Judge John Hodgman - New England Style Justice Chowder
Episode Date: September 7, 2022It's time to clear the docket! Bailiff Jesse Thorn has the week off. Monte Belmonte and Joel Mann join Judge Hodgman to dispense New England Style Justice. Hosting gatherings with your spouse, silverw...are sorting, maple syrup, car navigation, and sleeping with the windows open during New England winters.
Transcript
Discussion (0)
Welcome to the Judge John Hodgman podcast. Who am I? Oh, well, it's simply me, your Judge John
Hodgman. Oh, bailiff, my bailiff, Jesse Thorne has the week off, but I am in chambers with some
of our favorite summer friends to clear the docket. I know that I've been in New York for
much of the summer, most of the summer, because I've been working on a little project for Hulu
called up here. So I haven't been able to visit
as I would normally do
with my summertime, fun-time friend,
Monty Belmonte.
Hi, Monty.
Hello, Judge John Hodgman.
Monty Belmonte, of course,
is up there in the northwest of the northeast,
Northampton, Massachusetts,
WRSI, the river, 93.9 frequency modulation.
And, of course, even further north and further east is our
friend Joel the main man man hello Joel hello judge how are you I am fine thank you I'm doing
as okay as possible and you sound as even keeled and affect less as always Joel up up there at w-e-r-u 89.9 fm community radio up there in orono main serving
orono where else blue hill bar harbor you get to bar harbor does your signal get out there
ellsworth oh even as far as ellsworth everybody the solar powered sounds of w-e-r-u
joel man uh welcome back to the united states I don't want to tell on your personal business, but you were traveling abroad in France because of what?
My daughter got married.
Your daughter got married.
Congratulations.
Yes.
Congratulations.
That's so wonderful.
Very proud.
Very proud.
Yeah.
And, you know, initially I was going to try to sneak up to Maine for a weekend.
And I had a Monday.
And I was like, I said to Jennifer Marmer, who's also with us.
Hi, Jennifer.
Hello.
I said to Jennifer Marmer, and you can tell him if I'm a liar.
I said, can we get Joel Mann?
I can go into WERU on this one Monday.
Because I had a couple of days off.
So I went up to see my family up in Maine.
And she said, I think Joel Mann is in France seeing his daughter get married.
And I said, bull roar, call him back.
That's no excuse.
Come back.
But you wouldn't do it, would you, Joel?
Not this time.
Any other time I would have.
I guess your daughter getting married is more important than this podcast but only by a hair only by a hair and Monty what'd
you do today what'd you do today up there and in Northampton did you host your morning radio show?
I did I had a nice show it was pretty good we were then I went out to lunch with my friend who's a Northampton
resident and author, so it's been quite a nice
day. Now I get to talk to you and Joel Mann.
Who's this
other famous friend you got
now? Northampton author.
National Book Award winning
author Jeannie Birdsell, author of
The Penderwicks. The Penderwicks?
That's very famous. Yes. Young Adult
series. It is. I love famous. Yes. Young adult series.
It is.
I love it.
It's a great series.
All right.
I would be having lunch with you if you came to visit Western Mass.
All right.
But you've abandoned.
I was wondering when the guilt was going to kick in. I was going to try to start guilting you, but you out-guilted me.
Yeah.
I still have abandonment issues.
No, I've not abandoned you.
I simply haven't returned for years. Not abandonment issues uh no well you i've not abandoned you i simply haven't returned for years
not abandonment you you came out for to western mass for the solid sound festival though so i did
get to see you not in north i did but i did get to see you at solid sound and i think we need to
do another event at the at the shea theater in turn. Don't you agree? I would love that. Let's hope that the ongoing pandemic allows it.
But in the meantime, we assembled a docket of all New England style cases.
That is to say, thick and creamy.
Not with red tomato sauce?
Not with red tomato.
We're talking about New England style Justice Chowder.
Love it.
Thick and creamy and flavored with time and the three of us are going to bring down some new england justice
the states of new england of course are maine vermont new hampshire rhode island and that's it
am i missing any monty massachusetts nope it's not a state. It's Commonwealth. Gotcha.
You did.
And then there's one other.
There is one other.
Technically Connecticut.
No, not technically.
Fully is a New England state.
They got a lobster roll.
They got to be a state.
But, you know, we were we last time we did a New England docket, the three of us together.
We we were underrepresented in Rhode Island or maybe proportionately represented Rhode Island because Rhode island is a small state in the union they call it little roadie you know we have a non-democratic
senate that apportions equal votes to states that are large and depopulated to states that are
smaller and densely populated and so people complain like, why does South Dakota have as many senators as
the Bronx? But no one stops to say, why does Rhode Island get a senator at all? A little thing.
Here's a case from Elsa in Bristol, Rhode Island. Do you know where that is?
I was married very near there in Warren, Rhode Island. Yes. Colt State Park in Warren,
Rhode Island. Love Rhode Island. Maybe you'll recognize elsa from her case my husband dan often refers to the social gatherings we host together as quote my events
for example a couple weeks ago we planned to have some family over for a cookout
dan asked his brother if he knew what he was bringing to quote elsa's thing this is what
it's probably sounding like hey what are you bringing to elsa's thing that's a rhode island what are you bringing what are you bringing to elsa's thing right
elsa's thing that's a rhode island accent or if i ask dan to please ask one of the guests to bring
x you know something like a gallon of scallops for example dan will often say to the guest that
hey elsa wants you to bring a gallon of scallops to her thing.
This makes it sound like I'm hosting the party and that Dan is simply a person who happens to
be in the house at the same time. I should note that Dan is always a fine and helpful co-host,
but as we are a married couple living in the same house, Dan should refer to these gatherings as
our party rather than my thing. And I asked Elsa how long they've been a couple.
They've been together for 11 years and married for six of those years.
So I have a question for you, Monty, and for you, Joel. Who hosts the things at your houses?
If you have a cookout, who is the host, would you say?
We both are.
Co-hosts, really?
Yeah, yeah.
I would ask the husband why he puts it that way.
I would too, but we don't have him here,
so we can just be mean about him without him around.
Well, I can maybe answer for him
because I feel very similar to this,
where I think a lot of it, for me personally,
when it comes to interactions with human beings
on a friendship level,
I am painfully shy and afraid to invite people to a gathering at my house.
It takes all of my courage and muster to say, please come to this thing.
So whenever there is a gathering at our house, it is clearly my wife who has orchestrated it.
So that could be one reason why it would be Elsa's thing.
The other reason could be
how long have i doesn't really not how are you shy when have i ever gone to you and said hey
hodgman do you want to go do this thing with me you're a secret introvert is what you're saying
yes so i have a friend who i've known for 42 years and my when i was a child in my backyard
his backyard was adjacent to mine i would walk back and forth in my backyard in the hopes that he would see me in the backyard and come over.
Because I am terrified I'm going to impose.
Here's my Hodgman anecdote.
You were playing with They Might Be Giants at the Calvin Theater in Northampton.
I was providing some narration.
I was not jamming with them.
Right.
You were there as part of the show.
And you said, text me and we'll hang out after the show.
And I was like, oh, my God, terrified.
I'm going to have to.
He might change his mind.
I might be imposing.
So I texted you and there was no response.
So I went home.
I changed my mind.
And then you texted me later.
And you're like, hey, where are you?
And I said, oh, I texted you and there was no response.
So I went home.
And you're like, hi, I told you we were going to hang out after.
And that's how I am.
That's not your fault.
That's my fault.
I was a terrible.
I didn't respond in time.
Because I think my point is I'm terrified of the rejection.
I was too busy having the greatest time of my life with They Might Be Giants.
I'm sure you were.
The hangout was that they might be John Flansburg and me going like, hey, what's up?
Did you see that TV show? Okay, go home too tired yeah well joel are you a secret introvert yeah i guess i am kind of yeah i don't think it's i don't think it's a secret
yeah you have a natural i just flinty reticence i just say hey you want to come
over for some scallops and that usually does it right a gallon of scallops sounds amazing by the
way yeah did you get your gallon yet joel i did i've worked my way through most of it and do you
have scallop parties or do you just uh sit just sit with your bucket in the middle of the night and enjoy them all yourself?
Usually down in the basement in the dark.
Right, exactly.
But I know that you have people over, right?
And isn't there usually one person who does more than the other?
Well, I usually cook.
That way I don't have to talk to anybody.
There we go.
That's a great trick.
Yeah.
That's a great trick yeah that's a great trick
for shy guys have you had any uh cookouts this summer uh not a whole lot because we've been away
for most of the month yeah i get it you went to france i got it yeah yeah sit in the cafes you
know little spritz did you wear a little beret no no i got one for the for for sweetie pie though that our new little dog you got a beret
for your dog sweetie pie i want to see a miniature dachshund cocktail wiener i don't know how you
could get more miniature than a regular dachshund you can would you send a photo so that we can
post it on our judge john hodgman instagram account yeah i will i'll do i appreciate that
joel monty's theory is that dan is just shy and that's why he says this is else's thing
what do you think about that do you have do you agree or do you have a different theory about this
guy i have a different theory i mean it's one thing to be shy but when you're given a party
i mean you know everybody's part of it so i would never say hey come over to
michelle's thing right that just doesn't seem right do you why do you think he's doing this though
i i i really couldn't tell you i think it's something a lot deeper than we have time to uh
I think that's something a lot deeper than we have time to analyze right now.
But it's kind of worrisome that he would approach it that way.
Yeah.
I mean, I think there's something deeper, but I definitely think we have time to say, Dan, you're being a jerk.
He could just be resentful of having to have a party and not want a party.
True.
He could be an introvert.
He could be antisocial.
He could be shy.
He could feel uncomfortable about it and not want a party. He could be an introvert. He could be shy. He could feel uncomfortable about it.
Not want the party.
He may not want the party,
but you know,
it's part of the deal of being married.
Jennifer Marmon,
do you have a theory as to why Dan doesn't want to say that it's his party too?
Yeah.
And I just want to say that it would be weird for him to be resentful about
having his own family over,
assuming that the family gets along and there are no issues um i think he doesn't want
to be responsible for this party or gathering in any way and so if he keeps saying yeah just
bring this to elsa's thing you know it puts the onus on her. Yeah, I think that you're right, Jennifer,
that on some level there is just a simple desire to evade responsibility.
The responsibilities of being a host mean you have to be there for other people.
You have to entertain your guests.
You have to be your guests. You have to, um, be, be available
to them. Um, and if you are shy or introverted and really what you just want to do is sit inside on a,
on a chair and, and play a video game while your mommy wife takes care of your, uh, mom and dad
and brothers and sisters for you. And I don't know that that's what's going on here,
but that is an impulse that is natural
and yet must be resistant.
Because when you get married,
you enter into a partnership.
And it's absolutely true
that there is often one person or another
who sort of just de facto
becomes the more hosty of the hosts.
In my relationship, my wife, who's a whole human being in her own right,
is a little bit more introverted than I am.
She's a wonderful host when she decides to be one,
but I'm often initiating like get-togethers,
or at least I was doing this before the pandemic began and then i
realized just how wonderful introversion is i may never host a party again in my life but back then
back when i was saying hey mommy come on over and drink vodka in my basement i that that was me i
was like let's have them over let's have a good time and yet my wife as a whole human being on
her own right would never say this is John's thing.
She would say,
welcome to our house.
I would want to know
if after the party was over
and it was really great,
does he say,
did you enjoy our party?
Oh, right.
You know?
Look, it's very tempting
to not think particularly charitable
about Dan of Bristol, Rhode Island here.
Can I act as Dan's lawyer since I sort of have?
Elsa does say, I should note that Dan is always a fine and helpful co-host.
So really, if he's having a hard time navigating this party scene emotionally and his only
shortcoming is referring to it as Elsa's thing, but is still otherwise holding down the fort
when he needs to, I think he should be allowed to call it Elsa's thing, but is still otherwise holding down the fort when
he needs to, I think he should be allowed to call it Elsa's thing. It's just calling it a thing.
He's still acting appropriately during the event itself.
Well, you're very smart to bring that up, Monty, because she does say that Dan is a fine and
helpful co-host. So he is not simply sitting inside on his Nintendo Switch, getting his mommy wife to take care of his own family for him.
He is not doing that.
So I'm sorry that I slandered Dan that way.
But I would argue that if you are a fine and helpful co-host and fulfilling those duties, that's the hard part.
The easy part is to simply say our party.
It does not cost anything to simply say our thing because his whole marriage
that's your plural thing not your singular in france joel as you know they have different
forms of you for singular and plural to or vu but here in the united states we have such a backwards language we only have you or you or
you for singular and plural and i'll never say y'all because i'm not from the south
maybe he loves her so much he wants to give her all the credit
maybe that's it whatever we'll never know what's going on in dan's head probably elsa will never
know but dan if you're listening elsa would prefer for you to say it is our party rather than elsa's thing and i think that's a very
reasonable ask and if that's a problem for you then you can interrogate that a little between
the two of you elsa and dan but yeah as long but the one thing that you don't want to do is be
well i mean there are many things you don't want to do is be, well, I mean, there are many things you don't want to do.
But if you're a dude in a heterosexual couple, don't foist off party hosting to your wife.
Here's something from Monique in Cranston, Rhode Island.
After dating long distance, I recently moved in with my partner, Kevin, here in Rhode Island.
Yeah, we get it. Rhode Island. Got it.
Kevin organizes utensils by size rather than by type
for example the space that is designated for forks which is literally shaped like a fork in the drawer
contains small spoons and small forks the space designated for spoons again shaped like a spoon
in the drawer contains large spoons and large forks.
Kevin says this makes it easier to find a small spoon for eating ice cream.
However, this makes putting away
clean dishes very difficult
because you must compare utensils
to one another in order to know
how they size up.
Please order him to organize
the drawer by type.
Monty, what do you think about this?
This is an infuriating case.
Why does this speak to you?
Because forks belong with forks
and spoons belong with spoons.
And if your only logic
for organizing it in this way
is to find a small spoon for ice cream,
you need to take a small spoon
and make it your own
and put it somewhere else
where you can always find it and let order prevail in your household.
First of all, that ice cream, since we're in Rhode Island, is going to be coffee ice cream covered in coffee syrup.
Ideally, autocrat brand coffee syrup.
The best coffee syrup named for a despot.
Or maybe it's a cabinet, which is a Rhode Island style milkshake slash wrap.
That's right.
A cabinet.
Called a cabinet presumably because of the New England accent.
Instead of a carbonate, a cabinet.
Oh, I didn't know that.
That is an explanation I have heard for that.
Joel, are you still there?
I'm still here.
And that's just wrong.
I couldn't live that way.
You're talking about my explanation of cabinet as carbonate
or the way that Kevin puts the spoons and forks away?
Both.
Yeah.
Can you imagine dating long distance?
Like, I dated my wife was a whole human being in her own right for a long time, long distance.
We didn't live together or even in the same cities for much of our early relationship.
So you develop your whole way of being in the world without compromise in your home,
unless you have roommates.
But even then it's like you have your room, you have your way of doing things jennifer marmer can you imagine dating someone long distance
no first of all no never done it all right but now but see if you can put yourself in monique's
shoes okay i'm there you're there in cranston rhode island well no kevin's there in cranston
rhode island monique is elsewhere all right she
moved in with Kevin right yes yes yes Kevin is like come to my little state yeah and Monique
is living it up in South Dakota or whatever and Kevin's like move to Rhode Island and she's like
why we've got two senators here he's like so do we move here can you imagine moving in with someone
you've been dating someone you're going to make a life with someone you've never lived with them you move in and you move into his house and you discover forks in the spoon spot.
No thanks.
That would be almost disqualifying.
Yeah.
That's why long distance relationships just don't work.
They worked in my case.
But you knew the difference between a fork and a spoon.
I know.
But that doesn't mean that my wife is a whole human being in her own right necessarily does.
Let me tell you something.
This summer, we're basically back to long distance.
Because she's up there in Maine with our son.
Our daughter is, I don't know where she is, somewhere in the world.
I'm down here in Brooklyn.
You know that I'm putting my forks away the way I want down here in Brooklyn. You know that I'm putting my forks away
the way I want down here in Brooklyn.
I'm doing dishes the way I want,
do everything the way I want by myself.
When I came back up to visit Maine
when you were away, Joel,
I opened up the utensil drawer.
Let me tell you something.
It's a very simple system.
There are three slots.
There are three sections there are three three sections
one is for spatulas or things that resemble spatulas one is for spoons or other scoops
and one is for tongs that's all simple paddles tongs scoops i open up that utensil drawer
it's chaos in there somehow there's a can opener in there. Everything's all
mixed up. I go away for two weeks and all of a sudden the paddles are in the scoop trough.
But that's okay. That's what happens. People who live alone, as you are forced to do when you're
happens. People who live alone, as you are forced to do when you're dating long distance,
they make up their own systems. And boy, oh boy, is it a different world. Let me tell you something,
Monty and Joel. When you move back into your apartment where you live most of the time with your family and a dumb cat and none of them are around and there is nothing in there except the the empty
sound of the humming air conditioner and you it is very disorienting when there is no i feel like
i'm either in prison or a monastery but it's more of a monastery because there is no one to judge me
but god or whatever in this place i could be putting spoons in the fork thing all day long
no one would ever know I took a three
hour nap in the middle of the day yesterday I could have gone on all day no one would know
about my indolence I could wear clothes to bed I could do anything it's really weird when you've
been living with someone and one thing I really began to appreciate, I could understand on a sort of conceptual level,
how hard it was for single people throughout this pandemic, and especially during the hard lockdown period.
Because I can't go out and do anything now because of our production COVID protocols.
Like, there's very little that's worth the risk of getting COVID and throwing the production off, you know?
So I'm stuck the way people were stuck
and still are stuck if they're dealing
with immunocompromised issues or whatever.
Just stuck alone.
It is hard to do.
No wonder you come up with weird new systems.
No wonder you become like Kevin,
a little twisted in the brain.
And if you're living alone
before you start living your life with someone else and you start thinking i've got a new system
i'm going to put my small ice cream spoon in this little fork cut out but kevin you're not alone
anymore you're not alone anymore you got to put those forks in the fork thing gotta put the spoons
in the spoon thing you are joining your life with someone else.
And that means not only compromise, but scrutiny.
And meanwhile, this message is to my wife, who's a whole human being in her own right.
It's scoops, tongs, paddles.
It's very simple.
Scoops, tongs, paddles from left to right.
You know what?
It's hard being by yourself.
So do it whatever way you want.
I don't care.
When you're by yourself, do it whatever way you want. I don't care. When
you're by yourself, do it whatever way you want. It doesn't matter. But when you're sharing a life
with someone else, you got to conform to some basic rules. And just, I think, Monty, your
suggestion is very good. Get a little jelly jar and put a bunch of small ice cream spoons in it.
And you'll always know where to go for that ice cream spoon.
I'm starting to wonder if this is
an allegory or some sort of euphemism from Monique and Cranston because they're just moving in
together and maybe Kevin wants to fork when she just wants to spoon and they're getting conflated.
They're getting mixed up. You got to read each other's signals a little bit better.
They're getting mixed up.
You got to read each other's signals a little bit better.
Jennifer Marmer.
Yes.
I think we're running long, right?
Yeah.
Yeah.
But we're going to leave that in, right?
Are we? We should really cut it, but we're going to leave it in.
Are we?
We're going to take a quick break to hear from this week's partners.
When we come back, we'll be moving on to Vermont,
another state in New England with more cases to clear from the docket on the Judge John Hodgman podcast. Hello, I'm your Judge John Hodgman. The Judge John Hodgman podcast is brought to you
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Welcome back to the Judge John Hodgman podcast. This week, I am clearing the docket with our friends from New England,
summertime fun time bailiff Monty Belmonte of WRSI The River in Northampton, Massachusetts.
Hello, Monty.
Hello.
And of course, we have Joel, the main man man up there at WERU 89.9 FM in Orland, Maine.
Hello, Joel.
Bonjour, monsieur.
How are you going to get him back on the farm once he's been over to Paris?
Here's something from Kate in Vermont.
Vermont, named for the Green Mountains.
Voila.
Our friend Dana claims that the state of New York exports maple syrup to Vermont,
which Vermont supposedly then resells as Vermont syrup.
She insists this is true, even though she has no evidence to support her contention.
She even asserts that New York is doing Vermont a favor by helping it meet demand.
We want an injunction preventing Dana from making such blasphemous false claims,
want an injunction preventing dana from making such blasphemous false claims as well as damages for her wanton disregard for the purity and sanctity of the vermont maple syrup supply
now i know kate she is a been a regular guest on my occasional instagram live slash twitch stream
get your pets her cat is named moxie. Her friend is named Dana.
Joel Mann.
Have you ever heard this?
I mean,
Maine is the,
is the third biggest producer of maple syrup in the United States after New York,
according to my research.
But no,
so you have a dog in this hunt,
but if you could,
if you could set aside any conflict of
interest have you ever heard of new york secretly supplying vermont with maple syrup to meet demand
has that ever crossed your mind or has that ever have you ever heard of that never never no never
right monty what about you you ever hear that you ever hear that rumor
I've never heard of that accusation and I was so confounded by it as a claim that I looked it up
at agriculture.vermont.gov and the most recent report I saw was from 2019 yeah and Vermont makes
almost a million gallons more maple syrup than the state of new york so i can't imagine
that they need help from new york and that it would be legal for them to label it this way
because what i have heard and i did not verify if this is true or not is that if you are in vermont
and you call it maple syrup it must actually be maple syrup not like mrs butterworth or what have
you it's right maple flavored topping or what have you. It's
maple flavored topping or what have you. Right. But that doesn't mean that all maple syrup
sold as Vermont maple syrup legally has to be made in Vermont. It's not impossible that New
York could be supplying Vermont with some excess maple syrup. But could they call it Vermont maple
syrup? I know, but they could be lying is what I'm saying.
No way.
Let's take Joel Mann, for example.
Joel Mann just got back from Sancerre in France.
When you have Sancerre, it is protected.
You can't call wine that is not from Sancerre. The Sancerre wine.
Sancerre.
Yes.
Right.
Sauvignon Blanc, my favorite from there.
You got to call it, if it's from Sancerre, you can't be from someplace else.
It's got to be from Sancerre.
It's not from Brittany.
Vermont maple syrup is from Vermont.
And they can sell New York maple syrup,
but they couldn't call it Vermont maple syrup.
Yeah, but you're talking about,
France has legal regulations over this.
Any bubbly wine that does not come from the Champagne region
cannot be called Champagne.
Not legally.
That said, there was a story once that only whiskey that came from Kentucky,
I think Bourbon County, Kentucky, could be called Bourbon.
But that's not true.
There are tons of hipster New York distilleries making Bourbon all the time.
We don't have that domain of origin protection here in the United States.
I don't know that there's a law about the labeling of maple syrup.
I just looked that up to agriculture.vermont.gov.
One, no person shall label any maple syrup, maple product, maple flavored product or artificial maple flavored product in any manner which is untruthful, unfair or deceptive.
product in any manner which is untruthful unfair or deceptive i would say that taking maple syrup from new york and labeling it vermont maple syrup would break that law i saw that pdf too where did
it come from again it came from agriculture.vermont.gov yeah it comes from the state of vermont
you don't think that they have a stake in this you don't think that they've tapped a huge stake into this tree?
Here's the thing.
These things I know are true.
Vermont is the number one producer of maple syrup in the United States.
In 2018, they tapped close to 2 million gallons of maple syrup.
New York comes after that.
Less than half of Vermont's output, 806,000 gallons in 2018.
Then comes Maine, 539,000 gallons.
All of them, all of them, Vermont, New York, Maine,
completely overshadowed by Canada.
Vermont, get over yourself.
Canada's making 12.5 million gallons.
12.5, that's triple all of the United States. That's 71% of the world's pure maple syrup. But here's the thing. Vermont maple syrup, it's got its cachet. I don't know if there's legal regulation. I don't know because I've not done the research. And you know who else hasn't done the research? Dana.
No, because I've not done the research.
And you know who else hasn't done the research?
Dana.
I asked Kate, did Dana provide any evidence?
I checked back in with her.
Has Dana ever provided any evidence?
Dana said, I don't have the numbers at hand right now.
I'm not here to do your maple syrup homework, Dana.
I don't believe you're telling the truth.
But if you want to do the research and prove it, or if anyone out there wants to do the research and prove that there is a secret pipeline of maple syrup from New York to
Vermont, I would love, I'd love to blow the lid off of that. I'd love to put agriculture.vermont.gov
in their place because obviously, obviously they're crooked. Crooked is a maple tree branch.
are crooked. Crooked is a maple tree branch. There's more tappable trees in New York state than any other state, far more than Vermont. So they should by rights be making more maple syrup.
The only explanation would be that it's less industrialized in New York, but they could be
pipelining into Vermont. It could be happening. I'd love to blow the lid off this bottle of maple
syrup. So come on, everybody.
If you're listening, go out there, get to work, and let me know what you hear.
Until then, I say Dana's wrong.
Here's something from Steven in Winthrop, Maine.
My husband, Kenneth, prefers to drive whenever possible.
He places his GPS device down in the console beneath the shift where he has to look away
from the road to see directions.
I guess this is probably his phone, right?
Phone with his maps on it.
I've offered to provide a stand for the dashboard or air vent so that he has his phone in front of him.
But he says he's never had a dash mounted device that stays put.
He also says a dash mounted device clutters the console.
We drove home from dinner last night
from the la region of maine where's that joel la uh lewiston auburn that's right i love la
yeah to our home i love it to our home in winthrop in the rain in the dark
i believe there's a firm line that overrides a person's taste when it comes to safety
when kenneth looks away from the road especially in in inclement weather, he crosses that line.
He won't budge for me, but I believe he would honor your, the judge's decision
if you order him to mount the GPS device on the dash.
Naturally, I too would honor a decision if things weren't to go my way,
but they will go my way because I am right.
I'm going to say something here.
That's going to be a little controversial.
Monty and Joel.
Sometimes when I'm navigating, particularly when I'm driving my,
the Jeep around in Maine,
I'll put the phone with the maps on it in the cup holder because Kenneth
isn't wrong.
The, those air vent mounts for the phones they'll just pop right off they'll pop off at any old time you go over a bump you go over what you call a frost heave
in maine you ever hear of a frost heave joel yes i have yeah yeah i can tell from your voice you
don't like the sound you didn't like to think about frost eaves.
No.
No.
You bump over a frost eave all of a sudden.
A frost eave, of course, is like an eruption when the ground thaws.
I'm trying to explain.
I don't understand how it works.
It's just bad.
It's just a lump in the road.
You pop over that.
You're driving your Jeep.
You pop over that.
You got your phone in a vent holder.
That vent holder pops off your phone, and you don't have any doors on your Jeep.
Guess what?
Goodbye to your phone.
So I've done what Kenneth is doing.
But is it good?
What's the most irresponsible thing you've ever done in a car, Monty, while driving?
I hydroplaned a week after I got my license and smashed into a Jersey
barrier and totaled the car.
Oh no,
really?
Well,
you were a child.
It wasn't quite,
yeah,
I don't know if it would be quite irresponsible,
but it was not very good driving.
That's the closest call.
That's terrifying.
Yes,
it was.
You ever hit a moose,
Joel,
up there in Maine?
I came really close, like within inches.
Wow.
Yeah, coming home late at night, all the equipment behind me, and it was just a good thing they just move so slow that you can usually miss them.
Did you maneuver out of its way, or did you?
I just hit the brakes and tried to go straight.
And what did it do then? He just looked at me and moved on yeah these are these are i mean i i was just when you said
hydroplaning monty i remembered one time it was a rainy day and uh we were out there in western
massachusetts and our children wanted to go to mass moCA, the incredible art museum in North Adams, Massachusetts.
And I don't ever want to deny my children art.
I'm like, oh, the weather's pretty bad though.
It's kind of rough when you drive over the mountain
and back down into that other valley over there.
Have you got to drive through Florida, Massachusetts?
You know what I'm talking about, the top of the mountain there?
Delicious oranges there.
Yeah.
Well, we got up to Florida and at the top of the mountain there delicious oranges there yeah well we got up to florida and at the top of the mountain it was snowing we couldn't get through i'm like this isn't safe we drove back down the mountain and then i i tapped the brakes just to
slow down my brakes locked and i spun out into a ditch it was terrifying now i i wasn't using my gps at the time i knew the way but the thing is kenneth
you got to remember you are driving a weapon of destruction when you drive that car and if you
hit a moose or a jersey barrier it will change the course of your life, potentially catastrophically.
And when I look down into the cup holder of the Jeep to check my route on the GPS,
I know that I'm doing something wrong.
And I'm going to tell you what, I'm never going to do it again.
You got to mount that phone.
You got to mount that phone.
I don't care if it looks cluttered on the dash.
out that phone. You got to mount that phone. I don't care if it looks cluttered on the dash.
And particularly at night, in the rain, you should be handing your phone to your husband,
Steven, and have him tell you where to go. Work together. But no, you got to give all your attention to the road. All of your attention, put your eyes in front of you.
Any disagreement there, everybody? I'd recommend getting a bluetooth or an aux cable and
then let the uh gps person tell you exactly where you're supposed to go and you don't have to look
at all you can keep your eyes on the road and you just listen jenna jennifer marmer raised her finger
in in agreement with that correct jennifer yes absolutely yeah get an aux cable. We just navigate by the stars up here.
You can't take your eyes off the road to look up at the stars either.
And what's this phone you're talking about?
Yeah, that's right.
That's why you keep your sunroof open even in the dead of winter so you can look up and check out where Polaris is.
Yeah.
Right.
Let's take a quick break.
When we come back, more New England disputes.
Hello, teachers and faculty.
This is Janet Varney.
I'm here to remind you that listening to my podcast,
The JV Club with Janet Varney,
is part of the curriculum for the school year.
Learning about the teenage years of such guests as Alison Brie, Vicki Peterson, John Hodgman, and so many more is a valuable and enriching experience.
One you have no choice but to embrace.
Because, yes, listening is mandatory.
The JV Club with Janet Varney is available every Thursday on Maximum Fun
or wherever you get your podcasts.
Thank you.
And remember, no running in the halls.
If you need a laugh and you're on the go,
try S-T-O-P-P-O-D-C-A-S-T-I.
Hmm.
Are you trying to put the name of the podcast there?
Yeah, I'm trying to spell it, but it's tricky.
Let me give it a try.
Okay.
If you need a laugh and you're on the go,
call S-T-O-P-P-P-A-D-I.
It'll never fit.
No, it will.
Let me try.
If you need a laugh and you're on the go,
try S-T-O-P-P-P-D-C-O-O.
We are so close. stop podcasting yourself a podcast from maximum
fun.org if you need a laugh and you're on the go welcome back to the judge john hodgman podcast i
am here with summertime fun time bailiff monty belmonte as well as our main man in Maine, Joel Mann of WRSI The River and WERU FM, respectively.
WRSI The River, of course, is the radio station in Northampton, Massachusetts, where Monty hosts the morning show every weekday morning.
Is that correct, Monty?
That's correct.
And you can probably listen to it on a website somewhere right wrsi.something
dot com shamelessly commercial and you can also if you're if if this is your preference and i
think it should be subscribe to a week of mornings with monty belmonti where the best
of monty's morning shows are collected every week in one fun chunk. That's one fun chunk of a podcast, Monty.
I like it a lot.
Thank you.
Gives me a chance to keep up with you, your fam,
hear what's happening in the old Pioneer Valley there
in Western Massachusetts.
And Joel, of course, you're the program director up there
at WERU Community Radio.
Yep, yep, that's me.
So you're the one who tells them to play all that hippie music?
Yeah. yep yep that's me so you're the one who tells them to play all that hippie music no it's one of the true last true freeform stations right the djs pick whatever they want
they do regardless and regardless of how many times you tell them to play joe bird in the
field hippies they'll play whatever they want right. I'll say I pick my own music too, by the way, though.
Yeah, no, no, of course.
Not the last one.
Of course, of course.
And yours, but WERU is a community-supported radio station.
It runs entirely on community donations, correct?
Yes, and volunteers.
And volunteers.
So if you want to go check out WERU,
they play some incredible uh acadian music on
is it sunday mornings uh sunday 11 to 1 what is the name of that show acadia highway oh they
should change it to incredible acadian music on sundays uh and among many other great programs
go to w-e-r-u.org. org and support it if you can. It's a great
radio station. Here's something from Sean in Marblehead, Massachusetts. Here we are now in
the Commonwealth of Massachusetts, Marblehead. How do you say it in Massachusetts? Marblehead.
Right. My wife Kelly and I live in the scenic coastal town of, go ahead. Marblehead. Massachusetts,
where the wind blows mightily off the ocean coast Kelly insists on sleeping
with the windows open even during the coldest February nights as a bald man no amount of
blankets can keep my head warm Kelly insists that I wear a winter hat to bed this blatant baldism
must end please let Kelly my wife know that if it is cold enough to wear a winter hat in our
room, then maybe we should close the window
at night.
Monty, I see you're
laughing at this. Does this resonate
with you and your, I mean
I'm looking at your wonderful
clean shaven head. Yes.
The only time I've had to do that is when
I have had the unfortunate
experiences of camping and I had to wear a winter hat to bed.
But I am the one who usually wants the room very cold.
And if I am too cold, I just pull the covers all the way up over my head and sleep totally under the covers.
In the winter, in the winter. Now, obviously, you're inland.
So it's warmer in the valley than it is in the town of, say it again?
Marblehead.
Which is on the coast.
You don't get those ocean winds.
Right.
In the winter, do you sleep with the windows open?
No.
I think it's irresponsible if you're heating your house to have the windows open at night
unless you are totally shut the heat off and then do what you will. But your pipes are going to freeze joel what do you think about this well my uh significant
other michelle she does have her window open but on my side of the bed where my bald head lies
it's closed and i'm fine with it like monty says i just pull the covers up over my head
I'm fine with it.
Like Monty says, I just pull the covers up over my head.
Jennifer, why are you laughing?
I could never.
I don't have a bald head.
But the thought of sleeping with the cover all the way over my head sounds terrible.
I like it.
Sometimes you just got to get away.
Okay.
To each their own.
Yeah.
I don't ever want to sleep with the covers over my head that reminds me too much of when i was a child and i was scared that i was going to
be possessed by the devil it's also also i sleep hot i understand where kelly is coming from because
i do sleep hot i very rarely will sleep with covers on never mind over my head but is it okay to sleep with the windows open
in marble head massachusetts i'll tell you what earlier in the pandemic when school was canceled
for much of the winter of uh 2020 to 2021 we went up there to spend almost a full winter in Maine and I loved it.
Winters in Maine have gotten a little mild,
haven't they,
Joel?
Yes,
they have.
Like last winter was nothing.
Nothing.
Did you ever use that snowblower or no?
I got to use it,
uh,
twice.
Two times.
Yeah. Yeah. So it's really paying off the winter before that was a little bit colder because i know because i would often
open the window before going to bed and i would stick my head out the window
and peer into the utter darkness of the woods with the bay just beyond them
and listen to the silence and feel the bite of the wind on my cheeks.
And I would do that for a while and breathe deeply and just breathe death into my lungs
and think about the end of all things and the other darkness that awaits for us
all. And I found it to be so calming at this stage of my life, so meditative and wonderful.
And then I would go to bed, but I would close the window. Of course I would close the window.
Of course I would close the window. I mean, I get it.
But Kelly, this is what we're talking about.
If you were living by yourself in, what's the name of the town again?
Mottlehead.
Right.
If you were living by yourself in, go ahead.
Mottlehead.
Then you could do whatever you want.
You could put the ice cream spoons in the fork drawer.
You could put the spatulas where the scoops go.
You could sleep with the window open all day
long you could become one of the great new england eccentrics of which there are many right joel
yes at least a few of us that's right you could become joel man but no joel shares his life with
another human and an extremely small dachshund.
With a cupid ray.
But if you wanted to, you could open that window alone and breathe in the dark abyss of New England winter all night long.
And you'd probably sleep better than you'd ever sleep in your life.
Certainly you'd sleep better than sharing a bed with Sean.
Because the fact is we all die alone and we all sleep
alone when it comes down to it sorry kids sorry to be morbid we're in new england now this is what
we think about but you choose not to be alone don't you you choose to share your life there in
say it again monty marblehead yeah you choose to share your life there and go ahead. With Sean.
And while you're sharing that life with him, you can't do whatever you want.
You can't do whatever you want.
And while wearing a hat at night, I mean, people have been doing it since Scrooge times.
Certainly exists as a thing. If Sean's not comfortable in that hat, then then I don't think you have the right to force him to wear that hat just because you want to waste your heating oil, especially these days.
Expensive sleep with the window open in the wintertime.
Nightcaps are for before bed, not during sleep.
Close the window.
Can I make one more comment please i mean it it is called marble head which to me should be indicative of the fact that your gleaming bald head should be
able to proudly shine yeah day and night yeah so as a bald man myself let his head shine in the
moonlight like marble marble i tried i tried my best shine in the moonlight like marble. Marble.
I tried my best.
A beacon in the dark.
That's right.
You did good.
Yeah, if you cover up Sean's shining head,
those ships are going to hit the rocks.
Exactly.
Sean's got a job to do,
and that's to reflect the moonlight for scooters.
The docket is clear.
That's it for another episode of Judge John Hodgman.
Our producer is Jennifer Marmer.
Our editor is Valerie Moffitt.
Jennifer, Monty, Joel, Valerie, listening in the edit,
thank you so much for joining us.
Once again, you can listen to Monty at WRSI The River.
Monty, do you have anything coming up in Northampton
that you want people to know about at the Shea Theater
or whatever else you might be up to?
Yeah, you can check out all of our listings at sheatheater.org. At the Shea Theater or whatever else you might be up to?
Yeah, you can check out all of our listings at sheatheater.org.
It's a nonprofit community theater that I'm on the board of,
and there's all sorts of fun stuff happening,
including Whiskey Treaty Roadshow is coming up. But soon I will be...
Wait, what roadshow?
It's a local band from Western Mass called Whiskey Treaty Roadshow.
They're playing in September.
Right.
Yeah, and hopefully the return of Judge John Hodgman
sometime this winter.
Yes, please.
And I will be kicking off
the 14th March for the Food Bank
that I do for Western Mass
by going to the White House Conference
on Food, Nutrition, Health, and Hunger
that the White House is putting on
and that Congressman Jim McGovern,
our congressman from the 2nd Congressional District,
has been pushing for for a long time.
So be listening for that broadcast sometime this month.
Fantastic.
And Joel Mann, thank you so much for joining us up there in Orland, Maine, at WERU, the solar-powered studios of WERU.org.
88.9 FM on your radio dial.
What's going on up there?
I hope to get up there and see you sometime soon.
It's September now. radio dial uh what's going on up there i hope to i hope to get up there and see you sometime soon um it's it's september now is the are you still playing jazz on the porch of the pentago at in or no yep we're at the pentago at in every uh tuesday five to eight and we're down at the home port um
in in searsport every sunday five to eight this is the night and day trio. Yeah, the night and day trio.
You play bass.
Yep.
Mr. O plays reeds.
Yes, yes.
He's retired now.
He's retired from teaching, but not from your jazz trio, I trust.
No, no, no.
He's still 100% doing the music.
And then Chris on guitar and vocals.
And we're just having a great time.
Hope you can come see us
you'll be playing the pentagon through the month
until October would you say or what
yeah up until Columbus Day and then we'll see what happens
usually everybody
disappears by then but we'll see
we'll see what happens stay safe up there
I hope to come and see you
lay down some jazz tunes
well great to talk to everybody
until then thank you very much we'll be back next week for another episode lay down some jazz tunes soon. Well, great to talk to everybody.
Until then, thank you very much.
We'll be back next week for another episode of the Judge John Hodgman Podcast.
We will talk to you then.
Goodbye. Open the window,
Monty. I want to feel the cold air of death.
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