Judge John Hodgman - Persona Non Carta
Episode Date: October 5, 2022Steven brings the case against his wife, Carrie. Steven wants to take a family photo for a Christmas card. But, he wants to include a total stranger in the picture and provide no information or contex...t in the card. Carrie thinks this is a terrible idea. Who’s right? Who’s wrong?Thank you to Twitter User @TimmKinitz for naming this week’s case! To suggest a title for a future episode, follow us on Twitter for naming opportunities: @JesseThorn & @Hodgman. Or keep track using the Twitter hashtag #JJHoCaseNames.
Transcript
Discussion (0)
Welcome to the Judge John Hodgman podcast. I'm Bailiff Jesse Thorne. This week, persona non
carta. Stephen brings the case against his wife, Carrie. Stephen wants to take a family photo for
a Christmas card, but he wants to include a total stranger in the picture and provide no information
or context in the card. Carrie thinks this is a terrible idea. Who's right? Who's wrong?
Only one can decide. Please rise as Judge John Hodgman enters the courtroom and presents an
obscure cultural reference. Now everybody.
I'm done. I'm done. I'm done. Well, it's not over yet. It goes on for... Meow, meow, meow, meow, meow, meow, meow, meow, meow, meow, meow, meow, meow, meow, meow, meow, meow, meow, meow, meow, meow, meow, meow, meow, meow, meow, meow, meow, meow, meow, meow, meow, meow, meow, meow, meow, meow, meow, meow, meow, meow, meow, meow, meow, meow, meow, meow, meow, meow, meow, meow, meow, meow, meow, meow, meow, meow, meow, meow, meow, meow, meow, meow, meow, meow, meow, meow, meow, meow, meow, meow, meow, meow, meow, meow, meow, meow, meow, meow, meow, meow, meow, meow, meow, meow, meow, meow, meow, meow, meow, meow, meow, meow, meow, meow, meow, meow, meow, meow, meow, meow, meow, meow, meow, meow, meow, meow, meow, meow, meow, meow, meow, meow, meow, meow, meow, meow, meow, meow, meow, meow, meow, meow, meow, meow, meow, meow, meow, meow, meow, meow, meow, meow, meow, meow, meow, meow, meow, meow, meow, meow, meow, meow, meow, meow, meow, meow, meow, meow, meow, meow, meow, meow, meow, meow, meow, meow, meow, meow, meow, meow, meow, meow, meow, meow, meow, meow, meow, meow, meow, meow, meow, meow, meow, meow, meow, meow, meow, meow, meow, meow, meow, meow, meow, meow, meow, meow, meow, meow, meow, meow, meow, meow, meow, meow, meow, meow, meow, meow, meow, meow, meow, meow, meow, meow, meow, meow, meow, meow, meow, meow, meow, meow, meow, meow, meow, meow, meow, meow, meow, meow, meow, or whatever? I do. I do. Do you swear to abide by Judge John Hodgman's ruling
despite the fact that he just performed
over 40 minutes of
meow singing?
I do. I do.
Judge Hodgman, you may proceed.
Meow, meow, meow, meow, meow, meow, meow, meow, meow, meow, meow, meow.
No, we did that earlier.
I think we did that earlier, John.
We'll make the podcast record.
Judge Hodgman, We already did that.
Carrie and Stephen, you may be seated for an immediate summary judgment.
One of your favorites can either of you name the piece of culture that I referenced as I entered this courtroom.
Stephen, why don't we begin with you?
Okay.
This sounds to me like a commercial from the 90s.
And now I just need to isolate what we're selling.
I think like cat food is too obvious.
It's going to be something really obscure.
Meow, meow, meow, meow, meow, meow, meow, meow, meow, meow, meow, meow, meow, meow, meow, meow, meow, meow, meow, meow, meow, meow, meow, meow, meow, meow, meow, meow, meow, meow, meow, meow, meow, meow, meow, meow, meow, meow, meow, meow, meow, meow, meow, meow, meow, meow, meow, meow, meow, meow, meow, meow, meow, meow, meow, meow, meow, meow, meow, meow, meow, meow, meow, meow, meow, meow, meow, meow, meow, meow, meow, meow, meow, meow, meow, meow, meow, meow, meow, meow, meow, meow, meow, meow, meow, meow, meow, meow, meow, meow, meow, meow, meow, meow, meow, meow, meow, meow, meow, meow, meow, meow, meow, meow, meow, meow, meow, meow, meow, meow, meow, meow, meow, meow, meow, meow, meow, meow, meow, meow, meow, meow, meow, meow, meow, meow, meow, meow, meow, meow, meow, meow, meow, meow, meow, meow, meow, meow, meow, meow, meow, meow, meow, meow, meow, meow, meow, meow, meow, meow, meow, meow, meow, meow, meow, meow, meow, meow, meow, meow, meow, meow, meow, meow, meow, meow, meow, meow, meow, meow, meow, meow, meow, meow, meow, meow, meow, meow, meow, meow, meow, meow, meow, meow, meow, meow, meow, meow, meow, meow, meow, meow, meow, meow, meow, meow, meow, meow, meow, meow, meow, meow, meow, meow, Yeah. Okay. So now I'm going to switch my answer to Super Troopers.
I think you were closer with the commercial from the 90s, honestly, because this particular tune has been used in a lot of commercials, particularly around a particular time of year.
That is a discussion point of this episode.
Does that, shall I enter that as a guess?
Or did you want to, I'm pointing you in a direction.
What time of year are we discussing during this episode?
The holidays.
The holidays time.
So perhaps we're selling Dr. Pepper.
Dr. Pepper?
Hot Dr. Pepper at the holidays is delicious, as Bailiff Jesse Thorne knows.
Not quite as delicious as eggnog and orange Fanta.
Carrie, do you have a guess?
I mean, nobody thinks of Dr. Pepper at the holidays.
If it's an advertisement for a beverage, it would be Coca-Cola.
Oh, that's true.
Coca-Cola is often advertised at the holidays.
But I don't think it's that either.
Let me ask, would you like to hear the song again?
No.
That would help.
Yes.
Yeah. Thank you. No, That would help. Yes. Yeah.
Thank you.
No, it's okay.
It's fine.
Do you have it?
So are you guessing Coca-Cola or do you have another guess?
That's going to have to be my guess for now because I'm not sure.
All guesses are spirited, but incorrect or wrong.
The tune, of course, is the very famous Carol of the Bells that was composed or based on a Ukrainian folk song and arranged by Mikhail Leontovich and made
famous by the Ukrainian National Choir in the early part of the 20th century and since then
has been used frequently for television commercials during the holidays, often using bells and not meows.
But in this case, the meow version of it, I discovered while doing some internet searching
around the subject of Christmas cards, which is of course the subject of this case,
specifically Christmas card pranks. And there is a company, and they do not advertise with us, so I will not
name them, but they have a product that is called, and this you might Google if you want to find
this product. It is a card entitled Endless Meowie Christmas with Glitter. It is a card that says meowy Christmas and a cat has a little Santa hat on it. And the
prank is that after you make an adjustment and you send it to somebody, the moment they open the card,
that song starts playing and it will never stop. There is no way to stop it. When you close the
card, it continues. There is some of their, some of their prank cards even have a fake button on the card that says stop music that doesn't work simply to drive the recipient bananas.
And that alone is annoying enough.
I don't love pranks.
It is not fun for everybody.
It's no fun at all. But I had to acknowledge the evil genius of this card, because not only does it meow repetitively over and over and over again and does not stop,
no matter how much Bailiff Jesse Thorne begs it to stop. But when you come to the last possible
option to stop this card from singing this song, which is tearing it apart, it is glitter inside.
it apart it is glitter inside there's glitter hidden in the card the world knows the court's stance on glitter we hate it almost as much as rudy does over at rudy's place
i don't know i don't know if i want to advertise this company this is a mean thing to send somebody
you know what john i'm gonna advertise the company it's northrop grumman
it was a DARPA project originally.
PsyOps.
We're going to get in trouble on the Reddit, that's for sure, for advertising Northrop Grumman.
No, it's not.
Endless meowy Christmas with glitter.
And one of you will be receiving a judgment in your favor at the end of this episode after I hear this case. And the other of you might get a surprise Christmas card in the mail from the court of Judge John Hodgman that might glitter bomb you.
We'll see what happens.
But in the meantime, which of you comes to this court seeking justice?
I do, Your Honor.
Stephen, that would be.
All right.
Correct.
State the nature of the justice that you seek.
Okay.
So I would like to have a total stranger posing with us and our family's Christmas card.
And at the bottom of the card, it would read,
Happy Holidays from Carrie, Steve, our two children's names, and Carl.
And there would be no explanation given as to who Carl is and why he's on our Christmas card.
And then on the inside of the card would be solo pictures of everybody
with little blurbs about what we've been up to this year.
And then so there would be Carl and I would make up some really generic,
boring thing about what's happened in Carl's life.
Again, not giving any explanation about who he is.
Well, you know, I love the name Carl, Stephen.
So you definitely didn't know that.
Yeah, I do.
I enjoy the name Carl quite a bit.
And I think that this is a kind of a funny idea.
Where'd you get this idea?
So this must have came about like 10 years ago when Carrie and I first got together.
Christmas cards was just not a thing at all in my family.
So it's a big, big deal in her family.
OK, that's why you realized you had to destroy it.
You had to destroy the tradition of Christmas cards because they were important to her and her family. Okay. That's why you realized you had to destroy it. You had to destroy the tradition of Christmas cards because they were
important to her and her family.
Yeah.
Or add some Stevenness to it.
Some direly needed Stevenness.
Yeah.
Because it's not enough that someone just enjoys a thing in life.
You have to get your fingerprints on it.
Goodness forbid a family member.
Love you.
Okay.
You, so you, so the, the spark, the spark Okay. So this sparked a little, the imp of the perverse in your mind.
How could I mess with this?
How could I Steven this up?
Correct.
Correct.
And originally he wanted it to be a child, an unknown child.
But that at least he has changed his opinion about over the decade.
So now that we have actual children.
So how long ago? You said a decade ago?
About, yeah.
Right. And now you have two children who are under a decade old, based on the math.
Yeah, five and just about two.
And it says here that you live in Victoria, British Columbia.
That's wonderful.
But you're not Canadian.
No, Carrie and I are both Americans.
Oh, cool.
Excellent.
Living the dream.
Moved here from Boston four years ago.
Oh, fantastic.
British Columbia is one of my favorite provinces in Canada.
Wonderful.
You're living the dream.
So this, but this was your original idea was to put a fake child to borrow someone's child and trick
all of Carrie's family into believing that you had a secret child or at least
confuse them mightily.
Right. So that's a core part of this. I,
I don't feel like I'm really tricking people.
I feel like this card is going to people who know us and know that we do not
have a person named Carl that is of that level of significance
in our life to appear on our Christmas card. But I totally agree. The child thing, that was a bad
idea. So now Carl must be a man in his late fifties. Okay. All right. Well, you know, I'm
only in my early fifties, so I'm not, I can't, I can't do the job. I'm no Carl for you. Tell me more about Carl.
He's in his late 50s.
What else do we know about Carl?
What's in his bio?
He plays pickleball.
And his pickleball team got to the provincial district finals this year.
So he's pretty proud of that.
So he's a provincial finals.
He's a Canadian pickleball player.
Yeah. It's important that he lives here. And it's pretty proud of that. Oh, so he's a provincial finalist. He's a Canadian pickleball player. Yeah.
It's important that he lives here and it's clear that he lives here so that, because
our friends and family know that like our parents don't live here.
So we don't want to make sure, make our friends think that that's our dad.
Right.
You're sending this message back to the United States saying, look what happened to us in
Canada.
We adopted a 58 year old man.
Yeah.
See, that's what it seems like. right? So that seems problematic to me.
Do you have a Carl in mind? Is there a person in your life who could be Carl or have you not gotten that far yet?
If I had to pick somebody, there's a couple of people that I have in mind,
but I prefer if it's just a stranger that we find in a place that we go to, to take this picture.
Oh, so it's not enough that you annoy and confuse Carrie's family and your own family,
but also a stranger.
Yeah.
Yeah.
I think he just wants to go up to someone at the beach and say, hey, will you take a
photograph with our family?
Right.
Got it.
Oh, I mean, I would say even worse.
Do you want to be in our Christmas card photo?
No, you would see what their reaction is.
I was just going to ask you, would you this Carl, as we'll call him, of what you intend to do with the photo.
You would get consent from him or not.
Would you have a production assistant run up to him afterwards and get him to sign a release?
I hadn't gotten that far.
Do you think I need to do that, though?
Yeah, I would, actually. I would. that far do you think i need to do that though uh yeah i would actually i would
i would say it was probably safer to go with one of your friends who your families don't know
necessarily or and probably they don't because they they're all down here down under as they
call the the lower 48 who would this card go to tell me maybe they're all up in Canada. I don't know.
Who would this card go to?
Yeah, this is the other big problem.
I know very few people
and Carrie knows quite a few people.
And so most of the people would be going to people
who are what you could call Carrie's people.
Yeah, I come from a big, a large family. I have many cousins,
aunts and uncles, grandparents across the US and a pretty large friend network that sends
Christmas cards every year. So they would be going to those people along with Steve's one sister,
one set of parents, one uncle, and a few friends.
I really love how the tone of your voice when you describe Steve's one set of parents really
was like he had failed in some way.
This guy only has one set of parents.
Carrie would absolutely be on board for this plan if Steve would just get himself a second
set of parents like normal people do.
Carrie, since the bulk of the cards would be going to Carrie's people, as Stephen calls it,
also the title of a great John le Carre novel, since most of it would be going to your people,
Carrie, what kind of responses do you anticipate getting? What do you think people will think when
they open this card? So I think one important thing to note is that our family, Steve and I and our two children,
we have never sent a Christmas card. So this would be the first time we've decided to
foray into Christmas correspondence. And I honestly think I will get many phone calls and emails
think I will get many phone calls and emails asking who is Carl because Steve says that people would think it's funny and it's a joke but I honestly think that it will just confuse people
because while he may be someone who does things to unnerve other people that's not something I
would do I wouldn't just put a stranger on my Christmas card.
So I think I, I think people will be confused and they will be following up with me to try to figure out what's going on. They will be genuinely confused is what you're saying.
They would not, they would not be rolling their eyes going, Oh Steve. Oh little Steve.
And, and that is exactly what his parents will do and his sister.
Right. They'll get the joke.
His few closest friends, they will probably do that. Whereas my family does know Steve,
my friends do. We've been together a long time now. But I think this is just taking it to a
different level that would be unexpected.
And the burden of explaining the joke would fall disproportionately to you, I would imagine your argument would be.
A hundred percent. Yes. I'm the one who even Steve's friends would contact me probably about this more than him.
I feel like, I really feel like it. Who would contact you?
My friends.
I don't know.
I think it often falls on the other person to explain the situation. And so this is a dynamic that comes up in our relationship all the time.
Anytime we're in a social group, Steve loves to make jokes that make people question.
Is he serious?
Is he not serious?
What's going on?
And I'm always there standing right behind him going, he's kidding. It's a joke.
Can you give me an example of such a time when Stephen made such a joke?
It's hard to think of a specific example because they're just small things all the time.
I bet Stephen can remember one.
So I can remember one that happened recently.
The Joker always remembers the joke.
Okay.
We were at her friend's and she's an educator talking about the school students bringing cell phones to class and how they try to teach responsibility for these phones.
Sure.
And I was like, well, that's like telling a school child that they can only bring two grams of heroin to school.
And that didn't go over the best.
It could have been because both of our daughters,
five-year-old daughters, were standing right next to me.
But they don't know what heroin is.
So I don't try.
When I tell these jokes, I try to make it so that people know that I'm joking.
But it does go wrong every once in a while.
You don't have the ebullient affect that Canadians expect.
Yeah, I'm a little out of place here.
Yeah.
Okay.
And what about your kids, Carrie?
What do they think of this plan?
Have you all discussed
the possibility of Stranger Carl being part of the Christmas card?
No, they don't know yet. I think our daughter, she's five now, so she at least would be aware
enough to know something was happening. But I will say frequently after Steve says a joke,
she will be like, what are you talking about? What do you mean?
Because there's confusion over, is he saying something that's real or is this not real?
It's very blurred, especially for a kid who's just trying to figure out what the world is like.
You mentioned that little Stevie can be a little provocative,
little Stevie can be a little, a little, a little provocative, uh, a little, a little disarming,
a little, uh, I think you use the term unnerving. You also sent in some evidence specifically of unnerving people, uh, during the holidays. So I'm going to open that evidence now and
talk with you about some of the photos. Did you send these in, Carrie? Yes. All right.
So exhibit A, these are gifts that Stephen has sent to his nieces. Is that correct?
Correct. All right. Our only nieces. Yes. Stephen only has how many nieces?
Only two. He only has two nieces? I know. Stephen, you really got to step it up. And they don't even
have mailing addresses yet. So they won't get cards.
You have to send them to their parents?
Correct.
And this is Stephen's family, right?
So I bet the nieces only have one set of parents too.
Yes.
Real losers.
All right.
This is an incredible thing, Stephen.
This is a piece of papier-mâché art.
It's a gorgeous paper coelacanth, it looks like to me.
Exhibit A.
Yes.
You correctly identified a coelacanth.
Well, I'll tell you something.
It was written underneath here as part of the evidence, including a pronunciation guide.
I appreciate that because I'm always saying coelacanth.
I stand corrected.
But this is actually a wrapping
around a present, this incredible piece of art paper sculpture, which of course you will be able
to, I hope with your permission, all listeners can see it on our Instagram page at Judge John
Hodgman or the show page at MaximumFun.org. That's a thumbs up from Stephen. That counts as an okay.
This is actually wrapping around a present and the present it says here inside and this is
you're sending it to your to your nieces or your niece this is her for her seventh birthday yeah
an industrial endoscope yeah what is an industrial endoscope if i may ask so it's like a camera body
but instead of the lens like attached to the camera the lens is like attached to a rigid wire tube whatever you
want to call it for exploring what would that be used for so like imagine you're walking through
the forest and you see like a snake hole and you're like is there i wonder if there's a snake
or something in there well there's no way for you to know wait i've got my industrial endoscope with
me i can just send that down the snake hole, see what's in there.
Let me give you a little bit of, I mean, I'm not an expert on this, but I will say if it's a snake hole, there's a snake in there for sure.
Well, so what does that snake look like? There's no way to know unless you get out your industrial endoscope.
Endoscopy, as always, is the answer. What problem can we not solve with endoscopy?
And then you sent a beautiful, it's somewhere between, how would you describe this, Stephen?
It's not origami.
It's paper sculpture, it seems like to me.
Yeah, yeah.
Make the wrapping look like animals to be a special thing that Uncle Steve does.
Yeah.
be a special thing that Uncle Steve does. Yeah. And this is an armadillo, a beautiful gray and darker gray armadillo that contains a nuclear spintheroscope, which is what, Stephen?
So it's a small piece of radioactive material that's enclosed in a viewing chamber.
And then you can look through it
and see like the after effects of nuclear radiation.
And so it's totally safe for children or anybody to have,
but it's super fun to give somebody
some nuclear radioactive material.
Especially an 11-year-old, as your niece was 11 years old.
And how did that, Carrie, how did that gift work out?
Yeah, so with this particular, with all the gifts, we have a challenge because we're here in Canada and it's really
expensive to mail things. So we often have things sent to Steve's parents, just the one set. Um,
and they are in charge of like putting it together and giving it to the nieces because they live
nearby. Do they have to assemble the whole paper armadillo?
Sometimes there's very complicated directions on like, here is this.
You need to like slide it here and then put A into B and attach C.
So they do have to do a lot of work. So that sounds a lot different than what Stephen said, which was no.
There's a lot of daylight between do they have to put together the paper armadillo answers there.
So, Stephen, what do they have to do?
Well, so this was a really special case because I did not want to have to deal with the customs nightmare of having nuclear radioactive material sent.
Like what?
I didn't want to fill it up.
Inside an armadillo, there's a form depending on what animal, how armored it is.
Yeah.
I go to the same UPS store and like, they know me by now and they're like,
okay,
just do your best on this form.
So I didn't even want to bother with this.
So I was like,
mom,
I'm going to send you an armadillo.
And then you're also going to get,
uh,
so I like pre-made the armadillo to be as easy as possible to just like put
the thing inside of it and then,
and then close it up.
Yeah.
But,
but other,
other of your paper creations do occasionally involve some complex
directions. Is that what Carrie was referencing to? I've learned that I really have to minimize
it because they're not good at following these directions and I get very upset.
And unfortunately, they're the only parents you have. This is why, Stephen, this is why you need
a couple of backup sets of parents because what if they can't put your paper armadillo
together correctly? What if they're dum- dumbs and they can't do it right yeah i got my second
set of parents on one of those task apps because they're really good at putting together ikea
furniture carrie you were gonna say something well so because steve knows that his parents
have challenges putting together the animals he also had his mom test out the nuclear box.
And it ended very poorly. Yes, the spintheroscope, because he wanted to see how it worked and make
sure it was going to be good. So it ends up to view it, you have to go into a dark room with the
box and you have to stay there for 10 or 15 minutes as your eyes adjust.
So his mom is in their basement bathroom and all of a sudden she turns around to try to grab the
box and she knocks it on the ground, shattering it. And she's like terrified she's been exposed
to some kind of nuclear matter. So she calls him desperately on the phone being like, Steve,
I couldn't see it. I knocked it. I broke it.
I'm looking at a picture of this thing. You all sent me a link. It's made in the USA,
but shipped from Canada. High thorium content, nuclear spintheroscope. It literally says,
allow eyes to become accustomed to total darkness for at least 10 to 15 minutes before viewing.
Yeah, I didn't see that part.
It's a very invented gift. How's your one mom doing? Did she become a radioactive mutant? That could explain some things of late, but I
think it sounded like she recovered from that. She was also upset that she broke the gift. She's like,
oh, are you a new one? I'm like, mom, it's okay. It all worked out. The last one I just want to talk, there are many examples that
were sent here. And I have to say, I have to say, people need to go to the Judge John Hodgman
Instagram page. They need to go to the show page at maximumfund.org, wherever you go to see your
Judge John Hodgman photos. This paper art is incredible. It's genuinely beautiful genuinely amazing and you these twin uh reindeer that you made
are incredible and as i understand from this is this is when you had your second niece come along
obviously yeah and what i understand from the caption is that one of the reindeer
contained uh sodium iodide and the other reindeer contained a bottle of 12% hydrogen peroxide,
and the instructions were to combine them and watch what happens.
This fun effect, may I presume that this is what the internet calls elephant toothpaste
or devil's toothpaste?
Elephant toothpaste.
You got it.
Yeah.
All right.
Which they knew already, so it wasn't as fantastic a thing, but they did it.
It was fun.
Let's take a quick recess and hear about this
week's Judge John Hodgman sponsor. We'll be back in just a moment on the Judge John Hodgman podcast.
You're listening to Judge John Hodgman. I'm bailiff Jesse Thorne. Of course,
the Judge John Hodgman podcast always brought to you by you, the members of MaximumFun.org. Thanks to everybody who's gone to
MaximumFun.org slash join. And you can join them by going to MaximumFun.org slash join.
The Judge John Hodgman podcast is also brought to you this week by our pals over at Made In.
Jesse, you've heard of Tom Colicchio, the famous chef, right?
Yeah, from the restaurant Kraft.
And did you know that most of the dishes at that very same restaurant are made with Made
In pots and pans?
Really?
What's an example?
The braised short ribs.
They're Made In, Made In.
The Rohan duck.
Made In, Made In.
Riders of Rohan Duck.
What about the Heritage Pork Shop?
You got it.
Made in, made in.
Made in has been supplying top chefs and restaurants with high-end cookware for years.
They make the stuff that chefs need.
Their carbon steel cookware is the best of cast iron, the best of stainless clad.
It gets super hot.
It's rugged enough for grills or an open flame.
One of the most useful pans you can own.
And like we said,
good enough for real professional chefs,
the best professional chefs.
Oh, so I have to go all the way down
to the restaurant district in restaurant town?
Just buy it online.
This is professional grade cookware
that is available online
directly to you, the consumer,
at a very reasonable price.
Yeah.
If you want to take your cooking
to the next level,
remember what so many great dishes
on menus all around the world
have in common.
They're made in...
Made in.
Save up to 25% this Memorial Day
from the 18th until the 27th.
Visit madeincookware.com.
That's M-A-D-E-I-N cookware.com.
The Judge John Hodgman podcast is also brought to you this week by the folks over there at Babbel.
Did you know that learning, the experience of learning causes a sound to happen?
Let's hear the sound. Yep, that's the sound of you causes a sound to happen. Let's hear the sound.
Yep, that's the sound of you learning a new language with Babbel.
We're talking about quick 10-minute lessons crafted by over 200 language experts that can help you start speaking a new language in as little as one, two, three weeks.
Let's hear that sound.
Babbel's tips and tools are approachable, accessible,
rooted in real life situations
and delivered with conversation-based teaching.
So you're ready to practice what you've learned
in the real world and you get to hear the sound.
It's not just like a game
that pretends to teach you a language.
It's also not a rigid, weird, hyper-academic chore.
It is an actually productive app
that actually teaches you
while you are actually having a nice time.
And you get to hear this sound.
Here's a special limited time deal
for our listeners right now.
Get up to 60% off your Babbel subscription,
but only for our listeners
at babbel.com slash Hodgman.
Get up to 60% off at babbel.com slash Hodgman. Get up to 60% off at babbel.com slash Hodgman,
spelled B-A-B-B-E-L dot com slash Hodgman.
Rules and restrictions apply.
Carrie, how many people are going to get this Christmas card?
And bear in mind that since you're in Canada,
for many of them, you'll have to use two stamps.
I mean, everyone will mostly, yeah, I think
probably 50 people maybe, a little bit more maybe. You're going to hand address those or do a mail
merge? I think hand address. It's, you know, it's the holidays. You want to put in that extra effort.
Well, who is going to hand address them? Oh me. Steve has very poor, he doesn't have very good,
I have to write the letters to the nieces because
he has poor handwriting. Yeah, that's a good point. That's true.
I love Steven jumping and going, I'll help. I just got some invisible ink.
What do you mean you have to write
the letters to the nieces? So when he sends these gifts,
usually there's very long letters that go with them.
It's very thoughtful, but he will say some facts about the animal that he has wrapped
the present in and also some information about the gift if there are directions.
And so in the past, I have helped to write it legibly.
So he definitely will not be addressing envelopes.
Do they not have computers or typewriters in Canada?
I think he just likes it to be handwritten.
By you.
Steve has a vision for things, if you haven't been able to tell yet.
Yes.
So since your handwriting is terrible, Stephen, it seems like it would,
most of the work of mailing out the Christmas card would fall to Carrie.
And Carrie, you would also have to sit for the photograph with the stranger.
Yeah, and prepare my children and make them comfortable.
Aside from all of those logistical burdens, when you think about sending this thing out, how does it make you feel?
It makes me feel very stressed. I mean, you know,
Steve and I have talked about this because if you rule that he can do this, I said we could do it.
You know, we would, cause we've had this conversation for 10 years. And so it keeps
coming back up every year. Um, and this is sort of, he said, this is his last resort.
This is it. Either we are going to do it if you say yes, or we're not going to do it if you say no. And I told him last night, I said, I think I'm going to be very upset because I am very uncomfortable with the whole thing. And I don't want to have all those conversations. It just seems like it's not fun to me.
What's the worst case scenario? What do you fear the worst is going to happen? it just seems like it's not fun to me.
What's the worst case scenario?
What do you fear the worst is going to happen?
That one of your many grandmothers from one of your many sets of parents will open this
and be so confused and surprised that they'll faint?
Do you know how like in families,
everyone just starts talking about things and then like you eventually hear the trickle down.
So I think like my grandmother will talk to my mother who will talk to my aunt and they'll all be confused together.
And then they'll wonder what's going on and why is Steve so weird and who's this person and what are they doing in Canada?
Do they know that you've married a weird person yet?
So my parents do. I admittedly
only have one set as well. And they do, my sister does, but my aunts and uncles and my grandparents
don't fully, I don't think. How long do you think you can hide it from them? I mean, you fled to Canada to isolate him from the rest of your family.
Exactly.
Yeah.
I think they know.
I see these people every two years.
We have a family reunion.
And I spend a lot of time with these people.
And I'm myself with them.
Do you feel that Carrie is ashamed of your weirdness, Stephen, that she's trying to hide it?
Not usually. feel that carrie is ashamed of your weirdness steven that she's trying to hide it uh not usually with but with this with this thing i think i think she is but not not typically um i will say that
like so when we first got together steve used to do a lot of out of the box things like this he had
a group of friends and they would do different pranks and unusual things. And I think that I have
been a different kind of energy. And I do feel badly if that's something he wants to be doing
more of. But I think that there are ways he could be doing it that don't involve me and my extended
family and friend network. So if he wants to do something that I don't agree with,
like even the gifts for our nieces, I've sort of let go of over the years.
I used to say like, I'm not sure this is a good idea.
Or do you think a five-year-old really wants that?
But now I know that he has this sort of routine and it's going fine.
But that doesn't involve me and my like outward facing
persona so um this just very heavily involves me what kind of pranks would steven do with his
prank group the pranksters that's what i call them uh i i don't think this is a prank group
at all this is uh part of a group in Boston.
You're very, very small, small group of friends.
That was a big group.
No.
So what happened is when I met Carrie, my whole life became like, Carrie, Carrie, Carrie, everything Carrie.
Which, look at her.
She's adorable.
She's super fun.
No regrets.
But before that, we would put on a citywide choose your ownure thing and have these sets that we set up throughout the city.
And we had a big following throughout Boston.
People would come in to do these events.
We had a big water battle fight to get hundreds of people to come to these events.
And they weren't –
A really good group of people for me.
It sounds more like a kind of an immersive game rather than a prank.
Yeah.
You weren't tricking people.
I guess I did have one friend.
You were creating an alternate reality game.
Oh, excuse me.
You said you had one friend what?
Go ahead.
I had one friend where we did do a little bit more prank things.
Like we snuck into Brandeis University and put up signs in the dorm saying,
please refrain from peeing in the washing machines.
And then just-
And then just imagined what would happen?
Yeah. So we'd watch people go up to these, watch music, and be like, oh, what are people doing?
Who would do that?
And you and your friend would just be giggling in the corner?
Yeah. And I'll say, meeting Carrie, I'm so glad that she has taken me away.
Like I needed to drop that like 41 years old.
Those days I'm glad to have Carrie's influence in my life to get me to be a
little bit more sane.
But what about the immersive theater?
The choose your own adventure station by station.
I mean,
I'm,
I can't,
I can't say that I fully understand what it is you're describing.
But do you have anything like that in your life now?
No, not really.
What do you want to give your own children as gifts?
Endoscopes and such?
I don't know.
So I made my daughter like this fairy tree dollhouse.
I try to be thoughtful with them in different ways,
but we'll eventually get to the point as they get older that I'm going to
want to give them weird things.
Yeah.
And Carrie,
how do you feel about Stephen giving your,
your children weird things in the future?
I think that's fine.
Again,
he,
he can do what he wants.
Um,
I think it's just me having to pose for a picture with a stranger and sent it to my family
that feels like I'm not really interested in that. I don't really think it's funny. So, you know,
having to sign off on something so big. When he hands your six-year-old on Christmas morning,
a paper grizzly bear filled with a centrifuge full of polonium or something.
You're going to be okay with that?
Sure.
All right.
It's just this one thing.
This one thing.
The photo with Carl.
Carrie, if there were some way to automatically link the card or for you to simply easily and automatically refer everyone to this podcast as a matter of explanation.
If there was something on the back of the card to say, confused, call this number.
And we set up like an internet number that just played this podcast so that you didn't have to take the burden of this? Would that change
it? If you knew that anyone who was confused could find an answer to their question without
talking to you, would that change your opinion? Perhaps, but I think it comes down to what's
the point of doing this at all? You know, like is the point is for Steve because he thinks it's funny? Is it funny if it's automatically explained through a QR code? I don't know if it's even accomplishing its original goal at that point. Because like, what is the point?
And I apologize as the judge of this proceedings.
So I now pose it to you, Steve, and I want you to really think of it because this is your closing argument.
What is the point of anything?
Specifically, what is the point of this card?
Do you acknowledge that it will confuse people?
Yes, I acknowledge that it will confuse people, but I believe that someone can be confused and happy and excited at the same time and that it's not a prank it's a challenge of like okay
this is a weird thing that's happening i gotta figure this out what's happening i know they put
a total stranger on their christmas card that's so weird. And itself, like, I don't think just that
is the greatest joke that's ever been, but for the effort it takes to do it, it's a good enough joke
that's going to make a lot of people enough happy to make me happy about it.
What will make you, what will make you happy? How, how will,
what feedback will you need in order to be happy?
Just that enough people found it moderately entertaining.
Like, again, I know it's not going to be like people are going to be on the floor dying laughing, but I think it's just going to be like, you know, somewhat brightens people today. And I don't think I'm some sort of like angel of spreading goodwill to somebody that I have to
brighten everybody's day with like ridiculous things. But I just imagine that they're going
to get this card and that's just going to be a silly thing. And it's something that they'll
remember and, and just be a unique experience for them. Do you believe that Carrie does not
know her own family that she misrepresents or misforecasts
how they're going to react to this?
Her extended family,
I think she's getting kind of right a little bit,
that they might react poorly.
I think that she doesn't know her friends,
which I would also say are my friends
because I've known them for 10 years as well,
and I've gotten close with their husbands in certain ways.
So I think all of her friends will love it.
Carrie, do other people in your family send you Christmas cards?
Yes, people in my family send Christmas cards regularly.
You haven't sent Christmas cards in the past?
Correct. We've never done a Christmas card.
Why not?
We've never posed for family photos. So this would be a very new thing. We've never done anything like that before.
Would you like to send a non-joke Christmas card? You've been together 10 years and haven't done it so far.
and haven't done it so far?
I'm open to doing that.
It's not something I have to do.
I haven't been asking to do that.
I think it's a nice thing to do,
but it's not necessary in my opinion.
Steven, do you think the joke works if you haven't sent straight Christmas cards in the past?
It doesn't work as well.
It would have been nice to have a history
of regular Christmas cards,
but it has to be now.
It has to be now? It has to be now?
It has to be now. Our kids are in peak cuteness. I think after a certain few years, our daughter
is, it would be less okay to explain to our daughter what's happening. And we're recording
this podcast. So our friends are going to find out about this eventually anyways, and ruin the joke.
Okay. Not to add more work then, but just trying to find a solution.
Carrie, I know what Stephen wants me to rule in case I were to rule,
to make and send the card. It says so right here in front of me.
If I were to rule in your favor, you've requested A, that Stephen acknowledge that this is a selfish
idea, and B, that if he wants to express himself through a Christmas card, there are more mainstream ways to do so. Would it be more acceptable to you if
Steven made the Carl card happen and he personally sent it only to an approved friend list that left
out family members that you thought would be confused or dismayed by this? Would that be appropriately
mainstream? I don't know what mainstream means in this term, but that'd be a compromise that
you would accept. I think I'm open to that compromise because it's easier to explain to
friends. But I just, I don't know if that's what he wants. It's not, the vision is not for that.
Steven, what do you think about this vision?
About your compromise?
Yeah.
What is your opinion on it?
I at least would want to send it to her parents and her sister.
Because they're people that I've gotten really close with.
I think I've heard everything I need to in order to make my decision.
I'm going to go to my chambers and consider my verdict.
I'll be back in a moment with my ruling.
Please rise as Judge John Hodgman exits the courtroom.
Carrie, how are you feeling?
I guess I'm nervous because I feel like, like I said, I'm not the most excited if we go ahead with this.
But I also know that I will trust the judge's verdict.
Stephen, how do you feel?
I'm feeling oddly optimistic.
I was expecting to be a little bit more going after, you know, make fun of Stephen, the weird guy thing here.
going after, you know, make fun of Stephen, the weird guy thing here. But I still, though, like,
I think past court precedents doesn't fall in my favor here. So I came into this knowing that I had a long way to go, and I don't think I did it. Stephen, you know that the joke is better
if you actually, like, hire someone from Craigslist or something, use their actual first name and what's actually happened to them this year, right?
I did think about Craigslist, but I was worried about getting a different kind of Carl than I wanted.
So you were going to cast specifically for people named Carl?
No.
I mean, Craigslist is the place to do it.
Hey, Craig from Craigslist, Judge John Hodgman listener, shout out.
I'll buzzmark a Craigslist all day.
All right, Victoria, BC residents, if John says that we can do this, check Craigslist for my gigs posting.
We'll see what Judge Hodgman has to say about all this when we come back in just a second.
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.
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.
Were 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.
Ah, we are so close.
Stop podcasting yourself.
A podcast from MaximumFun.org.
If you need a laugh and you're on the go.
MaximumFun.org.
If you need a laugh, then you're on the go.
Judge Hodgman, we're taking a quick break from the case.
Let's talk about what we've got upcoming.
Well, as you know, Dicktown is still available on Hulu and will always be available on Hulu, I'm glad to say.
Both seasons are up there at Hulu.com or on the Hulu app on your phone, tablet, or smart TV.
Just tell your smart speaker, as we were told by public radio all the time now tell your smart speaker hey siri play dicktown on hulu does that work
i don't know my phone's doing something
yeah if you have an apple tv it works it turns out uh by the way i used my apple tv to watch
confess fletch which is the new fletch movie from greg mottola starring john ham and eugene
merman and a lot of other really great actors and i found it absolutely charming and funny and oh
roy wood jr's in it one of the greatest funny people of all time. So funny. Who's so great in this movie.
And, you know, this is the kind of movies that they're not making anymore.
Not just Fletch movies, but just sort of like.
Movies that John Hodgman could potentially appear in.
Yeah.
Look, I was in New England when they were shooting it.
I didn't get the call.
That's fine.
I'm really happy for them all.
And Jon Hamm's really funny in it.
And just fun, breezy, whodunit that you used to go and see in the movie theater
and now you can see it online
anywhere you get your movies
and the last thing I'm going to say
is this some very important words
Jean Grey has a Patreon
that's right I'm going to repeat it
Jean Grey has a Patreon
you know Jean Grey
she's a guest bailiff on this show
from her many many different
songs and musics and videos
and actings and Dicktown she plays Monica on Dicktown.
She's one of the smartest, funniest, sweetest people.
You know who Jean Grey is.
I don't need to tell you this.
Get over to that Patreon because she's got a whole bunch of new content up there that's
so great.
And she's also relaunched her Church of the Infinite You Sunday sermon sessions, which
are so legitimately beautiful and wonderful and fun.
That's J-E-A-N-G-R-A-E.
Jean Gray has a Patreon.
Jesse, what do you have coming on?
Well, we've had some really great guests lately on Jordan, Jesse Go,
my other comedy podcast, including the great Judy Greer,
who's one of the most delightful human beings on earth.
She led us into a great discussion of what the main animals are. We just had Chris Estrada, who is the creator of the wonderful television show, This Fool.
Oh, I watched that. It was based on your recommendation. It. Patton Oswalt on the program, one of the funniest guys in the world, obviously.
So go check out Jordan Jesse Go.
I think you'll enjoy it.
Bear in mind, it does have a lot of swearing in it, not for children, but very warm hearted.
Yeah.
We'll be back in just a second on the Judge John Hodgman podcast.
Please rise as Judge John Hodgman re-enters
the courtroom and presents his verdict. Stephen, you said something that struck me
a little bit ago. You're like, I'm not an angel. I don't expect people to think that I'm an angel,
but I'm going to say something to you, Stephen. And I don't say this to a lot of people. You are an angel.
I absolutely, look, I've seen a lot of joke Christmas cards. When I go to the little grocery store, the Lee's grocery store, they always put up the Christmas cards that they get
from their customers. And I always feel very ashamed because I've never sent them a Christmas
card or given them a holiday card of any kind. But Mr. And Mrs. Lee always put them up. There's
this one family that does a
different amazing joke christmas card every year and so one year they do this and it's like a a
dad and a mom and two little kids and they'll dress up in jedi robes uh or they'll do this
amazing recreation of a of a spy movie poster or something like that. And I enjoy them very much. The dad
has a beard, obviously. We're in Park Slope. And it's very, very clearly his project
because he's always featured very prominently. And the mother and the two kids always look
fairly happy, but also trapped.
Trapped in the fantasy of this dad.
And I was concerned that you were going to be one of these dads who was just going to try to subvert the sincerity because of a self-consciousness around the fact that I'm no longer a crazy college kid who's putting up stickers in Brandeis' laundry room anymore, whatever it is.
That's not who you are
Stephen you are an angel everything changed when I saw those photos of those paper armadillos
and tardigrades and and and giraffe and double reindeer and coelacanth. I mean, Holy moly.
I mean, Carrie, you know what you got with this guy, right? An angel,
like the care that you are putting into these gifts for these nieces is so
astonishing. And I, and, and, and the gifts themselves are so weird,
but in such a nice way, I mean, truly in a, in a, in a really funny way. Like
this is not a trick. This is not a gag that you're playing on your nieces. Like it's obvious that,
that you care about them a lot and you want to share your, your weird preoccupations with them in a vuncular way,
it's an adjectival form of uncle,
that I think is really caring and really sharing,
and you care and share so much that you don't even mind
sending them chemicals that could burn their skin
or cause some respiratory irritation.
I was never, ever going to shame you for your weird,
your Stephen, because I think this is, this is an expression. What you're, what you sent to your nieces is an expression of true, truly generous, weird and true generosity because what they are getting and what you are making your single set of parents recreate when you send them the instructions. These are works of art that take time.
You know, you really deserve credit for this, but this joke,
this Christmas card, this Carl card,
I got to draw a distinction between a joke and a prank.
I really laughed at that video made by that prank card company.
When I realized that the,
the endless loop of
Meowie Christmas that you could not turn off when you opened that card had a
second gag within it that once you tear up the card in frustration,
glitter pours out.
That is truly deliciously funny and evil.
But if I ever got that card in the mail, I would be really mad.
That would not make me happy. There are people who enjoy getting pranked, but over the decade plus of doing the Judge John
Hodgman podcast, I've really, really leaned into if it's not fun for everybody, it's not fun at all.
Like dad jokes that cause confusion at highway toll collection booths, ordering Kung Pao chicken from your toll collector or telling your server jokes that make no sense when you have captive audiences, be they waiters or your own family.
I just don't care for it. I just don't care for it.
I just don't care for the pranks anymore.
And you know, too.
I mean, on some level, you understand that you are, to paraphrase Danny Glover, you are
too old for this feces.
You expressed happiness that Carrie has helped you move away from your days of stickering
the Brandeis laundry room.
And I have to say, the other thing is that even as a joke, this card, it's not a good joke. Sorry,
friend. Sorry. I mean, I'm going to get letters about all the people who have done this sort of
thing before. I mean, it was a decade ago that Monty Belmonte, summertime fun time guest bailiff Monty Belmonte, decided to send out the family Christmas card.
Now, Monty and his family do wonderful themed photos.
One year they all put on the kiss.
There were four of them.
There are now five of them.
But when there were just four, two parents and two kids, they put on elaborate kiss makeup, you know, for the band Kiss.
They looked amazing.
They do a themed holiday end of year card, New Year's card, whatever you want to call
it.
Every year, an amazing family portrait.
Our friends Matthew and Sarah do increasingly elaborate like junkie Sears portraits.
It's fun.
I get it.
And but, you know, it was more than a decade ago that Monty said this year we're going
to do a regular family portrait with John Hodgman in the background. We're not going to explain it
to anybody. Now there was a difference then 10 years ago, some people knew who I was. It wasn't
like, it wasn't exactly like, who's that Carl. It was more like, how'd you get that minor television
personality in your photo? I think that this has been done before. This is just a comedy critique, Stephen. I've
already called you an angel. I really believe it. I'm just saying from just a pure comedy,
I think that this feels like a joke that was developed 10 years ago and should have been
put into action at that time. I feel that having the bios of the family, including Carl,
is what we call in comedy a hat on a hat or a joke on a joke.
I think it would be funnier just to have no mention of Carl whatsoever and not even name him Carl.
That's just that would be my suggestion.
Then it gets it's a little bit slipperier and more funny, in my opinion.
And the fact that you were going to do a bio of carl and all you know is that he
plays canadian pickleball you didn't after 10 years you had not developed a full biography of
carl i have to say i i mean it would it would have to be a really and this is just to say
it's cool but it would have to be a really really really really good joke for me to second guess my basic instinct, 90s movie,
which is tricking people is no fun. Sharing your weirdness is fun. Weird is inappropriately
pejorative. I think being weird is a wonderful quality. I would venture to say that
Carrie loves you in part for your weirdness and let the record show that Carrie has reluctantly
nodded. Sharing your weirdness is a wonderful thing, but tricking people is not so much fun.
I don't know whether you feel this way, but one of the things that I was feeling when
I proposed the idea that you send the Carl card to your friend group, but send a traditional
Christmas card to everybody.
And you're like, I still want her parents to see it.
I still want her sister to see it.
That my feeling was like, I still want her parents and sister to see it. I still want her sister to see it. That my feeling was like, I still want
her parents and sister to see me. Carrie, you married a weird dude. You can't hide it forever.
Eventually they're all going to figure out just how deep it goes. Putting aside the obvious fact
that this prank would also put an undue burden on Carrie to explain not only herself, but you to her extended family.
Putting aside the fact that it would force her to sit in a photo shoot with your kids who may be made to feel uncomfortable by a stranger.
Putting aside the fact that she's going to have to write out all these things because your handwriting is terrible and you won't get a printer.
There is ultimately the truth that this is a trick and not a joke.
And therefore, I cannot allow it.
Not now.
Not ever.
You need to find a way.
And I know that you can. To share your weirdness in the same generous and expressive and truly weird way you share it with your nieces.
Carrie, you can't hide this from your grandma and grandpa.
They got to get a tardigrade in the mail.
You know what I mean?
They got to get a coelacanth.
Okay.
I mean, truly, you know, I'm looking at a photo here of at least a dozen paper ladybugs that you made.
Correct, Stephen?
This is your handiwork?
Yep.
So I know that you're capable of producing in volume.
I don't think ladybugs are weird enough. frankly, to cutesy. This is not the solution. It's up to you to find a solution that is as generous and shows your true, your true angelic inspiration.
the Carl card is not a great joke, but something new that you create some paper sculpture that you're going to send to weird out, not only your in-laws, your close in-laws, but the whole extended
family to really let them know who carried married. It's going to be amazing. He's going to weird them
right out. And it won't be a trick or a joke. It'll be, this is
who I am.
And the benefit is, you're
going to have to make all this stuff. If you want to do it,
it's up to you. You've got to do it.
You can do that
or not.
But as far as, that's my
advice, but as far as my ruling,
Karl Card is out.
This is the sound of a gavel.
Meow, meow, meow, meow, meow, meow, meow, meow, meow, meow, meow, meow, meow, meow, meow, meow.
Judge John Hodgman rules that is all.
Please rise as Judge John Hodgman exits the courtroom.
Carrie, you're largely vindicated. Are you prepared to share your husband's weirdness with the full breadth of your family?
I'm very thankful for the ruling.
I wasn't expecting it, to be honest.
I feel like things were moving in Steve's favor.
And I think that once we move on from this card, which has been a focus for a long time,
that Steve can find a way that's more personal and weird to express himself
and I'll support him. Steve, it's clear that you're capable of creating great beauty. Are you
already brainstorming ways to combine beauty, weirdness, and the spirit of the holidays?
No, I don't want to. I think I'm out of the making the holidays a weird game. I've been thoroughly convinced to drop that.
No, that's not.
Stephen, my angel.
You've been ordered to make the holidays weird.
Yeah, keep Stephen weird.
That's not it at all.
Don't put that on me.
How dare you?
I find you in contempt of court.
You heard my ruling.
It was clear.
So I have to send them weird Christmas gifts.
I thought it was just like just any,
any old time,
send them a weird paper animal thing.
However you choose to do it,
express your weirdness.
Just don't trick your family.
I want them to see you.
I don't want them to be confused by you.
Chances are they're already confused by you.
Right. Well, to answer Jesse's question, I'm not currently brainstorming these ways, but I know inspiration will strike when I least expect it. And I will go with it as long as Kerry approves.
Kerry, Stephen, thanks for joining us on the Judge John Hodgman podcast.
Thank you for having us.
Thank you.
John Hodgman podcast.
Thank you for having us. Thank you.
Another Judge John Hodgman case is in the books.
In a moment, we'll have swift justice.
First, our thanks to Twitter user at Tim Kinnitz for naming this week's episode Persona
Non Carta.
We also want to shout out friends of the show, Linda Holmes and Dan McCoy for some good titles
this week.
Linda suggested you'll never guess who this dude is.
Thank you, Linda.
Y-U-L-E.
Yeah.
And Dan's suggestion was, what Chad is this?
This is really like, this is what Dan was born to do.
Yeah.
Half joke puns.
If you want to name a future episode, follow us on Twitter for naming opportunities at Yeah. at MaximumFun.reddit.com. Evidence and photos from the show are posted on our Instagram account.
That's Instagram.com slash Judge John Hodgman, as well as at MaximumFun.org on the episode page.
John, I just started clicking around the nuclear products website. And if you've got $15 burning a hole through your pocket, I cannot recommend enough buying radioactive uranium-doped marbles.
This can't be okay.
This can't be okay.
It's not my recommendation.
That's if you've got $15 burning a hole through your pocket
and you want some marbles burning a hole through your pocket.
Right, I was going to say.
Our producer is Jennifer Marmer.
Our editor is Valerie Moffitt.
Now, Swift Justice,
where we answer your small disputes
with a quick judgment.
Twitter user at the Daryl says,
I think an unopened toothbrush
is fine to buy at a yard sale.
My friend thinks this is horrifying.
That's horrifying,
but not because of germs. Because the toothbrush is unopened, but because I can't, I don't want to think about the horrifying story of how an unopened toothbrush ends up being sold at a yard sale.
For sale.
Yeah.
Toothbrush never used.
It's just too sad. It's too sad to contemplate if you have a holiday dispute for us and we're including all of those winter holidays christmas
i'm not i'm not going to include christmas i'd love to hear about your non-christmas holiday
disputes christmas gets a lot of coverage
but I'm there are a lot a lot of other holidays out there let's hear your Saturnalia disputes
you just took the word Saturnalia right out of my mouth New Year's or if you have an anniversary
around the holidays what if you have your birthday on Christmas like and that's a that's that's always
a thing that happens and Ricky Henderson, right in.
Yeah. And if you've got a Christmas dispute and you think it's just the greatest,
go ahead and send it in too. It's fine. Maybe a miracle will happen.
That's it. Maximumfund.org slash JJHO. And look, you don't need to have a special dispute.
Send your half-baked dispute. We'll take any dispute at MaximumFun.org slash JJHO. MaximumFun.org
slash JJHO. We'll talk to you next time on the Judge John Hodgman Podcast.