Judge John Hodgman - RERUN: Dad Nauseam
Episode Date: July 5, 2023This week, we're revisiting a certified Judge John Hodgman classic: DAD NAUSEAM! Daniel brings the case against his dad, Kevin. He says Kevin overuses the same joke with service industry workers, whic...h the rest of the family finds embarrassing. Kevin thinks it’s a funny joke that brightens people’s day. Who's right?
Transcript
Discussion (0)
Welcome to the Judge John Hodgman podcast. I'm bailiff Jesse Thorne.
We've got a corker for you this week. One of our all time favorite episodes, Dad Nauseam.
A corker is correct, Jesse. Hey, if you've ever wondered why we often talk about ordering Kung
Pao chicken on this podcast, this is the episode for you because this is the origin of the phrase.
I'll have the Kung Pao chicken.
It was originated by a guy named Kevin, one of our amazing roster of weird dads on the show.
He might be the greatest weird dad of all time.
If it weren't for that one weird dad who was obsessed with cows.
That's true.
Every time he saw a cow, he would say cow.
But that's another episode.
In this episode, Daniel brings his father, Kevin, to the court asking us to prohibit him from asking for Kung Pao chicken at toll booths and other places. It is a really special one. We are glad
to share it with you. And if you heard this one the first time all those years ago, well, it's
time for you to hear it again.
If you didn't hear it before, well, you're in for a treat.
Let's go to the courtroom for dad nauseam.
Welcome to the Judge John Hodgman podcast.
I'm bailiff Jesse Thorne.
This week, dad nauseam.
Daniel brings the case against his dad, Kevin. He says Kevin overuses the same joke with service industry workers, which the rest of the family finds embarrassing.
Kevin thinks it's a funny joke that brightens people's day.
Who's right? Who's wrong? Only one man can decide.
Please rise as Judge John Hodgman enters the courtroom and presents his obscure cultural reference.
I have a little donkey I never ride one day I go to the fair.
Whim Road in my memory has never been such a hot summer day.
May not be 38 degrees early in the morning, 5 o'clock.
Eating biscuits, happiness is the law.
Fritters went plowing through day by day. I love
the simple pleasure of feeling like a hot and spicy Kung Pao chicken. Choose a good piece of
chicken with a little chopped green onion, garlic, chili, peanut. Plus, do not forget, I came to town
with Market, my big chicken. Mimi bustling, trading in the crowd. You're like an angel,
appeared in a dream.
Wearing a floral dress, you made me laugh at first sight. I love that feeling of innocence.
Even if the sky is falling is not a problem. I just hope every day with what you do together
at home, can I just want you to be my baby? I do not care if you send Missy Temper with me
or you love to play the game. Ooh, you're my baby, ooh, love is
like Kung Pao chicken lying, prairie I'm lost in your eyes. Bailiff Jesse Thorne, swear them in.
Please rise and raise your right hands. Do you swear to tell the truth,
the whole truth, and nothing but the truth, so help you God, or whatever?
I do. I do.
you God or whatever. I do. I do. Do you swear to abide by Judge John Hodgman's ruling despite the fact that he only eats at joke restaurants? I do. I do. Very well, Judge Hodgman. Daniel and Kevin,
you may be seated for an immediate summary judgment in one of yours favors can either you, Daniel, or you, Kevin, guess the piece of culture
that I quoted directly as I entered the courtroom. Kevin, you are the dad. You have been brought
here against your will by your son, Daniel. You can either guess first or force Daniel to guess
first and thus perhaps gain information from his guess. What is your choice? I will force Daniel to guess first and thus perhaps gain information from his guess?
What is your choice? I will force Daniel to guess. All right, Daniel, do you think
you will be able to guess correctly? I'll try. Okay. Well, let me ask you, did you
hear the quote? I sure did. Great. That was only half of the quote. Okay.
Would it help you to hear the rest? Okay, please.
Okay, good.
Love is like Kung Pao chicken lying prairie.
I'm lost in your eyes.
My heart is like a broken kite wandering.
I really have you.
I cannot believe I'm often hard-binging myself
to see if I was awake.
Oh, baby, I do not.
Why, fancy, I know I have no money to send you.
Hello, kitty.
Can everything I gave you all I love you
because dear daddy bear, his sweetheart to marry me, have no money to send you. Hello, kitty. Can everything I gave you, all I love you, because
dear daddy bear, his sweetheart to marry me, I think he seemed a little upset I did not have
a Mercedes, but I did not ring willing to give you my beloved chicken. I do not stick together
every day to tell you what to do at home. Can I just want you to be my baby, please,
my little chickadee? I do not care if you send Missy Temper or you. I keep playing
the game of love. Ooh, you're my baby. I just hope every day with you do not do anything at home.
Can I just want you to be my baby? I do not care if you send Missy Temper or you love to play games
with me. Ooh, you're my baby. Now Now do you get it?
Okay, my guess, just going from previous experience here,
is it's a Mountain Goats lyric to a song that I don't know.
Interesting guess.
Did you say Mountain Goats?
Yeah.
Kevin, just because he's your son doesn't mean that you run this place.
I run this place.
I am not saying whether or not it is or is not a mountain goat song,
but I am saying with some assurance that if it is not a mountain goat song,
it soon will be.
Excellent.
After I make a phone call after this podcast and email these lyrics to a person that I know has been on this podcast before. But now, Kevin, you have heard your son's guess. What is your guess?
So it's a song. Martha Stewart, Martha, Martha Stewart sings. I have no idea. I love hearing a dad joke being constructed in real time, though.
That was intense.
I'd like you to come back to that when you're ready, when you break the back of that joke and you figure out what Martha Stewart sings what.
I want you to let me know just at any time interrupt, because that's what dad jokes are
for.
But I can say with with assurance, even as you just half answered that all guesses are
wrong.
Jesse Thorne, of all guesses are wrong. Jesse
Thorne, of course, you know.
No.
Of course you do, Jesse. That's the song
Kung Pao Chicken
by Taiwanese singer-songwriter superstar
David Tao off his 2002
album Black Tangerine.
You know, I'm not much of a Tao head.
Really? Yeah.
I think there are probably some listeners who are really into David Tao, T-A-O.
But if not, please go to MaximumFun.org to the Judge John Hodgman page,
where we are going to be posting a recording of this song.
It's a really good song.
But since you both guessed incorrectly, we must now take up this case in earnest.
Daniel, you have taken your
father here to court to receive my justice because you accuse him of bothering service
people with the same joke. What is the joke, Daniel? Well, the joke is I'll have the Kung
Pao chicken. Ah, you see the connection. There is a connection, yeah. So what he'll do is,
regardless of where he is, the first thing he'll say to whoever's serving him is,
I'll have the kung pow chicken. Now this could be at a toll booth or, you know, the movie theater.
But you know what? It's getting really old and not just me.
Lots of people have gotten a little bit tired of it.
Kevin, do you really go to toll booths and say,
I'll have the Kung Pao chicken?
Yeah, that's one of my favorite.
You know, recently went to a theme park
and as I pulled up to the booth
and saw the exorbitant amount being charged,
I looked at him and I said, hmm, I'll have the Kung Pao chicken.
And I always get a hearty laugh and it doesn't get me in the parking free, but it gets a laugh.
You always, you always get 100% of the time get a hearty laugh, especially from the people who are imprisoned in booths.
I mean, a literal captive audience of one.
When you say a hearty laugh, are you referring to the laugh that you laugh after you say it?
Yeah, good point.
I hadn't thought of that interpretation.
Thank you, Bailiff Jesse. The joy of the Kung Pao line is it's the absolute opposite of what you would typically say.
And it sounds delightful, doesn't it?
Kung Pao.
I mean, it just is.
I don't know how my family isn't delighted by it and delighted to see the response out of those who are hearing it.
You did not answer my bailiff's question. Are you the one laughing or the person who
is trapped in a booth forced to deal with you laughing?
I think I will laugh if the recipient laughs. Not 100% of the time.
So basically you're saying you don't notice what they're doing at all.
Oh, I do.
Okay.
Daniel,
your father has claimed 100%
enjoyment of this joke time and time
again. Do you dispute that assertion?
I surely do.
Can you describe a time when your father
has requested the Kung Pao chicken
and it did not bring joy to the person who was attempting to take his toll or give him a parking ticket?
If I'm going to be generous, from what I've seen, I'll give him a 50-50 of, you know, the person maybe just smiling or the person just saying, wow, really?
Oh, man.
I think he has selective memory.
I think he remembers maybe the one person who actually laughed out loud,
and he paced that over every following encounter.
It's interesting.
So you are counter-asserting a 0% to 1% hardy laugh rate compared to his 100%.
And the truth has to be somewhere in the middle.
Yeah, hardy laugh is a strong term.
I mean, I'm thinking of a belly laugh.
Like your dad's enjoying right now.
Kevin, you have an infectious laugh. And I also have to say that when,
when you delivered the line in your dramatic recreation of your parking lot
experience, I kind of chuckled. It was pretty good delivery.
You've got to, you've got to be alive. You have to chuckle.
Do it again. Do I do? All right all right here let's role play it right now well you know
this is a this is a kind of interaction but let's just say i'm um what should i be bailiff jesse
thorne i don't know i'm a police officer okay who's pulled you over for speeding that's a good
one i bet i'd get off if I lay that on an officer.
How about this?
How about you've already gotten a ticket for speeding,
and now you're in my courtroom to dispute the ticket?
Okay?
So here we go.
Role play.
You ready, Kevin?
Okay.
In the case of Kevin versus the state, come forth.
Kevin, what do you have to say for yourself?
Your Honor, before we begin, can I have some Kung Pao chicken, fried rice?
You didn't do it right that time.
See, that I don't think...
You were on the spot.
You were on the spot there.
I don't think that was where I would use it.
Right.
Because... where I would use it. Right. Because? Because it needs to be so off the wall that it breaks the arduous tasks that the food
provider or the toll booth operator is experiencing.
Oh, so you're doing it as a favor to them?
Kind of.
Kind of. Okay. You're like a Johnny App a favor to them? Kind of. Kind of.
Okay.
You're like a Johnny Appleseed traveling the nation,
sowing mirth in our toll booths by tossing bond moths their way.
His folkloric name would not be Johnny Appleseed.
It would be Kung Pao Kevin.
I like that.
I was taking my daughter back to college one night, and we decided to get yogurt. And so we're in this long line, and the gal was just exhausted and just hating life.
So I get up there, look at the board, and say, hmm, I'll have the Kung Pao chicken.
And I tell you, she laughed and is still probably laughing to this day.
She's still probably laughing to this day?
She said, thank you for that.
You're saying that you broke her brain?
She's now institutionalized laughing.
All right.
I interrupted you, sir.
Go ahead.
She said, thank you for that.
She said, thank you for that.
That made my day.
And I said, well, you're welcome.
And my daughter, who is one of the, would be a plaintiff if she was here.
Right.
I said, Rachel, you have to admit, she got a kick out of that.
And she said, yeah, Papa.
So I think the good overwhelms the bad.
Do you acknowledge that there is bad?
There can be. I've said it, I can remember saying
that three or four straight times and the young food servers just looked at me. I think one looked
at me as if I was getting dementia and thought, oh, this poor guy doesn't know where he's at.
So I was really starting to think, well, maybe the family has a point.
But then I laid it on someone, and the hearty laugh pursued,
and it was like my meter was recharged, and it's back.
You got your Kung Pao groove back?
All right.
Daniel, how old is your dad?
Do you even know? 56. Pretty good. Pretty good. That's good. And Daniel, how old is your dad? Do you even know?
56.
Pretty good. Pretty good. That's good. And Daniel, how old are you?
I'm 28.
And you have at least one sister, sounds like, Rachel.
Correct. And a younger brother as well.
Where are you in the order?
I'm the oldest.
You're the oldest. So you're trying to lay down the law. It falls on me. Yeah.
To, to overthrow my father. Do you speak for all of the siblings? Well, it doesn't matter if you
do or not. You're the oldest. You tell them what to think. That's true. That's the truth. Right.
But no, yes. I've been kind of their appointed representative in this courtroom to, uh,
they've all wished you luck. You're their anti-Kung Pao proxy.
I can't tell you how much positive energy I've received
from many, many different people wishing me luck in this case.
Oh, really?
Do you have like a petition that you've had signatures?
It might as well be.
You're talking about your brother and your sister,
but anyone else?
My brother, my sister, coworkers, my stepmom, my, yeah, it goes on and on.
Your coworkers?
Correct.
So I work with Kevin.
We work in the mortgage industry, real estate.
And no wonder you're such a barrel of laughs.
The people we work with have heard the Kung Pao just as often as, I mean, the rest of us, the family.
And what context are they hearing the Kung Pao line?
Mostly at our lunch, you know, if we'll go out and grab a bite.
All right.
So you are mortgage brokers?
Correct.
Is your mortgage brokery called Kevin and Dan?
Kevin and Dan's Mortgage?
No.
I wish.
That's a good idea.
Is it called Father and Son Mortgage?
It could be here soon.
Is it called Kung Pao?
Kung Pao Finance Factory.
There we go.
Kung Pao Finance Factory.
Holy cats.
That is a brand I would love to buzz market. Kung Pao Finance Factory. Holy cats. That
is a brand I would love
to buzz market. I don't think I would
trust that outfit.
Are you kidding me, you guys?
If I had a choice
between
universal mortgage,
which is, I think, the place where I got my
mortgage,
and Kung Pao Finance Factory.
You're going universal.
Are you kidding me?
I go to KPFF.
We can abbreviate it.
Bailiff Jesse Thorne.
Are you with me on this or no?
Yeah, I'm with you.
Kung Pao Finance Factory.
This, here's your tagline. Kung Pao Finance Factory, this, here's your tagline.
Kung Pao Finance Factory.
It's not your father's mortgage company.
It's my father's mortgage company.
Kill me.
Kill me.
It's just a tag.
I'm just, look, I'm brainstorming here.
I'm just trying to help you out.
Let's take a quick break to hear about this week's sponsors.
More dad nauseam when we return.
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Kevin, where are you guys located?
We're in Irvine, California.
Irvine, California.
All right.
And how long have you guys been in business?
Kevin?
Twenty-five years.
And when did Daniel join the business?
Daniel joined, what, about six years ago.
My son was an English lit major and decided he didn't want to teach.
So welcome to the business, son.
But he's done great. It must be fun to have your son working with you.
It is. It is. Is he doing a good job or is he kind of on probation?
That's a great job. This business has gotten pretty arduous.
But what's going on in the mortgage
industry that makes it so hard? You know, the bubble was blamed on us to some extent.
You personally? Yeah, me personally. We deserve some of it, I guess. But
the regulation and the minutiae is just mind-boggling.
You mean since the financial collapse?
Yeah.
Or near financial collapse, right.
It's gotten a little more challenging.
If I were to come into your office, Kevin, and I'm like, hey, I'd like to get a mortgage.
Would you Kung Pao me?
Would you go like, hey, yeah, well, I'd like the Kung Pao chicken.
So what are we going to do?
We'll meet somewhere in the middle.
No, I mean, if it were, let's say Daniel was saying this line.
I think I would love, I know it's coming.
I would love to see the reaction of the person on the other side of the counter.
Can I say something here?
Well, you're there when you're saying it.
Hang on a second, Daniel.
You're there when you're saying it.
Aren't you observing the reaction when you talk to your pal?
I am.
I am, and I guess I'm miffed at the families and friends discussed by it
because I can understand that they've heard it to nauseam. However, it's a gauge upon the
person across the counter's zest for life. In other words, I've had some waitresses and waiters
take it the whole nine yards. Would you like fried rice with that? Would you like chow mein?
They come back and say, how's your chow mein? I mean, they just play it the whole way through. And those servers get a nice 25, 30% gratuity,
where if someone just looks at me with a blank stare, they're down to 15%.
That's actually how I deal, John. I don't know if you know this. That's actually how I deal with
audiences when we're doing live shows. 15% gratuity for audiences who don't laugh at my dumb jokes
and up to 35% for those who really bust a gut.
I'm going for it.
How did I do?
So your joke is not merely to entertain and break the tedium
of these people whose jobs you believe are boring and unfulfilling, which you have observed by telepathy, but also to test them as human beings as to whether they are worthy of you.
Look, I don't mean to put words in your mouth, but that's exactly what you're saying.
Daniel.
Yes.
How long has Kung Pao been going on? Oh God. Uh, probably 10 years longer than that. He says, Kevin, I like how you come
to your own defense on that one. Where did you, where is this your, is this a joke of your own
devising or how did this, how did it come up? Do you remember how it started?
Yeah, I think it was probably about 20 years ago.
You know how a food server will have a trainee with them.
And I remember this gal introducing, let's call her Sharon, and saying, Sharon's going to take your order now.
So I thought I would, you know, play with Sharon a bit.
And when it came to me, I ordered the Kung Pao chicken and we were probably at an Italian restaurant. Well, anyway, she looked confused. And then you gave
her a 15% tip. No, I don't remember that. And you'll let your father finish his story. All
right. But I, I thought it was well-received by both trainer and trainee and the table.
But how do you, I mean, look, I know like if you're a writer or a comedian or a songwriter, it's like how you, how you get stricken with a particular line.
It might, it might be difficult to remember exactly what went through your brain, but how did you say, I want to ask her for Kung Pao Chicken?
How did you settle on Kung Pao Chicken?
What was the spark?
First of all, I really like Kung Pao Chicken.
It's a delicious entree.
And then.
So you're saying if the toll booth operator happened to have some Kung Pao Chicken, you wouldn't be above paying that toll booth operator for the chicken, then consuming that chicken.
Frankly, that would merit a 1000% tip if a toll booth operator played along to the point that they actually gave you their Kung Pao chicken.
Well, yeah.
I mean, can you imagine if you, I don't know if I can mention the theme park.
Go ahead.
It was Disneyland. Right. It's 18 for pete's sake
to park your car there so i almost expect some kung pao chicken with that and and isn't that a
little pricey but anyway that's how i feel when i pay my tax bill those spendocrats better get me
some kung pao chicken but it wouldn't be the same if I said give me the general chow chicken or something
in Kung Pao the well it's got a good it rolls off the tongue is what you're saying yeah there
is a certain genius to it and you know you know the Kung Pao chicken is named for the
late Qing dynasty governor of Sichuan province, Ding Baozhen,
whose title was Gong Bao, which is literally palace guardian.
And it is perhaps the most popular Sichuan dish that exists.
And since 2005, you can actually get authentic Kung Pao chicken in this country.
Do you know why?
No, why?
Daniel, do you know why?
No. Sichuan pepperc do you know why? No.
Sichuan peppercorns, you guys.
Sichuan peppercorns are the numbing pepper that you get in authentic Sichuan cuisine,
which was banned from import between 1968 and 1990, excuse me, 2005.
And now you can actually get the real thing again.
And frankly, I want to get some tonight because I'm thinking about this
Kung Pao chicken so much. Maybe I'll go to a parking lot or to a bagel store or go to the
subway booth, go to the token booth at the subway and ask for some and maybe I'll get some.
Speaking of numbing, this catchphrase is pretty numbing. There's a lot I have to address here.
All right. I will let you have your say, Daniel.
Well, okay.
Now I can see that there's some humor in the Kung Pao chicken.
I think it's probably unrealistic to get him to never say it again.
And I know that you have a strong precedent for wacky dads and their weird behavior.
But context is what's important here.
We've been out to sushi before where he's
asked the waiter for some Kung Pao chicken. And the waiter was a little bit baffled thinking
that was an error. Do you think all Asian food is the same? Is that what he said or that's what you?
That's what I could just, there was just an awkward silence. And, you know, everyone else
at the table, we're counting down how long until we jump silence and, you know, everyone else at the
table, we're counting down how long until we jump in and apologize and say, don't worry, we're sorry.
And did I hear a little quiet acknowledgement from Kevin there? Did you just say that was an
error, Kevin? You did, Your Honor. That was an error in judgment. And I don't do that anymore.
I don't believe. You don't go into sushi restaurants?
I don't go into sushi or obviously anything closely related.
And for years, I worked as a waiter at a certain Australian fried onion themed restaurant.
Just say it's Cheesecake Factory.
Yeah, Cheesecake Factory, right.
Let me ask you a question.
Was this restaurant In Front Meat Shack?
Was that the name of the place?
That's exactly what it was.
It was the In Front Meat Shack right next to Kung Pao Finance Factory.
Two new t-shirts, by the way.
We got to get on that right away.
I like it.
But, you know, chain i like it but you know chain
restaurants like that you know they have kind of eclectic menus they'll have you know stuff like
that if i'm having a rough day and i'm dealing with some real terrible customers and then if
you're in the weeds right lingo and then someone asked me seriously like with for the kong kai
chicken i'll maybe you know maybe I wouldn't recognize it at first.
Maybe it's, oh, do you mean the spicy Diablo chicken or whatever it could be.
And just knowing that right there, that my gratuity, even if I had excellent service, would go down.
You don't know that.
No, but if I did, I would be offended.
That's a secret your dad is deviously keeping to himself.
That's what I'm saying.
It's a, this just, it's just not worth it.
There is no gut-busting belly laughs.
At most, it's a smile or a chuckle or just a, hey, you got me.
We don't serve Kung Pao chicken.
At worst, it's just an awkward, befuddling, jarring experience while he
waits for the person to catch on and laugh, which never happens. The trade-off is not worth it.
Risk versus reward. Now you broke in there, Kevin, to say you don't know that I am silently judging
you along my own weird Kung Pao chicken criteria.
Exactly.
And that your tip is going up and down, fluctuating according to my own sick whim at any given moment.
Because you're keeping that secret to yourself.
But I think it's fair to say that whether or not you are there, whether or not you have revealed your fluctuating sliding scale, every
person who has ever served food in a dining establishment that relies on tips by necessity
has to feel that they're being silently judged all the time because they usually are. Whether
or not it's you testing them with your joke or another diner just testing them with their
speediness and their knowledge
of the menu.
Isn't that right, Daniel?
That's correct.
But when you're a waiter, you live in fear, do you not?
Oh, I still, no, I still wake up in a cold sweat sometimes.
Yeah.
Listen to the maniacal laugh of your father.
It's not the knowledge that I'm being judged.
It's that I'm being judged for laughing at a joke that is barely funny.
That's it.
Wow.
Kevin, have you waited tables?
I have never.
You have never.
Have you sold yogurt in a college town?
No.
Have you worked in a toll booth?
No. Have you worked in a toll booth? No. Have you worked the parking lot
at Disneyland? No. What jobs have you had aside from Kung Pao Finance Factory?
Like when you were growing up, like when you were in high school, summer jobs, that kind of stuff, you lawn work, you do.
It was usually janitorial. Uh, I, I,
I cleaned the bakery during the wee hours when they weren't bacon and stuff
like that. And so I,
I know this, the food service people live off these tips, and that is very important to them.
But it baffles me that they go about their business mummified or in a coma.
That's what they have to do to live.
They could be having a bad day, but don't they realize their tips would be and their income would be proportional to how they interact with their customer?
So if they see me throw out this line, obviously, I'm a character.
Play with me.
Like a cat plays with a ball of yarn.
And you'll get a good gratuity.
Okay.
Now, if it were me, I would recognize that it was a joke.
And I would probably have to fake laugh at that joke, and wipe a fake tear from my eye, and die a little bit
inside, just because I'm trying to make the tips. Wow, that's really... You lose a little bit of
yourself every time you have an interaction like that. You really do. Surely this is not the first
time your son has explained this to you. Judge, this is new to me. I mean, I didn't realize that
a piece of the soul was destroyed every time you said this. But you're laughing because you think
this is a huge exaggeration, but sir, let me tell you, it is not. And here's the thing. I completely understand and am sympathetic to you, weird dad Kevin,
because, look, I don't know you very well,
but I know that you have your own business,
which requires you to be social and interactive with your clients, right?
That's part of your job, right?
Yes, exactly.
And you have to have fun with them. You have to tell jokes and receive jokes. And
it's one of those sort of like handshaky type jobs. You know what I mean?
Exactly.
And then your other work experience that you were able to describe,
which was cleaning a bakery in the middle of the night. Like'm not i was in no way suggesting that you're unfamiliar
with hard work and and sort of drudged labor which we all have to do at times in our lives
you know what i mean but that was a profoundly anti-social job right correct and so you would
have loved to have some impish weird dad wander into your life and go,
I'd like to have some Kung Pao chicken.
I would have given you something to do at 2 a.m. in the bakery, a little mystery to solve.
How did that man get in here and what is he doing?
That would be great.
But service industry, a little bit different.
Wouldn't you say, Daniel?
A little bit.
Yeah.
I don't think it's an exaggeration to say that when you're serving multiple customers over and over and over again in a repetitive task,
people who are requesting service from you and you are obliged to give it no matter what they do,
and in fact, you are being silently judged because you have to, if it's a tipped-based job,
say like being a waiter or being a toll booth operator, you know that that's a tipped-based job, right? You get 20% on every toll.
You are a performer. You are essentially performing live theater for sequential
audiences of one to five. And yeah, you need to be in a rhythm in order to do that.
And it's hard to be thrown off your rhythm.
And I guess some people might enjoy it,
but other people very well may not
because all of a sudden you've got your own son, Daniel, going,
wait, wait, is Kung Pao Chicken on the menu?
I'm confused.
And now I have another thing to think about
along with all the other things I have to think about.
And maybe that you just didn't consider that.
Would you think that's fair, Weird Dad Kevin? You know, that has spoken so elegantly. I would agree with that. You could
be tempted to spit my food over that one. Oh, I didn't even consider that. Oh my gosh.
Kevin, I mean, you probably cannot comprehend the amount of non your saliva you have ingested.
Wow.
Over the years.
And I don't know what tollbooth operators are like in Irvine, California.
If I went through the New Hampshire Turnpike on my way to Maine and I dropped a Kung Pao chicken joke to one of those living monsters who live in the... One of those trained by other humans to become sociopaths lest they give up their entire life themselves.
Toll booth operators, man, I would get a stare so cold my heart would
immediately freeze and i would be on it and i would cease living you're talking a whole different
ball game it sounds like there yeah no that's that's i wouldn't risk it myself now judge one
other thing i want to bring up and really because it feels like I've kind of made your case for you here, Daniel.
Well, let me pile it on here. I got a lot riding on this.
I don't like piling on dads. I'm not sure what you have riding on it. What is it that you're ordering me to do exactly?
I'm just saying.
If you win this case, if I find in your favor, what is my order? I'll let you bring up your other point,
but I want to get this down out there right now.
Obviously, the most agreeable to me would be
an immediate cease and desist on the Kung Pao line.
Oh, man.
What bothers you more,
the joke being repeated over and over again
or the joke existing at all?
What bothers me the most is not even that he does the joke over and over again.
And he does it when, you know, none of us are around.
He'll do it just by himself.
What bothers me is that he knows that it irks us so much
that it causes us such discomfort that he'll even tell us
about the times he used it when we weren't there and the response he got.
He reads you his Kung Pao chicken joke diary?
Pretty much.
Pretty much.
He'll come home and say, oh, you should have been there.
I ordered a burrito.
I asked for the Kung Pao chicken.
The kid, his face lit up.
Oh, you should have been there.
It was great.
And we're forced to relive this moment over and over, even when we are not there.
It's rough.
Do you ever suspect that your father is lying?
Oh, no doubt.
No doubt.
I know that you guys didn't see the snuffleupagus of everybody enjoying my joke.
I swear he was right here.
It just happened
it might not necessarily have to be characterized as a lie judge hodgman i mean it could be
that he's seeing the world through laugh colored glasses no it's not it's not so much that
he doesn't it's it's if he gets one good reaction, which he does get, that will last him, you know, making 20 other people uncomfortable.
He'll still think it's worth it.
He'll go after it.
Judge, I have to break it.
Please.
These numbers being thrown about are completely false.
I would say, and I'm not exaggerating, when I go to Starbucks and order a latte, I say it every time.
I would say 99% of the people taking that order laugh.
And I swear that's true.
Is this the same Starbucks every time?
No, it's different Starbucks.
And I'll often say...
He keeps a chart of the Starbucks he's used the line on.
I'll often say...
I mean, if you don't want to repeat Starbucks
and you're going to a hundred Starbucks's to test this out,
yeah, you better keep a chart.
I mean, Daniel's throwing around some errant numbers here.
Hold on.
Order, order.
Order in this court.
Order in this court.
This court is now furious with both of you that I don't have the Starbucks Kung Pao laugh chart submitted as evidence.
Does this thing exist or does it not exist?
It doesn't exist, but to my knowledge, I would not put it past him to.
Wait a minute, Daniel, you said he had a chart. Were you lying?
I am adding a little bit of hyperbole that I wouldn't put him past him to keep track of who
he's used the Kung Pao line on and to try to work it onto some new people and rotate it.
You know what, Daniel? I've heard enough from you because frankly, I don't know what is crueler.
Asking a toll booth operator for kung
pow chicken as a joke or teasing this court with the promise of a starbucks kung pow laugh chart
that doesn't exist i'm finding you in a contempt of court right now whatever my ruling is uh the
next time you guys are out for dinner you kevin at the very least, gets one last Kung Pao chicken in. Teach you,
I'm going to brush you back. Don't like that at all. Now, just be quiet for a second. Let me
have a chance to be mad at Kevin again. Kevin, you say these numbers are all off.
There is no chart. There is no data. Why should I believe you when you say the numbers are all off?
If I said this and was getting blank stares,
like Daniel says I get,
and wasn't getting the response that I say I've been getting,
I wouldn't do it because, like he said,
I will do it when no one's around.
And I do it all the time because I think that person, that Starbucks server, has never heard that before.
And they laugh.
They think it's clever.
And then it opens up other dialogue.
And it's just a delight.
And a fear of mine is that your listeners will also use this,
and it won't be that novel.
It's an actual fear.
You're afraid you're burning your material?
Yeah, this is like my baby, and I'm afraid that it's going to be... You wouldn't say that your son is your baby?
First the Kung Pao, then me and the other children.
Can I just say, I love my dad.
I love that he's a character.
I love that he wants to make people smile and laugh when he goes around.
Thank you.
I just think he's a witty guy.
He can do so much better than this.
I really can't.
I mean, if you're contending that his forcing a joke on service industry personnel is inherently disruptive and disrespectful, then it's not an issue of coming up with a better joke.
No, correct. I've heard it for 20 years, so I'm a little bit biased, I would say.
20 years so i'm a little bit uh biased i would say you're gonna you're gonna be a little bit sorry when after this podcast breaks at kung pao chicken joke is gonna be the most viral meme in
the world you'll get nothing for it i'm gonna be out there with my kung pao finance factory t-shirt
making all kinds of money kevin in the affidavit that was presented to me, our producer talked to you,
and these are the notes that she wrote down based on things that you said.
Kevin really wants to be thought of as a character and remembered as such.
I'll ask you to respond to that. Is that true? That is true. I always, growing up, my friends
whose fathers were full of personality and characters are are the dads that i would love
to interact with and and judge wouldn't you say that was your case growing up when you when you
want to engage and be around those fathers who were characters i feared character dads. Fear.
Well, whether you feared them or loved them, they carried a certain charge that your own boring dad didn't carry.
And that made them a little bit more interesting.
And maybe you loved them precisely because you didn't have to deal with them all
the time day in day out like your own dad i think i've heard everything i need to in order to render
my decision i am going to go into my toll booth and hope no one bothers me while i make my
deliberations i'll be back in a moment with my decision. Please rise as Judge John Hodgman exits the courtroom.
Daniel, how do you feel about your chances in the case?
You know, I feel pretty good.
I feel like without bashing Kevin too much, I've opened his eyes a little bit to the that other people can understand the complaints that we tell him all the time. So.
Daniel, you're a grown man who calls his dad, Kevin. Why do you even care?
Well, see, I work with him. I see him every day. It's not just me either. Like I said,
there's a lot of other people counting on me to, uh, for justice to be done.
Kevin, how do you feel about your chances?
For justice to be done.
Kevin, how do you feel about your chances?
Not as good as I did coming in. I really thought this might be the judge's most open and shut case.
Because why would my son want me to not brighten people's days?
But I guess there is a flip side to that coin, which I never really saw.
Well, I mean, I think we can agree that your son seems like a real monster trying to prevent you from brightening people's day.
He is, don't you think?
He's a real storm cloud in front of the sun.
That is you.
You are the sun brightening America's day.
He is a pregnant storm cloud.
Dark with water.
Well, we'll see what the judge has to say about all of this when we come back in just a minute.
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.
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.
Judge Hodgman, we're taking a quick break from the case.
Yeah.
Jesse, I have a question for you.
Do you remember how 247 years and one day ago we broke up with England?
Yeah, I do remember that.
This is the week when we celebrate our antipathy towards our neighbors to the east.
towards our neighbors to the east.
The special relationship is on again because we're making up with the UK
and we're returning to London
and the London Podcast Festival this September.
So excited.
Haven't been there since 2017.
We're coming back.
Jesse, what are our dates?
We'll be at the Podcast Festival
Friday, September 15th,
Saturday, September 16th.
You can find all of the details at MaximumFun.org slash events.
That's MaximumFun.org slash events.
We always have a great time there at King's Place.
Yeah, when we talk about Friday and Saturday, those are the two main days of the weekend,
as they say over there, the weekend.
We're going to have a good time at the london
podcast festival plus jesse thorne i believe that's not the only maximum fun podcast that's
gonna be at this festival jordan jesse goes gonna be there too baby it is gonna be a blast and a
half and i will be dedicating all of my energy between now and September 16th to trying to convince Sharon
Horgan to show up for one of the shows. Didn't you do a bullseye with her? Yeah, I did. And she
kissed me on the podcast festival. She kissed me on my cheek. Maximumfun.org slash events is where
you go to get tickets. But we also need your London beefs. Oh, the beef and dairy podcast
is going to be there too. But we're talking about your disputes. If you're in London,
or can get
there, why don't you send in the dispute that you have with your neighbor, friend, spouse, partner,
whatever. Go to MaximumFun.org slash JJHO to send in all your disputes all the time. But specifically,
if you're going to be in London and you want to come see the show and you've got something you
want aired on stage, aired and settled by me and Jesse, Maximumfund.org slash JJHO for your UK London based
disputes. Now, we also have some other tour announcements to make soon. Very exciting. Some
of the places that we are going to, but we're going to leave that for now because we're not
ready to announce them yet. And when we do announce them, we're going to announce something
else that's special. Stay tuned. In the meantime, MaximumFun.org slash events for the London Podcast Festival and MaximumFun.org
slash JJHO for your London beefs. Jesse, anything else going on with you?
No, I don't think so.
Okay, great. Well, then we'll see you in London.
Let's get back to the case.
Please rise as Judge John Hodgman re-enters the courtroom.
I remember when I was growing up in Brookline, Massachusetts, and I was a teenager in high
school, and there was
some character dads around.
John Wolfe's dad was pretty funny.
I remember one, Valerie Gintis' dad, made a joke that I remember
every day, and is one of the formative
jokes in my life it was a very dad joke but I didn't realize it at the time and I was getting
a ride home from Coolidge Corner with her or something and her dad picked her up and I got
in the car she said oh wait hang on a second I gotta go over to the bookstore to brookline booksmith went to buzz
market my hometown bookstore still great she said i gotta go i gotta go to the bookstore you get a
book and he goes why you already have one i love that joke you already have a book why do you need
to buy one that was the context of the joke and what made it such a classic dad joke was not only was it corny and a little bit dumb,
but also it was delivered in such a dad deadpan.
And that's why it worked.
Now, you know, Kevin and Daniel, that I am a professional humorist.
Comedy is my business.
And I am here to tell you
that I'll have some Kung Pao chicken
on paper
is a terrible, terrible joke.
But I would be lying
if I didn't admit
that the first time you did it, Kevin, the very first time, and you
did this understated like, I'm the Kung Pao chicken, you kind of got me.
See the magic?
You have a delivery, sir, that I enjoy a lot.
And I hope you take this as flattery and also that you know what I'm talking about.
When I see there's a little Bob and Ray
in what you're doing with your voice
and even a little, what is it,
Coil and Sharp there, Jesse?
Yeah.
Is it got a little, that kind of sing-songy,
nasal, low deadpan thing going on? I'm not saying you hit it all the time,
but there's something about the really understated way you did Kung Pao Chicken
that made me think this could be a funny joke in certain contexts. Now, you think, sir,
that it's a funny joke in every context.
And yet, you also know instinctively that that's not true.
Because I said to you, let's role play.
You're in my courtroom.
I'm a judge and you're petitioning or you're trying to get out of a speeding ticket.
You're like, I wouldn't do it then.
And I said, well, what if I were a client coming in to buy a mortgage?
I probably wouldn't do it then either. And there's a well, you know, what if I were a client coming in to buy a mortgage? I probably wouldn't do it then either.
And there's a reason, right?
Because the whole point of the joke is formed on a power differential in which you have the power.
And this is something that I don't think that you understood about this joke until Daniel and I really lay into you for it, which is that when you are sitting in a restaurant or approaching someone at a yogurt shop,
you have the power to get that person in trouble.
You have the power to,
uh,
make that person's life more difficult.
You have the power and indeed act on the power to withhold tips.
If they do not dance for your particular pleasure
in the way that you deem to be correct.
And they're as aware of it as you are.
And therefore, it is easy to throw, I'll have the Kung Pao chicken onto a cashier at the
yogurt place.
And it may be that in that moment,
she appreciates that it is your desire
to add a little texture to her life
because there's nothing more monotonous
than the smooth texture of frozen yogurt.
But it may also be,
and I think this is what Daniel
is pointing out to you,
a point of true confusion
for someone who is telling, who is receiving this joke, a point of true confusion for someone who is receiving
this joke in a restaurant of any kind, and a moment of anxiety.
Because all of a sudden, one of the people who's coming up in the line of unfamiliar
faces moment after moment after moment in that person's day is a wild card, and you
don't know where they're coming from.
And you don't know what they're asking, and you don't know what they're asking and you don't know whether it means they're telling a
little joke or or maybe maybe i as the service person am having a stroke and don't understand
language anymore but they have to process all of that and then decide what am i going to do about
this person who is making my day complicated all of a sudden?
And if they come to the correct conclusion that it's a joke, then they may feel obliged to go,
I get it. What do you want, really? And then they can move on with their lives.
I don't dispute, honestly, sir, that you're getting laughs with this joke.
Real laughs, warm laughs that you're sharing with people who get your intent when you do it.
But I have to imagine that that is a minority of opinion.
Even when people are laughing, they are laughing potentially under the duress of what happens if I don't laugh at this weird dad's joke. And quite honestly, that's not being a character
anymore. That's causing a problem for other people. And that's not as funny. Okay? Because
true comedy, true comedy. And I'm saying this as someone who most people accuse of not practicing true comedy, and they're probably right.
True, fearless comedy would be being called before a judge, and the judge says, what do you have to say for yourself?
And you say, I think I'll try the Kung Pao chicken.
When you're putting yourself at risk, that's comedy.
When you're threatening others implicitly with a lowered tip, that's terrorism.
And so the truth is that comedy is profoundly subjective.
And I have not taken any time to walk in your clown-sized shoes
to experience your judgment when you deploy this joke versus when you don't deploy it.
You're saying that you're going into Starbucks and you've done it multiple times and they always
love it. I would enjoy seeing you go into the same Starbucks every day at the same time and telling
it over and over and over again until it becomes an Andy Kaufman style endurance joke. That would
be something I would enjoy a lot. But I don't want to be the guy who forces someone to remove
humor from their lives. So you have heard my warnings, and I think you've heard
your son, in a new way with regard to making your waiter or waitress deal with a joke that they may
not understand. And I will say this right now. Since you have heard us both, I will not deny you this Kung Pao chicken joke.
Rather, I want you to work on it. So I will say you may not make this joke anymore
in restaurants of any kind. There's simply too much of a likelihood of confusion. And confusion
is not funny, but terrifying to a wait person who has a million things on their
minds. Believe me, clarity and respect is what you owe a wait person. You may selectively deploy this
in a retail interaction because what makes this the potential to be funny,
aside from your own deadpan delivery, which I enjoy, is the contrast between what you are asking
for and what the establishment actually serves, right? So if you are in a hat store and you ask for Kung Pao chicken that's getting closer to funny
but it still
verges on terror
for the person serving you
because they are after all
a captive trapped audience
if you sense that the person
is game you can give it a try
maybe give it a try at Starbucks
you seem to know your audience there
but I would encourage you you can give it a try. Maybe give it a try at Starbucks. You seem to know your audience there.
But I would encourage you, if you really want to hone this to be a real joke,
to restrict yourself to places where telling this joke may cause you profound disapproval, a mean stare or a physical altercation.
The place is like, I mean, I think a toll,
a toll booth is the perfect place for you to do this joke because you might get in trouble.
You might not be allowed to go forward.
And if you can deliver the joke
such that you can get a legit laugh
from a tollbooth operator,
then I think you have accomplished
everything you need to with this joke
and you are ready to retire it.
I do order you to rename your business
Kung Pao Finance Factory
so that I will not be the only one profiting off that name.
But otherwise, keep it out of restaurants and start thinking a little bit more about what it's
like to be on the other side of the counter in a real way, not just in the way that you think they
just all want some weird dad to come joking at them right away. This is the sound of a gavel.
Judge John Hodgman rules.
That is all.
Please rise as Judge John Hodgman exits the courtroom.
Daniel, how do you feel?
I feel pretty good.
I got to say that was more than I was expecting to get.
What was your expectation?
Weird dads are great.
Don't touch them.
You're wrong.
It was kind of what I was expecting.
That's a T-shirt.
Kevin, how are you feeling?
A little shocked, I guess.
I'm taking a loss out of this.
I'm taking a loss out of this.
I did tell my wife and all my loved ones that I would abide by the judge's ruling.
And I think a tear is forming by the thought that I can't use this in a restaurant.
A tear of joy.
No, a tear of said.
Sir, it's not a funny joke in a restaurant because they serve food there.
Look, it may never be funny, but I'm trying to give you the best comedy knowledge I have to offer.
For it to even be close to funny, it's got to be high contrast.
It's got to be delivered perfectly.
And you have to understand that you're not entertaining a person.
You are disrupting a person's life for your own amusement in the great long tradition of coil and sharp style prank comedy, which is what this is. So if you can accept that reality,
then you might be getting something closer to comedy.
Yeah. Gentlemen, thank you for joining us on the Judge John Hodgman podcast. It was truly a pleasure.
All right. Thank you.
for joining us on the Judge John Hodgman podcast.
It was truly a pleasure.
Thank you.
Judge Hodgman, sorry to disturb you here in your chamber. Sorry, I'm just
trying to order some Kung Pao chicken.
I was going to order some Kung Pao chicken
from you, but it's fine.
Well, you know what? Good thing
you're here at Refinanced Kung Pao
Factory because I'm buying
some Kung Pao. I'm going to bundle that Kung Pao with other Kung Pao chickens and sell you a Kung Pao Factory because I'm buying some Kung Pao.
I'm going to bundle that Kung Pao with other Kung Pao chickens
and I'm going to sell you
a Kung Pao mortgage product.
Hey, this week's case
was named by Chris Fazio.
Thank you, Chris Fazio.
If you want to name a case
in the future,
oh, it's easy and fun.
Just follow
at Hodgman on Twitter
and at Jesse Thorne on Twitter
and like Judge John Hodgman on Facebook and at Jesse Thorne on Twitter.
And like Judge John Hodgman on Facebook and join the Maximum Fun Facebook group.
That is, connect with us via social media.
Yeah, why not?
Our producer on the show is Jennifer Marmer.
We'll see you next time on the Judge John Hodgman podcast.