Judge John Hodgman - Slunch Buggy No Punch Backs
Episode Date: October 24, 2018Judge John Hodgman and Bailiff Jesse Thorn are in chambers this week because the docket needs to be cleared! They discuss punching your fellow car passengers, laundry room etiquette, computer mice vs ...tablets, recycling, coffee house mugs, pebble ice, and much, much more!
Transcript
Discussion (0)
Welcome to the Judge John Hodgman podcast.
I'm bailiff Jesse Thorne.
We're in chambers this week.
We are going to clear the docket with me as always.
The hardest working man in show business, Judge Brother Number One, Judge John Hodgman.
Hey, everybody.
Thanks for listening to the Judge John Hodgman podcast.
We're glad you're here.
And Jesse, I'm glad you're here.
I'm glad you're here, John.
Do you want to clear the docket?
Let's get rid of that docket because it's, you know what it is right now?
Unclear.
Well, we've got something from Andy.
All right.
Dear Judge Hodgman, what's the appropriate phrase to use upon seeing a Volkswagen Beetle prior to giving someone a gentle fist-based tap.
Punch in the shoulder.
Punch in the shoulder.
I believe the correct phrase is slug bug.
My wife thinks punch buggy is correct and has taught our sons to think the same.
I like slug bug, not just because it's what I grew up with, but also because one,
it's more directly derived from the common nickname for the vehicle, the bug. And two, the phrase has an internal rhyme and a punchier rhythm. I have no desire to stop my
wife and kids from using their preferred phrase. I only ask that you rule that they acknowledge
slug bug is the better version and that I be allowed to use slug bug without ridicule.
Slug bug. I had never heard that before. Jesse, you're familiar with this
hit your friend game, right? Yeah, I previously had known it only as punch buggy. I've only ever
heard of it as punch buggy. And yet I looked it up. I'm sorry, what? I'm laughing because
it occurred to me that his elaborate circumlocution of the word punch in his description of what you do, he described it as a gentle fist-based tap.
Yes.
Was intentional.
Let me say this.
First of all, to the merits of this case, the gentleman, Andy, only wants to call it the way he grew up calling it.
And I gather that slug bug is a regional variation of the age old,
or at least if that age is as old as Beatles have been around,
a game of seeing this particular kind of car, calling it out, usually by color.
And you say, punch buggy red or punch buggy green,
depending on the color of the car, right?
And you punch your friend in the shoulder.
This is a real game, and it is called Slug Bug
according to Wikipedia.
It's also called Punch Bug or Punch Car
or Physical Assault Buggy
or Startle Your Dad While He's Driving
So You Both Almost Die Bug,
which is how I play it with my son.
My son goes to a school on the other side of Brooklyn,
and when I can, I give him a ride there in our family car.
And whenever he sees one of these buggies,
he goes, punch, buggy red, punch.
And I almost drive off the road,
and I can't do that in New York traffic.
Come on, son, if you're listening.
Thanks, by the way.
Thanks for taking an interest.
But please stop punching me while I drive.
Yeah, if any of my kids are listening, i just want them to know i love them yeah
and my instinct was always that i didn't get this game i didn't understand it it violated two rules
one it was hurtful and the other it was arbitrary two rules i could not tolerate as a child
but i didn't really appreciate how awful it is until I read this Wikipedia page on the game of Slunch Buggy, Slunch Bubby, which pointed out that in 2009, the Volkswagen Automobile Company commissioned an ad from the advertising agency Deutsch that used this in the ad and was not just buggies.
It was not just buggies.
It was not just Beatles.
The whole ad was people seeing a Volkswagen and then they would turn to the other one and go,
they renamed it because it was all the things.
It was Punch Dub as in VW.
Sure.
And it's all these people just turning to each other going,
Punch Dub White and then punching their friends and their co-workers and their family members in the arm not always softly
and it's clear that the other person doesn't like it this is in the ad and as you see this over and
over and over again it's really terrible it upset Especially one moment. This is a televised ad from 2009.
One of the greatest years I was still making Apple ads.
This was the low point of 2009.
A child in this Punch Dub ad sees a Jetta or something.
And he goes, Punch Dub White.
And he turns to his grandpa and like punches his grandpa like in a private area
like i think they try to play it as the upper thigh but the implication is clear it was a
national ad campaign so about private punching grandpas yeah so i think we've moved on as a
culture since 2009 obviously that ad campaign is not in the works anymore.
Though I drive a VW, a Passat station wagon, discontinued.
Don't hate me, but I got one.
It's pretty good.
But VW, you know, is now the pariah of the auto industry for misleading people about its diesel mileage or whatever it was that they did.
about its diesel mileage or whatever it was that they did.
If I was VW, I'd be thinking about bringing back that ad where Tony Hale is in a car in a parking garage and he's listening to Don Morigato, Mr. Roboto.
Yeah.
He's doing a dance.
Yeah.
And you're like, hey, that's Tony Hale from Arrested Development because you can see the future when you saw it.
Right.
In 1998 or whatever.
Yeah.
Yeah.
And also, VW, I'm not mad at you.
I drive one of your cars.
You want to do an ad campaign with the guy who used to be in the Apple ads. I'm your man.
Well, there are only two of us. I hope you pick me. Sorry, Justin. I hope you pick me.
But if you pick Justin, that's fine too. Bad news. They picked Patrick Warburton.
He made an appearance once. Oh, that's right. So many people pass through those Apple ads and
some you never even saw big actors who actors who never, they killed the ad.
Jenna Fisher from The Office.
Maybe I'm not allowed to say that, but she was in one.
I don't think it ever aired.
Patrick Warburton was a delight.
Seth Morris from UCB was a delight.
Oh, guy's as good as it gets.
Zach Galifianakis was in one.
Galifianak attack?
Yeah.
Paul F. Tompkins.
They played dueling Santa Clauses.
The world will never know what I saw.
I'm like Wrecker Hauer at the end of Blade Runner.
I've seen attack ships off the arm of Orion or whatever,
and it all is going to go away like tears in the rain.
Unless I write it all down.
In any case, Andy, I find in your favor,
you can call it slug bug. That is fine. The law, of course,
is no punchbacks, but also the law is no punching. Stop punching each other, everybody. It's no fun.
It's no fun for the punchee. We had a rule in my family. My daughter was very young, like a toddler.
We had a cat that is no longer alive named Francis.
It was my wife's cat before we were married.
She adopted this cat.
This is a secret of hers that I'm going to tell.
The cat was named Francis because it was a black cat and she was a fan of the pixies.
So she named it black Francis.
This is not something we've ever revealed to our acquaintance,
Charles Thompson, AKA black Francis.a. Black Francis,
who we used to see from time to time in western Massachusetts
with his lovely wife and family, Violet Clark, and kids.
Well, I've got bad news for you, John.
This is going to be quite a disappointment
to my vacation home acquaintance, St. Francis of Assisi.
I have a vacation home in Assisi.
Yeah, and somewhere out there, Annie Clark, also known as St. Vincent, is thinking to herself, listening to this podcast, going, why don't I know these guys?
I guarantee you that Annie Clark is not thinking that.
In any case, we had this adorable, dumb, huge cat, Francis.
He was a dum-dum.
I love dumb cats.
And our daughter was trying to pull
its tail. And I'm like,
don't pull the cat's tail.
And she said, no, it's fun.
And I came up with this great
parenting line that I've used ever since. It was
not fun for everybody. It's not fun
at all.
Wow. Well, it blew her mind.
And I was relieved that she stopped torturing the cat,
both for the cat's sake and because I was concerned that she was going to grow up to
become a sociopath. But she's not. Very kind young woman. Well, when your child tortures small
animals, kind of a red flag, but it's all fine. It's all good. Also, my daughter at that time
could not pronounce Francis's name. She called him Fatty, which was accurate.
And when she was exploring that whole region of Francis that had the tail on it for the pulling,
she was curious about Francis's bum.
And my wife said, no, that's Francis's bum.
Leave it alone.
And to this day, we still repeat what my daughter said.
I'm talking about verboten things.
That's fattiespum. Leave it.
Fattiespum, even.
So anyway, Andy, if it's not fun for everybody,
it's no fun at all.
I'm telling you, as a subject of this game,
it's very distracting to get punched by someone you love,
even in a light fist-based tap kind of way
when you're trying to drive.
So don't do it, but you're right.
You're right anyway.
Slugbug is fine.
How do you feel about the game
where you make an okay symbol below your waist
and then if you get somebody to look at it,
you get to punch them?
Do you know that one?
You know how I feel about that one?
Fatty's bum, leave it.
Keiko says, my boyfriend complains that his neighbors don't take their clothes out of the washers and dryers in a timely manner. I think it's totally
okay to take their clothes out and put them in the basket, especially if you're in a hurry. But
he thinks we shouldn't touch other people's clothes, like their underwear. What do you say,
John? Well, Jesse, I have some experience in this as I have lived in several apartment buildings with shared laundry rooms, as well as dormitory
type situations. I presume you have as well, Jesse, in your life? I have too, although I've
never really had this problem such that it got in the way of my life. I think I probably lived in
shared accommodations, certainly at UC Santa Cruz, with people who simply didn't wash.
Oh, okay. I was going to say, boy, the people of Santa Cruz are fast washers.
No, they're non-washers.
Yeah, the volume is lower, so there's less of a bottleneck.
I don't know what it is about New England where I grew up. That's a region of the United States
in the Northeast United States, Jesse. Maybe it's just our laid back way of life.
People in New England are famous
for just sort of taking their time.
What's your hurry?
Sure.
Sit out on the porch and have some sweet tea
and let your underwear molder in the dryer
or the washer.
You don't have to get down there for a couple of days,
but people would do it all the time
in all of the shared laundry rooms
that I experienced in New England and in New York.
And I'm telling you what I did, and I thought was fine.
If you're down there and someone has left their stuff in the wash,
and especially in the dryer, and you do your cycle and you're ready to put it in the dryer
and they haven't come at all, just get in there, grab it, put it on top.
Take out their stuff, put it on top.
You don't want to pour
through it or anything. You want to kind of avert your eyes. You don't want to try it on or anything
like that. And I always felt that that was reasonable. I felt like that's apt punishment
for not being on top of your stuff. You've got to be on top of your stuff when you're using a shared
facility. It would get awkward from time to time, very rarely, when they come down into the laundry
room and you're elbow deep in their boxer briefs or whatever. They catch you in the act. But that's
your punishment for getting up in their stuff. The system evens out, is what I'm saying.
It's a self-managing system like a fractal.
Yeah, exactly. It's a self-managing shame system. If you're so late that you come down and you see someone has put your stuff on top of the dryer or whatever, and you're like, well I did for many years. And even here in
the Max Fund offices in Los Angeles, which are in a live work building. So there are plenty of folks
doing plenty of laundry in the laundry room. Generally, there's a policy. So before I went
rogue, I might chat with the apartment building manager and say, hey, you know, I've noticed that sometimes people leave stuff down there.
Could we put up a sign or something?
Oh, the equivalent of asking the fast food store whether you can get free soda water or not.
Yeah, I guess so.
Figure out what their policy is.
Just so people are forewarned and therefore forearmed.
I think that someone should invent laundry tongs.
Big tongs.
So you can get that stuff out of there without having to touch it.
Let's patent that together, Jesse.
Let's patent that together, Jesse. I would imagine that Keiko's boyfriend maybe is a little more sensitive to this because he is not unreasonably more likely to be seen as a creepo for handling the undergarments of others.
Yeah, that's fair. in a very reasonable situation like this. And I think a nice sign would make it clear to everybody whose responsibility it is to
keep the washers and dryers clear and what the consequences, the very, very mild consequences
are if you don't.
Well, I'm going to say that in the case of how I'm going to adjudicate this, I'm going
to rule in Keiko's favor.
this. I'm going to rule in Keiko's favor. It's okay. But I think with the caveat that my wise bailiff has suggested that Keiko's boyfriend and indeed Keiko herself, if they live in the same
building or if they, even if she has a different building, you know, get on that email list with
your fellow tenants, ask if there's a policy and create one, maybe put up a sign. Communication
is always a good answer.
Usually communicating is better than touching people's underwear.
Let's take a quick break.
We've got more stuff on the docket coming up in just a minute on the Judge John Hodgman podcast.
Hello, teachers and faculty.
This is Janet Varney. I'm here to remind you that listening to my podcast, The JV Club with Janet Varney, is part of the curriculum for the school year. Learning about the teenage years of such guests as Alison Brie, Vicki Peterson, John Hodgman, and so many more is a valuable and enriching experience, one you have no choice but to embrace,
because yes, listening is mandatory.
The JV Club with Janet Varney is available every Thursday on Maximum Fun
or wherever you get your podcasts.
Thank you.
And remember, no running in the halls.
If you need a laugh and you're on the go, try S-T-O-P-P-O-D-C-A-S-T-I.
Hmm.
Are you trying to put the name of the podcast there?
Yeah, I'm trying to spell it, but it's tricky.
Let me give it a try.
Okay.
If you need a laugh and you're on the go, call S-T-O-P-P-P-A-D-I.
It'll never fit.
No, it will.
Let me try.
p-p-a-d-a-d-a-d-a-d-a-d-a-d-a-d-a-d-a-d-a-d-a-d-a-d-a-d-a-d-a-d-a-d-a-d-a-d-a-d-a-d-a-d-a-d-a-d-a-d-a-d-a-d-a-d-a-d-a-d-a-d-a-d-a-d-a-d-a-d-a-d-a-d-a-d-a-d-a-d-a-d-a-d-a-d-a-d-a-d-a-d-a-d-a-d-a-d-a-d-a-d-a-d-a-d-a-d-a-d-a-d-a-d-a-d-a-d-a-d-a-d-a-d-a-d-a-d-a-d-a-d-a-d-a-d-a-d-a-d-a-d-a-d-a-d-a-d-a-d-a-d-a-d-a-d-a-d-a-d-a-d-a-d-a-d-a-d-a-d-a-d-a-d-a-d-a-d-a-d-a-d-a-d-a-d-a-d-a-d-a-d-a-d-a-d-a-d-a-d-a-d-a-d-a-d-a-d-a-d-a-d-a-d-a-d-a-d-a-d-a-d- welcome back to the judge john hodgman podcast we are clearing the docket in chambers and we have something from roxy hang on before we get to roxy i just want to establish what we've settled
so far yeah some pretty important legal precedents have been set in part one of the podcast one
don't punch people two don't touch their Three, if it's not fun for everybody,
it's no fun at all. Have we ever talked about, I think the only time I ever got punched?
No. I was in front of St. Mary's hospital on Valencia street in San Francisco,
a block from my father's apartment. And I was wearing this 49ers jacket
that I'd gotten at the Burlington Coat Factory,
not to brag, just reality.
My dad took me there, said I could pick anything I wanted.
And I picked this 49ers sort of Letterman-style jacket.
I was walking down the street.
I was maybe 13.
I saw an older, slightly cooler kid
wearing the same jacket,
walking the opposite direction.
I said, hey, cool jacket.
And he punched me.
And then he laughed at me and kept walking.
Oh, no.
I'm sorry, Jesse.
It's okay.
I mean, he didn't get me that good.
It was very shocking.
No.
Oh, yeah.
I got punched on the subway in New York City once.
Wow, really?
Yeah, it was right after I moved here.
It was a very crowded train.
It was a number six train.
On the Upper East Side, it's not well served by the subways.
But at the time, it was very, very small, old trains.
People were all bunched up together.
And I kind of was moving my way into the middle of the car.
And I kind of accidentally brushed by someone's back.
And the guy turned around.
He said, don't touch my back.
I'm like, I'm sorry.
And he said, I said, don't touch my back.
I'm like, okay.
And then he took his hand down from where he was holding onto the strap or the bar and just elbowed me in the face.
All of a sudden, it was not crowded in that car at all.
Like people found new dimensions to escape to to get away from
and the seat opened up immediately and he sat down but it was crowded enough that i really
couldn't go anywhere and i was just hanging on and i you know we're there together for a long
time in silence and a couple stops later he looked up and he was in tears he was a young guy
and he was like
i'm really sorry i'm just having a really terrible time i'm like i understand holy cow yeah that story
really came around john well i think of it a lot when i think about you know there are pros and cons
to living in a big city like one of them is you might you you might get an elbow in the face but also you're
pushed into small spaces together in a highly dense diverse population you have to live together
rather than someone you know getting in a road rage and driving away and never seeing the other
person that was sort of the sense of like you have to live together you have to find a way to get
along you're gonna have to be on this train for a little while longer.
The train now being a metaphor for all of,
you know,
New York or whatever.
Of course I sued the guy into oblivion.
Oh,
one other thing we settled in part one of this podcast,
uh,
speaking of not to brags,
we did establish that,
um,
I know black Francis a little bit.
Hi,
you guys hope you're listening.
I guess I learned from my experience
not to wear white as a guest at a wedding.
Oh, you mean if you wore a bridal dress to a wedding?
Yeah.
Then you say cool dress,
then the bride might punch you.
Yeah, pretty much.
I'm really grasping at straws here.
I haven't done any like moth workshops.
Maybe Dan Kennedy could help me out with finding a moral to my story.
You know, I think that it's a variation on the Tom Sharpling principle.
Uh-huh.
One of the many principles of The Best Show hosted by Tom Sharpling.
Check it out at thebestshow.net, which is like, don't tell people that they look like
someone from the movies or television
or anyone else. Do you know what I mean? Because it's very rarely flattering. It often makes someone
feel terrible. We have a Jordan Jesse go rule about that. What is it?
Never tell someone that they look like someone famous unless that person is famous for being
attractive. Oh yeah. I think we've discussed this before.
That's a great thing.
And to be clear, like, you're not allowed to say it
if you find that famous person attractive.
They have to be famous for being attractive.
Right.
Like, you look like Brad Pitt.
Exactly.
I'm sure there are listeners who would be kind enough to say,
I think, Jesse or John, that you are attractive.
Yeah. But neither of us, that you are attractive. Yeah.
But neither of us is famous for being attractive.
So don't tell anyone on the street that they look like one of us.
That's the rule.
Okay.
Wait, wait, wait.
No, no.
I'm sorry.
You opened the door.
Yeah.
And I will allow this digression as the judge.
I'm going to save this for my new book, but I'm going to say it here later.
You're going to read about it then.
When I shaved my beard and my disgusting soul patch and only had a mustache so as to star
in the television show Blindspot, hit television show on NBC.
Starred in two episodes.
I kind of thought the star that was Ennis Esmer.
Go ahead.
He wasn't even on the show yet.
He was a recurring character that they did not kill and instead made a series regular.
He kind of came in and seized the day, I guess. But anyway, go ahead.
Yeah, yeah. I guess he was so good. They were like, we have to have him on and let's not kill him. That was not how they felt about my character.
Spoilers.
Another spoiler? With just my mustache, if my hair falls a certain way, I look like Hitler.
I know this.
I've known it my whole life.
What I didn't need was the guy who parks my car to tell me that.
I mentioned that I have a car in New York City.
We park it in a garage.
There's an attendant there.
And one time I was getting out of it, having worked that morning on Blindspot, and he goes,
you know who you look like?
Hitler.
that morning on blind spot and he goes you know who you look like hitler it's like yeah i okay like why are you you're supposed to pretend to like me at least you know
like it's part of our professional relationship that you don't say that i look like history's
most notorious villain mass murderer evil person how do you think that's going to affect my tipping?
Of course, I tipped him double, right?
That's the only thing he can do.
But then he kind of laughed.
He goes, no, man, you really look like Hitler.
And he was acting as though he was saying to me, I look like Brad Pitt.
There's no life lesson in that one.
And so if you're wearing a 49ers jacket, you know, people, when they dress, you know,
as a sartorial engineer, they want to feel that that's their look.
If you call out to the guy walking down the street, hey, I've got the same jacket on, you're going to get punched, especially if there's a beetle around.
All right, that's my time at the Moth, everybody.
See you next time.
Here's something from Roxy.
My girlfriend insists on both drawing and animating using
a mouse. I wish
for the judge to instead order her to
use a tablet rather than forcing
her through the absurdly masochistic
act that is
drawing with a mouse.
It's drawing on a computer.
Yeah, one presumes so.
It'd be horrible
if you were just using a mouse as a writing implement i guess you
would dip it in an inkwell yeah would you dip its little snout or would you dip its little tail
i don't know i guess if you starched the tail you could use that yeah we're circling back around to
a abusing small animals motif that i'm finding disturbing now. So let's presume for the sake of argument that Roxy's girlfriend is using a
computer mouse to animate and draw on a computer.
Now I sympathize.
I spent a lot of time drawing with a mouse in Mac paint on my original 1984
era Macintosh 128 K.
You weren't even born yet, Jesse. When I was drawn with a mouse on my Macintosh 128K. You weren't even born yet, Jesse.
When I was drawn with a mouse
on my Macintosh computer.
I happen to have once owned an Apple 2 Plus, so.
Oh, really?
Yeah.
It was used.
It was a few years old when we got it.
That's super old school.
Did you play Decathlon on it?
I did.
Yeah.
That was a good time.
Did you ever have a black and white Macintosh computer? And if so, did you ever play Dark Castle on it? I did. Yeah. That was a good time. Did you ever have a black and white Macintosh computer?
And if so, did you ever play Dark Castle on it? Nah, those are for rich kids. Oh,
well, I had one and I used that Mac paint to do some drawings.
And I can't remember whether it was me or mitchell verter who did a really sweet very difficult illustration of cyclops from the x-men with cyclops looking directly like
you as the viewer were directly in the lines of cyclops's eye beams and by the way everyone who
sent me letters before i I get it now.
They're beams, not lasers.
They're force beams, not burn beams.
I think it was Mitchell.
Mitchell Verter definitely wrote psych underneath CYKE.
But I think we collaborated on the illustration.
Mitch, if you're out there and you're listening, get in touch with me.
It's Hodgman at MaximumFun.org.
It would be great to hear from you.
I haven't seen you in a long, long time. But as mind-blowing as it was to be able to manipulate pixels on a screen in 1984, it was primitive, and Cyclops probably
looked terrible. And I can't understand why now that these highly sensitive tablets, which allow
you to essentially draw with a writing implement or drawing
implement. Why you wouldn't do this, Roxy's girlfriend? I don't get it. But you know what,
Roxy's girlfriend? I bet you have a reason. It's a choice that you're making, right? Unless you
don't have access to a tablet, in which case, Roxy, get your girlfriend a tablet. But my guess
is that it's Roxy's girlfriend's art to do it this way.
And Roxy, let her
do her thing.
You know what I did on one of those
all-in-one Macintosh computers?
I visited my uncle,
my stepmother's brother, John,
in Belfast in Northern Ireland.
And I played
on his Macintosh computer the game
Crystal Quest. Oh, yes.
Where you move your mouse around and you collect crystals. Yep. And I beat all of his high scores.
Oh, boy. There wasn't that much to do at his house for a kid, you know, because he was a grown up.
He didn't have kids. Right. And then we went to Done Donegal which is in the northern part of the Republic of
Ireland on a little like uh you know seaside vacation cold seaside vacation you'd elect it
sounds like my thing then came back to Belfast and stayed uh you know a week later at my uncle's
house again and I noticed that he had cleared all the high scores.
Oh my goodness.
My 40-year-old uncle.
Wow.
He's a good guy though.
In fact, I'm not even going to say he's a good guy though.
He's a good guy because of that.
That's like one of the many great things about him. Look, I don't like to truck in a lot of national
stereotypes, but we all know the Irish are very Crystal Quest proud. Well, did he have Dark
Castle or what? That's what I'm saying. No, I don't think he had Dark Castle. I don't think
I've ever played Dark Castle. You know, that's the game. I know that there are a bunch of middle-aged dads listening to this right now
who are pumping their fists in memory of Dark Castle.
That was an amazing game.
You play a little guy, and you're trying to defeat the Black Knight
who's at the boss level of all these different sort of puzzle screens
where you've got to jump around,
and you've got to carefully aim your arm to throw a rock at a rat. And when the rat dies, it goes,
and when you make a successful jump, you go, yeah. And I've, they have emulators online,
but you can't save it. You can't, someone's got to hook me up with this dark castle.
Someone out there has this and I need and I need it as soon as possible.
Rula says, I'm bringing the case against my husband, Peter, for throwing away sorted recycling.
We pay for a recycling service and have a separate recycling bin in our kitchen.
But Peter believes that the recycling company doesn't recycle most of what they collect.
If we're not going to be on the same page about recycling, then I don't think we should would like to pose directly to Rula. Rula, does Peter have any evidence
that supports his non-recycling conspiracy theory?
I'll take your silence as evidence
that you're not actually in the room with me,
but also that he doesn't have any.
Now, if I'm wrong, Peter,
please write in and tell me,
Hodgman at MaximumFun.org.
Especially write in if you've got a copy of Dark Castle that you can send me. But if I'm wrong, Peter, please write in and tell me, hodgmanatmaximumfund.org. Especially write in if you've got a copy of Dark Castle that you can send me.
But if I'm wrong, Peter, write me and tell me.
I would love to hear about your adventure, your overnight stakeout at the dump,
where you saw and observed and maybe video recorded the dump workers laughing and laughing
at all the rubes like Rula who actually separate
their recycling all while they're just tossing all those glass jars and plastic bottles into a
pit of poison fire. But if you didn't do that, if you don't know for sure, haven't seen with your
own eyes that this sordid recycling is just getting tossed in with the other trash. Then I say to you, Peter, would I yell to every dude on a bicycle without a helmet in Brooklyn
who run the red lights when I'm driving my son to school?
Guys, stop it.
The rules also apply to you.
You are not smarter than the rules, dudes.
We make rules for everyone's benefit.
Obviously, it's not precisely the same because
this is an opt-in program to recycling it's not as though but if you think you're smarter than
the world and based on zero evidence then the system breaks down and if you're a dude without
a helmet who thinks that the rules of the road don't apply to you then what's going to happen
is my son's going to go punch buggy silver punch me in the arm and then i'm accidentally going to
drive into you.
Not talking to you, Peter, anymore.
Sorry.
Got a little distracted there.
Peter, I sentence you not only to honor the separated recycling,
but also go spend a night at the dump.
You have to go spend a whole night
at a waste treatment facility,
and you're not even allowed to have fun when you're doing it.
You're not even allowed to act in an episode of Amazon's forthcoming season two of The Tick,
which is what I did the last time I spent a night at the dump.
Did I tell you that, Jesse?
No.
You told me that you were in season two of The Tick.
I'm very excited about it.
It's a great show.
But I didn't know that you spent that night at the dump.
Spoiler.
Well, it's not a spoiler because I won't reveal what happened, but I got to enjoy
not one, not two, but three overnight shoots at the Newtown Creek Wastewater Treatment Facility
in Greenpoint, Brooklyn, where they have magnificent, huge, futuristic silver eggs
called digesters where all of New York City's poop goes. Three whole nights I had to stay awake.
It was actually pretty magical. So thanks. Season two of The Tick coming out sometime next year.
Isn't the deal with recycling basically that the reason it is third on the list of reduce,
that the reason it is third on the list of reduce, reuse, recycle,
is because it is the least efficient of those three things. It's the one that helps the earth the least.
It's less efficient than you wish it would be.
You imagine if you throw a can into the recycling bin,
it comes out as a clean new can immediately with no cost.
Right.
But that is not an argument for throwing that can in the garbage
instead. Look, if you have to throw a can in the garbage every now and then because there's no
other way to dispose of it, it happens. I get it, Peter. But Peter is peddling a conspiracy theory
that all of the recycling just gets thrown in the garbage later on down the line. And if that's true,
then OK, go for it, Peter.
But prove to me that that's true.
I don't think that he's done his legwork.
I think he's been listening to too much talk radio.
I will say this, John.
You generally speaking can't recycle pizza boxes.
Do you know why?
Because of the grease.
That's right.
They're food soiled, John.
I had to talk with the dumb person about that
and it was very edifying.
Let's take a quick break.
When we come back, we'll hear about coffee cups and, ooh, pebble ice.
My favorite.
You're listening to Judge John Hodgman.
I'm bailiff Jesse Thorne.
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Welcome back to the Judge John Hodgman podcast.
We're clearing the docket this week.
Here's something from Lucy.
Why does every cafe have wide-mouthed,
shallow, dinky-handled cups with saucers? Liquid becomes lukewarm the minute it's poured into
these things. Unless you chug its contents, you've got a $5 cup of garbage. It doesn't say to say
garbage like that. It's sort of like an interpretation for me. No, I think you're
really embodying Lucy's rage here. Give me more. Why is this? Do some people like these cups? Are cafes just trying
to move patrons along and discourage loitering? Are they all just sheep getting these crappy cups
because everyone else has them? Can I bring my own mug? My husband John doesn't think I can.
Can you shed light on this? And if you agree with me, can you shame these cafes?
All right, Jesse, that was great.
Let's do it one more time.
I think we have rage covered now.
Let's try maybe natural.
Good audition.
Thank you for coming.
Thank you.
Okay, I mean, I could do it in a different way.
No, no, no, no no no no no no i
think this is great my headshot do you have my headshot you have my number we have it just um
do you is there anything else i can oh you know you can do i read something else i have a
contemporary and a classical just uh stand up and um say your name for the camera and humiliate
yourself by saying your height and weight it It's an audition thing that happens.
I don't think they've ever asked me my weight, I don't think.
So, oh, Lucy.
So mad.
But I don't blame you.
I think Lucy's problem is that she's going to coffee houses in 1997.
I do not know what she's talking about.
I do not know what she's talking about, but I do remember those big mugs and saucers from 1997.
She could be.
Was there a character named Lucy on Friends?
Yeah.
It felt very central perk to me what she was describing. And I was just thinking about this recently because we had in our neighborhood here in Brooklyn a couple of late 90s coffee house holdovers.
It was actually a tea place called the Tea Lounge.
And they were trying to be for tea what Central Perk had been for coffee. overstuffed velvet couches and these like ratty Persian rugs and like mismatched coffee tables
and this whole sort of like nineties corduroy bohemian vibe. And they had those mugs,
those big oversized mugs that are very wide and like saucers that you don't want. But those,
I don't see those anymore. So maybe I think, Lucy, you need to find another coffee house
because I've been all across this great land and most coffee houses I've gone to, coffee shops, coffee houses, cafes, whatever you want
to call them, they'll have mugs if you want to be ecologically minded and not take a paper cup.
But they're usually just regular old mugs, straight sides, deep, thick walled, keeps your
coffee hot. But to answer your your question if every coffee shop in your
weird pocket dimension that is stuck in friend's time only serves coffee in those wide
bowl type mugs or coffee cups you are absolutely right to bring in your own mug i think that's
perfectly reasonable you're doing the planet right by selecting the mug option and bringing your own mug. That's called reusing.
Or you could just hold one of those big wide mugs with both hands and be in like a yogurt commercial.
Nescafe moments.
Yeah.
Next time we do a promo for the show, the Judge Ian Hodren show, which is this one.
Whether we do an audio, maybe we can even do a video it's like you and me
on a balcony early morning balcony of a cabin in the woods just drinking big international coffees
and just saying to each other it's good to see you jesse this is our time
could we maybe get out on like a dock in a lake where it's real beautiful and green and there's like a mist and we're each inside a bathtub next to each other and we reach over and hold hands?
We're in separate bathtubs on the beach?
Yeah, and we're both kind of silver fox types.
Yeah, let's do it.
I can't wait.
Okay, we have a letter here from a listener named Nora.
She says, I've been listening to the archives of the podcast and got to an old episode where Jesse said that he likes pebble ice.
I wanted to make sure that he knew that fast food restaurants mostly let you buy a bunch of that ice.
The sandwich shop Witch Witch advertises it, and a lot of Sonics will let you buy a big of that ice. The sandwich shop Witch Witch advertises it,
and a lot of Sonics will let you buy a big bag and take it home.
Did you know this, Jesse?
I didn't know that.
It seems weird to me.
I don't know if I'm fully prepared.
I think the idea of buying a weird machine that only makes pebble ice of which there is now one
available to home consumers and pebble ice for listeners who haven't listened for that long is
that kind of round lightweight crunchy ice that you want to chew on so-called because it's like
little pebbles yeah it's for people who want to chew pebbles but they can't because it's like little pebbles. Yeah. It's for people who want to chew pebbles, but they can't because it's bad for your teeth and society frowns upon it.
There's an ice version of pebbles that is okay for you to chew.
Yeah.
And, you know, I live, like you, I live in an expensive urban center.
So I can't afford to have the kind of house that has like a pantry attached to the kitchen where there's like a washer and dryer or whatever
like a mud room or whatever i don't have any of these extra rooms you know yeah so i don't have
a place to put it my kitchen's too small to have a whole ice machine but i would do that if i had
one of those my concern here is that once i go and pay money to the sonic once i go to the sonic and i say tj jagadowski sent me
uh legendary improv actor star of the sonic commercials i know who you're talking about
that guy yeah um shout out by the way to his improv partner dave who's on a great show called
lodge 49 that i really like i've heard good things about that show i should check it out eh
your man bruce campbell is so choice in it. Oh, it has some gorgeous Bruce Campbell work in it.
I didn't know that Bruce was in that. I'm embarrassed.
Yeah. So anyway, to buy enough of this ice to justify my trip to Sonic,
I would have to have one of those rooms so that I could have a special freezer where I keep extra frozen things,
which is also something that I aspire to, but is impossible for me being a resident of a city where, you know, houses cost a million dollars.
So you don't have room in your existing freezer for a bag of pebble
ice from Sonic? Absolutely
not, no. At the moment, my freezer
is full of cassoulet.
Oh. Because I made some
cassoulet in the slow cooker, and you know, you make
four servings worth
so you can eat it over the next couple months so you don't have to
make another lot of cassoulet.
That is a wonderful autumnal dish.
Anytime I make a stew or uh
any juicy food gross i'll allow it i'll freeze a couple tupperwares worth so that i have it for a
weeknight dinner in a month you know well i you know as i say cassellet is one of my favorite autumnal treats.
I would say throw that into the lake.
Let your children go hungry and get yourself some pebble ice from Sonic.
Treat yourself.
I got some homemade ice cream in my freezer right now.
Oh, what flavors?
It's sort of like a chai.
Like I started with some black tea and added some cardamom.
Very good. That's the only flavor that's in there right now. I really only eat one bowl of ice cream at a time. Well, holiday time is
nigh upon us, and now I've got some very good ideas for a gift
for my bailiff, Jesse Thorne. A pocket dimension within
his own freezer. A new house with a room that I can put
a standalone freezer in what if i just
what if i just ignored everything you said and sent you a huge standalone freezer
man i would like to have one my wife keeps talking about should we have one of those
and i'm like wait put it where we have three children sleeping in one bedroom.
Well, you know, you could put it in the corner of their bedroom, I suppose.
Maybe, depending on the form factor, we might be able to fit it under our bed.
You know what it could be, Jesse?
Oh my God, this is incredible.
You get like a dorm fridge-sized freezer, fill it up with pebble ice, use that as your bedside table. Come on. Yeah. Bad news. My fire safe is already my bedside table. Got my important documents in there.
Fair enough. All right. If you have to choose in life between a fire safe and a standalone freezer,
two great dad options. Classic dichotomy, fire and ice.
That's right. George R.R. Martin would be proud. I think probably the fire safe is the more responsible way to go.
Well, we'll find a way to get you pebble ice sometime.
In the meantime, I've never heard of Witch Witch.
That's apparently a sandwich shop that started in Dallas.
Good for you guys for carrying that pebble ice.
Would you be our sponsor?
Also, TJ Jagadowski, if you're listening, will you be our sponsor?
Also, Tupperware, you got a shout out there. Would you be our sponsor?
I think I use Glad Snapware, so Glad Snapware. Hit me up.
Yeah.
Okay. The docket is clear and we've run out of corporations.
That's it for another episode of Judge John Hodgman.
Our producer is the great Jennifer Marmer.
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