Judge John Hodgman - S'morder in the Court
Episode Date: October 11, 2023Katherine brings the case against her husband, Lee. They like to go camping together. Katherine recently bought a new camping chair. But, Lee says they bring too much stuff. There’s no room for this... chair in their car! But, Katherine thinks that they can make it work. Who’s right? Who’s wrong?Thanks to reddit user u/ToLiveAndBrianLA for naming this week’s case! To suggest a title for a future episode, keep an eye on the Maximum Fun subreddit at maximumfun.reddit.com! Check out the evidence from this week's episode at instagram.com/judgejohnhodgman. Judge John Hodgman’s Van Freaks Roadshow is on! Visit vanfreaksroadshow.com for ticket links, other dates, cities, and more information! And SUBMIT YOUR CASES along the tour route at maximumfun.org/jjho!
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Welcome to the Judge John Hodgman podcast.
I'm Bailiff Jesse Thorne.
This week, smorter in the court.
Catherine brings the case against her husband, Lee.
They like to go camping together.
Catherine recently bought a new camping chair,
but Lee says there's no room for this chair in their car.
But Catherine thinks they can make it work.
Who's right? Who's wrong? Only one can decide.
Please rise as Judge John Hodgman enters the courtroom and presents an obscure cultural
reference.
Yeah, smooth sailing and Hall of Fame are my top two nicknames.
Also, cool guy and jolly John, fun John.
There are a lot of derivatives of John.
Cool John.
Some people took smooth sailing and Fun John and made Smooth John.
That's a good one.
It just started catching on with the general public.
Every now and then, hey, Smooth John, or yeah, you're Smooth John, right?
And people aren't quite sure.
And I'm like, yeah.
And they're like, okay, cool.
That's what I thought.
Bailiff Jesse Thorne, please swear them in.
Catherine and Lee, 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.
Do you swear to abide by Judge John Hodgman's ruling, despite the fact that when he goes
camping, he brings a mid-tier business hotel?
I do.
Yes.
Judge Hodgman, you may proceed.
I always pack a Hampton Inn and Suites.
Yeah, or a Courtyard by Marriott.
No, thank you.
Sorry about that.
Oh, wow.
I mean, if they were to sponsor the podcast, I'd change my mind.
But as long as I am neutral, I'm going to tell you what John Darnielle told me,
which I live by from now on.
Hampton Inn & Suites, best mattresses in the biz.
Well, bon voyage to you, because I'm staying at the Courtyard by Marriott.
This is going to be awkward on our tour, which is just about to get underway.
The Van Freaks Roadshow, as you know, is hitting the road starting October 9th in Lexington, Kentucky,
and going on, if you haven't gotten your tickets yet or submitted your disputes, go to vanfreaksroadshow.com.
That was just a plug since we got there.
Meanwhile, Lee and Catherine, you may be seated.
For an immediate summary judgment in one of yours references, can you name the piece of
culture I quoted as I entered the courtroom?
Let's start with Lee.
What's your guess?
I'll give you a hint.
Starts with a John.
Starts with a John.
J-O-N, by the way, if that helps narrow it down.
Should.
J-O-N John.
J-O-N John.
You want another hint?
Sure.
All right.
Catherine, do you have a guess first before I give him a hint?
The only thing that popped in my head was, like, horse racing names.
Horse racing names?
Okay.
No.
I think the idea of a horse named John is terrific.
Yeah.
Because I love animals that have just plain vanilla human names.
200 on Frank to show.
Go John.
Go John.
Judge Hodgman,
do you have Bill
in the third race?
No, I'm picking Alan.
Okay, fair enough.
I think Alan's got the stuff.
I'm going to go for the trifecta.
I'm bringing Marty into this.
Okay, well,
I'm going to give you both a hint and I don't know if this is going to break the
dam open for you or what. Here's your hint. Ready?
Gear!
So there are your two prompts. That whole long quote I gave about smooth John, cool John,
Hall of Fame smooth sailing John, and me yelling gear.
I am just stumped.
I can tell that you are.
Usually when I listen to the podcast
can shout out the obscure cultural reference.
I know.
Well, you know, but here you are
in studio in Stanford, Connecticut.
You're on the spot.
You shouldn't feel bad that all guesses are wrong
or in this case, no guesses are wrong.
No, you had guesses.
You had John the horse and John Colton, Jonathan Colton's dad.
Those are two valid guesses.
Joel Mann, do you have a guess?
What people call you when you make breakfast sandwiches.
Smooth John, Smooth Sailing John, Hall of Fame John.
Yeah.
Here at the General Store in unnamed coastal town Maine.
No.
Yeah, I'm not in there cooking those sandwiches that often anymore, so don't come
looking, please. A great loss. Before I reveal the answer, Joel, while this episode is coming out in
October, if you can believe it, this is our last time recording here in Maine this summer because
exactly so. When I came into the studio, Jesse Thorne and Lee and Catherine, I was chit-chatting
with Joel briefly, just talking about normal stuff like road work on Route 15, how's it going on
Backridge Road, talking about Joel eating scallops out on Route 15. How's it going on Backridge Road?
Talking about Joel eating scallops out of the shell off an illicit scallop boat on Cape Cod.
Normal stuff.
And then Joel, just as he was dialing in to Jennifer, just goes, yeah, I showed John and Yoko how to get out of a Senate hearing during Watergate once.
Your life has many chapters, Joel.
It does. And it's not done yet. Yeah. And we don't want to hear about any of them right now because we've got to hear Lee and Catherine's case. But we'll
talk about them when you're on stage with us in Portland, Maine in November on the Van Freaks
Roadshow. So get your tickets, vanfreaksroadshow.com. Okay. No guesses are wrong. All guesses
are wrong. I was quoting John Glazer. John Glazer is a comedian,
a sketch writer, an actor, and one of the truly funniest people I know in my life.
He is the creator of the incredible TV shows Delocated and also Neon Joe Werewolf Hunter.
And also John Glazer loves gear because John Glazer loves camping gear. He loves gear of all kinds. And he did this remarkably funny show on TruTV called John Glazer Loves Gear. And he invited me to play the voice
of the robot AI in his phone, who was named Geary. It was a very fun job and really funny show. John
Glazer is a true delight. And you might know him as Jeremy Jam from Parks and Recreation.
I know him as half of the Fagetta Buddies.
Half of the Fagetta Buddies.
He's one third of the Slipnuts on Conan O'Brien.
Just one of the great weird comic minds.
And, oh, by the way, he is one of the stars of Dicktown, a TV show that David Reese and
I made that I'm not promoting in any way.
I'm just stating a fact that it's out there.
WGA, SAG-AFTRA, Solidarity, forever.
So we've talked enough about that, but he loves gear,
and one of you loves gear, and the other one is just fine about gear.
Who comes to this court seeking justice between the two of you?
I do, Your Honor.
That would be Catherine.
Yes.
And state the nature of your dispute.
Well, we like to go camping a few times a year, several times a year. And we like
to bring our creature comforts with us, but not too many creature comforts. The most recent point
of contention is we have one really nice camping chair. It's a, you might call it a camping love seat made by a company who I don't
think we want to buzz market, but it's a great chair for the two of us to sit on in front of
the campfire. However, we have a dog that also loves to sit on the chair with us.
And so that gets a little uncomfortable. So on my own power, I bought an additional single chair.
And when this arrived, my husband Lee said, how are we going to fit that in the car?
Lee, is that the nature of your response? It doesn't fit?
It doesn't fit safely.
I see.
But the point is not that there isn't room. The point is that if we use that room, it might not result in a good outcome down the road.
Because the chair sticks out the back window or something, might fly off and decapitate the driver behind you?
Well, we've been doing this for a long time, and I've gotten really good at packing the car.
But it's to the point now where if we want to put anything else in it, we're going to have to stack up the space between the top of the heap and the ceiling of the car.
You do not like that prospect.
I can tell by the sheer fury in your Canadian voice that that really makes your blood boil.
Because you can't see out the rearview mirror, right?
Is that the issue?
Yes.
Right.
That's one point.
And the other is that these things potentially become missiles if you have to make a hard stop somewhere.
Lee hasn't been this angry since someone queued inappropriately.
At the Loblaws?
Yeah, probably so.
Lee, I happen to know here because it was given this information was provided to me that you are from Toronto originally.
Yes, actually. Well, I was born in Northern Ontario, but yes, I lived in Toronto most of my life.
And Catherine, you are from the Bay Area, which is, I don't know what those words even mean,
but you both live in Connecticut now.
That's correct, which is a part of New England, I'm told.
Where are you, though, if I may ask?
We live in Stanford.
Oh, okay. Got it. New York North. Got it. Understood are you, though, if I may ask? We live in Stanford. Oh, okay.
Got it.
New York North.
Got it.
Understood.
And where do you do your camping?
It depends.
We like to go to the Adirondacks and the Catskills.
And this upcoming weekend, we're going to what's called Taconic State Park.
It's right near the New York, Connecticut, Massachusetts border.
Yeah. So the question really is, are you going to bring the extra chair to Connick State Park or no?
Right.
I'm going to decide it. Unless, Lee, you've already destroyed the chair in a fit of Northern
Ontario Peak.
No, it's still intact.
Okay. For now, it's still intact. So you mentioned that you like to go camping. You mentioned that you like your creature comforts. You also mentioned that you have a
creature. Yes. So now it's time to pay the evidence dog tax, as they say online. Let me
see a picture of this dog. This image, of course, will be available on our show page at magazine.com.
As well as our Instagram account. I switched early to the picture, sorry.
You know, that's okay. It's great.
At Judge John Hodgman.
I just want to get a plug for our own Instagram account out.
Okay.
Little chubbers.
How would you describe this dog, Chessie Thorne?
What kind of dog is this?
This is a small to medium-sized dog
with floppy ears and short fur.
It's sort of a classic dog look.
Legs are a little bit stubby.
A little dachshund-y, would you say, Lee?
A little bit dachshund-y, yeah.
And its head is resting on the arm of a camping chair.
And it's sort of, it's perpendicular to what I presume is Lee's lap.
And because its head is resting on this camping chair arm, it has some really great sort of neck and shoulder chubs.
Yeah, a lot of good chubs in this dog.
So, Catherine, what is the name of this dog?
His name is Dibney.
Dibney. And Lee, is Dibney a dachshund?
Yes. He's so-called miniature dachshund that grew to, well, he's an overachiever, let's put it that way.
Seems pretty maxiature for a mini.
An overachiever in the area of kibble.
Is this picture Dibny relaxing in the Kelty love seat?
Yes.
On top of Lee's lap?
Yes.
And this is evidence not only of a cute dog, but also that Dibny has claimed this love seat for his own love and will not admit another lover to this love seat.
Correct?
Yes.
It's a tight squeeze if all three of us are on the chair.
That seems pretty adorable, though, to tight squeeze in that Kelty love chair.
Yeah.
Scrolling down here is another picture of Dibny and Dibny's little dog bed in the back of your car.
Yes.
You catching this, Jesse Thorne?
Oh.
He's wearing his own little, he has a little seatbelt and it involves a little orange safety
vest. Yep. And he's peeking. He's peeking up over his little dog bed. And finally, there's a photo
of your campsite. Now, this is a pretty developed campsite, I have to say.
I'm a non-camper.
I have slept under cover of a tent twice in the past 30 years.
But looking at your campsite, I mean, it seems like this is not a campsite.
This is like a camp compound.
You have multiple hang stations.
How would you describe the tent that you have over here on the left of this photo?
It doesn't look like a tent so much as like a wind tunnel that they used to test jet turbines. Yeah, just like outdoor co-op supply, like wedding and event tents, because this thing
is gargantuan. It's incredible. It is a six-person tent. It's a six-person tent. And there's an
addition on it they call a garage, which we use to park the
firewood. And sometimes we put the seat in there, the chair in there for the night. Also, if the
rain's coming down, we can just sit in there and provide some shelter. It literally looks like your
tent has a garage. I will say that the only way you could fit six people in that tent was that
four of them were children, I think. If we were you try to put six adults in there, I think it would be a tight squeeze.
To be fair, six adults is four too many for any given tent.
Where was this photo taken? In the woods of Connecticut?
That was taken in the Catskills at North South Lake Campground.
I'm also seeing here a picnic table, a barbecue, and three large bags of firewood.
Well, of course, the picnic table is on the campsite.
But, you know, we drape a cloth over it and it's nice.
I was about to say, there's also a tablecloth.
But we don't usually use the campfire for cooking.
We have a Coleman stove that Catherine uses.
It's a little more easier to deal with, I think, than trying to cook over a grill.
In other words, when you're camping, it's only the bare essentials.
Yeah.
I mean, I bring my cast iron pans.
I was going to say, this looks like a really comfortable setup where you could hang out for some time.
And you're not sleeping on the ground, are you, Lee and Catherine? No, no, no, no, no, no. What do you got going on in there? Catherine found
this bedding set that's got like a big, like a queen size inflatable mattress, you know, so one
of the things that has to be done when we arrive after the tent is up is, you know, I am sitting
in there blowing up this mattress with the pump for 20 minutes and, you know, I am sitting in there blowing up this mattress with the pump for 20 minutes
and, you know, and then putting the bedding on.
And then you'll see in the next picture when we get to it, there's the foam tiles that
go down over one end of the tent so that we have like a floor that doesn't hurt when you
walk on it.
You have a floor that you put in your tent?
Yes.
So what I have scrolled down and I see this luggage cart full of equipment, which I take it to
be the full complement of what you pack into your car.
That's not even all of it.
No?
Oh, so it's more than one luggage cart's worth?
The love seat's not on the cart in that picture.
This is a real luggage cart from a...
Are you staging your camping trips at a courtyard by Marriott?
No, the building where we live has a few of these for the use of the tenants.
Yeah, it's the apartment buildings cart.
I see. I see.
Base camp, Jesse, is at the courtyard morning muffin station.
Yeah.
Look, I appreciate how much comfort that you're inserting into the camping experience.
This is a lot more than I would have thought.
Who had the idea to put a comfort floor into the tent between the two of you?
That would be me.
That would be Catherine?
Yes.
In the interest of full disclosure, it isn't just foam tiles.
There are a few blankets that we spread over the foam tiles to keep the dirt from getting in the tent.
Right, of course.
There was also a little folding stool that goes on top of all of that so someone has a place to sit.
Nothing worse on a camping trip than dirt.
Well, inside the tent.
Next thing you know, there'll be trees around.
I didn't come out here in the wilderness to get my foam tiles dirty.
I think it's terrific.
It's on the glamping spectrum insofar as you want to be outdoors, but you also want to not be uncomfortable and to enjoy yourself.
I think that's fine.
Let's take a quick recess and hear about this week's Judge John Hodgman sponsor.
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Rules and restrictions apply. My question is, who came to this relationship with the idea of camping?
I think I may have been the more avid camper, but I think Lee also camped when he was younger.
I would go on cycling tours, supported tours, where we basically brought our own tents
and set them up every night at the end of the day. So I did a lot that way. When I was a kid,
my family would go out. Of course, my dad had one of those pop-up trailers for a few years.
Sure. So it was a little more swanky than a tent maybe. But yeah, I've done a fair amount of tent camping, you know, for over the years.
Yeah, but Lee, when you're describing the foam floors and the special stool, etc.,
you kind of just keep pointing at Catherine like she's the one introducing all this comfort into the outdoor experience.
Is that your feeling?
You think it should be a little bit more rustic?
These are not unwelcome improvements.
That's the harshest thing I've ever heard a Canadian say.
I've never heard anything more passive nor more aggressive.
That's the key to the Canadian nuclear football.
I'm sorry, Lee, and all of Canada.
I'm dealing in these stereotypes.
Is it true that these improvements are not unwelcome, Lee?
You're under oath.
Yes, I would say so.
It's not like we have an inflatable sofa in there or a television set.
But these are things that make the experience more enjoyable, especially if you're going to be there a few nights.
You'll probably get a projector, a camping projector.
Put that on a sheet.
No, Catherine?
I'm trying to glam this out for you.
Do you have a particular way you like to pack the car?
Oh, absolutely.
Tell me about it.
Okay, so it really doesn't all come together until the cooler's ready to go in because that's the biggest thing.
all come together until the cooler's ready to go in because that's the biggest thing.
You would have noticed on that last photo, there's a sort of a big dark gray box, and that has most of the gear, like the plates, the pans.
I'm sorry, the what?
The wash tubs.
You said that was most of the, it was a G word.
Oh, the gear.
Gear!
Yes.
And then, you know, so the cooler goes in first.
The gear sort of goes in sideways.
And then that bedding set I talked about, it comes in a bag, and you can tie the bag down.
It has straps to sort of ratchet down to compact it, but it's still pretty bulky.
So it has to fit in sort of behind that. And then there's a space behind the seats that the boxes don't quite fit into
because the seats are angled.
And that's where I tuck the poles for the tarp.
I fill up that spot with stuff.
Then I end up layering things on top of that.
I'm trying to get it all sort of into...
Tetris-ing it in there.
You know, roughly level shape.
Yeah.
And still so that it only comes up to about the level of the top of the seat.
Right.
Because, as you point out, if there is something heavy in the back, not only does it block your view in the rearview mirror, but should you stop short, it could come flying forward and hit you in the back of the head or go through your windshield.
Yeah, exactly.
I mean, and just to be clear, I'm not overlooking other opportunities for using space.
Like the space behind the driver's seat, behind the passenger's seat, it's all full of stuff too.
Right.
And the other half of the back seat where Dibny isn't sitting is also stacked with stuff.
What kind of vehicle do you drive?
It's a Honda CR-V.
Yeah, no one's accusing you of getting lazy finding space in that CR-V.
We know you're packing it up.
Lee, would you characterize yourself as a packing dad, which is to say that, like me, you spend the five days preceding any trip obsessing over exactly where each package is going to go in your motor vehicle?
Uh, not so much.
I mean, I've been doing it enough now that I can just sort of wing it.
You know, we'll pack up maybe the night before we leave just to get some of the stuff in the car.
But, you know, we've done it so many times now, I can just, it used to take a lot longer.
But you have a system, right? I mean, this is like filling a dishwasher. If someone else does it,
it's big trouble. Oh, yeah. Yeah. I have a very particular way of doing it these days. You know,
stuff that I've discovered works in terms of just getting things to fit.
Bailiff Jesse, may I ask you a question?
Of course.
You ever pack a car for a car trip, say, to Maine at the beginning of the summer, right?
And then someone in your family decides to put something else in the car on their own?
Oh, my God.
Oh, my God.
Oh, my God.
Oh, my God.
Oh, my God. Oh, my God. Oh, my God. Oh, my God. Oh, my God.
Oh, my God.
Oh, my God.
And maybe you're still thinking about it.
I love my wife so much, John.
I love my wife so much, and I can't emphasize that enough.
But I don't think there's anything that makes me break out in hives of irrational rage more
than just when even one new bag shows up after the packing line has been drawn.
Right.
And then just,
why is this open top tote bag full of marbles here?
And yes, and I will need access to that during the drive.
So find somewhere where I can reach my marbles.
I can't emphasize how much I love my wife.
She's really great. And she deserves a tote bag full of marbles. I can't emphasize how much I love my wife. She's really great.
Oh, and she deserves a tote bag full of marbles.
That's not it.
Our brains are broken.
Nobody should be separated from their marbs during a long drive.
Yeah.
No, my brain is just broken.
It's just, I can't, I have to rearrange everything in my mind and maybe in the car to adapt for new things.
But Lee, I think you're a little bit cooler than me and Jesse in the car to adapt for new things. But Lee,
I think you're a little bit cooler than me and Jesse in this regard. You just want to be safe.
Yes. I see a meh hand signal from Catherine.
Yeah, I definitely saw a meh or a metza metza hand signal from Catherine. Please explain.
Well, you know, he's Canadian, so he is hiding his deep-seated rage at anything that might disrupt this perfect packing system that he has in his head.
Catherine, I heard him say that he's pretty much got it under control now.
To me, and correct me if I'm wrong, that signifies that he has a perfect system that will be broken by the slightest change or addition.
Yes, that's correct.
Do you cop to that, Lee?
Yeah.
Every time something new arrives, it's like, ah, now I'm going to make this work.
Let the record show Lee is touching his hand to his brows and just picturing this extra
complication in the back of his CRV.
He looks like a stock photograph of someone suffering a migraine headache.
That's right.
Just trying to paint a word picture for the podcast listeners at home.
Pretty much like I got this chair and it was, where is this going to go?
How am I going to make this fit?
We have to get rid of something else.
But if I get a new piece of gear, he often will figure out how to make it work.
He was angry when we got the tarp at first.
He was like, we don't need this tarp.
And now he loves the tarp.
Lee, were you angry at Tarpy in the beginning?
I don't remember that so much, but I suppose it's possible.
In the end, it turned out to be not a big deal. The tarp
doesn't take up a lot of space, and we were able to get it in the gearbox. When you say the gearbox,
you're referring to the gearbox of the CR-V? You're out of room in the cargo area? Yeah, I mean,
he's putting stuff in the carburetor. That's how resourceful he is when it comes to putting stuff
into the CR-V. Taking out the spark plugs and replacing them with Slim Jims.
Catherine, you got this chair, you say, under your own power.
That is to say, without consulting your husband.
You just went off rogue and got this chair.
Tell me about the chair.
Tell me why you love it.
Tell me where you got it.
You can tell me the name of the brand of the place that sold it to you.
Well, it's another Kelty chair.
Here we go.
It's just a chair for one person instead of two people.
And it's also lower to the ground.
That's the other differences.
It's the kind where you can stretch back and stretch out.
The other chair is up a little bit higher,
and sometimes I feel like my short legs
kind of swing when I'm sitting on it.
Oh, really?
A little bit.
So I'm taking it that when you say
that this new chair can seat only one,
the one it seats is you.
Well, whoever decides to sit in it,
sometimes even Dibny sits in it
because he can get on and off the chair
with his little stumpy legs
more easily than the taller chair,
which might injure him if he jumped off of it.
Tell me about Dibny as a camper.
What's it like to be camping with Dibny?
Because it seems like he's running the show.
He really is.
He's a very spoiled dog.
He is great to camp with. He loves to wander around the campsite, sniff things,
curl up on a chair, curl up on whoever is sitting in a chair. He's also, when it's cold at night,
he is an excellent sleeping bag, sleeping quote heater. Right. Hot water bottle. Yeah. So long
as he wipes his paws on the blankets on top of the camp tent floor before coming in, I presume.
Do you have a camping outdoor shower?
We do have one.
We've never actually used it as a shower, though.
What do you use it as instead?
An irrigation system?
We intended it as a camping shower during COVID when it was a little nervous feeling to go into bathhouses and campgrounds. Right.
But we never actually used it for that purpose.
We actually use it to wash our bikes.
Okay, fair enough.
So does Dibny have his own camp seat?
No, because he wants to sit on whomever's lap is currently sitting down.
And whose lap does he prefer? He is pretty evenly split.
Equal opportunity laps sitter? Yeah, exactly.
Right. How did it feel before you got the new chair to be coming out of the tent,
walking through the garage, then you have to pass through the east wing and the video games room.
And then also the lounge and then the mudroom.
And then you finally get outside to see your loving husband, Lee, sitting in the love seat with Dibny in his lap.
And there's no room for you.
Mostly it was when we both sit there and then the dog just drapes himself across both of our laps.
It's cozy, but it was getting a little uncomfortable.
Because it won't sit still.
Yeah.
It's kind of like when your feelings on people sleeping together at night where it's a little too cozy and there's too many people in bed and everyone's
shifting around. So it's nice to just have that one chair. Yeah, no, I mean, Lee, do you deny that
this chair serves a pretty vital purpose? I mean, what other option is there for Catherine if you
and Dibny are snugged up on that love seat and she's not comfortable? What do you say to her?
Go sit on the ground? Well, we could ask Dibny to sit on the ground. I mean, he does have an actual dog bed.
Come on, Lee. Let's be serious now. No one's asking Dibny to sit on the ground. I've seen
the photos. He'd just bring dirt to the blankets, which would then transfer to the foam. And Dibny
can't be on the ground. He's a dog. He's got to be on those laps. You know his position on this.
He's pretty adamant on that.
I get back to my original question, Lee.
It seems reasonable to have an extra chair.
Don't you agree?
If it's not possible to have three of us in the love seat,
then somebody would like to have a place to sit.
So, no, I don't think it's unreasonable, but...
But it's still too much.
It's too much.
Why a love seat to begin with?
Why not just two chairs?
Isn't that how two people camp?
They get two chairs.
They sit in them.
How did this love seat come into your life?
Who bought it?
I think that was a group decision.
It's just one piece, you know, instead of having two of these to haul around and bundle up.
And it's actually convenient when we need to move it around.
There's just one thing to move.
It's just a little bigger, a little heavier.
So it wasn't for closeness reasons that you wanted this love seat.
It was for expediency of packing.
I didn't say that.
Well, you're not saying anything else.
You're saying it's one piece and it's easy to move around.
It saves you some hassle with the CRV.
That's what I'm hearing.
It is also leg swinging, notwithstanding.
It is very comfortable.
Right.
But less so with a dog sometimes.
Right.
Wouldn't the easiest answer to this be to just get rid of the dog?
No.
Yeah.
Yeah.
Here's what you do.
How far away is this drive to the Catskills from Stanford, would you say?
A couple hours?
Two hours, yeah.
So here's what you do.
You get another car.
You fill up your CRV with all of your campsite stuff.
And then the other car with all of Dibny's chairs and beds and tents.
And you two drive in the human car and he can drive the dog car.
Exactly.
You'll have to help him set up his little campsite, of course, because no thumbs.
And also, you're under his sway.
Yeah, but just have a separate campsite for Dibny. I think that that's a great solution. Probably not And also you're under his sway. Yeah. But just to have a separate
campsite for Dibny, I think that that's a great solution. Probably not the one you're looking for.
So Catherine, you have the new chair and you went camping with it. How did that go?
I think it went pretty well. You know, we sat in it. Dibny sat in it. It fit. Lee made it work.
It did fit in the car as he narrows his eyes at me. And it was fine.
How did it feel to sit in your own chair while camping?
It was pretty nice.
I mean, I would sit in the chair.
Sometimes Lee would sit in the chair.
Sometimes we would both sit in the left seat.
I'm sorry to interrupt you.
Lee, you sat in the chair too?
Yes, once or twice.
How dare you?
It's a little low to the ground for me.
So Lee, are you telling me that not only did you want to ban this chair,
but when it showed up, you then had the nerve to sit in it?
And now you have the nerve to come on our podcast and there's no other way to say it,
poop on it?
Well, it's there.
Might as well use it, right?
Is this a sit and poop, Lee?
Is it a sit and poop?
Not usually.
Okay. So Lee, let me ask you this question. When you were sitting in the love seat this last time camping with presumably
Dibny on your lap, and you look across not the campfire but the Coleman range that you brought,
probably a six-stop burner or whatever, and you see Catherine sitting there in her own chair,
how do you feel then?
You know, sometimes I wish Dibny would be happy to sit somewhere else so that Catherine and I can just have the love seat for each other. So you do value love, not just seat.
Yes. Right. It's not just an efficient
one piece of furniture that is easy to pack. It is also an opportunity for coziness with your partner.
Exactly.
So it did fit in, or you got it there somehow.
How did it fit?
Well, I had to figure out a way to squeeze it onto the stack
without blowing everything up.
It could possibly explode?
Let's just say sometimes when we have to stop and I have to open the tailgate, I worry that
some things will not
stay put.
Just got to be ready to catch them if
they drop out. You're concerned about a cartoon
closet situation. Yes.
You probably shouldn't have packed those three bowling balls.
Doink, doink, doink.
Falling on your head. Stars
and birds. So it
was frustrating for you to pack it.
Were you able to see out the rearview mirror?
Or was it blocking your view?
I was able to see out the back.
You did find a way.
Now, Lee, is this a slippery slope situation?
Are you concerned that if you allow this chair, this addition, that there will just be more and more and more additions?
I think that's clearly a danger. I mean, eventually we will run out of space.
Right.
Lee, does your car have a roof rack?
Unfortunately, it does not.
Have you ever considered a cargo box on top? Because you're not against the gear.
Gear!
If we had rails on top, we'd definitely consider it, I think. Although then the question remains
where we'd put the cargo box when we were done with it at the end of the season, because we
don't really have a place to store it.
Catherine, have you investigated a cargo box?
Is what Lee's saying true?
No rails on the CRV?
No place to store it?
That's correct.
When we got the car, we had the smart idea to get a trailer hitch for our bikes, but no roof rack.
It was an oversight.
There are aftermarket rails you can get for CRVs.
And there's also things like cargo nets. You can install a cargo net in the CRV to prevent
flying objects. Oh, inside the car, you mean? Yes. I thought you meant you were going to put
stuff on top of your car and then sort of secure it with a net. I'm like, yeah, that's going to be a lot of fun to drive around. Knowing you
got all kinds of bowling balls and extra chairs secured by a net on top of the car. No, thank you.
Lee, what's wrong with a net or a cargo barrier between the cargo area and the back seat?
There's no real place to mount it on top of the pile to keep it from bouncing off. I don't see
any tie downs or anything inside the car where I could actually make that work. I bet you that CRV has some tie downs. Look, I know that you're a
Canadian car packer. I know you've got, I know you've gotten in there, so I'm going to trust
that you know your vehicle, but it seems to me most hatchbacks have some tie downs. I just googled
Honda CRV cargo barrier and there are many, many choices. Many, many choices of cargo barriers,
but maybe that's not what's the crux here, Jesse Thorne.
Maybe the crux is the concern that Catherine has things that she wants to put in the car,
period.
Catherine, Lee mentions, and checking online, I can concur, a Honda CR-V is not a bottomless
pit.
There is a limit to the amount of space in there.
Do you have your eye on any other equipment that you would like to add to your camping profile currently? No. I'm sorry. That felt like a lie to
me, Catherine. There was a significant pause there. That pause to me did suggest that you
were thinking like, am I truthful here or do I hold back the fact that I'm really interested in getting a camping media console?
It's more that I self-police myself to try to eliminate any temptation of acquiring any new gear.
Like, for example, there's like a sale going on at REI and I go, OK, that would be kind
of cool.
But no, I try to buy anything else or mention anything else.
Lee will say, no, that won't fit.
Or what are we going to do?
What are we going to take out instead of taking this thing?
So first of all, let me say finally a mention of REI in this buzz market fest that we've got going on here today.
I am a member of that cooperative.
So thank you very much.
But second of all, policing my desires to look for new camping equipment
as a way of life does not sound like fun.
Well, you know, it's the deep-seated Canadian anger that
if I buy anything, he might make a passive-aggressive comment
about how it won't fit in the car.
How does it make you feel, Lee, to know that Catherine is spending her time
tamping down even the idea of a curiosity of a desire
for some new piece of camping equipment.
That she fears your Canadian passive aggression.
Well, now I don't know if it'll go that far, but...
She just said it.
So how does that make you feel?
I'm not trying to stifle you, dear.
You know what, Lee?
I believe you.
Was there something more you wanted to say?
You know, it's okay to look at these things. Any decisions that we make about adding more
equipment to the pile, I mean, have to be undertaken jointly, I think. That seems very
reasonable, Catherine. You admitted from the beginning that you got this chair on your own
without consultation. That's true. I mean, you could appreciate that Lee's negative reaction
might be less, how do I fit this into the car?
But also like, why aren't you checking with me?
I have a very specific way I get things into the car.
This chair is not going away.
This chair is part of the pile now, right, Lee?
More or less.
So what specifically would you have me order, Lee,
if I were to rule in your favor?
Nothing ever again or what?
I would probably would just like to request that any desire to add new things be discussed first, you know, with an eye to practicality and available space.
So no more sort of springing these little surprises on me.
Okay.
Oh, yes, we'll be taking this.
Well, I hope so, but we'll find out.
Lee, are there any items in the current pile that you would like to get rid of?
Because I could order them gone, too.
It's not just the chair that hangs in the balance.
It could be anything.
Floor tiles, turntable and hi-fi set, portable swimming pool.
I'm fine with the current collection of camping gear that we have
Portable helipad
Portable casino
Do you have a casino?
Do you have slot machines?
No?
You're okay with the pile as it is?
Just this chair is the last
It's the last straw
Yeah, that's pretty much the limit as far as I'm concerned
Let this chair be the penultimate straw
The last straw is the one that breaks the CRV
That's when the explosion happens
Catherine, what would you have me order if I were to rule in your favor? an ultimate straw. The last straw is the one that breaks the CRV. That's when the explosion happens.
Catherine, what would you have me order if I were to rule in your favor?
What he's asking for isn't unreasonable.
Oh, communication in a marriage?
The irony is normally we're very good communicators.
So why is this happening? If you're good communicators, and I believe that you are, what drove you to go behind Lee's back and get a chair for yourself?
Because I thought he would say no if I got it.
Or if I asked to get it, he would say no.
Right.
And I wanted it.
Classic beg for forgiveness, don't ask for permission move.
Yes.
Lee is concerned with safety during driving, Catherine, and not being able to use the rearview mirror.
Do you do any of the driving on these trips or is he the sole driver?
Oh, I drive.
I usually drive on the way there and then he'll drive on the way back.
Or if it's a longer drive, we'll share the driving.
But you don't share the same urgency when it comes to the possibility of
your brand new chair that you bought flying out of your windshield like a missile. I think I'm
more comfortable with driving because I've driven across country with a trailer. Right. And so I'm
more familiar with having driven without being able to see out of the rearview mirror.
I mean, I totally understand the safety aspect of it, but I feel like the, I can't see out of the rearview mirror is something that isn't 100% to me like a valid reason.
Do you think that consciously or unconsciously Lee is making it up?
No.
Well, I don't.
Maybe he's just less comfortable.
Right.
He's just less comfortable.
Genuinely less comfortable.
Yeah.
He's not using that as an excuse to cover up a different preference, which is, I just
don't want any more stuff and I don't want you to go buy more stuff.
I don't think so.
Okay.
Lee, any mischaracterizations that I've made of you that you'd like to clear up at this
point?
I don't think so.
I think the discussion has proceeded fairly.
All right.
Good.
I'm glad to hear it.
So one thing I have to ask you, Lee, is, you know, Catherine said that she wanted the chair
and she was afraid if she asked you about it, you would say no, and she wanted it.
So she went ahead and got it anyway.
What do you feel about that?
Obviously, I think it would have been better if she had
asked me first you know are you sure there's no room for this and then I probably would have said
yeah I'm pretty sure but you know sometimes I'm wrong about things like that you know until we
actually try it if the chair was on sale say you know we got it we couldn't make it fit in the car
then we can't use it either we send it back or find some other use for it.
It can't come with us.
The worst thing that happens is we've wasted some money.
But I would have preferred that she had approached me about it before she ordered it.
Okay.
Well, I think I've heard everything I need to in order to make my decision.
I am going to go into my portable planetarium that I just assembled
while I was judging this podcast.
I'll be back in a moment with my verdict.
Please rise as Judge John Hodgman exits the courtroom. Catherine, how are you feeling
about your chances in the case? Oh, I'm not feeling great. Why is that? Lee has presented some very
logical arguments, and I don't feel like things are on my side. I mean, this is a man with a system.
True.
And he does have a habit of thinking things won't work at first, but then discovering that they in fact will work.
Or being resistant to change and then once he's presented with a change, adjusting himself.
You're telling me a man with a system is resistant to change?
These pieces just aren't adding up.
Lee, how are you feeling about your chances?
I feel like I've presented my arguments rationally
and tried not to be unreasonable about things.
I would, I don't know, if the judge ruled in my favor,
I almost feel a little bad about it.
I don't want to make Catherine unhappy, right?
I don't want there to Catherine unhappy, right? I
don't want there to be disharmony because of this. You know, the important thing is we know that the
time that we spend together, you know, it's fun time, you know, regardless of the work it takes
to get there. And once the stuff is there and we're there, you know, it's usually a nice relaxing
time. And I don't want squabbling over whether things will fit into the car or not, you know, to be the thing that sort of hangs over these trips in the future. All I'm asking for is
a little consultation, I guess, before we throw anything more into it. Well, we'll see what Judge
Hodgman has to say about all this when we come back in just a moment.
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,
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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
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Judge Hodgman, we're taking a break.
And as this episode is released, we are on the road.
We are ripping our way through the Midwest, delivering justice.
We just had an incredible time at the Opera House in Lexington, Kentucky.
And if you're hearing this today on the day of release, it's not too late to get your tickets for our Chicago show, which is tonight, October 11th. And then it's on to Madison, Wisconsin, St. Paul, Minnesota, Austin, Texas.
And then a short break before we go down to Atlanta, Charlottesville, Durham, North Carolina, Washington, D.C., Portland, Maine, Brooklyn, New York.
Why, it's the Van Freaks Roadshow, and we're just getting on the road.
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Go to vanfreaksroadshow.com for tickets and a link to submit your disputes.
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VanFreaksRoadShow.com.
Submit those cases and get those tickets.
Please rise as Judge John Hodgman
re-enters the courtroom and presents his verdict.
You may be seated.
First of all, Lee and Catherine,
I was so excited when i saw your camping setup
and then when i heard that you had a queen air mattress i was like oh they are so close to the
dream like they already have a tent that is a house and they already have one queen-sized
air mattress in it how hard would it be for them to upgrade that to a queen-sized air mattress in it, how hard would it be for them to upgrade that
to a king-sized air mattress
and then get another tent house
with another king-sized mattress
and set it across from a portable reflecting pool,
which you can easily get at REI,
and it comes in a bag.
That means it's portable.
And then you can live the Judge John Hodgman dream of the ideal sleeping arrangement between people who love one another, which is obviously two king-sized beds in separate villas separated by a reflecting pole.
And you can visit each other from time to time.
But then I realized that's not for them, nor is it for me, honestly.
I also would miss my partner in that situation.
It's a joke.
It's an idea.
It's an ideal that should never be reached
because clearly you two love each other
and want to be close to each other
and care about each other
and you want to snuggle on that love seat.
And if it weren't for Dibny,
you wouldn't have a problem in the world.
You have the love seat,
not because it is a seat,
but because it is love.
And if we could get rid of that dog somehow, but we can't.
Dibny rules everything around us.
And that's also the way it should be.
Now, it is perfectly reasonable, rational, logical, as you were all saying,
that if you can't share the love seat comfortably,
that you should then have another seating option
for someone who might be like, I don't know, the person you married and love who has shorter legs
than you do, Lee. As Catherine pointed out, and as you pointed out, Lee, you also presented perfectly
reasonable, rational, and logical reasons for why you want it to stop here. This chair, no further. And I agree with
you. I think you are out of room in that CRV. And besides the discomfort that you feel just thinking
about fitting more into your CRV, a discomfort that I think you might want to interrogate a
little bit more closely as to whether that's a good thing in your life or not. You feel put off and made discomfited by slight changes to your packing arrangement that might
not be a trait that is bringing you happiness.
It's certainly not bringing Catherine happiness.
You are right, and it is logical, quite honestly, that Catherine should not have bought that
chair behind your back and should not go off and buy other pieces of camping equipment behind your back in the future.
This chair no further in that regard as well. You are good communicators, right? But here's the
thing. You did a very, very good job answering all of my questions, as you pointed out,
rationally, Lee. But you didn't do a very good job answering emotionally. Perhaps it's not part of
your Canadian constitution. We'd have to ask Howie from Disbarred about that. He's an expert in
Canadian constitutional law. But when I asked you, how does it feel to hear that Catherine went
behind your back because she was afraid you would say no, you kind of sidestepped it. And instead you said, well, if she had asked
me, I would have said no. Basically, you went into this long extrapolation of everything that
could go wrong with the chair, how it might not fit, how it might fit in a way that is dangerous,
how if it didn't work out, what would you do with it?
I mean, you really looked far into the future instead of staying in the present
and considering what you had just heard.
Maybe you would have said no.
Maybe you would have said all those other things.
Maybe you would have said yes.
But I think that you need to reckon with the fact that she went behind your back to buy a chair
because she was afraid you would say no and get freaked out
if she asked you about it ahead of
time. And I think that's a reasonable thing that she felt. That is rational. That is based on prior
engagement, that she would feel that you would not be comfortable with even the idea of adding
a chair to the portfolio and fitting it into the CRV. And though I rule in your favor, and I do
feel that Catherine made the error here, and it's not an error that should be repeated, by sidestepping communication, I think that
both of you need to interrogate a little bit about why this ended up happening.
And this is coming from someone who packs a car really, really intently and with intention.
And truly, I was not exaggerating that I get very, very psychologically derailed when all of a sudden
a person who lives in my house comes out with two guitar amplifiers that I didn't know anything
about that have to immediately come to me.
Oh no.
Yeah.
I know, Jesse.
I know.
I know.
I know.
Excuse me.
Two guitars, one amplifier, but still that's one guitar and one amplifier more than I knew
I was dealing with.
In any case, I feel you, Lee.
I really do.
Like, I am someone who really does go to the worst case scenario with every camping chair,
metaphorically, that I buy.
What if it doesn't fit?
What if it doesn't work?
What if it's not the best?
What if it doesn't go into the car?
How would we return it? Blah, blah, blah, blah, blah. And I'm telling you, Lee,
it's not a happy place for me. And Catherine, I don't think it's a happy place for you
to be, you know, sort of like walking by a web browser open to REI or Celtes or whatever.
I mean, like, no, no, I can't think about that. Got to shut that computer because I don't even
want to think about adding something to the portfolio. These are things that we all go through. It's not a big deal,
but I do encourage you, though I rule in Lee's favor in this case, but that you interrogate the
dynamics a little bit and talk and communicate and reckon with the emotional stuff that's behind
the chair and leave the rational and the logical. They both have their place, of course. But Lee,
your response to the Tetris of your car planning being upended is an emotional response as much
as it is a logical and rational one. And Catherine, too, your desire for a chair that you can sit in
rather than be edged out by Dibny, that's also both a logical desire and an emotional one.
So with those caveats to talk further about this, I don't know when you would ever have
time to talk about this.
It's not like you're going to be sitting out under the stars just contemplating life
anytime soon, looking up at the vast field of the Milky Way, listening to the Coleman
stove percolate or whatever it is that happens, contemplating the big questions in life.
I don't know if that's ever going to be part of your life in the future, but you might take some
time around that to discuss this stuff and give Dibny a pet for me. This is the sound of a gavel.
Judge John Hodgman rules that is all. Please rise as Judge John Hodgman exits the courtroom.
Lee, how do you feel about that verdict? I think it's fair. And John's point about further introspection is well taken as well.
Can you imagine if someone in your family showed up with two guitars and an amp after you already packed the car?
I can imagine them showing up.
I'm not necessarily imagining me driving away with it in the car.
imagining me driving away with a equipment in the car. The dads united will never be defeated.
Catherine, how do you feel? I feel pretty good about it. The judge gave several good points about communication and we'll spend some time when we're in front of the campfire,
looking at the campfire and talking it over.
Well, I love it.
Katherine Lee, thanks for joining us on the Judge John Hodgman podcast.
Thank you.
Thank you. It was fun.
You're welcome to join me on a camping trip anytime, as long as you don't show up with an open-topped bag at the last minute.
You've got to put it by the door the night before so that I can work it out in my head.
Another Judge John Hodgman case is in the books.
We'll have swift justice in just a minute.
First, our thanks to Redditor 2Live and Brian Nallet for naming this week's episode Smorter in the Court.
You know why everyone that wins this contest's Reddit handle is a pun? It's because
they won a pun contest. That just occurred to me. Just now that occurred to me. They won a pun
contest. To live in Brian, LA is a great pun too. Yep, exactly. Join the conversation over at the
Maximum Fun subreddit. That's maximumfun.reddit.com. That's where we've been asking for these title
submissions. So get in on it. It's fun just to see them, even if you don't.
Look, I can never think of puns.
And I have nothing but contempt for them.
But I look at it and I still enjoy it.
I still do, too.
You know what I mean?
I really enjoy them a lot.
You can find the photos of this amazing dog and this wild campsite at Instagram.com slash Judge John Hodgman.
Follow us there.
Judge John Hodgman was created by Jesse Thorne
and John Hodgman.
This episode engineered by Ian Callinan
at Carriage House Studios in Stamford, Connecticut
and by Joel Mann at WERU in Orland, Maine.
Marie Bardi runs our social media.
Congratulations to her on her wedding.
Congratulations, Marie.
Our producer is Jennifer Marmer.
Now, Swift Justice,
where we answer small disputes
with quick judgment.
Stacey.
And Judge Hodgman,
this is our MaxFun colleague,
Stacey Molsky.
That's true.
Extraordinary.
Extraordinary.
Extraordinary that the number two executive
at Maximum Fun is taking the time
to submit dumb disputes.
Hopefully it's not with me.
Oh, boy.
Stacey says,
I use the words ground and floor interchangeably. And I think that's fine and normal. My partner does not think that is fine and normal. He always laughs at me if I say things like,
I don't like when blankets touch the ground.
So this is really interesting, Jesse, because not only is Stacey a member of the Maximum
Fund Employee Owner Cooperative and a friend, she is also, along with Lee and Catherine,
a member of a secret society that I have no knowledge of and cannot acknowledge that it
even exists.
So for all of these reasons,
maybe for the first time in Judge John Hodgman history, I have to recuse myself from this one.
Holy moly.
And I'm going to throw this one to our good friend, Joel Mann. Joel, did you hear the case
in question?
Yes, I did. Yes, I did.
And I'm sorry, I didn't give you any warning that I was going to ask for your wisdom on this,
but I have to recuse myself. You understand, I can't give you any warning that I was going to ask for your wisdom on this. But I have to recuse myself.
You understand.
I can't be unbiased on this.
Now, wait a minute.
Before I ask you this question, has Stacey bought you any luxurious trips in private planes?
Has she invited you to her hunting lodge for five weeks or anything like that?
Do you know Stacey Molsky?
Has she had business before your court before?
Did Stacey get you a $250,000 RV? Anything like that? Do you know Stacey Molsky? Has she had business before your court before? Did Stacey get you a $250,000 RV? Anything like that? No. Okay. So you are prepared to be
unbiased? I am unbiased. And well, then all I can do is I'm ready for your ruling.
Ground or floor, are they interchangeable? I don't think so. think uh the ground is when you're outside and the floor is when you're inside
harsh but fair thank you very much yeah look this is exactly what we were talking about in this case
in if you're camping the outside is ground if you're if you're in inside the tent and you put
in a floor then it's floor you know what i want to get, Jesse? REI sells hardwood flooring for tents. Did you
know that? I'm getting classic pattern and herringbone. I would prefer a parquet like
the garden in Boston. Joel Mann, I just want to say thank you. It's been so much fun to spend
this summer with you as always. WERU is a fantastic radio station. I listen to it not only on land,
but also there's a boat that has a radio on it. And I was listening to it last night and I heard Sue George play a couple of David Bowie
songs from the Life Aquatic soundtrack. And I was just like, what a gift to the world that WERU is.
And I know that you had your pledge drive that's long in the distance, but-
It was great.
And it's a shame because it means people can never donate money to the station.
No, no, that's not true. Oh, my yeah w-e-r-u.org w-e-r-u.org everyone you can also
listen to the station there and i highly recommend it i'm just going to put out a plug
not only do i make it a point to always listen to joe bird and the field hippies
on repeat during the joel man hour do you have an hour when you spin discs? Not anymore. Not anymore.
You just run the show. Yeah. But I love the Acadian music show on Sunday mornings. It's
really terrific. Everything's great. Well, it's been a great summer, and I wish you and Jesse
all the best of luck on your tour. Oh, thank you very much. And when we see you, you can explain
how you helped John Lennon and Yoko Ono escape from the Senate during a Watergate hearing.
Watergate hearings, yeah. I will.
Thank you very much. WERU.org. Meanwhile, unbelievably, we are already in October,
and that means it is spooky day, spooky night, Halloween.
Coming up, I wrote that song myself. Don't get on me, ASCAP. It's my own composition.
Do you have Halloween-themed disputes? We always have them. Fun size versus full size. What's the
better kind of decoration? Classic plastic skeleton or some kind of blow-up situation?
You know, those inflatables. Are those cheap or Are those good? What about a 10-foot skeleton? I saw one of those in Brooklyn last year. Very, very
scary. Is that acceptable or do the neighbors have a right to TP it? What's the worst costume you've
ever wore? What's the best costume to wear in Halloween this season? Any kind of dispute you
have for us, please send it in. Maximumfund.org slash JJHO is where we absorb
all of your disputes and make podcast magic out of them. But we do need your disputes,
and I do mean all of them. Right, Jesse? Maximumfund.org slash JJHO, no matter what
they are. Judge Hodgman, as I was reading that question from Stacey, it occurred to me that now
that I'm a mere creative executive at Maximum Fun and a member of the worker-owner
cooperative myself, not only do I no longer outrank Stacey, who is the number two business
executive at Maximum Fun on our org chart, but also then when you recused yourself, I found out that I'm also outranked by Joel. Wow.
Wow.
It's a dark day for me, co-creator of the Judge John Hodgman podcast.
I'm sorry, Jesse.
Do you want to make a quick list of everyone that outranks me now?
Yeah, we should put out a t-shirt that has the Judge John Hodgman org chart on it.
Probably sell some sweet teas.
Oh my gosh.
You know what?
I'm a free radical.
I'm going to cause cancer in this organization. Hey, I guess we always say we'll talk to you next time on the
Judge John Hodgman podcast. And that's true. But we'll also see you soon on the Van Freaks Roadshow.
So go on to vanfreaksroadshow.com, get those tickets, send in those disputes. And what else
is there to say, Jesse? That's it. We'll talk to you and see you next time on the Judge John Hodgman podcast.