Judge John Hodgman - The Battlestar Galactist Generation
Episode Date: February 21, 2018Judge John Hodgman and Bailiff Jesse Thorn are in chambers this week so they can clear the docket. They talk about strangers on the subway reading Vacationland whilst behaving badly, cheating in schoo...l, and public shaming. Plus! What is the minimum percentage that is an acceptable restaurant tip? What is ok to eat in the car? Should a couple of new parents hire a professional photographer to take photos of their baby?
Transcript
Discussion (0)
Welcome to the Judge John Hodgman podcast. I'm bailiff Jesse Thorne. We're in chambers this week, clearing the docket with me, as always, the man, the myth, the legend, Judge John Hodgman.
Now, Jesse Thorne, by the time this comes out, I will not even be in the continental United States. I will be floating at sea down the Mexican Riviera with Jonathan
Colton on his cruise. So that's still a couple of weeks away. So as we speak now,
I am in my chambers here in Brooklyn, New York, but specifically I'm in my medicinal
full body immersion bath of sunscreen to prepare for this trip.
It's a treatment.
It's sort of like tooth whitening, but it's a deep skin protective treatment,
and I have to sit in this tub of Factor 9000 sunblock to let it seep in.
Is it like a tray like with teeth whitening?
Is it Judge Hodgman-shaped?
I had an option.
I had an option to get one that was more like a suit, a suit full of goo that I could wear
so I could do my errands here in Brooklyn and whatnot and move around at more like slosh around
in it. But it was a little more expensive and I don't want to go outside. I'm looking for
opportunities to sit in a vat for five hours a day anyway. So I took this one.
You're always keen on a vat-portunity.
That's exactly so. So if you hear me clicking my mouse or typing on my keyboard during this
recording, that is not me. That is a sound effect because of course my arms and hands are deep in a
vat of
sunblock so i also love to sit in a vat but i don't have to look for opportunities
because i'm one of those super cylons oh deep bsg cut yeah except for that I couldn't remember what they were called, so I just said super Cylons.
I think all of the humanoid Cylons would emerge from a vat of goo in the new BSG.
Did they all go back to the goo vat?
One of them was just in a vat all the time, right?
Yeah, I think they were constantly growing artificial bodies in goo vats.
they were constantly growing artificial bodies in goo vats.
And then if their existing body was murdered or destroyed in some way,
their consciousness would thumb drive back to the mothership and go into a new vat body.
Right.
That's technology.
That's how that works.
Well, it's going to be our future.
You want to settle some cases? No, I don't want to talk about Cylons more.
You see, the thing about Cylons was that they were a monotheistic society that had an almost evangelical belief in God,
whereas the colonists were all pretty secular polytheists.
But the reason they were preoccupied with God, these Cylons, is because they had no
sense of mortality, because they were born immortal.
And that's what, when we as a species defeat mortality, which, you know, Ray Kurzweil says
is going to happen, pretty soon we're going to be thumb driving our consciousness back
to some vat body somewhere.
That's going to really play a real mind game with us
as we adapt to this new idea that we aren't going to die.
So I feel a lot of sympathy for the Cylons.
Anyway, this new podcast is called
The Battlestar Galactica-ist Generation,
and it's going to be very successful. I guess that would be Battlestar Galactica-ist Generation, and it's going to be very successful.
I guess that would be Battlestar Galactist.
You know what?
I'll workshop it for a while while you read the letter.
Okay, great.
This is from Emily.
I live in New York City, and I take the subway every day to get to work.
Yesterday, somebody pushed past me on an escalator in a way that made me feel like I was going to fall down the stairs.
Awkwardly, I then ran into this person while I was on the G train. I wasn't surprised that he was
lounging on the pole, blocking the doors with his reclined body. You can imagine my shock to see
what he was reading. Vacation Land by John Hodgman. Oh, what? I spent the whole ride watching him not
move out of the way, too absorbed in his book to give commuters sufficient space to get on and off the train.
I mulled over whether I should confront him, but I didn't have the emotional energy for conflict.
Also, I was carrying groceries.
Would you please rule that Judge John Hodgman fans are required to act respectfully in public life while advertising their associations with you?
Oh, this is a grave, grave disappointment in one of my readers.
You know, the experience of putting Vacationland out into the world was almost uniform.
I would just say uniformly positive until this moment, primarily because of all the nice people taking pictures of the book
as they were reading it and putting it onto social medias and making me feel good at two o'clock in
the morning when I wake up for no reason and stay awake for four hours and wonder what I'm going to
do with the rest of my life. So that's, I'm so grateful to all of them, but not you guy reading
my book on the subway because the subway is a part of my life and people who block those
entrances are beneath contempt. Now here's the thing. Normally this podcast is pretty strict
about hearing disputes between two parties. I don't like disputes with strangers that you saw
one time and I don't like disputes with yourself because that's too philosophical. I like person A versus person B.
But I realized two things as I was absorbing the shock of this bad behavior by this dude with my book.
Because, one, the first thing is, one, he was reading my book.
And therefore, it is possible that he is a listener to this podcast.
It is possible that this person may be listening right now.
And two, subsequently, I realized I therefore have the power to shame this person in his
very ears.
So listen, listen, dude, listening to my voice.
First of all, thank you for buying my book.
I appreciate that.
Thank you for reading it on the subway and showing it off so people could know but i need you to be a good representative
of my book because if you're about to knock people down on the escalator and then you
man spread all over the pole lounging on the pole and don't let people on or off the train
and you've got my book. That doesn't just make you
look bad. That makes me look bad. People are going to be like, I don't want to read the book that a
creep reads. So for the good of humanity and also for the better of me, I'm starting a new segment
from time to time on this docket, a new segment of public shaming, some vigilante justice.
And this is it, dude. You're in the stocks. I order you. You're in the internet stocks
until I release you, until you behave better on the subway. You are hearing me right now.
And I hope sweat is pouring down your face and maybe you are urinating in your pants
because you can't believe this is happening to you. That's how you should feel. Feel bad.
Feel bad until you correct your behavior.
This is the sound of a gavel.
You're in the stocks, dude.
Wow, that was about as real as this show's ever gotten.
That was raw.
Well, you know what happens is when there is no one to speak back to me
and I can preach from a position of power into a dude's ears, I become a terrible monster.
Speaking of preaching from a position of power into people's ears, can I clarify something I said?
I believe it was on a recent Docket episode of Judge John Hodgman.
I will allow it.
I've had a lot of questions via email and Twitter regarding undershirts.
Oh, right.
And I fear that I may have been unclear
because of the nature of the question.
So I want to clarify my position on undershirts.
First of all, it is perfectly appropriate
to wear an undershirt.
It's a personal choice.
Some people feel clammy when they wear an undershirt. Some people feel clammy when they wear an undershirt.
Some people feel more comfortable when they wear an undershirt.
Whatever you prefer is fine.
However, what I would ask that you not do is wear a crew neck undershirt under a buttoned shirt that has the neck open.
a buttoned shirt that has the neck open unless you are going for a specific layered effect and be realistic you know if you're trying to layer and you know if you're
just showing your underwear or you're going for a look i call third season friends Chandler. Yeah. I mean, I would say the ideal version of that would be
J. Crew catalog model. I think J. Crew catalog model will, you know, they'll often style it
layered and, you know, it'll be a colored shirt that complements other parts of the outfit and
the shirt on top of it might be unbuttoned a little lower.
And that's perfectly fine. But if you're wearing a plain white undershirt as an undershirt and you have another shirt on top of it, it should either be a v-neck undershirt or you should have all of the buttons on your shirt buttoned up.
You should button it up all the way to the neck so that we're not looking at your underwear.
That's all.
I just wanted to clarify that point
because I got a lot of questions about it.
I would like to follow up
not on the topic of undershirts,
but on the topic of underwears.
Because I have been receiving
a lot of comments and suggestions
on email and social media
regarding my dilemma
that I can't get my American apparel underwear anymore. And I just want to say thank you on email and social media regarding my dilemma of that.
I can't get my American apparel underwear anymore.
And I just want to say thank you to everyone who took the time to think about my underwear
over the past several weeks.
Very flattering.
I had some great suggestions.
Our friend Ennis Esmer, now series regular on Blindspot on NBC.
Wow. They didn't just get him on there a couple episodes and kill him off, huh?
No.
Because they've had some really good guest actors on that show who just came on and then
got killed off, as it turned out.
Yeah, yeah.
I can think of one prime example of someone they had on a couple of times.
This character and this actor made a big splash.
The actor was very excited to go back on the show,
but then they killed him off right away.
I can think of some other really talented actors
who were on the show that were not killed off,
like Paul F. Tompkins and Mark McConville and Matt Gourley,
the latter two of whom are former editors of this show.
Yeah.
At this point, it's starting to feel bad
that I haven't been on this show. We this point it's starting to feel bad that i haven't
been on this show we should mount a campaign i'm available you could go on as my brother
my character is evil brother but only one ennis esmer was on the show a couple of times and because
ennis is so gosh darn charming and winning they made him a
series regular so check him out I do adore him and he suggested Calvin Klein that's hard for me to
wear Calvin Klein because of the associations with Mark Wahlberg still you're really hanging
on to those a lot of people look I'm that's all I got I'm an old man a lot of people suggested
various podcast brands of underwear.
I'm not going to name them because I don't know if we're making money from them or I'll say the wrong one.
They're two big podcast underwears and they fight each other.
And I don't want to say the wrong one, but you know who I'm talking about.
So I want to let you guys know, I appreciate all your advice.
I think I found something that just might work and it arrived yesterday in the
mails. I have not yet put the garment on my body and I hope that next time we record, I'll have
good news for you. What a thrilling cliffhanger. I know. That's what we call in the podcast business
an underwear tease. Here's something from Sam. I'm currently sitting in a coffee shop and
overhearing a conversation between a male college student and his girlfriend.
He's talking about how he cheats in all of his classes.
Some forms of his cheating include sharing answers with friends, copying answers from an online textbook,
and putting it in a Word document to use during quizzes.
He calls it beating the system and not cheating. As a teacher at a large university,
this absolutely infuriates me. It sounds to me like his approach to life is going to turn him
into the kind of person I don't think is a great addition to society. Also, beating the system
hurts your peers who are doing honest work too. What do I do? Do I ignore it and jam my
earbuds further into my ears? Do I confront him with my words and really tell him what's up? Do
I punch him in the face? What? No. Or do I go home and prepare the best lecture ever and make up for
this guy? P.S. Now he's talking about how he wants to buy a Ferrari F12. Also, just heard his name is Alex.
Alex, perfect.
I have information for my shaming.
Sam, you don't need to do anything because here come the stocks.
And written on the stocks is the name Alex
because they're going to go around the ankles of this jerk.
You know, my wife teaches public high school
here in New York City.
And this conversation has been going on for a long time.
She's worked there more than it's measured in decades.
And when she first started, she was abashed by the conversation around cheating in the school, which was these smarty pants kids at this smarty pants public school thought that cheating was totally reasonable. It was beating the system. You know, you could use
any method at your disposal, every tool at hand to get the grade that you needed to get to get to go
to that college. And she and I and others that we told
despaired over this attitude
because it was surprising to us that kids,
teenagers who should be idealistic
were instead already,
I'm just trying to figure out a way to say
this word in a family friendly podcast.
Let's just say underwear covers the
part of the body that they were being. Normally people do not become so cynical until a later age.
And there were disputes and debates that we would have, she and I and our friend group,
over this issue of cheating. If you're cheating, are you just cheating yourself? I think absolutely. You are not getting the full depth of knowledge. You are not pushing your brain through
the discomfort that it takes to really master the knowledge that you're being asked to reproduce.
And are you cheating others? That's what Sam is worried about, that somehow this guy cheating is going to hurt other people in his
class who aren't cheating. That one, unless I'm sure I'm going to get letters in social medias
about this, but unless there's some grading algorithm that this Ferrari dude, Alex is
throwing off by cheating in this way and by encouraging others to cheat, I don't know about
it. The truth of the matter is when you're confronted in life with people doing the wrong thing, if they are hurting others,
it is incumbent upon you to stop it, to speak up. It is hard to do. It is not always easy to do.
And it is okay if you don't do it every time. Gosh knows I've not made every confrontation I could have made in life.
But when someone is expressing their own inner rot, their own self-cannibalizing,
soulless, cynical worldview, and even if they're bragging about it,
you do not have to punch them in their face. In fact, Sam, I urge you not to do that because you will go to jail,
not Ferrari Alex, the jerk.
But instead, take confidence that their beating the system
will eventually beat them down
in ways that may not be measured in their success.
They might be very successful,
may not be measured in their pocketbook,
may be very financially successful as well.
Who knows?
But they're consuming themselves when they do this.
And you just go home and you prepare the best lecture ever.
Not to make up for this guy, although that's a grand sentiment.
But because you're Sam and he's Alex, and we know where you are, Sam.
You're at the top, top of the heap.
Number one good person.
And you know where Alex is?
In the stocks, dude.
This is the sound of the stocks closing.
Wow.
Yeah.
You know what you're in, Alex?
The Ferrari of stocks.
I really splurged on these.
You know, Judge Hodgman, I cheated in college.
Yeah? How do you feel about it?
I'm okay with it. I did not cheat.
Here's the thing. I was a poor student starting in around middle school all the way until college and was not a great student in college.
and was not a great student in college.
But I went to a University of California school,
and there were certain graduation requirements.
I had to take a gen ed science class,
and I signed up for a genetics class,
remembering a segment on genetics that I had done in a math class in middle school or high school that I had enjoyed.
We had a nice teacher. It
was a huge lecture hall class. And we sat down in there and about class three, I realized that I had
not taken high school chemistry or biology and had no idea what was going on in the class.
And I knew that if I didn't pass the class, I would not be
allowed to graduate from college. And I knew that I would never be called upon in my life to do
genetics. And so what I did is I had two good friends in the class, both of whom were nerdier
than I. And I said, hey, Dan and Nathaniel, I don't have any idea what's going on. And they said,
just copy our answers. And I said, yeah, okay, I'll just copy your answers. And I did fine
and passed. And I graduated from college. Sometimes an act of moral failure serves a greater good.
Thank you.
You needed to graduate from college.
I did.
I'm not letting you off the hook just because you're my friend and you're adorable.
Oh.
But because you have a conscience.
You are doing what you needed to do to survive.
It was a dog-eat-dog world.
That's right.
If you were starving on the street, I was going to say, and you had to steal an apple to survive,
but since you said dog-eat-dog, if you were starving on the street and you had to eat a dog.
Well, I don't think you'd be able to do it.
It would be hard.
Also, don't know if it's illegal.
I love dogs.
But stealing an apple, weirdly, definitely we know that's illegal.
Eating a stray dog, unclear.
But that's a problem with our United States system.
Yeah, that's one of the many problems with our criminal justice system.
Yeah, but you know what you weren't ever doing, Jesse Thorne?
You weren't going around to the coffee shop going,
hey, guess what, everybody?
I beat the system.
I'm stealing from these two nerds in
the class. And that's the way to do it because that's how the world is. The bragging on it,
that was the greater moral crime. And if you think that's how the world is, you're going to find
yourself in a world that is like that. And there are sections of the world where people are
monstrous to each other, where they lie and routinely, and they
treat each other as subhumans. They only
have to get over in order to get
more and more money.
And that is a world that
must be fought. Anyway,
Alex and the Ferrari, good luck
driving that Ferrari with your feet in those
stocks.
I feel of all
confidence shaming this guy because he doesn't feel shame. And Jesse Thorne,
I absolve you. Okay, let's take a break and hear about some of the other awesome shows that
MaximumFun.org makes. We'll be back in just a second on Judge John Hodgman. I love other shows.
Let's hear it. Hello, I'm your Judge John Hodgman.
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Welcome back to the Judge John Hodgman podcast.
This week, we're clearing the docket.
Jesse Thorne, first of all, I have two things I want to say.
Yeah.
First, I love the sound of that other show.
I'm going to listen to it.
I'm going to subscribe to it.
Great.
And when Max Fund Drive comes, I'm going to listen to it. I'm going to subscribe to it. Great. And when Max Fund Drive comes, I'm going to donate to it.
Second, I had an idea during the break.
Because just yelling stocks at a person who isn't there isn't exactly shame enough.
And we don't have, unfortunately, a sheriff on this show to enforce my orders.
We have no fake justice enforcement arm.
So I've always insisted that our listeners
be self-policing, which is really the best way to be anyway. But after this podcast, I'm going to go,
you know, I'm going to reach out to our friend Aaron Draplin in Portland, Oregon,
and see if he will design a button, a badge, a pin. You know what I'm talking about,
a round thing you put in your jean jacket. Yeah, a sticker. Yeah.
What?
Is that what you call it?
I just did, didn't I?
Okay.
I'm going to ask him, and I hope that he'll agree, to allow me to commission a Judge John Hodgman shame badge.
It's going to be a scarlet letter.
And they're going to be available via our store. And then if we ever have to shame someone in the future in this way,
or it might be a condition of a verdict against someone,
they're going to have to get that shame badge and wear it for a certain period of time on their jean jacket.
And then they'll always know that guy on the subway, he'll have to wear that on the subway.
And every Judge John Hodgman listener will know to look at him and shun him
or say,
thanks for following the rules this time. It's going to be great. Maxfundstore.com. That's where
all of our merchandise is. Keep an eye out for that shame badge. There'll be further announcements
forthcoming. I love it. Here's something from Lindsay. I have friends and family members who
insist that a 15% tip at a sit-down restaurant is sufficient for good service.
Most recently, I noticed my new boyfriend does this, too.
I'm more in the 20% camp, reserving a 15% tip for poor service.
He only recently moved to the U.S. and thinks the American tipping system is stupid.
Uh-oh, red flag.
I'm starting to see red.
Uh-oh, red flag.
I'm starting to see red.
As far as I'm concerned, there's no greater personal sin than saying the tipping system is stupid.
Not because the tipping system isn't stupid.
I think there's an argument to be made that it's stupid.
I may even agree with that argument.
But simply because it is always used as a justification for monstrosity and not as a way to change the world for the better.
Anyway, okay, here's what else she says. I agree that it is, but complaining won't change anything.
Here's me giving Lindsay a standing ovation. Yes. Many of my friends have worked as servers. I know how much they depend on tips to live. Under the current American system, isn't an 18 or 20% tip
for good service just the norm in sit-down restaurants? I request you to order him to tip
at least 15 percent for sub-average service, at least 18 percent for good service, and a full 20
percent if the server's gone out of his or her way to do something extra for us, like answering
questions about the town if we're traveling. Well, I think listeners know where I'm leaning on this
because we already covered it back in Verdict 158,
tipping the scales of justice.
That was about tipping room attendants in a hotel,
the people who make up your bed,
and clean the sheets that you have sweated in all night long.
Should leave them $5 a night, period.
Because people who work in tipping industries work hard. And your creepo boyfriend from other lands may think that the tipping
system in American restaurants is stupid. And as we've, I think, all agreed,
it is counterintuitive. These people work hard. They should be paid a living wage. Tipping
should not be factored into their wages. Tipping in restaurants tends to favor the front of the
house over the back of the house. And those people work hard too. There are a lot of problems with
the system. Danny Meyer, the restaurateur, is working really hard to fix
this and to create a new restaurant culture of fair wages, health insurance, and other
compensations and career training where there is no tipping involved and the prices are higher.
And guess what? Diners are having to adjust to this, but at least he's doing something.
Being stingy is not an act of moral bravery in the face of an doing something. Being stingy is not an act of moral bravery
in the face of an unjust system.
Being stingy is directly hurting another human being,
denying them part of what is their baked-in wages.
You may not like the system, but it is the system.
Okay, creepo boyfriend?
Now, I'm going to say right now, this will be controversial,
and I'm sure that I will get social medias all the live long day about this. 20%, period.
That's where you start these days in restaurants, at least in big cities.
That may be different in other towns. The expectation may be a little bit less,
never less than 15%. But 15% was the standard that I
was taught by my mom and dad when I was 10 or 11 or 12, when I first be able to figure out
percentages. And that was a thousand years ago. Standard now is 20%. If you have exemplary service,
If you have exemplary service, 25% or higher.
But I would never dip below 20%. And that's not only because occasionally every now and then someone still recognizes me and I'm afraid they're going to put my thing on the internet and say what a cheapskate John Hodgman is.
And the rest of the internet is going to go, who?
Because that Apple money ran out.
because that Apple money ran out, but mostly because the people who are working,
particularly the people who are working in restaurants,
they are working in restaurants for a number of reasons.
People who choose to work in restaurants do so to maintain the flexibility of
their schedule,
probably because they have children probably because they are young and just
starting out probably because they are chasing and just starting out, probably because
they are chasing some other dream. They might be artists, probably because all kinds of reasons
that this is not their career necessarily. Not to put down people who are waitstaff in
restaurants as a career. That's amazing too. And I think Danny Meyer, it sounds like,
is trying to make that a more realistic possibility for people. But the people who
are serving you in restaurants for the most part, they're dreamers, just
like you, dumb-dumbs.
They listen to podcasts, too.
And they're choosing that career because it offers them the flexibility to do other things
like paint their paintings or raise their son or daughter.
So I never feel bad when I accidentally find myself in a situation where, like in a hotel
room, where I don't have that $5 to put down, so I have to put down $20. when I accidentally find myself in a situation where like in a hotel room
where I don't have that $5 to put down,
so I have to put down 20.
Because for a second, I'm like,
yeah, that's a lot of money.
But another thing is like,
I don't ever clean a toilet in my life.
So yeah, everyone feels good when you tip
and everyone feels better when you over tip.
But the fact is, this is the system, dude.
You know what I think of when I'm tipping?
No, what?
This is what I think.
I think, look, I work very hard.
I work very long hours.
My job is very stressful.
It's stressful to be responsible
for other people's livelihoods in addition to your own.
I'm not saying I'm a lazy bones.
No.
But I think almost every person who works in a service industry
who is working partly for tips is working harder than I am.
At the very least, they're all on the top tier of hard work.
Sure.
None of them are paid a great hourly wage.
None of those jobs pay a great hourly wage.
Some of them, thankfully, in some places that have things like living wage ordinances get paid a livable wage.
But nobody is getting rich doing work that receives tips, not even ministers who do weddings.
And they deserve it at least as much or more than me.
That's at the end of the day.
I think I love having this $20, but this person deserves it at least as much as me.
The least I can do is give it to them, given that they have worked hard to make my life
better.
Yeah.
I also feel really strongly that you should tip particularly generously in lower-priced
restaurants.
I think that the folks who work very hard at the Mexican restaurant where I can take my whole family to dinner for $45 deserve the tip even more than the people at the lovely French restaurant that I go to once every few months on a date with my wife.
Right, because the system is stupid.
Tipping is better in restaurants that have higher priced menu items because it's a calculation.
Yeah.
So you're absolutely right.
And the thing is that whether you're working in a taco place, whether you're working in
a high-end restaurant, fine dining, fast casual, whatever it is, and particularly if it is
table service on the floor, that is a job that you disrespect at your peril because
it is incredibly taxing physically
and incredibly taxing mentally.
And if you are bad to that person,
look, a professional would never spit in your food,
but you might deserve it.
Occasional guest bail of Jean Grey,
whom I talk about on the show all the time because she's brilliant and my friend, but she created an instructional album for adults, she called it, called That's Not How You Do It. Use your headphones on the bus. And in particular, I think the number one with a bullet on this album is don't.
And I'm going to have to use a term for something that I didn't want to say before because it's a family podcast.
But it is a piece of the body that is covered by underwear.
Don't be a d*** to the waitstaff.
And it's a great song.
You should go check her out at jeangrey.bandcamp.com.
Grey is spelled G-R-A-E.
One other thing, final thing I will say about this, if you are lucky enough to go to a restaurant
where you know the owner, or you've made a relationship with the bartender, or you've
been a regular there and they want to do something nice for you. So they buy you dessert or they buy you a drink or they comp your whole meal even.
Remember, that doesn't lower the amount of service that the servers had to offer you.
Tip on the amount that you would have paid, not the amount that you do pay.
If they knock off 50% off your bill for whatever reason, don't tip on the half price.
Tip on the full price because the server worked the same amount no matter what.
Okay, that's all I have to say about it for now.
Here's something from Abby.
For the last 18 months, my husband, Jack, has been the primary driver of our shared car.
When I was the primary driver, I took exceptional care of it.
I didn't eat in the car very much and regularly took it to the car wash.
But Jack has yet to actually wash it.
There are stains on the seats from eating burritos on the go.
He thinks taking care of the visual aspect of the car is an unnecessary expense
and will only maintain things like routine oil changes.
To add insult to injury, when I do wash the car and vacuum out the
seats, Jack thinks we should split any money that I find because it's most likely from his pockets.
I'd like Judge Hodgman to rule the following. Jack has to wash the car four times a year.
Whoever cleans the car gets to keep any and all money they find, and burritos should not
be consumed while driving. Or you can rule what is and isn't allowed as acceptable food to eat
in the car. Thank you. Abby, I'm going to do both. But first of all, thanks for keeping the almost 100% winning slash losing streak jack for husbands who try to pass off
laziness as some idea about how the world should work and that taking care of the visual aspects
of the car is an unnecessary expense just say just say it dude you're lazy you're lazy you're lazy
and you're a slob because you're eating burritos in your car.
And you're staining your car.
Gross.
Obviously, all of Abby's requests are reasonable and so ordered.
Wash the car four times a year.
Of course.
Whoever cleans the car gets to keep all the money.
Of course.
Jack gets none of his pocket change back.
It's forfeited because he's being a slob.
Not only is he dropping burrito all over the place, but he can't even keep his coins of his pocket change back. It's forfeited because he's being a slob. Not only is he dropping burrito all over the place,
but he can't even keep his coins in his pocket.
And yeah, don't eat burritos in the car.
A couple of reasons for this.
One, burritos are beautiful and deserve to be savored.
Right, Jesse?
Preach, preacher.
Yeah, thank you.
You don't want any distractions when you're eating a burrito.
Distractions including driving a multiple hundreds of pounds killing machine
that you have to keep safely on the road without murdering your fellow citizens.
I don't know how much a car weighs.
That should be pretty obvious, right?
It's obviously more than a couple hundred pounds.
You can say one ton or two tons, average car.
I'm going to say one ton.
And eating in the car is something that we all do.
We probably shouldn't because it is a distraction.
But if you're going to mitigate that distraction,
there are some foods that I think are,
are safer to eat than others in a pinch.
And I think we've discussed this before,
but just to go over it again and Jesse,
I include,
I would like to include your suggestions as well.
If you have any,
first of all,
not acceptable,
almost all sandwiches,
too much stuff can fall out yeah and definitely all hot dogs
which aren't sandwiches but also have stuff that can fall out right falling out of stuff
is going to distract you because you're gonna be like oh no i just bought these pants and then
you're gonna plow into a pole or another car so it needs to be a self-contained
thing that will not fall apart in your hand you need to be able to grab it easily
get it into your maw ideally in a single bite and that's it one exception i might allow
is a well-made and well-chilled tuna sandwich.
Because that's all paste.
It all sticks together.
It was really like a dense tuna sandwich on white.
Yeah, I'll do that.
Just be careful not to leave that on the seat.
Yeah.
You know, there are pros and cons to everything.
It's probably safer to drive with a tuna sandwich than say a floppy roast beef
sandwich or a wrap of some kind, but you're going to stink up that car. Everyone's going to be like,
gross. No egg salad because that's too floppy. That'll flop out of there. A bagel with cream
cheese, fine. Although maybe a little too thick, depends on the size of the bagel.
Some of those bagels, you really really have to unhinge your jaw
to gnaw into that thing.
I would say a tea sandwich.
Here we go.
Any kind of tea sandwich is made
with a savory paste.
If you're driving a car in Harrods, you're fine.
But mostly
self-contained
snack foods.
Self-contained snack foods like potato chips or cheese puffs or jerkies.
And that ain't going to broth.
You can have like a bone broth.
That's probably the best thing to do.
A nourishing bone broth in a thermal carafe next to you.
That's how you drive safely until you can stop
and have a proper meal and properly sit down and eat
without killing other human beings.
Can I run a few things by you, Judge Hodgman?
Please.
So we've already ruled on any,
you can drive a car through Harrods.
Yes.
What about Fortnum and Mason?
I wish I had said Fortnum and Mason because I prefer it.
You and I went there once with Jennifer Marmer, and that was so much fun.
I love that place.
What about the Ritz?
I've never been to the Ritz Hotel in London.
Uh-huh.
No, I've never been, so I don't know the twists and turns in there.
It might be a wrong place to drive a car in.
What about Pret-a-Manger?
Oh, boy. boy i mean that's
just a fast casual restaurant you know i don't eat a lot of bread these days because it just
it's just easier for me to not and yet i really i really have such a deep deep fondness
for british pre-made sandwiches and triangle plastic packages,
with Pret-a-Manger being, as far as I'm concerned, the apex of that.
Like an egg and rocket sandwich from Pret-a-Manger?
Forget it.
But I would never eat that in a car.
Okay, we have to eat some sandwiches, so we're going to take a quick break.
I'm so hungry.
When we come back, we'll clear the docket some more.
Hello, teachers and faculty.
This is Janet Varney.
I'm here to remind you that listening to my podcast, The JV Club with Janet Varney,
is part of the curriculum for the school year.
Learning about the teenage years of such guests as Alison Brie,
Vicki Peterson, John Hodgman, and so many more is a valuable and enriching experience,
one you have no choice but to embrace because, yes, listening is mandatory. The JV Club with
Janet Varney is available every Thursday on Maximum Fun or wherever you get your podcasts.
Thank you.
And remember,
no running in the halls.
If you need a laugh and you're on the go,
try S-T-O-P-P-O-D-C-A-S-T-I.
Hmm.
Were you trying to put
the name of the podcast there?
Yeah, I'm trying to spell it,
but it's tricky.
Let me give it a try.
Okay.
If you need a laugh and you're on the go, call S-T-O-P-P-P-A-D-I.
It'll never fit.
No, it will.
Let me try.
If you need a laugh and you're on the go, try S-T-O-P-P-P-D-C-O-O.
Ah, we are so close.
Stop podcasting yourself.
A podcast from MaximumFun.org. Oh, we are so close. Stop podcasting yourself.
A podcast from MaximumFun.org.
If you need a laugh, then you're on the go.
Welcome back to the Judge John Hodgman podcast.
We're clearing the docket.
Here's something from Bonnie.
My husband, Connor, and I have been married for 10 years.
We recently had a baby, and we've never had photos taken by a professional. Even our wedding was shot by a friend and the pictures are terrible.
A former friend, I guess. It's truly one of my biggest life regrets. Connor says professional
photos are unnecessarily expensive and aren't guaranteed to be good. He claims with a good
camera, anyone can be a photographer.
I'd love to capture some great family moments that are practically kinfolk magazine, I presume worthy,
without inconveniencing a friend.
I'd like to redo our wedding day,
but time travel is a completely separate issue.
Well, it's interesting.
You know, I don't think Connor is exactly wrong.
We do have technology
now, even
much better than 10 years ago,
to take really,
really, really fine
photographs
with little devices that we carry around in
our pockets.
So he's not wrong about that. John, you can name him.
Swiss Army Knives.
That's right.
Yeah.
At the very end of the little white toothpick that you pull out of the end is a very fine camera.
Oh.
When I discovered, it took, I had a Swiss Army Knife for a long time as a kid before
I realized I could pull out those little, two little hidden doodads.
One is a toothpick and the other is a little tiny tweezers.
I felt like I had discovered the Ark of the Covenant.
I was so excited.
So Connor's not necessarily wrong.
And I'll even give Connor another little bit of credit here
that I would say a professional photographer at your wedding
is, I'm going to do the math,
roughly 1,000 times more important
than having professional photographs of your baby
because a baby is a smaller event.
You only have to kind of put the baby
in front of the camera and take the picture
as opposed to capture an entire day's worth
of incredibly emotional, important moments and a cast of, you know,
fives or tens or even hundreds.
Like there's a much bigger job and it really does require professional photographers.
I and experience doing that to get those moments.
And that's why you have that lifelong regret that Connor talked you out
of having a professional photography or wedding and thus tainting the marriage on its very first
day. Well done, Connor. Also, family photographs. I've sat for a couple of professional family
photographs and they can feel posed and weird and uncomfortable. But that said, there is nothing wrong with hiring at all.
Even though you can probably get some pretty good pictures of your baby. And believe me,
now that you both have cameras in your pockets, you're going to have so many great pictures of
your baby and so many medium pictures of your baby and so many bad pictures of your baby.
And you will never delete any of them. They're just going to take up terabytes of space in your
life for the rest of your life. You're not going to lack for nice pictures of your baby and you will never delete any of them. They're just going to take up terabytes of space in your life for the rest of
your life.
You're not going to lack for nice pictures of this baby,
but there is no question that there's nothing wrong with getting professional
photograph.
They're not unnecessarily expensive,
especially since Connor is not done paying for the crime he perpetrated on
your wedding day.
He owes you.
Hire that professional photographer.
Get some of those sweet, sweet posed shots,
if only to restore balance in this marriage.
And then you can move on with your lives.
Another possibility,
if he really is against hiring a professional photographer,
do it behind his back.
Hire a PI to stake out your house and take pictures of your baby as you're walking by.
This is the sound of a gavel.
Hey, Judge Hodgman.
Yeah.
Can I offer a recommendation?
Yeah, you can.
If anyone needs professional portrait or event photography in Southern California,
why not holler at Hodgman at MaximumFun.org,
and we'll hook you up with Shane Pangburn,
who is the husband of our brilliant producer, Jennifer Marmer.
Shane Pangburn? I'd love to have him photograph my baby.
What baby wouldn't smile at Shane? The guy's a peach.
Okay, that's it for another Judge John Hodgman.
The show's produced by Jennifer Marmer.
You can follow us on Twitter at Jesse Thorne and at Hodgman.
We're on Instagram at at Judge John Hodgman.
Make sure to hashtag your Judge John Hodgman tweets, hashtag JJHO,
and you can talk about Judge John Hodgman on our Facebook page,
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and on the Max Fund subreddit at MaximumFund.reddit.com.
Submit your cases at MaximumFund.org slash JJHO or email Hodgman at MaximumFund.org.
We'll see you next time on the Judge John Hodgman podcast.
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