Judge John Hodgman - The Gentleman Leaf Thief
Episode Date: November 11, 2020This week we have Friends of the Court Chuck Bryant and Josh Clark in chambers to help clear the docket! They talk about distances, leaf collecting, consuming blood, and snacking on leftovers. Plus a ...letter from a Gen Z listener about books!Josh and Chuck are the hosts of the smash hit podcast STUFF YOU SHOULD KNOW! They are also the writers of the forthcoming book STUFF YOU SHOULD KNOW: An Incomplete Compendium of Mostly Interesting Things. It will be released on November 24 but it's available for preorder now! Visit stuffyoushouldreadbooks.com for more.Don't miss their virtual event with Judge Hodgman to celebrate the release of the book on November 24, with Little Shop of Stories in Decatur, GA! Visit bit.ly/JJSYSKO for ticket info.Make sure you also check out Josh Clark's podcast The End of the World With Josh Clark as well as Chuck Bryant's Movie Crush podcast.
Transcript
Discussion (0)
Welcome to the Judge John Hodgman podcast. I'm bailiff Jesse Thorne. We're in chambers this week, clearing the docket. And with me, as always, is the first member of the expanded Supreme Court, Judge John Hodgman.
on 11-11-2020, but it's being recorded because of time before then.
But still, 11-11, make a wish, everybody.
Okay, I just made my wish.
All right, anyway.
You have to kiss your watch.
Is that true?
That's how it worked in my middle school.
You had to kiss your watch.
You had to kiss your swatch?
Hey, look, that's what Debbie Sue told me.
When I was in early high school, I had a Keith Haring swatch.
Keith Haring limited edition swatch.
It made me the coolest guy working in the stock room at Conran's on Exeter Street.
Then I took it off because it was too sweaty and I left it on the loading dock and I never saw it again.
Hey, normally I start these things by thinking I have nothing to say at the top. And then all of a sudden I'll talk for 30 minutes
about a Keith Haring swatch or whatever. But we don't have time for that because we have two
incredible special guests here to clear the docket with us. I'll introduce them individually
and then I'll describe the thing they're known for working on together.
Josh Clark is a former Judge John Hodgman expert witness
who reminded me today that he already told the story
of his tattoo on this podcast,
which is one of my favorite tattoo stories of all time.
So too bad for you new listeners.
Go into the archives.
Thank you for having me.
You're welcome.
He's also, as you can tell,
a super lovely, funny guy who chose to do a 10-part podcast series on the end of the world called The End of the World with Josh Clark.
While located above him randomly in my Zoom gallery, Charles W. Chuck Bryant, of course, is my partner in hosting the MaxFunCon Pub Trivia Quiz, whether in Lake Arrowhead or on the Internet, as well as the co-host with me on my award-winning All Avengers Movies run of episodes on Chuck's own podcast, Movie Crush, which is Chuck's podcast.
It's a great podcast where he talks to people and himself about his favorite movies.
And you should subscribe to both of those podcasts,
The End of the World and Movie Crush,
depending on how you feel that day.
But you might know them much, much, much, much better
for their podcast called Stuff You Should Know.
Josh and Chuck, welcome.
Thanks.
Thank you, John.
Thanks for joining us here on the Judge John Hodgman podcast.
An old podcast.
We've been around for almost a decade, but you've been around for a dozen years, right?
Easy.
Maybe two, three decades by this time.
Yeah, I think it was 2008, April of 2008 when we started.
April of 2008. Holy moly.
Yeah.
And you guys were one of the original super duper popular podcasts.
And Jesse Thorne always explained it to me that it was because you had the best title for a podcast.
You know, that's actually Jesse's quoted on our Wikipedia page, I think, explaining that we have the best title for a podcast ever.
Yeah, it's on our, I believe,
I mean, I read it once or twice a month.
It was the last time it was still on there,
last time I looked.
Oh, wow.
And Jesse, explain why it's the best title for a podcast.
Well, because when you hear Stuff You Should Know,
it's like a challenge to listen to it.
So, especially in the olden days
when there were no famous podcasts
and no famous people with podcasts
and all you saw was a little tiny graphic
on your iTunes, on your desktop iTunes.
So stuff you should know.
I already know stuff.
And you click on it.
It's a hook.
You fell into the spider web.
That's right.
And I have happily never climbed
out i mean this does go back you know at least a decade before conan o'brien invented podcasting
so it's pretty amazing that you guys and you know chuck and josh you know wyatt snack was the one
who turned me on to stuff you should know he's like this is a podcast you should know it's called stuff you
should know i'm like i get it i want to listen did i'm not sure you're gonna feel how you're
gonna feel about this but i was like i was immediately hooked and it's because i like to
learn about stuff i think the one of the earliest episodes i listened to was about um catapults and
pumpkin catapult competitions.
Oh, good Lord.
Pumpkin chunking.
Pumpkin chunking, pumpkin chunking, pumpkin chunking.
I remember that.
One of our worst episodes.
No, but it was, look, even, let me say this, Chuck, Josh, even at your worst, you're so great.
Because it doesn't need to be about anything.
You guys just have this great rapport.
And I was like, and I remember, I remember turning to my family in the car going,
this is the new car talk right here.
This is the new car talk.
And my family was like, speaking of the car,
will you please keep your eyes on the road and stop talking about podcasts?
I tried to talk a public radio network into making a public radio show
out of stuff you should know.
I bet they rue the day that they failed to say yes to that plan.
I told them the same thing.
I remember that.
Now, look, I'm going to say this.
Stuff You Should Know is one of the most downloaded podcasts in history.
How do I know that?
Because it's on the back of this book I'm holding,
which is called Stuff You Should Know,
an incomplete compendium of very slash mostly interesting things.
And this book is coming out November 24th, 2020, in just a couple of weeks.
And also on November 24th, I would be remiss if I did not point out
that I will be hosting Josh and Chuck on an amazing VTE. That's a virtual ticketed event.
Everyone knows what a VTE is at this point.
It's an amazing book event organized by Little Shop of Stories in Decatur, Georgia.
Georgia, of course, where stuff you should know is headquartered.
And each ticket includes a book, a signed book plate.
So you guys are going to sign a bunch of book plates.
I already did. And you already did it.
That's a lot of fun.
I'm sure you know.
I'll tell you a story about that after the break.
That's a tease.
I don't know if you do podcasts, but that's how you keep people listening.
And each ticket includes a book, a signed book plate for you to put into the book,
plus, I don't know if you guys know this, but I'm adding this on,
a coupon for one free look at Josh Clark's tattoo, if you ever see him in person.
Oh, my.
One free peek.
So get your tickets at bit.ly slash JJ Cisco.
That's J-J-S-Y-S-K-O.
It's just a combo of J-J-Ho and Sisk.
It's not a very good one.
Bit.ly slash J-J-Sisko, all capital letters.
Weirdly, Bit.ly slash V-T-E-Y-S-K, virtual ticketed events, you should know, was taken.
So I had to do the other one.
I don't even have a book yet, John.
It looks great.
They had to send me one.
It does.
I'm holding a physical copy of the book.
I have not even seen that.
This is what it sounds like.
You still haven't gotten yours?
I still don't have my books.
That is weird, Chuck.
I think they're lost in the mail or something.
No, that's all right.
Yeah, well, you know, the mail is busy with other stuff.
That's right. Yeah, well, you know, the mail is busy with other stuff. That's true.
But by the time November 24th rolls around, shipping is going to be speedy.
And I think you're going to want this physical book because it's beautifully laid out with fantastic illustrations.
And it's just, it's something you want to browse through.
You know, you pick it up off of a side table and browse through it at any moment, as I was doing earlier.
But we'll talk more about that later.
In the meantime, we have some justice to dispense.
Are you guys willing to weigh in with your well-informed decades of information, researching informed opinions on these matters of dispute?
I've spent the last several weeks perusing American case history, just randomly picking cases for looking for precedents to rule through or by.
So, yes, I feel pretty qualified right now.
All right. Josh is on board. What about you, Chad?
Yeah. I mean, I've been waiting for this. I want to pull off the trifecta, the J.J. Ho trifecta. I've been a litigant.
Yeah.
I've been waiting on this moment.
Right.
how trifecta i've been a litigant yeah i've been waiting on this moment right and very secretly when uh monty belmonti i want him to catch a cold one summer so i can fill in his guest bailiff
that would be that would be the triple that's right um i apologize because of course you
you and emily were litigants on the on the podcast that's right as to whether or not
you would be allowed to personally uh widen a doorway
in your home i remember some unlicensed contracting yeah yeah jesse had one of the great jesse lines
of all time was on that episode which was that i subscribed to the uh old carpenter's
rule of thumb which is measure nuns
well i've seen that doorway in person and it looks great.
And I know that you had a professional and a friend come in and do it.
What was that gentleman's name again?
It's Isaac.
Cause he, he made you a gavel too.
He made me a wonderful gavel.
Isaac, we're thinking of you, but look, Isaac, you're in the past.
Now nostalgia is a toxic impulse.
All this stuff is in the past.
Now we must move forward in
the future. Jesse, do we have any dockets to clear? Here's a dispute from Tom. My friend Dana and I
are journalists at the local newspaper. I've always used a straight line distance to explain
how far apart two places are because that's the literal definition of distance. Dana argues
driving distance makes more sense because that's how
people think about how far away something is. If you find in my favor, I'd like you to order Dana
to use straight line distances in her stories and petition to have an entry about measuring
distances added to our newspaper's style book. This has some real ramifications.
Yeah, this goes far beyond the Daily Bugle.
That's right. We don't know the name of the newspaper, right? The local newspaper?
No, we don't.
I'm going to presume it's Le Monde.
Yeah.
The locality in that case is Le Monde?
Le Monde. Le Monde.
What do you say, Josh and Chuck, should this local newspaper describe distance by driving mileage as opposed to what Corvid enthusiasts call as the crow flies?
Josh is a bit of an expert. Are you going to tell me about your newspaper history?
Yeah, that's right.
I mean, I don't know how relevant that is because I think this person who describes distance by driving distance might be the only person in the world who does that.
I think it's, I don't know if I've ever met anybody who said it's like X number of miles away, unless you're getting in the car, tapping in like wherever you're going on ways,
and then go by that. Otherwise, it seems to be like as the crow flies when you're just talking about how far away, say, like the next town over is. So you're a crow flyer. Yeah. What is it? I'm
a Corvidite. You're a Corvidite. Corvids are the ravens and the crows, right? Corvids?
I don't know.
That sounds like a separate case entirely.
I'm not going to look it up now.
I feel really embarrassed.
I thought I was so smart. Yeah, the Corvidi is a cosmopolitan family of Ocene Passerine birds that contains...
All right, which ones am I not listing?
There's one I'm going to leave out.
All right, which ones am I not listing?
There's one I'm going to leave out.
Crows, ravens, jackdaws, jays, rooks, tree pies, chaws.
I don't know that one. Did you say tree pies?
Tree pies.
That sounds delicious.
Shut your tree pie hole.
And nut crackers.
There's one Corvid that I left out of the list that's in the Wikipedia page.
I'm going to say seagulls.
Incorrect.
I'm going to say swallow.
Incorrect.
I'll give you a hint.
I'm going to say finch.
Oh, interesting.
No.
There are a lot of birds.
Let's narrow it down.
I'm going to say parrots.
Okay.
Do I get to guess?
No, it's magpies.
That's what Jesse was going to say gonna say i was gonna say marmot
because because the corvids are super smart and they were and they display remarkable intelligence
have you ever seen a seagull walk around it's smart no they're dumb i've seen a lot of seagulls
and they're dumb you can trick a seagull so easy we're talking here about birds that are known to
scientists as the scheming birds yeah birds that are always making a plan against us well that's
not a joke because crows it's been scientifically proven that crows hold grudges they do it's true
they hold grudges they recognize faces and they pass their grudges down to their young.
Like, there are people in town that the crows hate who are hated by generations of crows,
and they'll make a run at you.
And magpies, of course, are notorious thieves.
Well, Heckle and Jekyll were magpies.
They were pretty smart, and they could hold a grudge, too.
I always thought they were crows.
You know one of the ways they're smart?
How? Thank you, Chuck. the grudge too i always thought they were crows you know what's you know you know one of the ways they're smart oh thank you chuck that's really wow sorry i quit my job as sidekick briefly and then signed back up chuck finally got to live his dream of being a guest there you go all right
that's the hat trick you know one of the ways they're smart, Chuck?
How?
They fly real straight.
That's why they fly straight from point A to point B as the crow flies.
That is the measurement over land without impediment of curves or natural terrain.
Chuck, what do you think?
Josh says as the crow flies is the normal and should be newspaper
standard style yeah so i guess i'm a little confused is is this person saying in the
newspaper if they're referring to uh two towns that they should refer to them as the crow flies
or you know actual mileage in a car so yeah, exactly. She wants to count up the road miles.
He wants to measure the distance between them on a map
and check it against the key.
Yeah.
I think it's got to be crow flies then.
That'd be weird because there are different ways to get places.
Yeah.
Well, okay.
It would be great if she was calculating it by circuitous roots, like unnecessarily circuitous roots.
She's like, well, I would go through Duluth just because I got to get some of those maple candies I love.
Or she only uses historic highways.
Right.
Everything.
She believes all distances should be counted by distance on Route 66.
So let me produce a counter argument to this because actually I'm not sure.
Crow flies felt right to me, but then I thought about it.
Because you both know that I spend some time every year as much as possible up on the coast of Maine.
And the coast of Maine, the shoreline is so shattered and twisty and broken and haunted that distances that
are very close as the crow flies are actually quite long drives.
And it's not about circuitous routes.
It's the only way to get there unless you're a crow.
So, for example, the distance, and you may want to jot this down, the distance between
Bass Harbor Head Lighthouse on Mount Desert Island, historic lighthouse,
and say some random other point in Maine
at roughly 44 degrees, 15 minutes, 57 seconds north
by 68 degrees, 34 minutes and nine seconds west.
As the crow flies, that distance is only 11. miles we can we can round up to 11.83
whereas by car the shortest and only route between those random coordinates
and the famous bass harbor head lighthouse is in fact 50 more than 50 miles hang on
i wrote it down and i threw it away nope is in fact 50, more than 50 miles. Hang on.
I wrote it down and I threw it away. Nope.
Nope.
I made all these notes about this.
That one says Chuck equals one with beard.
That's right.
Which one is it?
So the distance between these two points in Maine
is 11.82 miles as the crow flies, but 51.3 miles as the car drives.
And that's about an hour and 15 minute drive.
And when you get there, all the crows, obviously they beat you.
They're already there.
And they're circling in a terrifying mockery of a halo around the waiting figure of Randall Flagg, a.k.a. the Darkman, a.k.a. the walking dude, a.k.a. Walter O'Dimm, that ancient, smiling, charismatic embodiment of chaos, tyranny, and self-destruction, who has always been in Bass Harbor, Maine, waiting for you, and now you are his pawn.
You ever read The Stand, you guys?
The Stand?
I'm familiar with Randall Flagg from the Dark Tower series more than The Stand.
Yeah, yeah.
He was a major bad guy.
The major bad guy in The Dark Tower.
Yeah.
I don't think that Stephen King listens to this podcast, but I love Stephen King novels so much.
And I don't normally curse on this podcast, but I don't f*** The Dark Tower.
That's not on my list.
May I make a counter argument to your counter argument?
Please.
Counter on a counter.
It seems to me that very few people turn to their local newspaper for driving directions
to the town that's two towns over or up the coast.
So no one's expecting how many car miles it takes to get from point A to point B.
I think they're already expecting as the crow flies.
But since you do make a good argument, I would propose that these guys compromise.
No.
And give, and give, bear with me, and give the miles or kilometers, depending on where
you are, as the crow flies from point A to point B,
and then just simply put in parentheses after that, further by car.
If they're going to write a style guide,
why don't they just indicate in the style guide
that you should say by what method you're calculating the distance?
It would take like two words.
You can say, let's say you're talking about left 10 and you say, meanwhile, a 30 mile drive away in right 10.
Or you say, meanwhile, in right 10, just 20 miles away as the crow flies.
That is both.
Clarity is what we are after here.
So that is both clarity is what we are after here.
Yeah.
And I will extend that to say that my personal preference clarity wise is that if there is no clarification, you're talking about the literal distance.
Is that as the crow flies?
That's as the crow flies.
So Jesse Thorne, you're also weighing and saying the default should be as the crow flies.
Absolutely.
Though I would prefer, in most situations, clarity, especially if you're talking about traveling.
It's interesting because my initial thought I shared with all of you, which is that as the crow flies, is for sort of gross general estimates of distance between two towns or whatever,
obviously we are talking about as the
crow flies right yes and that therefore that should be the default and saying as the crow
flies should be unnecessary and the reason that i initially thought that is that that's just the
way we've always done it but take my extremely compelling exception of ma aside, the entire coast of Maine that you're willing to write off.
Goddamn inland elites.
Leave to confused wandering.
If you set that aside, though, I think that we're in a different time because I know all that stuff because I used a computer program. And I think it's important to think a
little bit about how Google Maps and Apple Maps and other maps programs have changed our thinking
because it is much, much easier and common now to find driving distances between two points
at a highly precise level than ever before. And it's actually hard to figure out how the distance between two points as the
crow flies on a map program. That's true. MapQuest doesn't do that.
Oh, you got in your plug for MapQuest finally. I don't know how much.
Still making that MapQuest money.
I am going to, with great respect, I'm going to overrule all of you. I think the default
should now be driving distance.
Boo.
What if it's pollution?
What if there's a power station and you say the pollution extends all the way to Wrighton, 20 miles away?
You say a radius of 20 miles, I think you would say.
Oh.
Not necessarily.
It could just be by the way the wind blows.
It's not like pollution spreads out
in a perfect circle around the epicenter.
It just moves around with the wind.
There are plenty of times
when you're talking about distance
that you're not talking about transportation.
And there's plenty of times
you're talking about transportation
that you're not talking about driving on roads.
Now we're getting as the wind blows and as the crow flies.
What if I take the subway?
Why? We have science now. Why do we need crows and winds?
But I think that's why I like it.
And I think I agree with Jesse here that like specificity really helps.
And you could go with both as long as you're specific.
But I think I like specificity because as the crow flies is a is very pleasant earthy phrase that i don't want to phase out thanks to the you know big map quest
also uh if you were in maine you would say you don't want to go over there the pollution's
terrible there yeah yeah john that's how people in maine talk exactly it's a perfect impression of how mainers
talk to each other thank you jennifer we can cut all of chuck out of this
in the backwards can we have someone else record his lines or
no i'm just as guilty of occasionally talking in a down east accent
if you were to tell someone how to get to
one place or another, Bass Head, Harbour,
Lighthead, House,
from those coordinates I gave you,
and you didn't say, as the crow flies,
they'd be mighty mad at you.
Wait, are you from London?
I think that was the Midlands.
Hello, Governor, it's me,
the Lighthouse Man.
The Mayor of Maine.
I'm here to catch some lobsters, I am.
All right.
Here's the deal.
I think obviously that you have some common sense understanding of when distance as the crow flies is more apt and helpful and useful than distance as the car drives.
And if you are talking about the relative distance between Paris and Calais,
then you might as well give as the crow flies as the default.
Basically, I think that's a straight drive anyway.
But if you're talking about the relative distance between Bar Harbor and Calais, Maine,
which is spelled like Calais but is different,
you'd best give the driving miles
unless you specifically say as the crow flies.
And I like what Josh Chuck says.
I'm willing to accept the as the crow flies as the default
so long as it is specific that you say as the crow flies.
If you are giving driving instructions,
then you have to make sure that you are clear that that is driving mileage.
And if you are in a place like Maine where the as the crow flies distance is stupid and makes
no sense because no one would ever fly on the back of a crow from those two places,
between those two places, then you should just be clear it is 51 point now i have to find my note again 51.3
miles by road to the bass head harbor lighthouse bass bass harbor head lighthouse that's what it's
called that does sound like a compromise but i think clarity has to rule the day here clarity
is more important than either tom or dana being, as the crow flies should be used when you are describing measuring distances that way, especially if it's
going to be confusing otherwise. Let's take a quick break. More items on the docket coming up
in just a minute on the Judge John Hodgman podcast. I'll tell you what, though, if you do drive from
those coordinates and take that long drive to Bass Harbor, It's not as fast, but you do get to
pass by Acadia Provisions on High Street in Ellsworth. And that's the only place in Maine
where they have Taylor pork roll. That's just a life hack for you. Goodbye.
You're listening to Judge John Hodgman. I'm bailiff Jesse Thorne. Of course, the Judge John Hodgman podcast always
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dot com slash Hodgman. Rules and restrictions apply. Welcome back to the Judge John Hodgman
podcast. This week, we're clearing the docket with Josh Clark and Chuck Bryant,
the hosts of the podcast Stuff You Should Know
and the authors of the forthcoming book of the same name.
Here's something from Jeremiah.
He says,
I am a gardener and I make my own compost and mulch.
One of the best ingredients for them is shredded autumn leaves.
We don't have any large trees, so I have been acquiring leaves
from the area. When neighbors take their yard waste out for pickup, I will briefly open their
bags just to make sure it's leaves or mostly leaves. Then I put them in my car and take them
home. Hold on one second. Speaking of shredded autumn leaves. Immediately outside my window.
Leave it in. That is thematically appropriate.
There's a leaf blower out there.
We are in the midst of autumn.
Shredded autumn leaves sounds, frankly, delicious.
Yeah.
And this is an important one. Sounds like a good emo band, too.
Right?
Opening for the promise ring, it's shredded autumn leaves.
My partner, Liz, says this is stealing.
The residents are paying for the city to take them.
She also says it's weird and makes me look like a foliage perv.
But I don't disturb the residents or trespass onto private property.
Liz would like you to rule that I stop picking up leaves from the curb.
I would like you to rule that I be picking up leaves from the curb. I would like you to rule that I'd be allowed to continue. All right. Well, so this issue goes all the way back into the past, Judge
John Hodgman, verdict number 38, Pepperoni Pauper, in which we discussed the inherent indignity
of going through the trash bin at a Canadian pizza parlor for coupons,
or really going through anyone's trash, your own or someone else's.
Josh, Chuck, you live in communities where people put out trash bins and trash bags for collection,
correct? Yes. All right. What do you think about Jeremiah's leaf peeping and taking scheme?
Well, I'm actually split on the two because if you'll notice, there's two things in there. One is that he's bothering the neighbors or that he's a perv, a leaf perv, foliage perv, I think is how Liz put it, or Jeremiah put it, how Liz put it.
And then the first is that he's stealing.
I disagree with the idea that he's stealing by the very evidence that Liz uses, which is that people
are paying for this to be taken away. I would say that people aren't paying for someone specific
to take it away. So long as it's taken away, I think they're okay with it. If he were bringing
his leaves and putting them with somebody else's leaves and not paying for somebody to take it
away, that's actually more theft than what he's doing.
Right.
But I do agree that he could be considered weird or odd or a foliage pervert
by people who have hang-ups about things like that.
I don't think that there's anything inherently wrong with it.
I think he's definitely not stealing.
If he doesn't have leaves of his own,
I say help yourself to your neighbor's leaf
because they're not going to care.
Chuck, have you ever gone through your neighbor's trash?
No, but I got to say,
as a weekly listener to this show for years and years,
this case is like,
the Venn diagram of this case is,
I feel like the J.J.
Ho universe is collapsing on itself or something because I immediately.
We're trying to keep up with the times.
I'm immediately thinking of the mom who would steal plant clippings from neighbors and shopping malls.
Yeah.
From shopping malls, not neighbors.
Okay.
She would go shopping malls and take clippings from the pot of plants there and replant them
herself.
Yeah, and I'm also recalling the guy sort of recently who would move his neighbor's
trash cans back to his house from the street.
Right, right.
And I think there's been a dog poop in trash can thing.
Like this is a very common theme here.
Yeah, I mean, basically, basically chuck you live in a suburban
neighborhood my question to you is this it's not suburban yeah no all right i i stand correct and
we'll leave all this in the point i'm making is that you that you have a house on a street
and you take your garbage out to the curb correct that's not what happens
in my apartment building right yeah we we've got two, a big recycling
bin, a big trash bin.
One goes in one, one goes
to the other, goes out to the street, and I have seen
people put stuff in these trash cans.
I don't think it's nice to put dog poop in there.
But I do think it's okay
to crib
some fall foliage.
Sure. So if you saw
someone taking some leaves out of your garbage
bag or took the whole garbage like open the garbage bag looked at it ascertained leaves
and then left with it you would be that's cool great at least he didn't put jesse's dog's poop
in my in my uh trash can yeah I think that's totally fine
because I would assume
some non-nefarious usage.
Because that's what Jesse's doing now.
He's mailing his dog's poops
all over the country
to put in other people's garbage cans.
Are you getting money for that, Jesse?
It's not money.
It's just spite.
He just loves it.
Oh.
Look, I'm with you both.
Jeremiah is right
and Liz is wrong. Gar garbage that is on the curb
is abandoned property I I would check with your local uh uh town hall or whatever
but I would be extremely surprised if you didn't learn that stuff that is left out on the curb is
free for people to grab it's also free for private detectives to go through to learn stuff about you.
That turned up in a lot of the case law that I looked over, John.
Really? Did it?
Oh, yeah.
Yeah. That's why you have to shred your autumn leaves rather than put them out whole,
because otherwise they'll see the notes that you took on those.
Exactly.
And I think he's doing a nice thing i would say i would say this
chuck thank you for giving us a history of of garbagey disputes that have occurred on this
podcast and minor theft and minor theft in the case of the woman who was clipping you know fronds
from uh ferns at the mall or whatever it was that's that's private
property that's theft you're not supposed to be concept categorical imperative would say
don't do something you wouldn't be comfortable with everyone doing and if everyone was cutting
off a frond that would be bad you wouldn't have any fronds left you'd be frondless
and then they'd have to shut the mall because that's the only thing keeping malls open.
So that, right?
And then moving the trash cans, that's also interfering with someone's personal property,
which those trash cans are.
And personal space and perhaps literal property boundaries, you know,
as you're walking them back up to their own house.
But the garbage in there, that's fair game.
You want to grab some shredded autumn leaves?
Go for it.
You will look like a weirdo to the people in that house
as you go through their trash.
That's what it comes down to.
Some people go through other people's trash for treasures
as part of a lifestyle of radical recycling and freeganism. Some people go through people's trash for treasures as part of a lifestyle of radical recycling and
freeganism. Some people go through people's trash because they have no choice. They have to find
food to eat or things to turn into recycle to make some extra money. All are fair game.
But if you want to be a, I think, good neighbor,
part of being a good neighbor means not giving your neighbors something to worry about with you.
Not giving them a sense like,
well, if he's going to go through our trash,
what else is he going to do?
Pee in our windows?
Yeah, totally.
When's he going to show up without pants?
Right, exactly.
Exactly.
I just wish there was some way
to communicate with neighbors.
No, it's impossible.
Unfortunately, that's what we've determined time and time again.
Good point.
Yeah, there's no way.
He could leave.
He could create like a little card or note or something that he left,
almost like a calling card that said something like,
just using the leaves for mulch. Thank you for them.
And then maybe his trademark could be like he leaves a score bar or something behind too.
It's like, thank you.
You know?
You get known for that.
Wow.
That.
Yeah.
If you leave a score bar.
I think all Judge Sean Hodgman questions should come with the standard proviso that, you know,
maybe we just say it out loud once and then everyone
knows from here on that that's appended to the end of every question. It says, blah, blah, blah,
blah, blah, question mark. P.S. I am not willing to talk to anyone who is not already my intimate.
I am really into this idea of leaving behind a score bar or something like, and you leave it,
right? And you leave you i mean this
would get now get expensive it would kind of but like i was like just leave it atop a velvet glove
and a and a letterpress printed card that says you have been visited by jeremiah the gentleman
leaf thief yeah i think i think at the end of the day you're, you're looking to be called the something bandit.
It doesn't really matter.
Just the something bandit.
That's right.
Yeah, I would go, if there are neighbors who are routinely giving these things away,
I would knock on their door, leave them a note,
leave your number or an email address in case they don't want you to do this.
I love the idea of leaving a card you have been visited
by the leaf bandit
of Jeremiah's block or whatever.
I think that's part of being neighborly.
It's letting people know
why you're going through their trash.
They don't want to think
that you're some kind of private eye,
like some kind of former teen detective
who's now a grown-up middle-aged man
trying to solve mysteries for teenagers
in North Carolina, bit.ly slash dicktown, they want to know that you're their neighbor.
It's just a plug. Always be plugging. Okay, here's something from Darcy.
Does consuming blood count as cannibalism? The squad has been debating it since January,
and I'm not even sure what side I'm on anymore. First of all, I just want to say, John,
I'm impressed that the squad
found time to be reelected
to Congress
and debate this question.
Yeah.
The squad, of course,
is how we refer to
four members of Congress,
Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez,
Rashida Tlaib,
Ilhan Omar,
and Ayanna Pressley, right?
Those are the four.
Those are the squad, right?
And the idea that they're sitting around debating whether or not drinking blood counts technically as cannibalism really does sound like the worst Facebook conspiracy theory of all time.
I'm sure it's out there, though.
It's the new internet rule.
Yeah, plus when you're doing all that Twitch streaming, you got to have something to talk about.
That's right.
It's like the squad are going to hold a press conference.
Yeah, we drink blood, but we've talked about it.
It's technically not cannibalism.
A podcast told us.
That's what the stakes are here.
Speaking of stakes, Jesse Thorne, we are talking about drinking human blood, so there will be some discussion of Dracula's in this.
Yeah, I was about to say that's just the elephant in the room.
Some content warning for you.
It's a Dracula in the room.
I wonder if you could turn an elephant into a Dracula.
Any animal can be a Dracula.
A lot of people think that only bats can be Draculas,
but any animal can be a Dracula if they get bit by another Dracula.
Look at Bunnicula.
Bunnicula, of course.
It's a perfect example.
Celery stalks at midnight.
Read it.
Important book.
Well, that was a writer's house author book
when I was my first job at the literary agency.
Bunnicula gave me a paycheck in my 20s.
Thanks, Bunnicula.
I'll tell you something, though.
A Dracula elephant would be hard to deal with because they already have tusks.
You know what I mean?
Are those going to get longer and pointier?
Well, I mean, one of the problems for the Dracula elephant is the tusks kind of get in the way.
No, but they got that hose nose.
What do you call it?
A trunk?
Yeah.
I like hose nose from that one.
Yeah.
Elephants are one of the only Draculas with hose noses.
It's also a great put down for an elephant too.
Like out of the way, hose nose.
Yeah.
Elephants get so sick of being called that in middle school.
Yeah.
On 80s sitcoms.
Elephants are the most decent, amazing, wonderful, compassionate, empathetic, long-lived, and intelligent creatures on Earth.
They're basically the crows of the mammals, but less schemey.
Yeah.
And they take circuitous routes that only they understand.
And I don't know why anyone would put down an elephant.
Don't call an elephant a hose nose, unless he's a Dracula, in which case it's self-defense.
So, all right right first of all Chuck
and Josh I gotta ask you each and this is for real now Chuck are you a Dracula or no
am I a Dracula or no well no I was about to say I can't be because I'm a podcaster but
as we all know Dracula's can have can have any job. It's true.
It's true.
Josh?
Am I a Dracula?
Or no.
Are you a Dracula or no?
And you have to tell the truth
even if you're undercover.
That's right.
Even though Draculas are notorious liars.
Is that enforceable though?
Yes, you're under fake love.
I'll enforce it.
I have the equipment.
All right.
Well, then I can neither confirm nor deny that.
Too close.
Do you know what that's called?
That particular phrase?
Killing the bit.
I think you just saved it, Josh.
Classic no-am.
Oh, boy.
What is it?
Where did it come from?
It's called the Glomar response.
A what?
A Glomar response.
It came from the CIA in the 70s,
where they were asked if they were trying to get their hands on a Russian sub
that had sunk, and the CIA said,
we can neither confirm nor deny that.
But what is the origin of the word?
The Glomar was the name of the ship
that they were actually using to get their
hands on that Russian sub.
The Glomar Explorer.
Sorry about
killing the Dracula thing.
No, you did great. I just needed to affirm
that you guys were not Draculas.
But it's interesting, you know,
I looked up a thing
one could learn my new podcast things you can learn the clinical term people some people do
drink blood yes and and those who have a pathological obsession with the idea of drinking
blood or who actually do it as a habit that's clinical vampirism also known officially as Renfield syndrome
after the character from Bram Stoker's Dracula which frankly Renfield of course was Dracula's
little helper and it's not to be confused with Renfair syndrome which is where you're always
making your own chain mail we've all drank our own blood though right i mean that's a weird human response to
yeah put your finger in your mouth and drink a little bit of that sweet irony goodness i think
the difference is if you do that and you're like this is pretty great or you're like what other
people's blood tastes like that is actually a condition called auto vampirism where you are
you become addicted psychologically to drinking your own
blood on purpose so here let's break it down uh would you be a cannibal chuck
if you accidentally drank some of your own blood from like a a cut on your finger or a bruised lip
or whatever no i don't think so.
I think a cannibal is, and I might not be correct,
but in my view, a cannibal is someone who actually consumes flesh.
So you're saying that even someone who drinks blood on purpose,
num nummy, that's not a cannibal?
Even if it's someone else's blood? You would not say that num nummy is that's not a cannibal even if it's someone else's blood you
would not say that num num me is the cry of a cannibal no I would say no unless
they're you know little little tiny bits of flesh in there it's a cannibal on a
liquid diet you're gaining sustenance from a human tissue I don't gee boy oh
boy Chuck what do you I mean It's not tissue though.
Josh, it's blood tissue.
Oh man.
This is just a horrible
rabbit hole. Yes, I think
blood is tissue.
I think. Yeah, an ensemble of similar cells
together carry out a specific function
which is, in this case, bleed.
I think you would be a cannibal if you drank other people's blood,
but not necessarily if you drink your own blood,
unless you are drinking it specifically for the purpose of drinking it.
Yeah, then yes.
If you drink blood to drink blood, then you may be a cannibal.
If you've got four cars on your lawn and don't none of them work, you might be a cannibal.
Well, first of all, I just want everyone to know, don't drink blood.
Don't do it.
Don't do it.
I can understand why you'd be interested.
It is 93% protein and only 1% carb.
So it's good if you're keto.'s good if you're keto might be attractive,
but no human blood.
Don't,
don't drink it.
Nevermind the violation of someone else's body that might be involved.
Nevermind the possibility of contagion.
The fact is based on some science and health websites that are designed well
enough for me to trust them.
I looked at a lot of them.
The consensus is that beyond just a little bit of your own blood
or someone else's blood our bodies are not really set up to digest it and and drinking a fair amount
if such a thing can be described of blood can actually cause a condition an overload of iron
called hemochromatosis because our bodies are not great at getting rid of iron.
And you get hemochromatosis,
that actually could be a fatal situation.
So don't do it.
But I'm going to say based on this illuminating discussion,
here's my judgment.
If you ingest a little bit of blood from your own cut lip
or your own cut finger or whatever,
or like you're chewing your fingernails
or whatever you accidentally swallow some fingernail or some of that fingernail meat around it
that's tissue tissue right if that just happens unintentionally you are you are not a cannibal
if you accidentally drink someone else's blood or their fingernail tissue by accident, a small amount, I don't know how you can figure out a scenario, I'm sure.
If it happens by accident, a small amount, you are not a cannibal.
But if you eat or ingest any amount of that on purpose for the purpose of doing it, as Josh said, to drink blood as blood,
that is an act of cannibalism.
And then if you cook any of it,
then you're definitely a cannibal.
Then you just get a capital C, cannibal,
which is awful.
But at least you're not a Dracula.
Do you think they named him Hannibal
because it rhymes with cannibal?
Yes.
Yes, I think so too.
I think that is true.
Let's take a quick break, a dispute about leftover snacking,
and a letter from a member of Gen Z when we return.
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
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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.
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A podcast from MaximumFun.org.
If you need a laugh and you're on the go.
Welcome back to the Judge John Hodgman podcast.
I'm Bailiff Jesse Thorne.
We're here with the hosts of Stuff You Should Know,
the authors of the new book, Stuff You Should Know.
Here is something from Catherine.
I'm requesting an injunction against my husband, Brax.
He's a dear and sweet man.
However, he has one irritating habit.
Also an alien insect.
Yeah.
He's not a... All husbands
should be named after Adult Swim characters.
Alright,
what's Brax's deal?
He's a deer and sweet man. However,
he has one irritating habit.
He's not a big snacker, but sometimes wants
just a little nibble of a leftover.
The problem is he'll take a bite of
said leftover, then put it back in the refrigerator, bite mark and all.
This happens most with pizza,
but today I found that he did it with some leftover crepes.
Pictures of this mayhem are attached.
Will you please order that Brax stop this gross habit?
And if he wants just a taste of something,
he has to cut off a piece with a knife.
Okay, so Catherine sent in two pieces of evidence,
two photographs that will be available on the show page at MaximumFun.org
and, of course, at our Instagram account,
where you can see all the evidence each and every week
and has a fun little comment community as well of its own.
I encourage you to sign in and follow at Judge John Hodgman.
Two photos.
What we see, John, in these two pictures are a piece of pizza and a crepe, which have clearly been visited by the munching bandit.
Did he leave a scorecard?
Did he leave a card?
Yeah, he left no card.
Well, you know what?
His bite marks are his signature because these bite marks are very, very clear.
You could probably create a perfect plastered dental mold of Brax's teeth.
Yeah, these are what I would call cartoon munch holes.
That's right.
I tell you this though, Catherine, good news.
Brax, not a drac.
I can tell from looking at this.
Your husband's not a Dracula.
No fang holes.
That's how you know.
Josh and Chuck, we've all been stuck inside with our loved ones for a long time. looking at this your husband's not a dracula no fang holes that's how you know josh and chuck
we've all been stuck inside with our loved ones for a long time and a lot of uh you know
whatever we feel about civilization outside our homes definitely civilization
inside our homes has been collapsing uh and descending into sheer chaos as the veneer of humanity gets stripped away
and we're just weird farting creatures
who live with each other.
What have you, I'll pose this question to both of you
and you can answer if you have one.
What is the thing that you feel like you really let slip
during this time of staying home safely and responsibly.
Whether or not it affects your partner.
For me, I've really gotten into wearing the exact same outfit for three days in a row.
And that outfit is frequently my favorite pair of workout shorts that I haven't
worked out in in many months now and I have a pretty good size hole in an unfortunate place so
that's kind of how I've let myself go which seems to be kind of like a pretty big way
of letting yourself go now that I say it out loud on record.
That's okay.
We're all doing the best we can in this situation.
Chuck, is there anything that's kind of falling apart in your household?
Yeah.
You know, I think with delivery increased to homes for various things, I think the inside, like, nine-foot radius around our front door is generally cluttered.
Is that as the crow flies or driving?
It's been pretty cluttered with boxes and packing, not packing peanuts, but the little poppy things that you can pop.
Yeah.
So, yeah, that gets a little messy.
Your tolerance for visual pollution and clutter
is maybe a little bit higher than breaking down those boxes for recycling is something that's
happening like once a week yeah instead of as it comes in plus uh jeremiah the gentleman box thief
is waiting for you to put those outside why can't we get going on this i need i need this for the
box fort that i'm making uh yeah i'm i mean i'll i will say
the thing that i think about often is how comfortable i have become wearing elastic waist
pants soft clothes i mean yeah soft clothes as paul f tompkins and janie hadhead tompkins would
say like i believe in soft clothes of an evening when you're ready to relax but
there is no evening anymore you know there's all evening it's all evening and you know it's like a
decision every day like am i going to wear fitted pants today or am i really just going to wear
these track pants me wearing track pants i mean i think probably i the the image of me wearing
track pants probably just made a lot of our listeners just vomit right now and that could
be a real problem but it's true i've been wearing track pants and listeners to judge john hodgman
will know from my previous stances of wearing pajamas on an airplane sorry cory doctorow
or in general wearing leisure wear in everyday life,
my opinion was very low of that. But now it's not merely that my moral tolerance has changed for
this, for comfort, because I think we deserve comfort when so much of the world around us is
trying to make us uncomfortable or is doing so anyway. also i can't fit into my pants anymore at this point the only pants i wear are those jennifer lopez ones that say juicy on
the butt yeah that's right nice so i look i'm gonna admit that i i've taken a bite of pizza
out of the fridge and put in put back a brack style chomped slice and i've felt bad about myself
that's a bad thing to do that's gross that's a visual indicator that you have just salivaed on
this thing which by the way brax and katherine they live together they probably share a lot of
saliva but there is a there isn an you want to hide the you
want to hide the fact that you've slobbered all over this slice of pizza a little bit you want
to maintain a level of civilization in your house there's no good brax it's no good when i did it
it's no good when you do it especially when there's such a simple solution
when you want to eat some of the pizza but not all of it,
just cut off a slice
with your pizza shears.
Everyone's got to get
pizza shears.
You know that.
We've ruled that
on Judge John Hodgman
the best way to cut pizza
is scissors.
Just get some
dedicated pizza shears
and the crepes.
Just get out your
Ciseaux de crepe.
That's French for crepe scissors.
You're welcome, Babbel.
Free advertising for today.
CISO de crepe.
What do you think, guys?
Am I wrong or am I right?
You couldn't be more right.
Oh, phew.
I mean, that's just-
I don't think you're wrong.
You say I'm wrong?
Yeah, I don't think it's a big deal.
Oh, man.
wrong yeah i don't think it's a big deal oh man i think i think the fact that we have things like forks and pizza shears and that we've had these things for hundreds thousands countless years
and that they're they're so handy they're usually right by where the pizza and the crepes are yeah
that you just open a drawer and pull it out and then you cut it. And it's just, that's the, to me, the bare minimum threshold of civilization.
It's a sign of respect for the people you're living with, which is like, I'm not, I'm going to, I know that I'm just a farting, sweating, ingesting monster, but I'm going to try to pretend to be something else for you.
Right.
Yeah.
I think that is a, those are my, those are my loving thing that you could do
for somebody.
But Chuck is very low key and I, and I, yeah.
And you know something,
if I were in Chuck's house and I've been in Chuck's house,
I had to go over there and inspect the widening of that door.
Which good.
And if I opened the fridge,
which would be a very intrusive thing to do as a guest,
but Chuck wouldn't care.
And I saw a piece of pizza that Chuck had had a bite out of it and put back
in there.
I would not think ill of my host.
I would be like,
you know what?
I admire Chuck's laid backness and I might chomp a bit too.
Cause that's how, that's the Chuck way. Well, Chuck is well-known for, before guests come over,
taking a fork and cutting the bite marks off of the pizza.
Well, he and Emily are wonderful hosts. I'm with you, Judge Hodgman. I have a similar thing that happens to me every time I go to my friend Kool's house.
I'll go for the front door. Oh, Kool-Aid man is his full name.
I'll go for the front door initially.
And I'm like, he's just laid back about how he enters and exits homes.
To that I say, oh, yeah.
Oh, to that I say, oh, yeah.
OK, we have a we have a letter to read here, Judge Hodgman, a letter about Generation Z from a listener named Tristan.
That's right, Jesse. So Josh Chuck, over the summer, guest bailiff David Reese and I heard a dispute about whether or not it's OK to burn books if they are written by Tucker Carlson or Bill O'Reilly and they're ilk.
If you want to know what the verdict was, go back and listen to that episode because I don't remember anything that ever comes out of my mouth anymore. David and I though wondered whether or
not Generation Z has the same visceral reaction that we of Generation X might have to the idea
of physical book burnings given how much of those younger
people's schoolwork and reading is now done on screens. Tristan, an 11-year-old girl, wrote to
me about this, and here's what she had to say. Dear Judge John Hodgman, you implied that Generation Z
doesn't read actual paper books, if they read at all. I think that statement was a bit ignorant,
if they read it all. I think that statement was a bit ignorant
because as I write this,
I'm in the middle of reading a paper book entitled,
Jesse, you may want to step out of the room,
entitled Breaking Dawn.
It's a Dracula book.
Disgusting that they can be in books.
A book about Draculas, paper Dracula book.
I am not just speaking for myself.
I have friends who love to read just like me.
I hope you understand that not all of Generation Z fits that stereotype of being device addicted.
A lot of us love to read and not on devices.
I know I would be appalled by a book burning, even if the books were written by racist conservatives.
Thank you for taking the time to read this letter.
I'm a big fan of your podcast.
Well, Tristan, I thank you. And the time to read this letter i'm a big fan of your podcast well tristan i thank
you and i do stand corrected in fact the young the younger people who in my life uh read more
paper books than i do and it's a i think there's still this is obviously very generationally
enduring pleasure that comes in picking up a book about dracula's and reading it even if jesse thorne would like you
to burn that book about dracula's and probably it's the safest thing to do because you don't know
a physical book about dracula's a dracula could come out of it a dracula could pretend to be a
book right jesse yeah absolutely right in fact i'm not a hundred percent certain that a book
couldn't itself be a dracula it's it's back's back and forth.
They're marginal creatures of the night. Tristan, I hope
your book isn't a Dracula.
Also, Tristan, I hope you're not actually
reading Tucker Carlson books.
But okay. Point taken.
Speaking of books...
Come on. Zoomers love Carlson.
Well-known
fact.
Well, they love Lou Dobbs. like tucker carlson that's right
you know john i'm the only millennial here oh boy guys are all gen xers i only read books on vinyl
speaking of books both physical and audio josh and chuck you have a book coming out in just a few days called stuff you should know an incomplete compendium of very and then that's
crossed off and it says mostly interesting things by you josh clark and you chuck bryant and your co-writer nils parker great guy and i would
encourage you tristan to pick up this book and read it then burn it don't burn it don't burn
this book you want to have this one around because this is one you can just dip into for example
jesse thorn here's a here's a question based on some information that i got from this book
Norn, here's a question based on some information that I got from this book.
Think it through.
Can you tell me the connection between cyanide, almonds, and asparagus?
Well, cyanide is a famous poison.
Right.
Almonds are a type of nut that people eat a lot of when they're on a diet and they want to tell you about it.
And asparagus is one of the things that is way better when you're a grown-up
than when you're a child.
So as far as I can tell, there is no connection, John.
I don't know.
Josh or Chuck, you want to take this one?
So cyanide has an almond smell
and not everybody can smell the almond smell and not everyone can smell asparagus pee either.
Isn't that correct? Yeah, that's exactly right. I was, uh, cyanide, uh, Swedish,
according to your book, Swedish chemist, Carl Schiele determined in 1782 that cyanide gas
smells like bitter almonds.
I mean, at first he was like, what is this, marzipan?
Nope, almonds.
That's what, that's smelling, that's what we call Swedish chemistry.
But in any case.
Marzipan and cyanide, by the way, are two things you should never eat.
Don't eat cyanide.
But as you say, Josh,
and this is the thing that blew my mind,
because I never heard of this about any other substance,
but only 50% of people can actually smell that bitter almond smell,
that famous from detective novel,
bitter almond smell of cyanide,
in the same way that a certain percentage of people
just don't have the genetic receptor
to smell that weird
urine asparagus tainted urine smell and for a while they had it a little bit backwards at least
with asparagus they thought that some people didn't smell or that didn't produce asparagus
right and then they finally thought to bring in some people um With noses. Yes, with noses.
What we call Swedish chemists.
And they found that some people can smell it,
some people can't,
but everyone makes a terrible smell
when they pee after eating asparagus.
I like that smell.
Wow.
It's not totally unpleasant.
Talk about a leaf perv.
Whoa.
But it's a little rough.
Look, November 24th, 2020 is when this book comes out.
It's also when you and you, Chuck, and you, Josh, and me, John, are going to have a VTE, a virtual ticketed event, a live book event in conjunction with little shop of stories down there in decatur
georgia and not only will we talk about all the amazing fun facts that you put into this book
and have a good old time talking but if time allows i'll i'll tell you chuck that book plate
story that i was going to tell you about me going into auto hypnosis while signing book plates.
And it was one of the most terrifying experiences of my life.
But if time doesn't allow, we'll kill that story.
So we have enough time for me to tell Josh's tattoo story, which is one of the greatest things I've ever heard in my life.
Makes me so happy.
I love that.
Bit.ly slash j j cisco bit.ly slash j j s y s k o all capital
letters all one word your ticket gets you a book your ticket gets you some face time with us but
most importantly you get to see what i've had the
pleasure of seeing for the past hour or so the wonderful faces of my friends josh and chuck of
stuff you should know thank you so much for being here you guys thank you for having us thank you
guys our thanks to josh clark and chuck bryant for joining us today you can follow josh on Twitter at Josh underscore um underscore Clark.
And Chuck is at Movie Crush Pod.
Their book, Stuff You Should Know,
an incomplete compendium of mostly interesting things,
comes out on November 24th.
It's available for pre-order now.
Visit stuffyoushouldreadbooks.com for more.
The docket is now clear. That's it for another episode of Judge John Hodgman. Our producer
is the ever-capable Ms. Jennifer
Marmer, whose husband Shane
walked through the background in his
favorite gym shorts earlier on.
Yeah.
We are on Twitter at
Jesse Thorne and at Hodgman. We're on
Instagram at Judge John Hodgman.
Make sure to hashtag your Judge John Hodgman tweets
hashtag JJHO.
And check out the Maximum Fun subreddit.
That's at MaximumFun.reddit.com
to chat about this week's episode.
You can submit your cases,
and we do need your cases always,
at MaximumFun.org slash JJHO,
or just email Hodgman at MaximumFun.org.
And listen, if you are a podcaster like Josh and Chuck,
if you've got a setup for talking and sounding good already,
and you've got a dispute, don't make up a dispute.
But if you've got a dispute and you've got some pretty good microphones,
you're going to go top of the pile.
We'll find a way to make it work.
You could be on a lot of podcasts these days.
Truth be told.
For the
last few years, we have booked studios for our litigants. These days, for obvious reasons, we
are unable to send them to studios. So if you do have some equipment, indicate that in your note.
And we'll talk to you next time on the Judge John Hodgman podcast.