Judge John Hodgman - The Glass-Action Lawsuit
Episode Date: February 10, 2016Dan files suit against his girlfriend Jessica. Jessica has a pair of low-grade prescription glasses. She prefers not to wear them, claiming they are not attractive. Dan says she's missing out on life ...by refusing to wear the glasses. Who's right? Who's wrong?
Transcript
Discussion (0)
Welcome to the Judge John Hodgman podcast.
I'm bailiff Jesse Thorne.
This week, the glass action lawsuit.
Dan files suit against his girlfriend, Jessica.
Jessica has a pair of low-grade prescription eyeglasses.
She prefers not to wear them.
She says they're not attractive.
Dan says she's missing out on life by refusing to wear the glasses.
Who's right? who's wrong,
only one man can decide. Please rise as Judge John Hodgman enters the courtroom and presents
the obscure cultural reference. Shed the days like skin, pray for evenings in. Hold their hands in
the street when you walk them off to school. A box too full to shut.
Cardboard paper cut.
Bleeding edge of a picture of your parents when they were cool.
Bailiff Jesse Thorne, swear them in.
Please rise and raise your right hands.
Do you swear to tell the truth, the whole truth,
and nothing but the truth, so help you God or whatever?
I do.
I do.
Do you swear to abide by Judge John Hodgman's ruling
despite the fact that in lieu of corrective lenses,
he simply has a pet eagle who tells him what he sees?
Yes, I do.
I do.
Very well, Judge Hodgman.
Dan, Jessica, you may be seated.
Yeah, it's not only an eagle-eyed eagle as a little bit of a cliche, but hey, there are stereotypes for a reason.
It's also one of those English-speaking eagles.
You know what? I wish everyone could have one, but only I can.
Sorry.
Most people can only afford a Portuguese-speaking eagle.
Oh, those, well, I wish knew the portuguese currency right now i
guess it's euros at this point right i think they're in the euro zone that was that was part
of the problem right right exactly so those euro a dozen is dozen metric we'll say it is eagles
portuguese eagles dan jessica uh for an immediate summary judgment in one of yours favors, can either one of you name the piece of, I would say, popular culture that I quoted directly as I entered the courtroom?
Jessica, you have been dragged into this courtroom against your will by Dan, so you get the first chance to guess, or you can ask the Dan guess first.
Wow. I'm going to be really bad at this good that's good for me when people are good at it it gets complicated it sounded like
a poem but this is a more of a pop culture reference that may have been the rhyming
maybe there are lyrics um lyrics to a
song that i don't know judge hodgman you know some poems rhyme but it doesn't have to rhyme
to be a poem that didn't rhyme jesse what are you doing uh well dan well dan's the writer so
if it is he'll probably know it well so your guess is lyrics to some song that I don't know.
Let me just enter that into the record.
It's a solid guess.
It's definitely a guess.
Should I be more specific?
Name a song you don't know.
Bop?
Okay, what?
The Glasses song.
Okay.
The Glasses song. All. The Glasses song.
All right.
It's probably relevant to what we're talking about today,
so that's my best guess.
Dan, are you ready to make your guess?
Yes.
Is that a Jonathan Coulton song known as Glasses?
Well, both guesses are right.
So it's a tie wow yeah what was great about that i had a look obviously the song is glasses by jonathan colton off of his 2011 uh superlative album artificial Artificial Heart. With the chorus, of course, being
so much to say I forgot to start.
There goes a day fading as it passes.
Here comes the rhyming, Jesse.
Forget the gray, let it fall apart.
It's okay.
I like you in glasses.
This is my favorite song on this album.
And even though I recognize
that there's probably a lot of then,
as they say, a lot of overlap
between Jonathan Colton fans and listeners to this podcast. And I had a feeling that one of you would know. recognize that there's probably a lot of then as they say a lot of overlap between jonathan colton
fans and listeners to this podcast and i had a feeling that one of you would know it and dan
you're the one who did and i could tell immediately when he said um i think my guess is i just knew
the tone of your voice you knew it but luckily for me and all of the listeners, your lovely girlfriend, Jessica,
took one of the greatest leaps of faith of all time
and simply said, glasses.
She guessed it correctly out of nowhere.
Just in context.
I have to be fair, I don't even know who Jonathan Colton is.
Good for you.
He's not like a secret guest on this podcast.
You have a full and complete life and a terrific journey into music ahead of you. You have not like a secret guest. You have a, you have a full and complete life and an,
and a terrific journey into music ahead of you.
But I,
so you,
you,
you amended your guests to be the glasses song,
but your first guest was glasses.
That's the one I put in.
And the fact that you guessed it allows me to take great pleasure in nullifying
Dan's guests.
No.
And therefore no summary judgment is made and i we will hear the case now dan yes you you are in a romantic relationship with jessica
of about how long uh a little under a year at this point And you discovered that she was keeping a terrible secret from you.
What was the secret?
I learned recently, maybe just in the last month or two, that Jessica has prescription glasses that she never wears.
I see.
And what are the glasses for, Jessica?
What are they correcting?
Your eyes, I presume.
That's right. I'm apparently
slightly nearsighted in one eye and slightly farsighted in the other eye. Oh, I don't even
know what that is. Did you see an eye doctor for this? Did they tell you what that is?
I did. So I get a lot of headaches. And about seven years ago, they thought it might be because of my
vision.
And when I went to see an eye doctor, he told me that I had this, this, um, uh, slightly
off vision and told me that I should wear the glasses as needed, prescribed me the glasses.
I got them and I wear them as needed ever since.
So, but obviously not very much if the special person in your life, well, first of all,
let's just be clear. It's 2016 now. Have you ever met in person, you guys?
On a few occasions. Okay. All right. Do you live in the same town?
We live in the same borough of Brooklyn.
Okay. And do you live together? Do you cohabitate?
Not yet.
Okay. But sounds like you hope that that might be true in the future.
Correct.
All right. So you've got double wonky eyes, but you don't wear your glasses. Dan discovers this
10 months into the relationship.
How did you discover it, Dan?
She was showing me some old photos before we met and she happened to pull
one up.
And you're like, Oh, who is that ugly, horrible spinster librarian?
I never seen such a foul creature before. No, it was, it was just,
just, she was just showing me this photo of her. And she's like, look at me. There's me and my glasses. And I'm like, glasses, it, uh, it was just, um, just, she was just showing me this photo of her. Uh, and she's like, look at me, there's me and my glasses.
And I'm like, glasses, you don't, you don't wear glasses.
Right.
And then she confessed.
Yes, that's right.
So wait, Jesse, you may have already said this, but when were you diagnosed with, um,
weirdo eyes?
I think it was about seven years ago.
I was in college, so it might have been a little longer ago than that.
And have you got your prescription for your glasses then?
Mm-hmm.
And have you had a new prescription since then?
Well, when I was in graduate school, so about three years ago, I had my eyes checked again,
showed them the glasses that I had prescribed to me, and they said those were a good fit for my vision.
So they said, stay with what you know?
Yes.
All right.
And so, Dan, you want me to order Jessica to wear her glasses all the time.
Why?
Do you feel that she's putting her and your life at risk by walking around?
No, I don't think so.
And I wouldn't even go as far to say as all the time.
Let's do it anyway.
Okay, sure.
All the time.
I've noticed that once I learned this secret that Jessica had, I started sort of testing her. Like, well, look across the room.
Is that, can you read this?
And a distance of, let's say, eight or nine feet, not far past from the couch to the television, for instance.
What a fun date, by the way.
Sure enough, her vision is blurry. And she's admitted that when we, you know,
we attend, you know, movies from time to time and we go to the live theater, as it were, and
she's admitted that she cannot necessarily see faces. They blur for her. So when we're, you know, viewing these cultural pieces.
You could just say movies and plays.
Movies, plays, musicals, a lot of musicals.
Well, he's talking about live theater as it were. He means that he's probably speaking
semi-metaphorically about the theater of life.
Right. Okay, gotcha.
Sure.
A lot of musicals, you say?
life right okay gotcha sure a lot of musicals you say yeah we are uh i am i am of the musical theater world uh so i have i've been uh inducted jessica into this strange world of singing and
dancing you are you are of it in the sense that you participate in it or you go to see it a lot
you're a stage or you're a stage door danny or are you a are you a creator of some
kind uh both i uh i i write i write uh lyrics and the libretto and i work with a writing partner and
we write musicals and any that have been produced on broadway not yet okay but you're still but
you're that's the idea uh so you go see a lot of musicals and you notice that Jessica does not know what's going on.
It's all just a bunch of pale smudges.
Is that true, Jessica?
Totally not true.
All right.
Sometimes it's blurry.
Depends on how good the seat stand gets are, right?
Exactly.
I mean, maybe it's not my eyes.
Maybe it's the seat.
Maybe your boyfriend's too cheap.
But some faces look better blurry, in my defense.
Wow.
Like your boyfriend's?
No, his face is lovely.
His face is lovely.
No, but in all seriousness, I mean, I always know what's going on.
I'm not sitting there watching, you know, a blurry blob and just refusing to put my glasses on.
Well, I don't. But you are refusing to put your glasses on, right? You're not putting them on.
Yeah. So sometimes I leave them at work because that's the only time I really use them.
What is your job? I am a lender. An airline pilot?
That would be unfortunate. No, I don't do any driving in my job. And I work in the renewable
energy space. And so I stare at a computer screen for large amounts of time. And sometimes when that
gets blurry, I need to put my glasses on because I need to see the numbers so I can give out loans.
When you say that you're a lender in the renewable energy space, you just mean you're a battery, right?
I lie in a tank of nutrient solution and I give up some of my biomechanical energy to the robots that control this world.
Exactly.
Exactly.
I'm the solution for the future.
Storage.
So you spend all day looking at a screen and then sometimes the screen gets blurry.
Now, here's what I hear.
This one eye is nearsighted and one eye is farsighted.
This may be a very common issue, but it's not one that I've heard of a lot.
So you don't have a special prescription for close-up and a special prescription for far away?
No, I have a prescription that has different lenses for each side.
Oh, okay.
Yeah, well, that makes sense, doesn't it?
So you just don't like the way they look on you.
Is that it?
Yeah, that's basically it.
How do they make you look?
Well, they mess up my makeup.
They make my nose all red from wearing them.
You make your nose all red?
Well, just where they sit on my nose.
Oh, okay.
There's a red band on it.
Hidden by the glasses.
Well, but when I take them off...
You mean like to emphasize a point in Law & Order style?
Yes.
I'm only supposed to wear them as needed.
So if I go from looking at a computer where I need them to sitting in a meeting with a
bunch of people where I don't like
the way I look, I want to take them off. But then I have this red line on my nose. I think it's
something about the way my face is shaped. It's just not, I don't think they look good on me.
I don't feel confident in them. Okay. Is that about the particular glasses that you have or
glasses in general? Glasses in general, I actually really like the glasses that I have.
They're timeless. Well, Dan or you
sent in some evidence. Oh, Jessica sent in this evidence. And it's a photo
of this very beautiful young woman wearing
glasses. And then a photo of a very beautiful young woman
not wearing glasses.
And this is the same beautiful young woman.
And as someone who wears glasses and has basically only ever fallen in love with people who wear glasses,
I'm not seeing what it is that you see when you see a photo of yourself
wearing glasses what is it that you see in this photo of yourself holding this imported beer and
having a good time with some friends in a bar that i that i that i don't that you feel you that you
dislike i mean i look hideous in that photo it was carefully selected you don't look hideous in that photo. It was carefully selected.
You don't look hideous in this photo.
Well, thank you.
That's nice.
Well, what looks hideous to you in this photo?
The glasses are all crooked on my face, and you can't see my beautiful eyes.
And they're a distraction.
You look right at the glasses.
Well, I will grant you that the glasses... No, I grant you nothing.
But I will say this in front of your boyfriend.
You have beautiful eyes.
Do you consider them to be...
Well, thank you.
Well, but I mean, it's true that, you know, glasses can enhance or interfere with,
but they're definitely an aesthetic, uh,
addition to the eyes, especially.
Do you consider your eyes to be one of your,
one of the qualities of which you are proudest and perhaps even most vain
about?
Absolutely. Absolutely. I know that they're wonderful.
All right. So why don't you wear contact lenses? They were invented last year.
Well, he didn't prescribe me contact lenses.
That's true. It's probably impossible for her to obtain contact lenses.
She might be able to go to Europe, for example, to some underground dealer.
Yeah, or Mexico City.
Yeah, for example.
But surely contact lenses would be available for you and you could wear them and then you wouldn't have to switch out.
I guess what I would say to that is, if I saw it to be creating a really serious problem in my life
I would definitely do that
I'm a problem solver
I'm very resourceful
I just don't see what the problem is
So you prefer not to wear glasses
You like the way you look without glasses
Dan, why don't you just let her do what she's going to do?
Because I feel
And my argument is that she doesn't have to wear them all the time.
You already had your fun control date where you made her look at a bunch of things at
different distances.
Didn't you get what you wanted out of that?
Well, my feeling is that if she were to just wear them when we, let's say, go to the movie
theater or go to the theater and it's in the dark, nobody can see that she's wearing them even.
Nobody's looking at her, that she would greatly enhance her enjoyment of whatever she's viewing.
Well, that's a good question.
Why don't you wear glasses in the theater?
I mean, Jessica, when you go to the movies, can you see better with glasses?
Undoubtedly.
Undoubtedly. Undoubtedly.
And yet, for the most part, when you go to the movies or go to the musical theater, you don't wear glasses or you prefer not to?
That's the point where I said that I don't wear them because I usually leave them at work.
Oh, okay.
Conveniently.
Conveniently, inconveniently.
Yeah, great.
Do you think she's lying?
Do you think that she leaves them at work purposefully?
So she doesn't have to wear them when she gets to the theater.
I don't know if it's intentional,
but I,
I definitely don't think she,
she has the glasses.
There's no,
there's certainly no way to find out if it's intentional or not.
Ask her.
Go on.
Jessica. Yes. will you marry me
jesse that was for later and also you're already married fair point fair point um so jessica i was
going to ask you um are you intentionally leaving your glasses behind at work? No.
Okay, then.
She's under fake oath.
You have to accept that answer.
All right, then.
So would you like me to order Jessica, then,
to stop forgetting her glasses at work if you were going to the musical theater?
Yeah, pretty much.
I would say that she should be more cognizant of having them on her so that when we attend anything that requires distance viewing, she can have the optimal experience.
And why is it important to you that she have the optimal experience?
Because I want to share these things with her.
I'm super passionate about the things that I get tickets to.
things with her. I'm super passionate about the things that I get tickets to. Some of my favorite movies I have her watch. And there are plays I'm excited for us both to see and share and talk
about. And I feel like she's at a disadvantage by not seeing facial expressions or small nuances
that can affect performances. Jessica, quick question.
Yes.
Do you give a feces about the musical theater?
So I like going.
I do.
All right.
I did not go much before I met Dan.
It's not a passion you share at the same level as Dan.
Right.
I'm not trying to trap you.
level as Dan.
I'm not trying to trap you.
I'm just trying to get a sense of how much you care about the same,
the stuff as,
as in contrast to him.
Well,
I do have something to say about what Dan just said,
if I may,
please.
So I know that Dan loves me very much and that he just wants me to enjoy myself,
but there's a little bit more to it than that he seems to think that
sometimes i don't enjoy the shows that he enjoys just because i couldn't see them
right and actually uh-huh they're just bad yeah in fact you're protecting yourself from these terrible shows by keeping a blurry veil
between you and they exactly all right let's get down to it what show did dan take you to that was
bad oh i hated les mis the guy died i didn't care um greatest yelp review ever um well there's a guy dying in almost everything
so we we went to go see recently this farce i think it's a british show called noises off
saw that one coming because i'm wearing my glasses my musical theater glasses saw that
one coming from a mile away i've never seen that show was it dumb so it was it was actually kind
of a terrifying experience for me because there was all these blurry people yelling at me
well i like literally everyone in the theater was laughing except me.
And the Times loved it and Dan loved it.
And I just felt like, what's wrong with me?
What are some things that you like?
Just the guy fell down the stairs.
I wish I could see that.
I haven't seen the show.
It was so good.
It was so good.
You loved it, right, Dan?
I loved it.
It's classic farce.
It just executed flawlessly.
I had a great time.
I see.
I see that.
Okay.
Did any of y'all see Hand to God?
No.
What is that?
It is a play.
I think Bob Saget is in now, or maybe it closed, but about a boy who makes a sock puppet, and that sock puppet becomes possessed by the devil.
How did I miss this, Dan?
That was funny.
It was really good.
Yeah.
Was that a play here in New York City?
That's correct.
All right.
And you liked that very much.
Yes. Like that's comedy. It was so funny.
It was the best theater experience I ever had.
And did you wear your glasses? No, no.
I looked bad in them. I see.
Do you feel like you missed out because you didn't,
you didn't actually get to see Bob Saget and all his glory no i mean i i can still see i just she couldn't see him sweating though you gave me a you gave
us all a pretty a pretty hearty y'all there where are you from originally jessica uh originally i'm
from ocean springs mississippi okay so but where you were where you were growing up uh and when you
were growing up see because dan where are you from long island originally right so i you know i'm from
brookline massachusetts we we grow up among and amidst a bunch of glasses wearers very normalized
for us but did but the the girls in your high school or the young women in your
high school, if they wore glasses, was that something of a signifier say of nerddom?
Absolutely. Yes. And would you say that that lingers somewhat in your heart as well?
Maybe a little, but it's not really about looking nerdy i am kind of nerdy sure but i don't
feel i don't feel confident and i moved to brooklyn and you're about to shack up with a dude who
writes musical theater it's pretty you know what i mean you take that back home to ocean springs
they might have something to say yeah i see your point um yeah but i think that's where the vanity comes from southern women are
they wear makeup to the gym it's a cultural it's a cultural difference oh yeah i'm saying that with
complete neutrality i'm just i that when i when i heard that y'all suddenly i was like oh i see
what's going on here she didn't she didn't grow
up watching public television brookline massachusetts i bet no i did not i bet she
doesn't i bet she doesn't cotton to a doctor who scarf either but dan you'll wear a doctor
who scarf wouldn't you you listen to jonathan colton yep wow did you play any sports when you were in high school not you dan yeah definitely not jessica
um i did most of my sports a lot before high school um i did cheerleading and i did dance team
i did play soccer for a little while in high school, but I stopped when I broke my back. Oh my goodness. How did you break your back?
Car accident. Were you driving? I wasn't wearing her glasses. Okay. All right. So
sorry to make light of your life-threatening injury, but please tell me the story.
Okay.
So I wanted to go to college.
Nobody in my family went to college.
And I wanted to go to Columbia.
So I was like, I need to do something.
So I transferred to this school in northern Mississippi, the Mississippi School for Mathematics and Science.
And it's four and a half hours north of.
No Miss Math and Sci?
I'm sorry?
No Miss Math and Sci?
I know that school.
It's in Columbus.
It's actually where the Mississippi University for Women is.
Okay.
As well.
What's their mascot, the Portuguese Eagle?
It's probably like a fried okra or something.
I like it.
I'll go there.
Okay.
So anyway, you decide you need to do something, so you went to NOMIS, Math, and Sci.
Yes.
I stayed up all night studying for my physics final, which I got 100 on.
Well done.
And fell asleep about three hours into my drive home for Christmas.
Oh, no.
I have a titanium leg.
Well, at least you're superhuman now.
Yeah, it's pretty badass.
Dan, how did you meet your cyborg bride?
Well, you don't think we run in the same circles?
No.
She's too good for you.
We met using a popular dating app.
Oh, really? Ah, Grindr.
Close.
No, it's Cyborger.
Got it.
Borger, it's called.
Borger.
I'm sorry that you broke your back i i don't know if anyone else was hurt and
i don't want to know but was your recovery long and painful or what happened how did that change
your life um well i wrote a great essay about it and i I got into Columbia like I wanted to, so that was good.
The recovery took a long time.
I was in physical therapy for about seven years.
I had to relearn how to walk again when I got out of my wheelchair.
Had to go back to school with this big plastic turtle brace around me.
It was hard.
And did you put off going to Columbia during that time?
Did you have to wait seven years before you could matriculate at Columbia?
No, no, no.
Everything was on schedule.
I graduated on time.
Oh, okay.
But you were doing all this physical therapy and all this other stuff through your college.
Did you go to Columbia for graduate school after No Miss Math and Sci?
No, I think you and I are alums of the same institution for my grad school.
You're a Yaley, huh?
That's true.
And if you think that will sway this court, then you're correct.
Awesome.
Yeah, I did my undergrad at Columbia.
Oh, you did your undergrad. So Northern Mississippi Math and Science was to get into Columbia for undergrad.
Is that correct?
Do I understand?
Yes.
All right.
And when you fell asleep, is it traumatic for me to ask what happened?
Oh, I don't remember the whole month.
I don't remember anything.
But you...
It wasn't even my car.
I don't even know why I was driving.
I do now, but... Did you collide with another car or did you just go off the road?
Just went off the road. It was a one car rollover. And you and so you were the sole driver.
I was in the driver's seat. My friend was in the passenger seat and there was someone laying down in the backseat.
And are they OK or no yes everybody's okay okay well that's that's a remarkable story
and then you came here to columbia and what and you majored in columbia in
economics okay and then you went to eal for graduate school in yes i got a um
no i got a master's in environmental management focus in in energy, and I got an MBA.
And then this dude, Dan, finds you on Borger one day.
And he says, his bio just says, I'm an aspiring lyricist.
Basically.
Yeah.
basically yeah uh and and uh and and now he's made now he's got it made in the shade because he's got this beautiful woman with a titanium leg and a real career who likes him and that's when
dan you decided like let's figure out what i can criticize
am i wrong smart smart move I really like that summary.
What would you consider to be an evening of entertainment,
whether it required glasses or not?
You liked this hand to God play,
but Dan's dragging you into his world to see these shows.
And that's not inappropriate.
That's what couples do to share of each other, right?
But are you also dragging him into your world
to go do your thing?
And what would your thing be in an equivalent way?
Well, I tried.
I'm really into college football.
So during the season,
I would always try to get him to watch LSU games.
I'm a big LSU fan.
Okay.
Go Tigers.
All right.
Go Portuguese Eagles.
Go UC Santa Cruz Banana Slugs.
He probably watched max 15 minutes of one game.
And did he have the excuse of not wearing his glasses so he couldn't pay attention?
He did not
do you okay i got you and dan do you not like football that's correct i you know i i'm i'm
with you on this one dan i'm very glad that the that the my wife and the person who's been in my
life for so long shares my utter disinterest in sports because it would be a challenge for me to see
sports. What do you, what do you find distasteful about sports? Everything seems so arbitrary.
There's such, um, there's such fervor for teams that, you know, if you were, you know, lifelong
passions, and if you happen to be born in the city over you care about a different team and uh everybody has such an investment in the outcome and i feel
like the only people that legitimately have an investment in the outcome are the players and
the owners of the teams you feel that other people's investments are illegitimate what a nerd
i can't believe i just made that argument well i like it i like it but you actually you raise are illegitimate. What a nerd.
I can't believe I just made that argument.
Well, I like it.
I like it.
But you actually,
you raise an interesting point.
Jessica, why LSU?
Because that's,
that's why,
why not the,
the no miss sci-fi
Portuguese Eagles or whatever?
Why do you,
why do you like that team?
LSU?
Cause that's God's team.
They're amazing.
Let's not. I love them.
Okay.
But can we get outside of the self-reinforcing non-logic of sports fandom?
So actually they're the, what's your connection to LSU? Why did you,
did you grow up? Is, is,
is ocean Springs sort of in the LSU sort of extended neighborhood?
Yes. It's the closest to me.
It's much closer than the upstate, Mississippi State, or Ole Miss.
Okay, gotcha.
So in a sense, it is kind of a hometown team.
Yes, I'm an adopted Cajun.
Oh, now are you?
We're only in a sports way.
Only in a sports way.
Okay, good enough.
I got it.
So I think I've heard everything I need to make my decision.
This is how you guys have been dating for 10 months.
11.
Yeah.
11 now.
Yes.
She's keeping track.
We have a musical on our anniversary.
What musical are you going to see?
She loves me. What, what musical are you going to see? She loves me.
What musical is that?
I don't know what's going on on Broadway.
If it's not Hamilton,
that's yeah.
Um,
the,
she loves me.
It's a,
a Harnick and Bach musical.
It's,
uh,
the same guys who wrote fiddler on the roof.
Oh,
okay.
And is it the shot?
It's the shop around the corner.
That story musical adaptation. Okay. I gotoof. Oh, okay. It's the shop around the corner, that story, the musical adaptation.
Okay, I gotcha.
And Jessica, are you looking forward
to seeing this musical?
Or partially seeing it, as the case may be?
Sure.
I mean, I'm always excited to see it.
I always give it a fair chance.
Hamilton was amazing.
Yeah, you got to see Hamilton?
When did you see Hamilton?
Dan, when did we see that?
Over the summer, I think.
Did you see it with Lin Miranda or did you see it
with Javier Munoz as Hamilton?
Do you remember?
Yeah, we saw Javier. We went on a
Sunday matinee. Yeah, me too. I just did it.
It was great.
I was glad I had my glasses on.
Did you wear the glasses to Hamilton?
I did not.
You did not.
Wow.
That's the biggest ticket in the world.
If you were going to wear glasses to...
But I saw it just fine.
You really...
You should tell the founding fathers apart by their flows.
That's true.
You know what? That's true.
You know what?
That's true though.
There's definitely a, there's definitely a Lafayette motif versus a Hamilton motif.
It's Lafayette.
And then there's Hamilton.
Exactly.
People know what I'm,
people know what I'm talking about,
but still Jessica,
you had me in the palm of your titanium hand to the moment you said you didn't wear your glasses to see Hamilton.
Now I don't know.
Oh, no.
If you had a choice, is there some...
Well, that's not even to make it a choice.
You're going to see this musical on your anniversary,
whether you like it or not.
Do you like it or not?
I like it.
Okay.
I'm excited about it.
You are.
And is there something that you would like to do for your anniversary?
That would be a little bit more of your thing.
I enjoy a nice cocktail.
We're doing that beforehand.
Where are you going?
Um,
the Iroquois hotel.
All right.
It's a,
it's a little,
uh, theater haunt called um
lanterns keep that we went to on our first date oh cool and what day are you going
march 5th march the 5th good i'll see you there
sounds like fun to me all right i think I've heard everything I need to hear.
I am going to go into my own lantern's keep and have a little justice cocktail,
and I'll be right back to render my decision.
Please rise as Judge John Hodgman exits the courtroom.
Dan, how do you feel about your chances in this case?
How do you feel about your chances in this case?
Well, based on the judge's comment that he was sort of very inclined to favor Jessica until her last comment about Hamilton, I'm a little nervous.
But I'm hopeful that we'll reach an outcome that's palatable to both of us.
that will reach an outcome that's palatable to both of us.
Dan, you realize that you've couched your entire argument in perhaps false concern for this woman that you love,
when in fact it seems almost completely clear
that what it's about is you not liking
that she doesn't like the stuff that you tried to make her like.
There's maybe an element of truth in that. And that we all, of course, always want the people
we love to like the things that we like. It's sort of a human instinct. But I am really concerned
about her being able to just take in everything the way it was intended to be seen, whether she likes it or not.
I think she should just be able to at least see it as it was intended.
Jessica, how do you feel about your chances in the case?
I don't know. I mean, I have to admit, I don't listen to the podcast very much, so I can't draw on the past to try and predict the future.
You probably don't listen to the podcast that much just because it's blurry without your glasses.
I can hear just fine.
I don't know. I'm feeling pretty good. I think he wants me to do. I don't know.
I'm feeling pretty good.
I think he wants me to do what I want to do.
Well, we'll see what Judge John Hodgman has to say about all this when we come back in just a second.
You're listening to Judge John Hodgman.
I'm bailiff Jesse Thorne.
Of course, the Judge John Hodgman podcast always brought to you by you, the members
of MaximumFun.org. Thanks to everybody who's gone to MaximumFun.org slash join, and you can join
them by going to MaximumFun.org slash join. The Judge John Hodgman podcast is also brought to you this week by the folks over there at Babbel.
Did you know that learning, the experience of learning, causes a sound to happen?
Let's hear the sound.
Yep, that's the sound of you learning a new language with Babbel.
We're talking about quick 10-minute lessons crafted by over 200 language experts that can
help you start speaking a new language in as little as one, two, three weeks.
Let's hear that sound.
Babbel's tips and tools are approachable, accessible, rooted in real-life situations, and delivered with conversation-based teaching.
So you're ready to practice what you've learned in the real world, and you get to hear this sound.
It's not just like a game that pretends to teach you a language.
It's also not a rigid, weird, hyperacademic chore.
It is an actually productive app that actually teaches you while you are actually having
a nice time.
And you get to hear the sound.
Here's a special limited time deal for our listeners right now.
Get up to 60% off your Babbel
subscription, but only for our listeners at babbel.com slash Hodgman. Get up to 60% off at
babbel.com slash Hodgman spelled B-A-B-B-E-L dot com slash Hodgman. Rules and restrictions apply.
The Judge John Hodgman podcast is also brought to you this week by our pals over at Made In.
Jesse, you've heard of Tom Colicchio, the famous chef, right?
Yeah, from the restaurant Kraft.
And did you know that most of the dishes at that very same restaurant are made with Made In pots and pans?
Really? What's an example?
The braised short ribs, they're Made in, made in. The Rohan duck,
made in, made in. Riders of Rohan, duck. What about the Heritage Pork Shop? You got it. Made in,
made in. Made in has been supplying top chefs and restaurants with high-end cookware for years.
They make the stuff that chefs need. Their carbon steel cookware is the best of cast iron, the best of stainless clad.
It gets super hot.
It's rugged enough for grills or an open flame.
One of the most useful pans you can own.
And like we said, good enough for real professional chefs, the best professional chefs.
Oh, so I have to go all the way down to the restaurant district in restaurant town? Just buy it online. This is professional grade cookware that is available
online directly to you, the consumer, at a very reasonable price. Yeah. If you want to take your
cooking to the next level, remember what so many great dishes on menus all around the world have
in common. They're made in Made In. Save up to 25% this Memorial Day
from the 18th until the 27th. Visit madeincookware.com. That's M-A-D-E-I-N cookware.com.
Please rise as Judge John Hodgman re-enters the courtroom.
Judge John Hodgman re-enters the courtroom.
So obviously there is a huge cultural aspect and cultural divide to this dispute and to this relationship.
I've talked a lot about in my career the overall philosophy of jockeism versus the overall philosophy of jockism versus the overall philosophy of nerdism and the overall philosophy of and both have their virtues the overall philosophy of nerdism of course is you
know intellectualism uh the kind of uh the the kind of deep critique that would allow one to say
what dan said about sports the only investment is the people on the field in there and their owners
and skepticism towards power and and a questioning attitude all of which is
necessary in a functioning society and then the the you know the downsides of
nerdism of course is ambivalence and waffling and indecisiveness and a kind of know-it-allness that makes you jump out
and say, I believe that's a Jonathan Colton song. You know, those are the downsides there. And then
the downsides and the upsides of jockeism asit attitude and a decisive attitude, and a trust and belief
in authority systems, such as let's do what coach says, and a belief in teamwork that
allows people to get together in teams or even just on their own and overcome enormous obstacles.
But I do believe you in when you say, if I put my mind to it, I could do anything.
Because you've done it.
You know, you went through that horrible physical and emotional calamity.
And you set a goal for yourself.
And through force of will, you got to where you
wanted to be. Uh, and, and, you know, I would say lesser nerds would have, would have collapsed
under what you achieved in your life. And I, and I acknowledge that and I applaud you. And
I have to say, you know, uh, you're Dan, you're in in you're in for a lifelong adventure so long as you stay
together with this person because you are of you are of a different a different world a different
culture you and i are of a culture where of course you wear your glasses to the musical theater
the same way you wear your glasses to uh the art house film you're gonna go see the same way you wear your glasses
to the ethnic restaurant you're gonna visit with your parents when you're an only child
like that's the same as you wear your glasses to the street corner at the appointed time for
the bully to beat you up exactly the same way you wear your glasses to your monthly glasses
appointments to have your glasses adjusted and and and that and that is a that is a world that i do not diminish and a world that i love
as well but it is it was definitely the case that i shared with you uh dan the same kind of like
why won't you just wear your glasses to the theater or to the movies
so you can see better it's in you know it's it's scientifically proven that it helps your vision
why don't you just do this rational thing and instead cling to this entirely irrational vein
i don't feel like it uh uh decision making process which is this gut level decision making
process of the jock no i'm not going to do that thing and and so it took me some time
though and not well it took me some time but not a lot of time to simply talk through it with
jessica and appreciate that uh she knows she knows when she wants to see things clearly and she knows when she doesn't
have to see things clearly.
I can only guess Jessica that you would never in a million years after what
you've gone through,
put yourself in a situation where your lack of vision would cause danger to
yourself or to another human being.
Correct?
Absolutely.
Right.
And the fact is that as,
as bad as her vision may or may not be,
she can see straight through you,
Dan.
She,
she knows,
she knows right away that what this is truly about is you trying to,
uh, uh, cajole her into loving the things that you love.
Now, Jessica, you've never listened to this podcast before.
So you don't know that we have this longstanding fake legal precedent that people like what they like.
And it's hard and problematic and usually ill-advised to try to make people
like something that you like you see what i mean like there's only so there's only so far you can
go to make the people in your life like the things that you like and i think dan is hoping
that if you wear your glasses suddenly you'll see clearly the same thing that he loves about say noises off but dan she's she's no dum
dum she liked the sock puppet devil thing but noises off just didn't connect with her and i
bet you the glasses were not the problem and dan let me also say that if I were an aspiring, not even a lyricist for Broadway musicals, but an aspiring one, and I was in a relationship with a woman I love who also happened to have an undergraduate degree in economics and a master's degree in environmental stewardship or some kind, right?
Renewable energy.
Yes, and I have another one in business administration.
Right, yeah.
And had a full-time job and a titanium leg.
I mean, she is of the future.
Broadway is of the past.
I would be, no offense.
You know, obviously, it's a thriving and vibrant art form.
Hamilton is a great example of it.
But you know what I'm saying.
She's a cyborg with degrees in renewable energy and a job.
This is not one you want to, you don't want to piss this one off, Dan.
That's valid. You want to you don't want to piss this one off dan that's valid you want to keep her happy that said you gotta put on your glasses at hamilton come on
i think it's fine for you to go through your life with an impediment jessica and to not wear your glasses out and about
at times when you feel that uh they will make you feel uh self-conscious or uncomfortable or not as
not as uh not as pretty or they just be distracting to you or just a you know wearing glasses can be
a pain in the neck or specifically a pain in the ears and the bridge of the nose sometimes.
I get it.
And I think it's just fine so long as you're not putting anyone's life in danger.
But I think you don't owe it to Dan, but you owe it to yourself to find a pair of glasses that will allow you to see filmed and staged entertainment clearly.
And there is a long tradition, of course, of wearing glasses in the theater
called upper glasses or theater glasses, like little beautiful binoculars.
I make this decision with the greatest respect.
And I have to say, I probably wouldn't have done it
if you hadn't told me that you only went and half-saw Hamilton.
Because this is the most important thing in my life right now.
Bad luck for you.
And one of the most amazing...
I mean, you can enjoy it just by listening to it, as I've said before on this podcast.
But now that I've had the great pleasure of seeing it, it's a piece of theatrical history.
And nothing like it, it'll never quite exist again in the same way, even once it goes on tour or whatever.
even once it goes on tour or whatever,
it's a huge moment at the crossroads of Broadway of the past and Broadway of the future
and just this amazing thing.
You saw it.
You liked it, right?
You might not have liked it as much as I did,
but you liked it, right, Jessica?
Oh, I loved it.
I thought it was great.
And won't it haunt you?
Perhaps it won't haunt you
because jocks don't tend to be haunted by anything.
But I'm telling you,
it haunts me that
you saw it with bad vision so i need you and this is what i order whatever you do for the rest of
your life i don't care but i need you to see hamilton with glasses and dan i need I need you to order a whole bunch of glasses from the internet for Jessica to
try on or Jessica,
you need to go out and try on a whole bunch of glasses to find your Hamilton
glasses and,
and,
and,
and,
and find the ones that you,
that are the most comfortable that you, that you love the most,
actively and openly,
such that you would not feel
as little self-consciousness as possible
for wearing in the semi-dark of a single theater one time.
And then, Dan, I need you to find the funds
to get tickets to Hamilton again.
Oh, boy.
Yeah.
This is what you get.
Now this is how you pay.
And you can go see it again as soon as possible.
And you have to wear them that one time, Jessica.
And then while you're wearing them.
I can do that.
While you're wearing them.
And you know what?
You may need to help Dan buy the tickets.
Cause I don't think this guy's got any money.
And what,
and what,
maybe you can borrow some money from Jessica,
go in and sit across from her.
And while you're wearing them,
I want you to think about this and think about whether or not it really
wouldn't be so bad as to see plays and movies clearly on a regular basis.
And then after that, once you've given that fair shake to that thing, however you decide to go forward is your choice.
And I hope you guys stay together and have a great time.
And I hope you guys, well, we'll all have a great time on your anniversary when I meet you for drinks.
This is the sound of a gavel.
Judge John Hodgman rules.
That is all.
Please rise as Judge John Hodgman
exits the courtroom.
Jessica, how do you feel
about the decision?
I feel great.
I do.
I, um, my life isn't changing.
Although one time I wear glasses
to see Hamilton and I get to see Hamilton again.
So that's great.
You could probably, you could probably get to see it again for the very first time.
I would argue because now you'll be able to see the difference and maybe you'll decide
that difference is enough to continue making the difference.
Or maybe not.
Sorry, Jesse.
I had to jump in there.
Dan, how do you feel?
I feel good.
I'm glad she's going to have the chance to do that.
I look forward to helping her pick out glasses.
And I can justify that at least this time I can choose to see Lin-Manuel.
So it'll be a slightly,
it'll be a different experience for me.
Dan, Jessica, thanks for joining us
on the Judge John Hodgman podcast.
Thank you.
Thanks guys.
Thank y'all.
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. I'm here to remind you that listening to my podcast,
The JV Club with Janet Varney,
is part of the curriculum for the school year.
Learning about the teenage years of such guests as Alison Brie,
Vicki Peterson, John Hodgman, and so many more
is a valuable and enriching experience,
one you have no choice but to embrace,
because, yes, listening is mandatory.
The JV Club with Janet Varney is available every Thursday on Maximum Fun or wherever
you get your podcasts.
Thank you.
And remember, no running in the halls.
If you need a laugh and you're on the go, try S-T-O-P-P-O-D-C-A-S-T-I.
Hmm.
Are you trying to put the name of the podcast there?
Yeah, I'm trying to spell it, but it's tricky.
Let me give it a try.
Okay.
If you need a laugh and you're on the go, call S-T-O-P-P-P-A-D-I.
It'll never fit.
No, it will.
Let me try.
If you need a laugh and you're on the go, try S-T-O-P-P-P-D-C-O-O.
Ah, we are so close.
Stop podcasting yourself.
A podcast from MaximumFun.org.
If you need a laugh and you're on the go.
Another thrilling Judge John Hodgman verdict in the book judge hodgman
yeah well i was not going to throw away my shot
can i say something yeah i can i i am still so i saw hamilton this past sunday uh on the sunday matinee with javier munoz in the role
of hamilton and he was amazing everyone was amazing uh and but it so happened that lin-manuel
miranda was in the neighborhood seeing another show spring awakening which was a delightful coincidence because while, you know, I was seeing the show that he wrote and created and, and he, and not many people know, including him, that I secretly wrote and created Spring Awakening.
Did you know that, Jesse?
No, I had no idea.
That was a weird crisscross.
I wrote and created Spring Awakening secretly.
I wrote and created Spring Awakening secretly.
Purple Summer is actually a very coded reference to that summer in Ocean City, New Jersey, when I first heard When Doves Cry in the arcade on the boardwalk.
Got it.
Yeah.
But he was there with a mutual friend, and we contacted each other.
And he came by after his show was over and his other show was over.
After the show he was seeing was over and,
uh, and Hamilton was over and he invited me backstage to chat and he could not have been,
you've, you've met him before, or at least talked to him on the phone before I'd had a few
interactions with him online. And, uh, you know, if you're listening to this Lynn, that was,
I've said it to your face, but that was a really wonderful moment for me and my family.
We love the show so much.
And he could not have been a nicer guy or a bigger fan of Maximum Fun and Jesse Thorne.
It was a delight.
You know, I've never met him.
We've only interacted on the internet.
Yeah.
He's a very special guy.
And so then I said, how much money are you going to
give us for the max fun drive you hit him up that's good oh coffee's for closers judge right
exactly and uh and i'll and i he he said he was non-committal at the time but um i took his wallet
out of his jacket oh thank god uh did you get his MacArthur card? That's what they give you when you win a MacArthur
grant. Really?
They just give you a charge card with a couple hundred thousand
dollars on it every year.
I got it and I got the security code
and everything. Oh, great.
And guess what it's got on it? What?
A hologram.
Oh.
A hologram of a brain for genius.
But I'll tell you something.
You know,
Jessica,
if Jessica and it doesn't matter about Dan,
but if Jessica ends up buying Dan tickets to see Hamilton again,
Jessica,
get a third and I'll come,
I'll come check it out with you.
In fact,
get,
get a third and a fourth and Jesse and I will both go with you guys.
Yeah. To heck with you guys. Yeah.
To heck with my family.
I'm flying to New York.
Let's do this.
Well, our show is produced by Julia Smith,
edited by Mark McConville.
Thanks to Matt Gersting,
who named this week's episode.
If you want to name a future episode,
follow us on social media.
Like Judge John Hodgman on Facebook and follow us on Twitter at Jesse Thorne and at Hodgman.
We're also on Instagram.
What are you on Instagram?
On Instagram, I am at John Hodgman.
That's my first and last name.
J-O-H-N-H-O-D-G-M-A-N.
Someone already has Hodgman and I don't even know if they use it. And my own Instagram, which I've been
enjoying very much, is primarily
concerned with menswear
since I'm also the blogger
behind Put This On. And it is
put.this.on
It's got a lot of
W-I-W-T pics
or what I wore today photos.
Is that what that means?
Yeah, I translated W-I-W-T
and then I translated pics.
That means photos.
Pics, right.
I think that's it.
If you've got a case for Judge John Hodgman,
go to MaximumFun.org slash J-J-H-O
and share it with us.
Big or small, we consider them all.
They're essential to our enterprise.
And yeah, just like Lin-Manuel Miranda is, look forward to that Max Fund Drive.
It's right around the corner.
I am looking forward to it.
And I remind you all that we can only do this podcast with your support, even though we have advertising.
That doesn't keep all the lights on.
That keeps some of the lights on.
We need all the lights.
We'll talk to you next time on the Judge John Hodgman podcast.