Judge John Hodgman - There's an APPellate Court For That
Episode Date: May 19, 2021Patrick brings the case against his dad, Rudy. Rudy says he has a billion dollar idea for an app. Patrick says this app will never work! Who’s right? Who’s wrong?Thank you to Jen Cunningham for na...ming this week’s case! To suggest a title for a future episode, follow Judge John Hodgman on Facebook. We regularly put out a call for submissions there.
Transcript
Discussion (0)
Welcome to the Judge John Hodgman podcast.
I'm bailiff Jesse Thorne.
This week, there's an app-ellate court for that.
Patrick brings the case against his dad, Rudy.
Rudy says he has a billion-dollar app idea.
Patrick says this app will never work.
Who's right? Who's wrong?
Only one can decide.
Please rise as Judge John Hodgman enters the courtroom
and presents an obscure cultural reference. I've heard it said many times, the original
is often the best. Bring the original Judge John Hodgman back. Not necessarily on all future
devices, but the ability to download it would be sweet. Judge John Hodgman's subsonic,
as good as it looks in its 3D colors and electro tunes, just doesn't have the same feel as the
original. Bailiff Jesse Thorne, please swear the litigants in. Patrick and Rudy, 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 he rarely orders apps for the table?
Yes.
I do.
Judge Hodgman, you may proceed.
Look at these two adorables actually raising their hands. That's what I get now that we teleconference on this podcast.
I can see you, Rudy, and you, Patrick, actually raising your right hands.
As instructed, father and son adorables.
All right.
For an immediate summary judgment.
First of all, you may be seated.
And thank you for not actually standing up.
For an immediate, because it seems like you might have.
For an immediate summary judgment in one of your favors,
can either of you name the piece of culture that I referenced as I entered the courtroom?
Let's start with you, Patrick.
You are the young man who seeks justice before this court.
What is your guess?
Boy.
You will not get it.
Yeah.
Is it a sort of like an HP ad? You're never going not get it yeah is it a it's an envo situation like an hp ad
like you're never gonna get it some sort of a like not this time weird like eastern european
ripoff not this time pc ads but for hp or something oh i like your reference there i'll
add that mac versus pc ads i find in in Patrick's favor. Sorry, Rudy.
Rudy, Rudy, how's the reception up there at Big Toad Road?
Big Toad Road clears crystal.
Coming in loud and clear from Big Toad Road, unnamed state USA, presumably.
Before we were recording, Jesse, of course, all the fun stuff happens before we hit record on any podcast.
That is the truth.
And I learned that Rudy, Patrick's dad, lives on a road called Big Toad Road.
And he didn't want me to mention it because he's afraid of podcasts, paparazzi.
Paparazzi around his home there.
That's right.
TMZ reports on all our past litigants. Let me just say to all those listeners who delighted in using Google Satellite to find that pool in Maine that I said probably didn't exist and had to prove it to me.
Do not hunt down Patrick's dad.
No.
It's okay because it's actually technically called Big Toad Way, so they probably wouldn't find it.
Well, there we go.
All the secrets are, all the IP is going out, being revealed now, which is in fact part of what we're going to discuss here in a moment.
But do you have a guess, sir, as to the source of my quote?
I have no idea.
You're never going to get it.
I was hoping you would do something from Cheers I might recognize.
I was hoping you would do something from Cheers I might recognize.
So my guess is that it's something post-1985 cultural reference, which by definition I would not get.
It is post-1985.
It is, in fact, from 2009.
And the reason you are never going to get it is this website that I'm quoting from is no longer extant. I actually got it via the internet archive. January 2009, a blog post on a website called conversations.nokia.com,
the official Nokia phone blog, specifically the history of Nokia part two, colon Judge John
Hodgman. Now, Judge John Hodgman is not the actual thing that is being discussed
in the quoted portion. Specifically, I was quoting Adam F. from the comments of this blog post.
Adam F. was saying, I heard it said many times, the original is often the best, bring blank back. Now this
blank, which you might take another guess at, I'm giving you a lot of hints, getting a lot of
chances here. Big Toad Road deserves it. This thing that I am referring to, this blank that
I'm asking you to name, is considered by some to be the first mobile app, certainly one of the first and most popular mobile games,
that was put onto the Nokia 6110 mobile phone in 1997.
The game was created by Tonelli Armanto.
Can either of you name the game?
I know that there are Judge Sean Hodgman listeners screaming into their email machines at me right now.
But we're going to give Patrick and his dad, Rudy, a chance to guess.
Is it snake?
Is it snake?
And Rudy, what is your guess?
No idea.
Snake is correct.
As I ruled rightly, it is I rule in favor of Patrick.
But since we're beaming in all the way from Big Toad Road, we will not grant the summary
judgment because neither of you technically got the cultural reference. And now we will hear the case. Before we begin, Rudy.
Yes.
Thank you for joining the podcast. Do you have, I love podcasts myself. We just finished our
incredible MaxFunDrive, supporting our community of many podcasts. If MaxFun were looking to
invite to its community of podcasts,
I don't know, a podcast on Ultimate Frisbee,
is there one you would recommend?
I can think of several.
You really want the best one?
You know what?
I don't care if it's the best.
I just want to know, is it the most popular?
Well, the most popular happens to be the best.
It's called Sin the Fields.
And it features Patrick Stegemiller and another guy, Tad Wessel.
What is it called, Patrick?
This is your ultimate Frisbee podcast?
Yeah, it's called Sin the Fields.
Sin the Fields?
Sin the Fields.
It sounds scary.
Yeah, it's a sort of deep reference from
within the Ultimate community that
makes it impossible, outside of just the fact
that it's about Ultimate Frisbee. It's a
deep Ultimate Frisbee cultural reference?
Right, so it just makes it impossible to market
to anyone outside of the handful
of people who actually care about Ultimate.
But, you know, you gotta
stick with your brand. I gotta
give credit for your dad, because that was the other thing that happened before we started recording was Rudy did a very dadly thing and recommended your podcast.
And I want to recommend it to all of our listeners.
What do you play?
What kind of ultimate Frisbee position do you play?
Is that a thing?
Yes.
Power forward?
Strike back?
I'm a handler.
Spin thrower?
Plate spinner?
A handler.
A handler? Yeah spinner? A handler. A handler.
Yeah.
Oh.
Yeah.
I actually have a pretty serious rivalry with Patrick.
My podcast, Bag the Chains, is about froth and frothing.
And I have nothing but contempt for Ultimate Frisbee and its podcast.
There's a lot of bad blood there. One of the great rivalries, Ultimate Frisbee and its podcast. There's a lot of bad blood there.
One of the great rivalries,
Ultimate Frisbee and Frisbee Golf.
It's a little, you know, I gotta say,
in a world in which Frisbee Golf exists,
as well as regular Frisbee,
it's a lot for your sport to declare itself the ultimate.
That's a big move that I never really felt was justified.
And that's, John, that's to say nothing of halftime shows featuring dogs doing incredible
Frisbee catches, which is by far the king of all Frisbee sports.
That seems ultimate to me.
I don't know that anything can go.
That is nay plus ultra in the Frisbee world. But it's fair.
It's established that that is its name from now on.
Sin the Fields.
S-I-N the Fields.
S-I-N, Sin the Fields, hosted by myself and my incomparably named podcast partner, Tad Whistle.
Which is his real name.
Just, yeah.
um his real name just uh yeah did he get that name because his parents anticipated he would grow up to be an ultimate frisbee enthusiast they're like it's it's either that or water polo
tad had whistle whistle anyway i guess we got to hear this case. I would love to talk about Tad Whistle, the ultimate Frisbee athlete and podcaster.
But we're here for you, Patrick, because you have dragged your own father in the court all the way down from Big Toad Road seeking justice.
What is the nature of your dispute?
road, seeking justice. What is the nature of your dispute? My father, Rudy, keeps pitching this app that's not a good app. And it's really creating some friction. I don't know if you would like me
to define what I think the app concept is or... No, no, I'll give it to the creator. I don't
need you to steal his IP. I'll give it to the creator a fair chance to elevator pitch me in a second.
But when you say, Patrick, that Rudy, your dad, is pitching this app idea,
he's pitching it to venture capitalists, titans of industry, app developers.
Who's he pitching it to?
Mostly just loved ones whose time that he gets to spend with them is limited,
and he consciously decides to use it
pitching over and over again this app.
Okay.
And how long has this been going on,
this app pitching?
I mean, does it go back to the time of Snake, 1997,
the year of the snake?
No, it follows on the heels of Snake.
I'd say about 2017, summer 2017.
So about four years now
is how long this has been going
you correct me if I'm wrong on the timeline
let's turn it over to Rudy
Rudy
well first I would
quarrel with his characterization
of how frequently I am
mentioning this, much less pitching it
I think I pitched it
once
and after that I'm just sort of more taunting them with it.
Oh, okay.
Yeah, taunting them with their failure to cash in on the opportunity
that I gave them.
Right.
But no one else has taken up the opportunity.
It's not like they've missed the opportunity.
The opportunity remains to be...
Although I think we're sort of blowing it wide
open by doing this podcast, so
someone will, certainly one of your
astute listeners will pick it up,
I have no doubt. Well, I'm going to ask
you to describe the app, and
I don't know, Jennifer
Marmer, maybe we should just bleep it all out
just to protect his IP.
Just a long... I mean, this show will then be 50 minutes of should just bleep it all out just to protect his ip just just a long i mean this
show will then be 50 minutes of one long bleep no it's okay they they had their chance oh i'm
that's right the world has had this chance rudy you've you've already revealed your son's podcast
i think you revealed his last name you've corrected me about the name of your road. It's Big Toad Way.
You are definitely triangulatable at this point.
And I urge the listeners of Judge John Hodgman, an honorable group if I've ever met one,
do not go find Patrick's dad.
He's a good dad who deserves his privacy.
And he's got, by the way, a great ceiling fan.
Love a ceiling fan in the background.
Good for you, Rudy.
I'm leaning in your favor at this point.
And also, he's got some IP.
Don't steal his IP.
Okay?
This is an opportunity that Rudy has extended to his son,
Patrick. And by the end of this podcast, Patrick is going to have to take it up or drop this legacy in the dirt, like a used Frisbee. That's no good anymore.
Rudy, what is the nature of the app? Okay. It's actually, it's a very simple
concept actually. All right. So you start with a virtual bar,
It's a very simple concept, actually.
All right.
So you start with a virtual bar, you know, an online gathering place.
Make it look like a bar, right? And then you have some mechanism for people to go off and have conversations with each other in the bar, right?
All right.
So you're hitting it off.
So like a booze zoom so far.
Booze zoom, right. Booze zoom so far booze zoom right booze right and the value
here's the value added so you're hitting it off with somebody in a bar you want to buy them a
drink so how do you buy a drink for somebody on a virtual bar well you then know them this is what
the app does so jack and jill hey pal jack and jill are, hitting it off. Jill says, what are you drinking? Jack says,
gin and tonic. Jill says, great, next one's on me. Jack goes into his kitchen, makes himself a gin
and tonic in his kitchen. Two buttons get pressed. $6 leaves Jill's account. $5 goes into Jack's
account with a modest stipend for the website operator. And with any luck, 20 minutes later,
it happens again the other direction. Everybody's happy. Just solid gold. Gold.
What is it called?
It's called Rudy's Place. I don't know what it's called.
Okay, I'm back on board.
I don't know what it's called. Okay, I'm back on board. I don't know what it's called.
I'll tell you something.
Now that you know that, now that it's called Rudy's Place, what I wish, honestly, nothing more is to buy you a drink.
Well, I want to transfer you a lot of money to develop this ad.
I love this idea so much now that it's called Rudy's Place.
up this ad. I love this idea so much now that it's called Rudy's Place.
If only there were some existing
way for humans to transfer
money to other humans using
online. But that
hasn't happened yet because you invented it apparently.
Well, John,
you're overstating the situation
here.
Rudy has invented
something. He's invented
adding a bar-themed skin to Zelly.
That's the other one.
Has anyone ever used that cash transfer thing?
That's the one my bank wants me to use.
Yeah, it's the one that lives inside your bank.
Yeah.
So, Rudy, I think this is a lovely idea and I get it.
But so are you talking about the lucky developer of this app?
In your vision would create a virtual conference space like a Zoom or Google Hangouts or what we're using now, right?
But there would be a little button down below that would say you would be encouraged to drink an alcoholic or non-alcoholic drink.
It is a social place.
Where strangers meet?
Do strangers come?
Can they drop in sort of like a clubhouse situation?
I assume so.
Honestly, what I just described to you is the full extent of the thought I've put into this app.
the full extent of the thought I've put into this app. So I just threw it out there to Patrick and his sister Bridget and a couple of their cousins of similar age when we were at an extended family
shore vacation. And I thought they would snap it up and I was surprised that they just scoffed and
mocked at it. You thought they would snap it up on the was surprised that they just scoffed and mocked at.
You thought they would snap it up on the basis of the fact that they are what is known as app aged.
Sure.
Whatever that is.
Patrick, why did you scoff your dad?
Why did you and your sister Bridget and all of your cousins down the shore have a scoff party and laugh at your dad for pitching this app?
You know, I think that you have to take into consideration my father's history with technology and his present current situation with technology.
And his present, current situation with technology.
And just that, the fact that he would be pitching an app in and of itself was a humorous idea.
And then when that pitch seemed to disregard multiple decades of pre-existing apps and companies and websites.
I think Paintball was founded in 1998 or something like that.
It was invented by Snake.
Snake invented it the next year.
Snake became sentient and invented PayPal.
That's history of technology.
That's just science.
So at a surface level, that was, I think,
where the initial scoffing came from. And, you know, maybe it's uncharitable
for a bunch of app-aged individuals to just scoff at the mere idea of, you know, a more distinguished older person
pitching an idea for an app.
Rudy, I just want to say that I don't know what app age, this is the first time I've
ever heard this term ever either. So both Jesse and Patrick are making fun of both of
us now. Is this a real term or one that you guys just made up in the chat to make fun of us, Patrick and Jesse?
Youths?
No, I think it is a bit of illustrative language that I created to illustrate Rudy's description that he pitched this app to Patrick, his sister, and some of their
cousins who are all about the same age, which seems to be, from my perspective, what Rudy
understands venture capitalists to be. Yeah, Rudy, may I ask if Patrick or Bridget or any of the cousins have a background
in investing or developing apps?
Certainly not.
I mean, Patrick, what do you do for a living aside from being an Ultimate Frisbee podcaster?
Well, my side gig, in addition to being an Ultimate Frisbee podcaster, is I'm an attorney.
Okay, gotcha.
Rudy, go on. What about Bridget or any of the cousins?
I think some of the cousins might be a little more involved in technology, but I'm just assuming that
someone who's in their twenties and gets excited about an idea can take it and run with it.
When you say they might be a little more involved in technology, do you mean that like
they bought one of those refrigerators with a screen on it or something?
I don't know. From my perspective, everybody is more involved with technology than I am.
Let's take a quick recess and hear about this week's Judge John Hodgman sponsor. We'll be back in just a moment on the Judge John Hodgman podcast.
John Hodgman sponsor. We'll be back in just a moment on the Judge John Hodgman podcast.
Hello, teachers and faculty. This is Janet Varney. I'm here to remind you that listening to my podcast, The JV Club with Janet Varney, is part of the curriculum for the school year.
Learning about the teenage years of such guests as Alison Brie, Vicki Peterson,
John Hodgman, and so many more is a valuable and enriching experience, one you have no choice but
to embrace, because yes, listening is mandatory. The JV Club with Janet Varney is available every
Thursday on Maximum Fun or wherever you get your podcasts. Thank you. And remember, no running in the halls.
It's the Judge Sean Hodgman podcast.
And as always, our show is brought to you by you,
the members of MaximumFun.org.
Never more so than now after the MaxFunDrive.
Our gratitude to every single one of you.
We're also grateful
this week to have the support of Sun Basket, known the world over as the only meal service
delivery outfit co-founded by my friend Tyler from college. Now, Jesse, I had a question about that.
Is your question, did Tyler once wear a holographic puffer jacket when we went to see
David Cross
at the Punchline in San Francisco? Because if so, the answer is yes. And it was very embarrassing.
That was on my list of questions. I didn't think we'd have time for it. So I'm glad you answered
it. Thank you. Was it, did Tyler win the Amazing Race one time? Because the answer to that is yes,
too. I didn't even know to ask that question. Tyler is an amazing person.
He is.
My question to you is, when Tyler first mentioned Sun Basket to you and this idea of this meal
and meal kit delivery service using super fresh, delicious food products that are perfectly
proportioned, no waste, sent to you in an ecologically sustainable way etc were you mean to your friend
and wrong and say that will never work yeah i had not tried it yet and then i tried it and i was
like oh tyler this is really good i only ask because i'm going to tell a little story about
that later in this episode but listen you're a good friend and you know who else is a good friend
sun basket sunbasket is a good friend to people who love fresh, delicious food, sustainably sourced and perfectly portioned,
but maybe need a little help and inspiration in the kitchen in the form of good food sent to them in a good box.
That's Sunbasket.
Sunbasket right now is offering fresh and ready meals for just $8.99.
That's a really reasonable price for a really tasty meal delivered straight
to your door
all you have to do
is toss it in the oven
cook it up a little bit
you don't have to
chop anything
or prepare anything
it is ready
to go
I'm talking about
John
braised beef
penang curry
with jasmine rice
and sweet peas
talking about
shrimp paella
the choices
are extraordinary John at sunbasket.com
slash menu. You can check out all of the choices because there are some really great ones.
And whether you're a vegetarian, whether you are eating paleo, whether you're on a crab-conscious
diet, Sun Basket has everything that you could possibly want. Whether you want a meal kit that
you put the ingredients together yourself
based on really good recipes they send you,
or as you say, Jesse, a fresh and ready meal,
which is just ready to go as it is.
It's amazing.
Sun Basket's offering $90 off your first four deliveries,
including free shipping on the first box
when you go right now to sunbasket.com slash Hodgman
and enter promo code Hodgman at checkout. That's
sunbasket.com slash Hodgman and enter promo code Hodgman at checkout. We're also supported this
week by Brooklinen, not founded by my friend Tyler from college, but founded by people who wanted to work directly with manufacturers to make luxury available to you without luxury markups.
They're making all kinds of beautiful stuff, John.
Yeah, you know, I'm very excited because we're living in a time of science.
People are getting vaccinated.
David Reese is coming back to Brooklyn to work with me on a secret project.
Wow.
And I got to get some new sheets for him for the old fold-out couch because he's going to be staying here.
And guess where I'm going to get these sheets from?
You can probably guess the John Hodgman collection at Brooklyn.
Whether it's spelled Brookline with an N or Brooklyn with a Y and then an N, you can't spell Brooklyn without naming a place where I, John Hodgman, have lived.
Whether it's for you or for those newly vaccinated friends and family coming back into your home, go ahead and check out those extra soft sheets, super plush towels, maybe a new waffle knit guest robe from Brooklinen.
Brooklinen are so confident in their core products.
They come with a 365-day warranty.
That's a full year, three out of four times.
They've received over 75,000 five-star reviews and counting.
And just some personal experience, only about 1,000 of those five-star reviews are by me.
And those are genuine.
I'm just like, this weighted comforter is still the greatest. These reviews are by me. I mean, and those are genuine.
I'm just like, this weighted comforter is still the greatest.
These sheets are still amazing.
I gotta give it up a thousand times.
But the rest of them are all just, you know, other people.
So give yourself the comfort refresh you deserve
and get it for less at Brooklinen.
Go to brooklinen.com and use promo code HODGMAN
to get $20 off with a minimum purchase of $100.
That's B-R-O-O-K-L-I-N-E-N.com and enter promo code HODGMAN for $20 off with a minimum purchase
of $100. Again, that's brooklinen.com, promo code HODGMAN.
Let's get back to the show.
road Hodgman. Let's get back to the show. So Patrick, let me just understand. The issues are you, I mean, when I said, why were you scoffing your dad? Basically you said, this is a, you know,
to summarize the idea itself is dumb and my dad doesn't understand technology, so he's pathetic. Mean. I'll say mean.
That's a hard scoff.
Explain to me and to your dad, who loves you, and to the members of the audience who are maybe thinking about investing their hard-earned cash at this moment, who have not yet seen
the flaw in the plan of Rudy's Place.
What do you see as the flaws in this app?
Well, I think partially because after you hear the concept for the first time,
one of the first things that springs to mind is about the only way that this could become
profitable is if it was used for some illegal activity, illicit behavior, something like that. And again, the idea of someone inadvertently pitching a new Silk Road
or something like that is, you know,
best intentions ending up in this situation, that's pretty funny.
I believe the new Silk Road is called Big Toad Road.
That is the new home of the dark web.
It's actually made of gravel.
So it's basically a dark web application with sinister uses.
What else?
What are your other arguments?
What would you caution someone before investing in this new app?
Well, there's also just a lot of competition in the online dating app space right now, I would imagine. I mean, Tinder, Bumble, Hinge, presumably other ones that I
don't even know about. What's the favorite online dating app among ultimate Frisbee players?
Oh, just being an ultimate Frisbee player, because there's only seven of us anyways.
being an ultimate frisbee player because there's only seven of us anyways so wow it's a it's it's a it's a it's a cluster of friends yeah yeah i see okay um so that so there's that and then also
again as we've already pointed out the functionality already exists easily in so many different ways
with venmo with z Zelle, with PayPal.
So you're already trying to box out multiple industries at once here to try to turn a profit
on this.
Rudy, I may have misunderstood.
I just felt like what you were proposing was a place where everybody knows your name, where
you can go to forget all your troubles, and you just hang out in a convivial atmosphere,
and if you feel like being nice,
you buy your friend a drink
within this ecosystem called Rudy's Place.
I didn't get the impression,
maybe I'm wrong here,
is the idea that people would date out out of this experience that they are buying drinks
for each other to lead to in real life or virtual hugging and kissing I can't speak to that I mean
okay people do whatever they want to do my right whatever happens at Rudy's place stays a room
exactly look just making your way in the world today takes everything you've got.
The only value added that my idea offers is that there is a conviviality involved in
buying a drink for somebody and then returning the favor, if you're still talking 10 minutes later.
And there's a social lubrication that occurs there.
And this would offer that.
That's my pitch.
That's it.
Well, Rudy, you pitched it to Patrick and his sister, Bridget,
and all of his cousins by the dozens and his aunts down there on the shore.
The market spoke, it said, scoff.
Right.
To quote the great Megan Amram, who wrote that line for me in Parks and Recreation.
Why are we even still having this conversation?
Patrick accuses you of bringing this up time and time again.
You have said that you are merely taunting them at this point.
What is going on?
I continue to think that it's a billion-dollar idea if somebody would just do it.
Now, this was all pre-pandemic.
I mean, I think it made sense before the pandemic.
I think during the pandemic, people actually couldn't even go to bars.
It would have been just absolute solid gold, multi-billion dollars.
How would the app be making money?
Would Rudy's Place be
taking a percentage of every transaction?
Yes. Or maybe just
stealing the data and selling it to
hackers somewhere.
You're nothing if not honest
and forthright. Thank you.
I appreciate that.
If only we could get Google to be so frank.
Rudy's motto is, sure, I. That's right. Why not? So we have evidence of your taunting or reaction to it. In any case, we have an affidavit from
Patrick's aforementioned sister, Bridget. I'm going to a a shortened version of it here for you now to put it into the record
dear judge hodgman patrick represents the dozens of family members and friends who have found
themselves barricaded in the corner of a family party stuck in an argument they don't want to have
trying to explain the basic components of apps to a man who still pays for his email account.
Damning, damning evidence.
Every critic makes him more adamant.
As he sees it, genius is often misunderstood.
It's made even worse knowing that my dad has no plans to create this app.
He's just frustrated that no one else is willing to commit their lives
to the million dollar idea he has
handed us. Now, I think that must be a typo because Rudy, you said it was a billion dollar
idea, correct? At least, yeah. All right. That's a typo, Bridget. You might want to double check,
give your things a proofread before you send them in to Judge John Hodgman.
Continuing from Bridget, so without a chance to be proven incorrect, his commitment to the idea is unrelenting.
It's been years.
Rudy's place is half.
Oh boy.
Bridget's really,
is Bridget a lawyer,
Patrick?
No,
but she's showing some chops.
Yeah.
What does,
what does she do for a living?
If I may ask?
She does fundraising for children's hospitals.
Well,
I bet she gets some money.
Because she is bringing it home here.
Listen to this.
Rudy's place is half of a terrible idea that deserves no one's time or attention.
But it has somehow become the hill my dad is choosing to die on. I don't know if it's a quixotic pursuit of greatness now that he's retired
or a bizarre way for him to process his deep misunderstanding and fear of technology.
But either way, it's ruining our family's beach trips. Any support you can provide is deeply
appreciated. Signed, Patrick's sister, Bridget. All right. Rudy, I want to ask you about this last paragraph in particular.
Okay.
How do you respond to the accusation
that this is a quixotic pursuit of greatness now that you've retired
and or a bizarre way for you to process your fear of technology?
Do either of those statements have any resonance with you?
Not the former.
Maybe the latter.
The latter being misunderstanding or fear about technology.
I wouldn't say misunderstanding or fear.
I would say understanding and loathing.
I don't like technology.
I don't like the Internet.
I don't like technology.
I don't like the internet.
So I guess, honestly, this is really just a way of sort of taunting the younger generation with the absurdity of the culture that they have been forced to live in.
That's really what it is.
You're doing it for the lulz.
You're trolling your children.
And their cousins
with this idea, which you don't truly believe in
because it produces pleasure for you.
Well, no, wait, no, wait.
I still believe in the idea.
The fact that it is ridiculous and grotesque
is not mutually exclusive with it being a billion dollar idea on the internet.
Rudy, it says here that you retired last year from a career in energy and environmental
policy, and you are now pursuing a doctorate, PhD in philosophy, focusing on technology,
the thing you claim to hate.
Yes.
Why are you taking this doctorate in technology?
You really want to go down this road?
Yeah, I want to go down that big toad road.
Meet the toad, baby. I'm going to ride till I can't no more.
I mean, we could spend a lot of time on that. I guess I'm pursuing the theme that technology is reducing the human self to an aggregate of commercial data.
It's empowering totalitarian surveillance states.
It's reducing mental functions to replace judgment with obedience.
It's erasing the notion of objective truth, where information and truth are just what feels good. And since people spend their whole lives staring at screens, it turns out what feels
good is rage. So I could go on. I like this podcast a lot. You know, Judge John Hodgman began
as a segment on Jesse's podcast here on the Maximum Fund Network, Jordan, Jesse, go.
And then it spun off into its own podcast.
So I kind of feel like maybe, Patrick, the solution here is for your dad to have a segment
on Sin the Fields, where he, you know what I mean?
Where he just talks about the danger and evils of technology.
Are you talking about podcasts in your portfolio of woe that you just laid out there for
us, Rudy? Okay. At risk of sounding like I'm sucking up, I will say I do like podcasts.
Podcasts are probably the closest that the internet comes to actually fulfilling the
promise that it made 30 years ago. Back when Snake was invented.
It is the most super
highway-like of the internet's
information.
So, okay.
So podcasts themselves
are not just a vehicle
for rage and obedience
and totalitarianism.
Well, not this one. Not yet, anyway.
So,
Patrick, what do you want me to rule in this situation?
Well, I think that Bridget really hits the nail on the head here,
getting at the deep irony of how this man who loathes technology, burden shifts technical know-how
onto all of those around him,
as evidenced by just everything
that went into getting this podcast appearance
in the first place,
is now essentially trolling his family
and becoming the monster
that he claims to be trying to save the rest of us from.
Yes, but he's not using technology to do it.
He's stoking rage for his own enjoyment in person, the way it used to be done.
Classic meatspace trolling.
So I would like you to rule that you issue an injunction on him continuing to pitch this app idea, which, despite what he has said earlier, is one of the three things that he talks about with the rest of the family at this point.
He misrepresents how often he brings up Rudy's place.
This is correct.
Only when we get together.
Okay. This is true. He's we get together. Okay.
This is true.
He's not sending blast emails out to people.
It is mostly, it's an analog pitch.
It's an in-person pitch.
What are the other two things that are in his repertoire?
Conversation down the shore.
The tension between his love of seafaring craft and his fear of sharks.
Great.
I mean, easy answer to that one.
Going to need a bigger boat.
Right.
You actually have no idea how scarring just even quoting Jaws is for him.
He's still got deep Jaws trauma.
That's true.
Sure.
And I would say the other one is probably extolling the virtues of the 1970s
Minnesota Vikings defensive line.
Three great dad conversations.
I mean, I dare say you're lucky to have a dad and a relationship with your dad that is positive.
Most people who have those things get one dad conversation.
There's three great topics.
Yeah.
Usually when you're talking to your dad, you don't get, you have to talk about big block versus small block, something like that.
You don't get to talk about the Minnesota Vikings legendary purple people eaters.
Thank you.
To be clear, to be clear, I'm not asking that you make him not my dad.
I don't know if you have the jurisdictional capabilities to do that. Thank you for clar be clear, to be clear, I'm not asking that you make him not my dad. I don't know if you have the jurisdictional capabilities to do that.
Thank you for clarifying that, Patrick.
I hadn't considered that.
Counselor so stipulated.
I forgot that I do have that power.
Rudy, if I were to rule in your favor, how would you have me rule?
I have to say, having heard Patrick's plea there, I don't know if this ever happens on
your podcast, but I realize, he's made me realize that I have been expressing my technophobia,
taking it out on innocent people like Patrick and his sister and their cousins.
Oh, because he said that you were like trolling them.
Yeah.
Yeah.
Whatever that means.
Yeah, yeah, yeah.
Just to point out, I love that you love your son, but I said it first.
It's fine if you want to credit him.
Okay.
Well, thank you.
But I really teed that up for him.
Yes.
But go on.
Please say, continue to touch things.
I'm going to give the credit to my son, though.
I'll give that IP away.
Okay. I have to concede that I should probably stop because
I'm not honestly pitching a billion dollar app to them anymore. I'm just taunting and
tormenting them for being young internet people and that's not their fault. So I don't know.
That's not their fault.
So I don't know.
Here's what I would like, though.
Yeah.
I would like to, you can reverse your charge to your listeners that they not take this idea.
Open it up.
Any of your listeners wants to take it and run with it, please do. But you need to order them that if they do it, they have to call it Rudy's place.
Absolutely so ordered.
Even before I make my verdict, which now seems a foregone conclusion, but we'll have to see.
John, that's a Creative Commons CCRP license.
It's a standard sub-license that you can use it for commercial purposes, but you have to call it Rudy's Place.
And if they make a billion dollars on it, sir, can they buy a super yacht?
No, please.
Why not?
Because I hate super yachts.
Somehow I knew that.
I don't want to be part of somebody getting a super yacht.
Too big of a boat, John.
Yeah, but it would seem that of all the boats, a super yacht might be the most shark-proof.
Yes. Super yachts produce more carbon than a small country. But that's a whole other topic.
One last thing before I go into my chambers to make my decision,
Rudy. When Patrick and Bridget and their and by the dozens and their aunts down
by the shore scoffed your idea initially and ongoing how did it make you feel honestly I
was surprised the first time because I I thought and continued to think that it was a commercially viable idea.
Didn't make me feel upset in any way.
Okay.
But I, you know, I would like to reserve the right, if possible, to bring it up occasionally.
Just occasionally.
I can't just let it go.
Especially if somebody does it, it becomes Rudy's Place.
And as someone becomes a billionaire, then I certainly have to be able to taunt them.
Well, that is a different situation.
Yes.
If a listener to Judge John Hodgman takes the idea of Rudy's Place, calls it Rudy's
Place, runs with it, you get to keep the money as long as you don't buy a super yacht.
But Rudy himself retains bragging and taunting rights.
Fair enough?
That sounds fair.
All right.
Now, as to the decision as to whether you're ever going to mention this idea again in the future or not, that remains for me to decide.
I'm going to go into my chambers now, which I'm a little embarrassed to say are here on my super yacht.
I'm going into the planetarium in my super yacht.
I'll be back in a moment with my bird.
Please rise as Judge John Hodgman exits the courtroom.
Patrick, how do you feel about your chances?
You know, I mean, I think I'm a little unclear on exactly what the ruling is going to be
or what even the terms of the ruling could be based on the admission that my father, Rudy, just made.
I feel that particularly with the great assist from Bridget,
we've made a very compelling case that both this is not an app that is going to be successful
and that it's basically impossible for us to conclude anything other than that he's just tormenting us
at this point by continuing to bring it up. So I think with those two pieces of evidence
established pretty well, I think that the judge will rule in our favor.
Or to use the language of your podcast, you're ready to kick a field goal.
Rudy, how do you feel about your chances?
I feel a little chastened as I listen to Patrick and Bridget's affidavit and the judge
and came to realize that I have just been tormenting this younger generation for something that's not really their
fault. On the other hand, I feel pretty confident that this is a good idea, that the judge will
believe that it is potentially a good commercial idea. So as long as I'm still allowed to mention
it at least once a year, I'll feel okay. Rudy, do you know that you basically invented the hot Silicon Valley guys talking to each
other on the phone app Clubhouse?
I'm not going to be responsible for the use that people make of this thing.
Patrick, you've been making fun of your dad's idea
this entire time,
and he's basically literally describing
the hottest startup app in the world.
I mean, it's not bar-themed or called Rudy's Place,
but I think we can all agree
that that would make the existing app better.
I agree that Rudy's Place is certainly a better name than Clubhouse.
Well, we'll see what Judge Hodgman has to say about all this when he comes back in just a moment.
Hello, I'm your Judge John Hodgman.
The Judge John Hodgman podcast is brought to you every week by you, our members, of course.
every week by you, our members, of course.
Thank you so much for your support of this podcast and all of your favorite podcasts at MaximumFun.org,
and they are all your favorites.
If you want to join the many member supporters
of this podcast and this network,
boy, oh boy, that would be fantastic.
Just go to MaximumFun.org slash join.
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.
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 the 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 this 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. Please rise as Judge John Hodgman re-enters the courtroom and presents his verdict.
How old are you, Patrick?
I'm 28.
28 years old. When I was in my 20s, when I was your age, it was, oh, just two years after Snake was loaded onto the Nokia 6110.
after Snake was loaded onto the Nokia 6110.
But around that time, you know, we had the internet.
And someone we knew was dating an older fella.
And he had the idea for creating what we now know to be a social network.
It had not existed before that time.
And this guy, Barry, he wanted to create a place where people could hang out together online.
And he hired two younger people to consult on this project with him to create this website where people could hang out together online.
And they ultimately parted because Barry insisted against their uh against their objections that this online meeting place should
be called hangouttown.com and i agreed with those younger people at the time but barry was right
we the idea of people hanging out online had not been invented yet. And Barry did it,
hangouttown.com. And if only he had gone forward with that terrible, terrible, terrible domain
name, maybe he would be, and maybe he is now a multi-billionaire. I don't know. I'm just saying,
historically, I have a bad time evaluating business ideas.
Around the same time, I was on a bicycle in Central Park, New York City, where I live.
Jonathan Colton, my friend, was on the bicycle next to me. We were biking together like friends
in a French movie. And as we bike slowly along, he says, I have an idea for an online business.
This business, people don't have time to cook. Bear in mind, this is around the time,
you know, 1998 or so. People don't have to cook. The business I'm proposing is that we send perfectly portioned ingredients to people at their homes as a meal kit
and they make the food at home. This dude invented sun basket right next to me. Sorry, Jesse.
I know that sun basket is the creation of your friend from college, but I'm just saying that
Jonathan Colton was right there on a bicycle with this idea 15,
20 years early. And it is the idea that allows podcasts to exist. And you know what I told him?
It'll never work. Hangout Town won't work. Proto Sun Basket won't work. Then Jonathan Colton came
to me a few years later and said, you know what exists podcast? And I said, we'll never work. Then Jonathan Colton came to me a few years later and said, you know, it exists podcast. And I said, we'll never work. I'm glad I was wrong in all cases. To me, this idea, I have to tell you,
Rudy, does not seem good. But then Jesse started saying it was basically clubhouse in another form. I'm like, what do I know? What do I know? So I can't evaluate the business savvy of getting
in on this idea on the ground floor or even the basement or the second floor. I don't know. I
don't know if this thing will work. It sounds like it doesn't need to exist, but then plenty
of things exist that don't need to in any case. That is not the wisdom I can offer you. The wisdom that
I can offer is this. Patrick, you have an interesting dad. Rudy, you live, what I've
taken from you is that you like to live in tension between opposing ideas. You have this loathing of technology and strong feelings about
it. And yet rather than just throw it all aside and go out and run a horsepower farm and ignore
technology altogether, you are taking a phd using technology presumably these
days in order to learn how to hate technology more you love ships and hate sharks a normal position
and yet your hatred of super yachts is such that you would refuse that protection. You would rather die by shark than own a super yacht.
You are a fan of the Minnesota Vikings, a football team.
And yet you have, even before it's begun,
the most popular segment on the most popular ultimate Frisbee podcast in the world.
That's good stuff that's interesting i'm sure patrick and bridget
and all the cousins and everybody else appreciate that about you and i don't think you deserve to
be scoffed for pitching this idea once because you you almost were telling the truth for a second.
You had a moment of clarity where you realized,
yes, I pitched the idea once, I got scoffed,
and now I'm coming back at them again and again just to bug them.
You opened the show that way.
You have stared into the technological abyss,
and whether you know it or not,
you are stoking rage in order to get attention for yourself and to get lulls out of it.
That's trolling, my friend.
Look it up.
Look it up on the Encarta CD-ROM encyclopedia.
Trolling.
You are now operating not in good faith, but in bad faith. Now, I'll give dads a lot of latitude to bug their children on this podcast.
It is one of the few consolations that we enjoy as we shuffle off into irrelevance and the grave.
But we've been going on and off for 2017, 18, 19, you know how terrible I am at subtraction.
More than four years.
Got to knock it off.
Got to knock it off with Rudy's Place.
The market has spoken.
Patrick and his sister and his cousins and his aunts, they don't want this thing.
They don't want it.
They're not going to make it.
Now you've chosen the right path you've come here i hate to call it this because i know how you feel about it but basically the shark tank of fake internet law podcasts
you were right to give this idea to the judge john hodgman listenership
maybe among them there will be someone who will be able to crack this code,
make a billion dollars, give you the taunting rights, and not buy a super yacht.
I am ruling in the children's favor.
You must relent.
I hate to take away one of the topics of conversation,
but the other two are so great.
There's just so much you can do with Minnesota Vikings and sharks and boats.
But I have to stop your bad faith torment of your children
in light of your own words,
your own understanding of how technology sparks the use of rage as a dopamine hit.
You got to cut yourself off from that.
I absolutely encourage you to come up with another app idea.
That would be fine.
But in the meantime, Rudy's place is now the public square
the public domain judge john hodgman listeners go for it make it happen i will i will donate
100 to a pitch that makes sense to me. Why am I doing this?
Hodgman at MaximumFun.org.
If you can make sense of this idea,
I will invest $100 of my own money.
That makes me the Chris Sacka of this podcast.
Patrick, at the same time,
I order you
don't scoff at your dad
you're lucky to have
an interesting one
and also
you gotta give him
a segment on the podcast
you gotta at this point
everyone's dying for it
people are writing me
right now
the segment on
Sin the Fields
Rudy's Place
the top segment
on the number one
ultimate frisbee podcast
this is the sound of a gavel.
Judge John Hodgman rules, that is all.
Please rise as Judge John Hodgman exits the courtroom.
Patrick, are you satisfied with this verdict?
Absolutely.
I don't think I could ask for anything more.
I would certainly appreciate the judge's ruling that I need to not scoff at my father and appreciate him because I certainly do appreciate him, but I can
always appreciate him more because he is very interesting. He's a very loving father and I
can't have asked for anything more for one. So as far as I'm concerned, come out of here with a
father and potentially now another great segment on my podcast. So a win-win for me.
Rudy, how are you feeling?
I think it's fair.
I might need a little clarification because there will be moments
when I don't have to say a word but just raise an eyebrow
and they'll know what I'm speaking.
And whether that constitutes... Ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha I might need a further clarification on it. Here's my ruling on that real quick.
You can raise your eyebrow whenever you God or whatever damn please, Rudy.
And if Bridget or Patrick comes to you or any of those cousins,
and they say to you, you're thinking about Rudy's place, aren't you?
You just say, what?
No, I'm not.
I'm thinking about ethics and gaming journalism fair enough well patrick rudy thanks for joining us on the judge john hodgman podcast
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, then you're on the go.
Another Judge John Hodgman case in the books. Before we dispense swift justice, our thanks
to Jen Cunningham for naming this week's episode. There's an app,
Ellett Court, for that. If you'd like to name an episode, like Judge John Hodgman on Facebook.
That's where we ask for your suggestions. Follow us on Twitter, at Jesse Thorne and at Hodgman.
Hashtag your Judge John Hodgman tweets, hashtag JJHO. And check out the Maximum Fun subreddit.
hashtag JJHO and check out the Maximum Fun subreddit.
That's at MaximumFun.reddit.com
to discuss the episode.
We're on Instagram
at Judge John Hodgman.
Make sure to follow us there
for evidence and other fun stuff.
Our producer, the ever capable
and always with a made bed,
Jennifer Marmon.
You can see her bed behind her
in the video conference now. Very well. You got to look. In the age of Rudy's Place, you got to look good. You can see her bed behind her in the video conference now.
You gotta look. In the age of Rudy's Place,
you gotta look good. You gotta come correct.
Yeah, Jennifer's bringing decorative pillow
game. Okay, now
let's get to Swift Justice. I can never
figure out what to do with them when I'm asleep.
Decorative pillows. I'm like, do I
just put it on the floor?
That seems weird. I put it on my desk chair.
I put one between my knees.
I'm a side sleeper.
Oh, that's smart.
That's smart.
That's good for your back.
Now, swift justice where we answer your small disputes with a quick judgment.
Jennifer from Arizona says,
My husband insists on seasoning the cast iron pans every time we use them.
We can't just clean them and put them away.
We have to clean them, oil them, and bake them in the oven for an hour.
It's an argument every time.
Yeah, Jennifer's husband, you don't know what you're doing with the cast.
That's not how you take care of cast iron pans over time.
You season them once, and then after each use, you sleep with them between your knees.
Everyone knows this.
No, I mean, I saw Jesse Thorne shaking his head there too.
It's not sleep with them between your knees.
You just got to clean them, and then you give them a little bit of oil,
a little oil coating, and that's it.
Right, Jesse?
Yeah, I mean, you don't even have to give them a little oil coating, and that's it. Right, Jesse? Yeah. I mean, you don't even have to give them a
little oil coating, frankly. The whole point of cast iron is that once it's seasoned, as long as
you're not cooking something super acidic in it for a long time or really scrubbing it with a
Brillo pad, that you can just cook with it indefinitely, essentially rinsing it out between
uses, and it will get better and
better over time. Yeah. It's beautiful because it's imperfect, not because you're trying to
perfect it every time. You can make errors in a cast iron pan. You can mess a cast iron pan up
and then re-season it. To paraphrase David Rees, the author of How to Sharpen Pencils,
and also the co-creator of Dicktown on Hulu, bit.ly slash dicktown,
of How to Sharpen Pencils,
and also the co-creator of Dicktown on Hulu, bit.ly slash dicktown.
The pursuit of perfection is the way of sadness,
so take it easy on your pans.
If it looks dry, add a little oil.
Add a little oil between these.
If it looks dry.
That's it for this week's episode.
Submit your cases at maximumfun.org slash JJHO
or email hodgman at maximumfun.org.
No case is too small. We'll see you next time on the Judge John Hodgman at MaximumFun.org No case is too small.
We'll see you next time on the Judge John
Hodgman Podcast.