Judge John Hodgman - This is the Sound of a Raffle
Episode Date: August 17, 2016Stephanie files suit against her friend Sewit. They are both members of a Las Vegas community service group that often uses raffles for fundraising. Stephanie thinks members of their group should be p...rohibited from entering the raffles, but Sewit has no problem with it. With Guest Bailiffs Dave Shumka and Graham Clark of Stop Podcasting Yourself! Do you live in Portland (Maine), Boston, Turners Falls, Brooklyn, Philadelphia or London? Do you have a dispute you'd like to try before Judge John Hodgman LIVE? Submit your case at maximumfun.org/jjho! No case too big or too small!
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Welcome to the Judge John Hodgman podcast, where bailiffs Dave Shumka and Graham Clark.
This week, this is the sound of a raffle.
Stephanie files suit against her friend Sweet.
They are both members of a community service group that often uses raffles for fundraising.
Stephanie thinks members of their group should be prohibited from buying raffle tickets,
but Sweet has no problem with it.
Who's right? Who's wrong? Only one man can decide.
Please rise as Judge John enters the courtroom and presents the obscure cultural reference.
And at that, Judge John Hodgman stood still with raised eyebrows and stern eyes
that I could meet the better now that he knew the worst.
Then with a shrug, he resumed his walk. And for some minutes, neither of us spoke.
But in his handsome, unmoved face, I read my fate and death warrant.
And with every breath, I cursed my folly and my cowardice in coming to judge John Hodgman
at all. Because he had been so kind to me, I had dared to look for kindness from him now,
because I was ruined. And he, rich enough to play cricket all the summer and do nothing for the rest
of the year, I had fatuously counted on his mercy, his sympathy, his help.
Dave and Graham, swear in the litigants, please.
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.
Do you swear to abide by Judge John Hodgman's ruling, despite the fact that half the time Judge John Hodgman says raffles, he actually means waffles?
I do.
I do.
Judge John Hodgman, please take this case off our hands.
Stephanie and Sweet, you may be seated.
That is exactly so.
50% of the time I say raffles.
I mean waffles.
And it's been measured. It's been measured. There was one
year when it was 48.9% of the time, but that was a statistical anomaly. It's very confusing,
both at diners and in function halls. But now I'm talking about raffles. And before I talk more about raffles, first of all, let me say hello and welcome and
thank you to not one but two guest bailiffs, Dave and Graham from the fantastic Maximum Fun
podcast, Stop Podcasting Yourself, one of my very favorites. Good time, summertime guest bailiff
Monty Belmonte could not be here today. And you guys very ably and eagerly and happily and to my mind, I'm grateful that you were able to join us.
Thank you for having me.
I can't believe they let us have guns for this.
And I am coming to you.
You guys are in Vancouver, correct?
Yes, correct.
The Canadian city of your residence.
Yep, yep.
That's the one. Are you both British Columbians? I can't remember.
Dave is by
born and raised and I'm an Albertan
transplanted here.
Graham Clark, you are an
Albertan? An Albertan.
That is one of the two Canadian
provinces I have not been to.
Oh, you could skip it.
That's what I've heard. What's the other? That is one of the two Canadian provinces I have not been to. Oh, you could skip it.
That's what I've heard.
What's the other?
Well, do you know what?
Hang on a second.
I just want to introduce our guest engineer, of course, Joel Mann here at WERU in Orland, Maine.
Hi, Joel.
Judge, it's an honor to be here.
So that's the most you've ever said on the podcast, and that was a little too much.
Sorry. Keep it to one or two monosyllabic responses okay yeah good there we go uh so the judge john hodgman family has expanded dramatically over the course of this summer and
it's it's great to have all of you here including you stephan and Sweet, now for immediate summary judgment in one of yours favors.
Can either of you name the piece of culture that I referenced as I entered the courtroom?
Sweet, you've been brought to this courtroom against your will. So you can either guess
first or make Stephanie guess first. What will you do? I'm going to have Stephanie guess first.
Stephanie, what is your guess?
It's extremely incorrect,
but I'm going to guess Shirley Jackson's The Lottery.
That is a guess.
We'll enter that into the guess book
that everyone must sign.
And now, Sweet, you have procrastinated long enough.
Can you guess?
As long as we're guessing,
I'm just going to throw out Dorian Gray.
The picture of Dorian Gray.
Another guess.
Of course, all guesses are wrong.
But I will give you another chance.
Can you guess which Canadian province that is not Alberta that I have not
been to this?
This may not be binding.
If you get it right,
it will not be binding.
Sweet.
You know how many Canadian provinces there are,
right?
Uh,
Quebec.
Okay.
That is a guess.
Stephanie, uh, Prince Edward Island. Uh, Quebec? Okay, that is a guess. Stephanie?
Uh, Prince Edward Island.
All guesses are wrong again.
The answer is Newfoundland.
Oh, wow.
Now, that took you guys by surprise up there in Vancouver?
You find it surprising that someone would never have been to Newfoundland?
Well, all those maritime eastern provinces are so close together, you could accidentally step into one from another one.
It's possible. It's possible that I did, and I don't remember.
We assumed it would have been Saskatchewan.
No, no, I've been to Saskatchewan, of course.
That's amazing.
I've been to its provincial capital.
Regina.
Stephanie or Sweet, don't give it away, you guys.
I mean, maybe.
Stephanie or Sweet, do you know what the provincial capital of Saskatchewan is?
I did know.
I believe it's, yeah, Regina, which I made a joke once because it rhymes with something entertaining.
Right.
That's, you have to imagine that that's why they named it that.
Stephanie and Sweet, enough Canada talk.
We're going to have to hear this case.
You know where I am, and I'm here with Joel in Maine in the studios of WERU 89.9 FM in East
Orleans, Maine. You know that Dave and Graham are out there in Vancouver. Where do I find you in
the world? We are in Las Vegas, Nevada. Las Vegas, Nevada. And who was speaking just then,
so I can begin to understand the differences of your voices? That was Stephanie.
Okay.
And Sweet, you are also in Las Vegas, Nevada, correct?
That is correct.
I'm here in Las Vegas, Nevada.
And you guys are friends and members of a community group.
Stephanie, explain.
Yes.
Is it okay if I buzz mark it by saying the name, the full name?
Let's just say that it rhymes with Regina.
Yes, the acronym does rhyme with Regina.
What does the acronym stand for?
Very Awesome Girls Into Nerdy Activities.
And just coincidentally, it spells out something that rhymes with Regina.
Total coincidence.
Yeah.
And what do the Very Awesome Girls do there in Las Vegas?
We do a lot of community service.
We volunteer.
Sometimes we've cleaned up trails.
We do fundraising for local nonprofits.
We also go to nerdy events like movie openings, things like that.
We volunteer at comic book conventions and other nerdy events like movie openings, things like that. We volunteer at comic book conventions
and other nerdy things like that, too. So it's like a nerd sorority.
That's a very good description, yes. Okay. And how long have you been doing this?
I've been in it for three years. It has been in existence, I believe, for six years.
Yeah. And I've been in for about five years. Okay, so Sweet, who just spoke, right?
You've been in for five years.
Yeah.
So you're the senior very awesome nerd girl,
in this duo at least.
I would be the senior.
She would be the freshman.
Right.
Was there a lot of hazing, Stephanie,
when you joined this nerd sorority?
Right. Was there a lot of hazing, Stephanie, when you joined this nerd sorority?
Um, I'm trying to, if by hazing, you mean good times and camaraderie, I guess. There's a lot of that.
Good times and camaraderie. That's a hard word to say. I was about to say, I definitely mispronounced that.
Camaraderie.
Camaraderie. My comrades. And who founded this group? Stephanie. Somebody
else named Stephanie, who is not me. And you may have already said, but remind me if you did,
how many very awesome nerds are in this group? About 50.
About 50.
Okay.
And what do you do in your real life there in Las Vegas, Stephanie?
I'm actually, it's funny because I mispronounced a word just now,
but I'm actually an adjunct instructor at the university here.
Of what?
English.
Of English.
Yes.
You know, that's, that's, that's reading and writing.
Pronunciation is the lowest art in the English major.
It's true.
If you were an adjunct instructor of pronunciation, I don't even think they would let you in
at that sorority.
You'd be like, no, too nerdy, too nerdy for the nerd sorority.
Uh, and, uh, and sweet you,ity. And Sweet, are you academic as well?
I am not. I'm a content coordinator, so basically a copywriter.
And what is it like living in Las Vegas as a professor of English and as a copywriter?
Well, I mean, surprisingly, there's a lot of cool academic stuff here. We have some
really good lectures here at the university. There's a very whimsical bookstore downtown
that looks like it's out of a Wes Anderson movie. But I think I know, I think that our friend of
the show, Sam Potts, had something to do with that bookstore. It opened a few years ago, right?
Yeah, yeah. Yeah. Yeah. The writer's block.
Yeah.
Yeah.
I'm almost certain that that is the bookstore that was opened by a guy named Scott who used
to...
Right?
Scott Seely, right?
Yes.
Drew and Scott opened it together.
And they lived in New York before.
Well, this is not...
See how it's a small world among people who went to college, isn't it?
In Vegas, it is.
Yeah. Scott used to be the manager of the McSweeney store.
And then the in Brooklyn, where I normally live, and then was on the board of 826 NYC,
which is Dave Eggers' New York branch of his tutoring
organization for middle schoolers and high schoolers. So it sounds like the life of the
mind is alive and well in Las Vegas, Nevada. Are you guys both Nevadans? Stephanie?
Well, I've been here 14 years, but I lived in California and Hawaii previously,
but I think I'm a local at this point.
And Sweet, your name is spelled S-E-W-I-T, but I lived in California and Hawaii previously, but I think I'm a local at this point.
And Sweet, your name is spelled S-E-W-I-T, but it is pronounced Sweet.
Am I pronouncing it correctly?
You are.
It is not phonetic in the least because my parents decided to be difficult.
Oh, well, that's if they had come to my courtroom, I would have made them give you a less challenging name. But clearly it has burnished your character because you're both doing good in the world.
And are you a Nevadan?
I have been here for about 16 years, but I'm from California originally.
But I consider myself a local.
Okay, cool.
Graham and Dave.
Yes.
Quick question.
By the way, bailiffs, you can't be taking a nap in my courtroom.
No, no, no.
We're on it.
We're ready to go. I don't know how they do fake internet court in Canada, other than I'm sure the judges wear wigs.
Yeah, that's right.
But I don't know if fake internet court in Canada, they have napping couches for their bailiffs,
but I need you to be-
Well, they're fainting couches, but yes.
Right, okay, good.
Well, you'll notice we haven't even gotten to the dispute yet
because I'm just enjoying you guys so much.
We're going to get to this dispute.
Can I ask one question before the dispute?
Yeah, please.
What was the obscure cultural reference?
Oh, you know what?
I've never gone so long without revealing it
i'm gonna try something new joel i'm gonna put it i'm gonna use it as a tease for the end of
the episode yes that'll keep me awake yeah graham's like the kid who asked if there's
homework five minutes before the bell rings wait wait you forgot to assign homework dave or graham are we nevadans no no i know but since we did a lot of canadian geography humor
at the top of the show and i use the term humor arguably can can dave or graham can you name
the capital of Nevada as Canadians?
Are you able to?
Is it Carson City?
That's a guess.
Who is that, Dave?
All right, Graham.
I'm going to say Reno.
Okay.
One guess is wrong.
Carson City is correct.
Well done, Dave.
Carson City.
Wow.
Nice job, Dave.
That's right.
Guess what?
Right now, current best bailiff, Dave Shumka.
Damn it. could all change
all right so i'm enjoying this conversation so much that i didn't get around to revealing the
pop the cultural reference uh barely we have not even gotten into the conflict the conflict is
essentially meaningless stephanie one of the things you guys do is you hold raffles to raise money for various causes.
And Sweet, you have a difference of opinion with Stephanie about these raffles in what way?
Well, I feel that we should be able to have our members enter these raffles and Stephanie does not.
Okay.
Stephanie, why is it wrong for the membership of your group, the Very Awesome Nerd Girls, to buy raffle tickets in the raffles that you're running?
Well, let me clear something.
I'm okay with them buying tickets.
I'm not okay with them winning.
So if they want to just throw the money in there, that's fine. somebody wins from our group, even though it would be, you know, a complete coincidence and natural
win. Someone watching that might think, oh, well, that's great. They're just giving the items back
to their own members. Why should I enter their next raffle? Right. So, you know, that one of
the principles of the Judge John Hodgman show is that specificity is the soul of narrative.
Now, I'm not a I'm not a professor of pronunciation but
that's how i always say it can you tell me a time when this actually happened where
you held a raffle for a charity or some other cause and the members entered and a member of
your group won and and thus causing a rift between you and the community that you're there
to support and get and be as specific as you can please uh okay so um i just don't i don't want
this member to feel bad if you're listening i do feel bad but um oh you do okay um we had uh
like a raffle um around uh solstice last year, and there was a lot of items up for raffle, including like tickets for Star Wars.
But one of the items was a hand.
Wait, wait, wait, wait, wait, wait, wait.
Which solstice winter or summer?
Winter.
My bad.
Yeah, I didn't.
I didn't want to use a Western specific holiday. So I just want solstice. Yeah. I didn't want to use a, you know, Western-specific holiday, so I just went with solstice.
Right.
And you also didn't want to discriminate against summer solstice.
It's true.
It's true.
It's a good solstice.
So, yeah, one member, there was a lot of items for raffle.
One member, and this was, we were doing it as the event went on.
One member won a handmade, a beautiful handmade lightsaber scarf.
And I don't have any affidavits to state to this, but I saw a few people kind of roll in their eyes that one of our members had won.
And maybe, maybe I was reading too much into it.
that one of our members had won.
And maybe, maybe I was reading too much into it.
Now, I just want to say that, look,
I'm glad you guys are all having a great time.
But here in Maine, your entire story was wiped out by Skype wonkiness, such that as far as I'm concerned,
the story you told was you plucking an ill-tuned banjo
and throwing a box of marbles down the stairs
that's what i did i don't know if you guys heard that but uh i don't even think i need i think i
get the picture someone rolled their eyes yes that's that's concise sweet you heard stephanie's Sweet. You heard Stephanie's story as well as I did. What's your response?
I feel as though we're a part of the community, the same community we strive to serve.
And we should be able to enter these raffles if someone from the community rolled their eyes.
They should definitely bring it to us, you know, personally, maybe voice their complaints and we can definitely respond.
But we're all part of the same las vegas nerd community and was there actual eye rolling or perceived eye rolling
um you know maybe maybe i was overly sensitive and it was perceived i do not have photographic
evidence of said eye rolling but there was But there was no express complaint made to you?
No, no one came up to me and complained or anything like that.
All right.
Let me talk to my bailiffs for a second.
Dave and Graham?
Yes.
All right.
I've gone as far as I can pretending that I heard that story when I didn't.
So don't let Stephanie and Sweet know that I don't know what they're talking about.
What was the cause that they were doing the raffle for the the the thing that
rhymes with regina yeah yeah i know i know the organization but i guess that was the
what were they raising money for uh their stuff yeah the solstice
they wanted to have a wintry solstice.
Basically, Dave and I both started laughing really hard when they talked about one of the items that was up for auction was a lightsaber scarf.
Got it.
That was one of the raffle prizes.
That was the one that caused the eye rolling.
Yeah. But not by the very nature of its existence,, by the fact that one of the members won it.
So someone, one of the members donated it.
Another member bought a raffle ticket and won it.
Or someone donated it.
Somebody donated it.
All right, Stephanie, I have to,
I tried to get this information out of my bailiffs
and all the listeners, of course, know
because they could hear the thing, but I couldn't.
And these bailiffs were just totally napping again
they were they weren't on their napping couches anymore they're in their their their their
respective chuckling corners chuckling to themselves instead of monitoring the situation
in my fake courtroom by the way dave i strip you of your best bailiff title you're now both medium bailiffs
again cool thanks stephanie what were you raising money for with this raffle um i can't remember if
it was it it might have been street teens it might have been something else um street teams what's that uh well it's it's a las vegas um uh non-profit that
helps homeless teens they give them food and stuff oh street teens street teens t-e-e-n-s
correct yeah your pronunciation is terrible i i apologize no i i just thought you said street
teams i thought you were raising money for buzz
marketing teams in las vegas see what i'm trying to determine here is to what degree
your uh your little booster club in las vegas is raising significant funds for actual charities
uh and to what degree it is mainly a chance for you guys to get together and
hang around and have funs. And I would like it to be both. I mean, you know, it's both is fine.
But I guess what I'm trying to determine is, is the balance, is the additional revenue coming from members buying raffle tickets meaningful enough to a meaningful enough charity that it counteracts the perceived eye-rolly ethical missteps that one might read into a situation where the membership itself is buying raffle tickets. In other words, if you're raising more money for homeless teens, who cares?
Who cares, Stephanie, where the money's coming from?
Am I right, Sweet?
I think you're right.
I think that since we have so many members who usually buy multiple, multiple tickets,
like maybe $10 a pop, we're making like $500 just off of our members that's going to like street teens or
Nevada Partnership of Homeless Youth, etc. All right. Stephanie, would you estimate
what percentage of raffle sales are going to memberships? Would you estimate? Ball pork it
for me. That's a little bit tough for me to answer because the raffles where I have donated the items and organized the raffle, I told members not to enter.
So my amounts are from when members were not allowed to enter.
Wait, anyone in your group can organize a separate raffle?
Is that what you're saying? we'll have like a fundraiser event or a table at a convention and you can go to the philanthropy committee and say,
I would like to raise money for Las Vegas pigeon rescue.
May I have a raffle at the table?
If there isn't one,
I hope they would say no.
Our pigeons and our pigeons endangered in Las Vegas.
No,
but neither are homeless teens.
Well,
I want, I guess. No, but neither are homeless teens. Well. Now I wonder if maybe you're a sociopath, Stephanie.
I just really love pigeons and birds.
I'm not.
I'm a nice person, I swear.
I help humans, too.
Insofar as a teenager is living on the street, I consider that to be profoundly more of an endangered situation than a pigeon living on the street, I consider that to be profoundly more of a endangered situation
than a pigeon living on the street.
That's where they're supposed to live.
Well, we're not just scooping up pigeons from the street.
It's usually people's racing pigeons that have been injured or people that mistakenly
release young pigeons that are domesticated and they end up in like parks or something
like that and die.
They die if they're not taken in or adopted.
So the pigeon rescue thing was, that's for real.
Yes, that was not a joke.
And that is more important to you than homeless teens.
Got it.
Not at all.
Not at all.
I'm just putting it down.
No, I'm just putting it down that way.
I'm just going to enter it.
So here's, let me make sure I understand this situation just so i understand how your
organization works you stephanie want to want to hold a raffle at some event a convention or
whatever it is to raise money to keep pigeons alive and sweet wants to hold a raffle to raise money to help at-risk children get off the streets
and into a safe environment because they're human beings.
And you individually can go to your, what is it, your officer of philanthropy?
We have a committee, a philanthropy committee.
And you can individually hold your raffles.
And in these raffles, you can individually stipulate that members can or cannot buy tickets.
Is that correct, Stephanie?
That is correct.
However, I'm the only person that's ever stipulated that members cannot buy tickets.
So you've already gotten your way.
You hold your raffles.
You do it your way.
Why does this need to be a very awesome nerd girl wide policy?
Um,
people are a little bit,
um,
not happy that I'm the only one doing that.
Like people,
people aren't taking it too well when I tell them not to enter the,
the raffles that we hold.
So what do they,
what do they say?
Well, they express an interest in the items
and say a few times how much they like them
and would like to enter and have them.
Let me think if I can think of something.
Well, one of the affidavits we had, you know,
Desiree, one of our members, you know,
said how she likes to enter because there's fun things to win.
And she's expressed to me before that she would like to enter specific raffles I have held.
All right.
Well, you sent in this evidence, which is an affidavit, and I'm going to read this into the record.
Dave and Graham, bailiffs.
Yes.
Yeah.
Give me the evidence.
Here you go.
Thank you very much.
That was some great role playing.
All right, so this is an affidavit
from very awesome girls member,
Christella.
I believe members should not be able
to enter our own raffles
because it could cause others
who enter to lose trust on our group.
We know we are being fair, but if someone in our group wins, people may feel it's unfair and lose faith in our
group. This is a photo of our most recent raffle items. Items included San Diego Comic-Con exclusive
swag, plus a signed photo of Flash Gordon star Sam Jones. He donated it to us at the las vegas convention we were holding the raffle at
because he's a total sweetheart whoa oh wow and also a mr robot mask and a bunch of other cool
stuff that one of you guys brought back from san diego comic-con is that right stephanie uh yes
that was i brought it back and so at least at least one other member agrees with you, Christella, unless Christella is a fabrication of your own mind.
Christella is a real person and a listener to the show.
I'm speaking to Christella now.
If you're out there, thank you for your support.
I appreciate your name, Christella, even though it sounds like an imaginary friend that Stephanie might have made up when she was 11.
By the way, is Christella also a princess racing pigeon?
Yes.
Well, she writes very well.
Christella, if you're a real human listener thank you if you're a princess
astronaut racing pigeon with the power of speech and writing i also thank you uh okay so this is a
pretty good this is pretty cool nerdy stuff that you auctioned that not auctioned excuse me raffled
off uh how much money did you raise raffling off this hoard of Sam Jones memorabilia?
Well, it was actually not as much because we were in an obscure location, but it was about $100.
Whoa.
Yeah.
And after you subtracted your administrative fees of $115.
It went to the Las Vegas Pigeon Rescue.
Okay.
Sweet.
You also sent in an affidavit from one of your members.
And what is her fantasy name?
Her fantasy name is Desiree.
Desiree says, I'm pro members entering our own raffles because our raffles are always
intended to help a needy
cause in our community why not get as much help as you can get this is what we've been discussing
I understand that it may look bad for one of our own members to win the raffle but I've been told
the alternative is to enter in someone else's name isn't being deceitful to our supporters worse
also then if I do win the raffle I have to make sure none of the prizes are ever showing in the
pics I post on social media I can't live with this paranoia adored very awesome girl member desiree last
name unpronounceable okay and when you have you have you run a raffle uh suite where you have
allowed members to buy tickets yes i've run uh several raffles where i've allowed members to buy tickets? Yes, I've run several raffles
where I've allowed members to run tickets.
Well, give me an example of one.
And if I were you,
I would give me an example of one
where you raised a lot more money than $100.
Well, we've had one at the,
let's see, I want to say the Henderson Mini Con.
Well, we were raising money actually again for
street teens um we had our own members enter that raffle and i believe we ended up uh raising
something like uh 550 dollars 550 dollars yes now i i don't do a lot of moths but mathematically speaking i think that that's more
i'm not so sure i want to come back wait stephanie in this raffle you had an autographed picture of
sam jones star flash gordon and you raised a hundred bucks how much how much were the tickets
so there were some extenuating circumstances though at this. How much were the tickets? So there were some extenuating circumstances, though.
At this other...
How much were the tickets?
They were $2 each, or three for five,
and we were in a room off to the side
with not a lot of traffic.
We were right in the middle of Henderson MiniCon.
All right, I can't do the moths on that one.
Two bucks, you raise $100, so that's 50 entrants.
How many entrants would you say you had in your last raffle, Sweet?
That is a very good question.
I know, I only asked the good ones.
I want to say we probably had a couple hundred people into this raffle.
A couple hundred people, and how many of them were members, would you guess?
Let's say it was 200.
Ball pork it for me.
I want to say about 30 people from our group actually entered the raffle.
So about 15%.
Got it.
All right.
I think I've heard everything I need in order to make my decision.
I'm going to go into my chomperers.
I'll be back in a moment with my decision.
Please rise as Judge John Hodgman exits the courtroom.
Now, Sweet, do you find living in Las Vegas,
getting people to join these raffles,
that in Las Vegas there's just not enough opportunity to gamble?
In Las Vegas, there's just not enough opportunity to gamble.
I mean, I guess it's kind of limited here if you live in the suburbs.
Oh, sure.
Yeah.
There's a lot of mini malls, strip malls with just AM, PMs full of slot machines, I'm sure.
Stephanie, let me ask you,
is there that Star Trek bar still in Las Vegas?
I'm so sad to tell you no.
They closed down Star Trek The Experience and Quark's bar.
Oh, no.
Where will you get your Romulan ale?
Times Square.
The Star Trek convention, maybe.
Or Millennium Falcon.
Oh, don't buzz market.
Oh, my bad.
Sorry.
If somebody in the group were to win these prizes and donate them back to the cause,
would that solve everybody's problems?
That would be great.
Yeah, I think that would be cool.
You should have called me first.
Sweet.
Do you think it's going to go your way?
I feel like this could go either way right now. I feel like we both had a very good argument.
But everyone thinks I'm a sociopath.
I mean, with imaginary friends.
I think, with imaginary friends.
I think, who is it that got the fundraiser that raised $550?
That was me.
Oh, yeah.
I think you're going to win.
I mean, it's not our job to speculate, but yeah. I think it looks pretty good.
Yeah, yeah.
Like the singer Jesse Jay, Judge John Hodgman is all about the money, money, money.
We'll be back with Judge John Hodgman's decision on Judge John Hodgman after the break.
You're listening to Judge John Hodgman.
I'm bailiff Jesse Thorne. Of course, the Judge John Hodgman podcast always brought to you
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Yeah, from the restaurant Kraft.
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Please rise as Judge John Hodgman re-enters the court.
You may be seated.
Boy, this is a difficult one, because on the one hand, I do perceive a difference between humans and pigeons.
my admittedly human biased position, it seems to me like ethical,
ethical blurriness or no sweets raising more money for human beings.
And on the other hand,
though ethically very pure,
Stephanie is raising less money for pigeons.
So in that sense, it's kind of a wash.
that you let an autographed photograph of Sam Jones star of flash Gordon go with a whole lot of other stuff for a hundred bucks.
And that that's a crime against culture.
And it's gotten me to thinking,
because my initial thought was,
well,
how much did that Sam Jones thing go for?
Because I immediately forgot that you were doing a raffle and I thought you were doing an auction right and in an auction situation like
if it went for the proportion of the hundred bucks that it ended up raising so in that big
lot of stuff that mr robot mass and those comic books or whatever it probably accounted for maybe
25 bucks do you know what i mean of of what you got for it as part of that lot and i was like
if you were in an auction situation and the maximum bid you would have on that sam jones
autograph picture was 25 bucks that you would you would remove it from the bidding you would not let
it go and then i was thinking well it's not an auction, obviously, it's a raffle. But if it were an auction and you had an organization that was donating items to be auctioned off to the public and members of your organization were bidding, that would be seen as unfair because they would be bidding up against the normals in the room.
And it would be seen as a little bit shady.
That was clarifying to me because as much as I think getting as much money for a worthy
cause as possible in the context of both charity and a fun event and a fun group like you have
is what you're aiming for.
There is no doubt, I think, on a gut level that allowing your own members
to buy raffle tickets and win the prizes is a little bit shady.
And there has been no grievance expressed so far.
So I'm not convinced there has been any real damage done. But it seems to me like the very awesome girls are at a crossroads in terms of, you know, how serious the fundraising aspect is going to be compared to the fundraising for yourselves.
and i think that what stephanie is perceiving is that to have members buy raffle tickets makes your group look less serious never mind the fact that you're raising money for pigeons i'm sorry
to be so sniffy about the pigeons you guys i appreciate that it's a real cause you've sold
me on it and i'm going to donate to both um I think that what you're doing is great. And I think that
it's so good that it deserves not only for it to be fun for you, but at least a veneer of
professionalism. And I think that having members buying raffle tickets, even though it raises more
money for the cause, makes it seem unprofessional and i therefore decree that stephanie is right and
sweet is wrong and i further order stop it with the raffles try auctions you want to have fun
and raise real money have an auction of this stuff.
Do you know why?
Because you go into a bar or something.
Do you have those in Las Vegas?
Or you go into Scott's bookstore.
He knows.
We used to have auctions for McSweeney's all the time.
And you get all this stuff, all this great swag.
And then you auction it off one by one.
And it's a whole event.
And what happens in auctions is people, it's not only an opportunity to donate to charity by bidding on an object that you want and having that money go to charity, but it's also an opportunity to beat other people because it becomes competitive. If you had two people wanting that Sam Jones autograph picture, and there would be, you would have gotten $200 for that alone.
And because you're combining charity with people's natural desire to destroy each other
in competition.
And it's a lot of fun.
uh and it's a lot of fun uh and i highly highly advise that you get rid of all these raffles or at least try one auction and see how it goes because it is it's an incredible sporting night
for charity and you get some racing pigeons in there it becomes a big thing you just race them
around the room everyone will love it you know, even though Sweet is senior
and even though probably no harm done,
I have to say I agree with Stephanie.
I think members buying raffle tickets looks bad
and you don't want to look bad.
So that is my ruling.
This is the sound of a gavel.
Judge John Hodgman rules.
That is all.
Please rise as Judge John Hodgman rules that is all. Please rise as Judge John Hodgman
exits the courtroom.
So,
I realize now I got
the Jesse Jay quote wrong.
It's not about the money.
Yeah, it's not about the money, yeah.
Stephanie, what is your
feeling on the verdict?
I'm happy
and I'm pretty excited about the idea of auctions.
I would love to practice one of those weird old-timey auctioneer voices.
Yep.
They still do that weird old-timey auctioneer voice when they auction.
Yeah.
I have a plug-in on eBay that does it for me.
I have a plug-in on eBay that does it for me.
But you could also make fun sci-fi themed paddles for all the people who are bidding.
Ooh, all these ideas.
Yeah.
Now it's more fun. Wait, I have to come back in for a second.
Please rise.
Please rise again.
Come back into the courtroom.
No old-timey auctioneer voice.
This is what I'm trying to say.
You guys,
you want your organization to be fun for your memberships and for the
communities that you're serving.
Right.
But you don't want your organization to seem like a,
just a big art project for yourselves.
You want to,
you want it to be fun,
but also actually raising as much money as possible to give back into the
community.
That's what I'm saying.
That's what this white man is saying to a bunch of activist women in Las Vegas who have
raised more money for carrier pigeons and street teens than I've ever raised.
But that's what, just do a regular auction.
That's all I have to say.
We got to get out of here.
Please rise again.
We're never going to find out the cultural reference.
Oh yeah, no, cultural reference.
Tune in next week i know i'm gonna do it tune in next week to find out the cultural reference i'm tired
of people not not listening to the next episode i'll tell sweet and stephanie i'll tell Sweet and Stephanie, I'll tell you guys off the air.
And in the meantime, everyone else who wants to find out the cultural reference,
tune in next week to Judge John Hodgman.
It's a cliffhanger, which is actually a clue, sort of, to what the cultural reference is.
Until then, I want to say thank you to Stephanie and Sweet,
because they got to get out of their studio out there in Las Vegas, because I guess trains run on time in Las Vegas.
Hello, teachers and faculty.
This is Janet Varney.
I'm here to remind you that listening to my podcast, The JV Club with Janet Varney, is part of the curriculum for the school year. Learning
about the teenage years of such guests as Alison Brie, Vicki Peterson, John Hodgman, and so many
more is a valuable and enriching experience, one you have no choice but to embrace, because yes,
listening is mandatory. The JV Club with Janet Varney is available every Thursday on Maximum Fun
or wherever you get your podcasts. Thank you. And remember, no running in the halls.
If you need a laugh and you're on the go, try S-T-O-P-P-O-D-C-A-S-T-I.
Were you trying to put the name of the podcast there?
Yeah, I'm trying to spell it, but it's tricky.
Let me give it a try.
Okay.
If you need a laugh and you're on the go, call S-T-O-P-P-P-A-D-I.
It'll never fit.
No, it will.
Let me try.
If you need a laugh and you're on the go, try S-T-O-P-P-P-D-C-O-O.
Ah, we are so close.
Stop podcasting yourself a podcast from
maximum fun dot org
if you need a laugh and you're on the
go
Dave and Graham
thank you so much for guest bailiffing I hope maybe
you'll come back next week now I know you will you will
because you're so curious about the cultural reference
I think it's from cliffhanger I think yeah Maybe you'll come back next week. Now I know you will because you're so curious about the cultural reference.
It's from Cliffhanger, I think.
It's John Lithgow's monologue from Cliffhanger.
His mountaintop monologue.
Before you guys say everything you need to say, let me just say what a pleasure it is to have you guys here thanks again to joel here at weru
uh 88.9 uh fm in blue hill 99.9 fm in bangor maine studio located in east orleans maine got hit by a lightning bolt right joel that's correct that's correct judge got hit by a lightning bolt and
wiped out its phone lines this is true community radio and they need and they need some anti-lightning protection.
So go to W.E.R.U. dot org and perhaps consider giving a donation.
And as well, we'll put a link to the Pigeon Rescue and the street teens donation links on our Web site so that you can consider donating to them as well.
Sam Jones, if you're listening to this, I will pay you $500 for an autographed picture of
yourself as Flash Gordon. And I hope you all will consider seeing me and Jesse and other special
guests on our tour in the East Coast. Unfortunately, not Newfoundland, but many other
East Coast cities. Go to johnhodgman.com slash tour for those details or go to maximumfund.org.
The events sidebar has all the ticket links right there.
Who named this episode, Dave and Graham? Ian Brody. Thank you very much for naming
this week's episode. This is the sound of a raffle. I like that one. And who produced
this week's episode, Dave? Oh, I want to say Jennifer Marmore.
Dave?
Oh, I want to say Jennifer Marmore.
Not Marmore, more more.
Not less more, more more.
More, more, more.
How do you like it?
And what else is there do we need to say?
Yeah, I just want to encourage everyone to join our street team.
We're going to be putting up posters around the city.
And we're going to do some of that power washing art.
Yeah, yeah.
And also, you know what?
Keep it up, Sam Jones.
Stop Podcasting Yourself is podcast weekly from Vancouver, British Columbia in Canada.
Yeah, and if listeners want to find an episode to start with, I would suggest episode 396 featuring judge John Hodgman and non judge John
Roderick.
Sometimes get guest bailiff,
John Roderick.
Thank you guys so much for being here.
I just,
you guys can go take a rest now and thanks everyone else for listening to
judge John Hodgman tune in next week for information about the cultural reference.
Goodbye.
Bye.