Judge John Hodgman - Van Freaks Roadshow in St. Paul
Episode Date: June 5, 2024What do you do when you find a spider in the house? Are bananas ever round? How do you deal with an outdoor cat taunting your indoor cat? Is Duck Duck Gray Duck a real game? Rulings on these disputes ...and more this week on the podcast! Recorded LIVE in St. Paul, MN at the Fitzgerald Theater. With special guest Kevin Murphy!We are on TikTok and YouTube! Follow us on both @judgejohnhodgmanpod! Follow us on Instagram @judgejohnhodgman.Thanks to reddit user u/humphrey_the_camel for naming this week’s case! To suggest a title for a future episode, keep an eye on the Maximum Fun subreddit at maximumfun.reddit.com!
Transcript
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Welcome to the Judge John Hodgman podcast.
I'm Bailiff Jesse Thorne and I'm joined by the great Judge John Hodgman.
This week's episode was recorded live at one of our favorite locations, the Fitzgerald
Theater in St. Paul, Minnesota.
We were so happy to be there.
We had some great litigants on this show.
We talked about spiders, scattergories, cats, and a game that seems to only exist in Minnesota?
Yeah, that's right. I was just thinking about this. A playground game that you are very familiar with
has a strange variation. And did we play it on stage? Stay tuned to find out. Plus,
special guest Kevin Murphy from Rift Racks and Mystery Science Theater 3000, who played a nose flute. Let's go to the stage at
the Fitzgerald Theater in St. Paul, Minnesota.
St. Paul, Minnesota, you came to us seeking justice, and we're
here to deliver it right here at the world famous Fitzgerald
Theater.
Judge John Hodgman is now in session.
Let's bring out our first set of litigants.
Please welcome to the stage, Ben and Emily.
Tonight's case, the long arm and arm and arm and arm and arm
and arm and arm and arm and arm of the law. Ben brings the case
against his wife Emily. When Emily sees a spider in the house she works hard to
trap and release it. Ben says this is a waste of time. Get to smushing. Who's
right who's wrong only one can decide. Please rise as judge John Hodgman
enters the courtroom and delivers an obscure cultural reference.
Hey Charlie I think about you every time I pass the filling station on account of all the grief you used to wear in your hair.
Still have that record little Anthony and the Imperials.
Someone stole my record player.
How do you like that?
Hey, Charlie, I almost went crazy after Mario got busted.
Went back to Omaha to live with my folks, but everyone I used to know was either dead
or in prison.
So I came back to Minneapolis.
This time I think I'm gonna stay.
Bail of Jesse Thorne, please swear them now.
I swear to God, you've done that voice on every single one of these.
That's right.
That's right.
Because it annoys you so much.
Ben and Emily, 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.
Where's your right hand, man?
Oh, okay.
I do.
Yeah, I didn't know if we actually do this.
Yes. Yeah. Yeah. Okay. Yes. We're here. These people paid good money to see you suffer. We're here.
You understand Ben? I do. This is live theater. We're here. I do. I do. I'm not a hologram. I'm not Abba in London.
This is real. Feel me, Ben. This is what it feels like. This is the magic of live theater. Now take that hand and get it up.
Seriously though, don't stand up though. That's too much.
Yeah, don't do that.
That's over the top. Good Rococo.
Do you swear to abide by Judge John Hodgman's ruling despite the fact that he has but six legs?
I do.
I do. Also.
Judge Hodgman, you may proceed. Ben and Emily, you may be seated.
For an immediate summary judgment in one of your favorites, can either of you name the piece of
culture that I referenced as I entered this fake courtroom here in St. Paul, Minnesota? Emily,
let's start with you. You have a guess? Arachnophobia the musical.
Arachnophobia the musical, which doesn't exist, but probably will.
Wrong, playing in Branson right now.
Yeah, that's probably right.
Starring Yakov Shmurnov.
So Arachnophobia the musical.
Arachnophobia is a movie about scary spiders.
Indeed it is. I think that's why we're here today.
That's why we're here today. So that so that's a good guess.
I'm going to put it into the guest book. I'm writing it down now.
Now, Ben, what is your guess?
The Replacements Little Known Blues album.
The Replacements Little Known Blues album, which is called, Ben, what?
What's it called? The Little Knows Blues album?
I don't know. It's so little known that I.
It's so little known that I... It's so little known.
A real deep cut.
All guesses are wrong.
As Jesse well knows, because I've been torturing him
this entire tour, that was my rather poor imitation of Tom
Waits.
I mean, it's not much worse than Tom Waits.
Wow.
The s- yeah. Again, the heel turn was right up top.
Yeah, that's true. We always knew. We always knew.
Sometimes Minnesotan Tom waits. This song is called A Christmas Card from an old friend in Minneapolis.
You're both wrong, so we have to hear this case. Who seeks justice in my fake court?
I do.
It is you. OK, Ben, what is the nature of your
complaint?
So Emily has a terrible fear of spiders.
And so disposing of spiders is typically my job.
But when I'm not home, that then falls to her.
And about a month ago, I was out at dinner with my
cousin and a rather large spider appeared.
And Emily went through quite a bit of trials deciding what to do with this.
She first tried to not really capture and release it in a like a plastic container,
but to capture it and then do something with it.
And I don't wish to save any spiders.
I know it's not my turn to speak, but saving them is not on the table.
So to somehow dispose of the spider via plastic container, which did not go well.
Ultimately, after many dramatic occurrences, she did kill it with a shoe.
And when we were talking about it afterward, I was like, well, probably next time, just go straight to the shoe. Go for the shoe. But she she took exception to this and continues
to contend that a jar or plastic container is the correct means of disposing of the spider, which
is I cannot even imagine how it would go well. By the way, I love your Minnesota accent. Thank you.
Yes. Where are you from in actuality?
I'm from Louisiana originally.
From Louisiana, welcome.
Yeah.
Interesting how quickly you picked it up though.
All right.
Yeah, oh yeah.
So Emily, why not just go to the shoot?
I mean, I was, I presumed that this was all about
how you're trying to save the spider
and release it to the wild.
You want it to die.
I want it to die.
You want our friends, the spiders, to die. I want it to die. You want our friends, the spiders, to die.
I want it to die.
So why not just squish it?
More than I want it to die,
I want to know where its location is.
So first, I did not see the shoe.
You could put an air tag on it.
That would require accessing the spider
more times than I'm interested in doing.
I saw the spider. First thing to do was take a picture of the spider to prove than I'm interested in doing. I saw the spider.
First thing to do was take a picture of the spider to prove to Ben how big it was that
I was going to kill the spider.
I was set on killing it, but I did need to spend a lot of time psyching myself up to
take action.
There was a lot of pep talking, a lot of whatever verbal self soothing needed to occur.
And then I thought ajar, because it was on a vertical surface, which didn't, it seemed
like it could get away.
How long ago was this?
About a month.
About a month ago.
Long enough that I'm still dreaming about it.
You're still traumatized by it.
Yes.
And you took a photo of the spider.
I did.
To prove how big it was.
I did.
And we also have video of you attempting to capture the spider in your jar.
There is video evidence.
And my question to you is who took this video and did you consent to it?
I unfortunately took my own video because we have a video, a camera in our kitchen that started because we would like watch our cats before we were, you know, when we were out of town.
Right.
But then we had a dog and we used it to watch the dog when we were away.
So you had a monitoring camera that was designed to work after your place.
Yes, now it's an actual security camera because we have a three-year-old so the animals have lowered themselves further down
the rungs so we don't watch them at all. You don't care about them anymore. And we only care about security. Yeah.
And the security camera captured this and I sent it to Ben only to be met with feedback about my approach.
Before we get Ben's feedback, we do have the footage. You do have the footage. Now,
Ben's feedback. We do have the footage. You do have the footage.
Now, so I want to clarify about this.
So this is literally you at home alone.
Son's asleep.
Child is asleep. Child sleeping in his crib or what have you.
The pet's somewhere. Who gives a shit about them at this point?
So you're at home, the kid's asleep, the pets are around somewhere, husband's not there.
Did you spot the spider somewhere on a wall?
Couldn't miss it.
How big was the spider, would you say?
Approximately tarantula size.
Approximately tarantula size.
I think there were hairs on the legs.
Well, that is a telltale sign of a tarantula.
It wasn't small. I wouldn't take a picture of a small spider.
Right.
Show with your hands the size of the spider, if you will.
It's not an itsy bitsy spider.
Let the record show that's about the size of a John F. Kennedy
silver dollar.
I'll make it larger for effect, but no, genuinely.
Right.
OK, you saw it there.
And then was the camera already recording,
or did you decide to record it for posterity at that point?
It was already recording. I didn't consider this as part of...
She just went back and got the footage later, yeah.
Now, we're gonna show the footage.
Now, I know that there's more to the story,
because you sent quite a long clip.
It took a long time to work up the courage,
which is part of my strategy.
Oh, no, believe me, and the full video will be available on the Judge John Hodgeman Show page. It took a long time to work up the courage, which is part of my strategy.
And the full video will be available on the Judge John Hoschman show page.
Maybe you actually were going to charge admission for it.
You know, but make sure that you schedule bathroom breaks for the full thing.
But John, I just bought the rights to call it arachnophobia, too.
Oh, wow.
So we did do a little bit of editing, but this I think will give people an idea. Are we
ready to show the video here? Yeah, here it is. The Fitzgerald Theatre in St. Paul. So that, I mean,
there's nothing there for scale other than a door. It looks quite big. That's a normal sized door.
I would like to note that it's in a crevice, which is again, a jar. I just can't imagine.
But a shoe, I mean, a shoe couldn't perfectly do that. It's a curved surface. It's vertical.
It's like that old joke. Take a minute.
Wait, I guess it would be when is a shoe in a crevice when it's a jar? I don't know. I sort of got out over my size.
Round of applause, Bale of Jesse Thorne. So your point is in this image, where the spider is
positioned, neither a shoe nor neither a jar nor a shoe could have done it. The only thing that could
have gotten the spider was what happened next.
Let's take a look. Let's go to the tape, Jesse Thorne.
["Jesse Thorne's Spiderman Theme"] Very impressive footage.
Emily I'm sorry that you were in such obvious distress at that time.
Perhaps but at the end I was just proud.
That's why I sent it to him.
Look what I did. You got it in the jar. I didn't. That's why I sent it to him. Look what I did.
You got it in the jar.
I did not get it in the jar.
The jar was-
I did see a jar in your hand.
At one point I thought,
better than standing still would be to do something.
Often true.
And I thought-
Unless there's a T-Rex.
The only thing worse than this spider being here
is the spider being loose after a missed
attempt.
Right.
I mean, I'm not athletic.
The spider was probably fast.
Yeah.
I couldn't know that it was around me, so I thought, just make it be still in this jar
that I brought for you. Oh.
This is the jar itself?
This is the jar.
It's a little piece of Tupperware or something.
It's going to let you down if you think it's a jar.
It's a plastic container that's used for, I suppose.
Storing a single grape.
Yes.
I wasn't ever going to.
Or a nice-sized spider.
I wasn't going to store the spider.
I thought I could, you know, ha and scoop it.
Right. Yeah, yeah, yeah. You thought you could put the container over the spider and then slip something in and then you would have it contained.
Yes, and in the full video you'll see that I do very calmly do this and the spider didn't move. So it half worked.
It half worked.
I'm just going to repeat, we are not able to play
the full video because this is only a 90 minute show.
Yeah.
Case in point, it took me a lot of courage just to.
Absolutely.
Move my arm.
And it half worked and then you lost control of the spider.
I fully lost control. And the resolution was you ended up smushing it and I smushed it. Okay
What is this evidence seeking to prove exactly?
that at least the jar spurred me into
some kind of action
To kill the spider you see the jar is an inspirational figure
In fact, I believe I do the spider. You see the jar as an inspirational figure? Ha ha ha.
In fact, I believe I do.
Ha ha.
Knock, knock, knock.
You're listening to Judge John Hodgman.
I'm bailiff Jesse Thorne.
Of course, the Judge John Hodgman podcast always
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Thanks to everybody who's gone to MaximumFun.org slash join,
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Ben, what do you make of this footage? Obviously, Emily is very distressed.
Yeah. So, you know, I think she sent it to me as a I think both a like this is funny and that she
was proud of herself that she had actually like a kill like achieved killing the spider.
But it honestly like was very hard for me to watch.
Like it was like painful to see her in that much distress. And then also like we have this probably somewhat pathologic desire to like split
all things equitably, like that we kind of split up our household work and even our
finances and everything.
But this is like one piece of the thing that this is like my thing because she has
this terrible fear.
You're designated Spider-Man.
Right. And I had failed by not being there in some way.
And so so when we were talking about it later. Why aren't you in the house 24 hours a day on Spider-Man. Right, and I had failed by not being there in some way. And so when we were talking about it later...
Why aren't you in the house 24 hours a day on Spider-Lookout?
That's true. I mean, I aspire to be, but I do step out sometimes.
So, you know, when we were talking about it afterward, I really like, I mean, I don't...
I know it sounds really like, you know, like mansplaining to say, like, next time
you should do it better. But it was truly like as a trying to like to say, it was definitely doing that.
But mostly just because I don't want to.
Instead of offering actual advice, you say, why don't you just do it better?
Right. I mean, but truly, like, I would like to know that the next time this happens, and I'm not available to come dispose of the spider, that we won't have a repeat of the same situation.
And then when she says, oh, no, I'm going to use the jar again, that then makes me like realize I don't want her to go through that again.
Whereas if she'd just come at it with the shoe, I'm pretty sure that the spider would have been gone. Emily, are you saying that if a spider comes into your house again, you want to go through
this exact same process again?
I don't know that I can avoid it.
I'm scared enough.
I would like to be the person who says, I see a spider, where is the shoe?
I'm going to kill you.
Now it will happen.
But I can't. Sure. Now it will happen. But I don't care.
Sure, I know that person.
Yeah.
The famous stock character from Commedia del Arte.
Do you not consider a shoe to be inspirational?
The shoe was outside of my direct line of sight.
The shoe was a, like, Oh, the spider is
behind now that now the spider has my worst fear really is
true that the spider has escaped and I don't know where it is.
Look around to see anything I could do. I really thought this
is my moment. Ben is gone. There is a large spider. I will
prove to him with this photo that I have killed this thing
and I will grab a Kleenex and I can smush it yeah but I couldn't do it I couldn't do
it well Kleenex is different from a shoe if you were to kill the spider let me
just say I'm not I don't understand why you're killing spiders anyway I thought
that this whole plan was you were gonna get it into what we're calling a jar
even though it's a piece of plastic and you were gonna to get it into what we're calling a jar, even though it's a piece of plastic,
and you were going to then put it outside,
because spiders are helpful creatures.
Sorry.
No, I mean, do you like flies?
Do you like mosquitoes?
It's funny you ask.
Do you like silverfish?
We have a bit of a fly problem.
Yes.
So I do recognize the irony.
We could have maybe used this spider.
Spiders are your friends.
Some spiders even eat other spiders.
Did you know the brown recluse spider
is very dangerous, venomous, you know?
Yes, I was sure this was one.
And do you know what eats the brown recluse spider?
A black recluse.
Don't you see that the spider was black and large
and looked like a brown recluse?
It might have been, but I'm saying that if you had a spitting spider in your house, it would eat the
brown recluse. Wouldn't that be fun to have a spitting spider in your house, Emily?
No.
Emily, are you suggesting the existence of a rainbow of recluse spiders?
I mean, they had to name it brown for some reason, otherwise it would just be the recluse.
Like different kinds of kryptonite.
That's a very good point.
I will say we do also know someone who was bitten tragically.
I mean, she's alive, but.
By a Brown recluse.
The energy went to a very weird place for a moment.
I had you for a second.
Thank you for saving.
She was bitten, a friend of ours bitten by a brown recluse and did-
I bet it was not fun.
It was not fun. She almost died, yeah.
And so I'm sure that any spider that size
or general shade of rainbow is not good for me.
This is in Minnesota that you saw this?
She's in Tennessee, but we don't have brown recluses.
But I did grow up in a house with brown recluses, so I'm, you know, wired internally.
What a strange parenting move.
I don't know if you've explored this in therapy yet,
but you might...
There might be a connection between the fact
that your parents raised you with siblings
that were brown recluse spiders
and the fact that you don't love spiders now.
Huh, interesting. I don't know.
Emily, do you have any other... tell me about bicycles. How do you feel about bicycles?
Well, it's another thing I'm... was previously afraid of. I'm an adult bike learner. It is
indeed not true that you, you know, never forget how to ride a bike.
Well, you... if you've never learned...
But I did, I did learn.
Oh, you learned.
I grew up riding a bike.
And then you forgot?
And then I just didn't for about 20 years.
Hold up, what else is a lie?
Heh, heh, heh.
Heh, heh, heh.
Spiders are good for the world.
They are good for the world!
That's another lie.
Not all of them, but neither are all humans.
In fact, most aren't.
In fact, let's go, Bramerclusis, do your job.
Well, I relearned how to ride a bike.
I spent a long time not knowing.
I'm very afraid of falling.
I'm not a generally anxious person.
I don't think this evening is doing a great job
of proving it.
Just the basics, like spiders. Could you send us four hours of footage of you just being calm in your kitchen?
Yes! I will!
Spiders, snakes, falling off a mountain or falling off a bike.
I'm not into those things.
And so, I didn't ride a bike.
Interesting Tinder profile.
I hope I won't need one after tonight.
Well, what does this come down to in fact?
Ben, what would you have me rule
if I were to rule in your favor?
I mean, just that she not tried the jar again.
Like, I truly don't want to,
like, I don't want to see something,
like we don't have cameras in every room in the house,
so probably I wouldn't have to see it,
but I would like to not have to watch her go through that distress again.
And also just to admit that, like, like she says, but maybe I would miss with the shoe.
And my counter is, well, you did miss with the jar.
So what would you say?
You mentioned yourself that where the spider was positioned in the photograph, a shoe would not do.
I think it actually might have. I think enough of the spider was up, but I would have just would not do. I think it actually might have,
I think enough of the spider was up,
but I would have just gone with the paper towel
or something and tried to smush it.
Yeah, but you can't go with the paper towel
because then you're just gonna feel it go
and you're, you know what I'm talking about Emily?
You're just gonna hear it go.
And then it might just get out like one little tooth.
Stop!
One little tooth at the last minute.
I don't think they have teeth.
I don't think.
Yeah, yeah, they have teeth.
They have a lot of teeth.
I now know how many eyes they have
because our son has requested to be a spider for Halloween.
But there are no teeth.
The sins of the parent are visited on the other parent.
He specifically says he wants to be a cute spider,
not a scary spider so they won't scare moms.
Oh, very adorable.
But still a spider.
That's what's thing is a cute spider.
I don't understand, Emily, if I'm to rule in your favor,
what, to go with the jar approach again?
To do whatever I need to do.
Oh.
It might be a jar.
I mean, it didn't work. I know that. But to take the time to psych myself
up to really make a plan and to do what I need to do. The spider got killed and I was not
distressed. Okay, yeah. In the moment, I was.
But afterwards, there's no...
There's very little lasting trauma.
Only pride. Only pride.
Do you think that you're gonna get better
at killing spiders over time?
I've gotten better in the last month
since submitting this case
because I feel like they've been following me.
And I've probably smushed, jarless, at least five other spiders in our house.
Wow.
Not that size.
Not that size.
Just small, regular spiders.
And how have you worked your average killing time down to five to 10 minutes or so?
It's gotten down.
I will say on one occasion I did call Ben to kill the spider and the spider got away.
Right.
It did get away.
So even smushing isn't perfect.
Ben, why aren't you there to kill the spiders?
I try.
So you don't want us to interfere with your method.
How do you feel when Ben tells you you're doing it wrong?
I feel emboldened to stick by the jar.
And what did you say about the spiders are now following you?
I feel like I skipped over that part.
I mean it's an old house in the fall.
Is it coincidence?
Right. They saw you torture that spider to death.
And now it's vengeance.
It might be its baby.
I think I've heard everything I need to in order to make my decision.
I'm going to go down into my creepy cellar.
I'll be back in a moment with my verdict.
Please rise as Judge Sean Hodgman exits the courtroom.
Ben, how are you feeling about your chances?
I mean, not great.
Why is that? I mean, not great. Why is that?
I mean, I knew I didn't have much standing,
but I would like to stress that, like, it's truly out of a...
just a desire not to watch her, like, be distressed,
because to me, she seemed very distressed in the video.
Emily, have you thought about putting together, like,
a family emergency plan? Have I thought about it? There's a plan. How are you feeling about your chances?
I feel pretty good. I feel like, you know, what am I a human being in my own right?
right? Wow. Well, we'll see whether Judge Hodgeman disagrees. Please rise as Judge John Hodgeman exits the corner he's been backed into and presents his verdict.
Ben, thank you for bringing your wife to the stage
and consenting for her to appear in public.
Well, normally I don't approve of such a thing.
I'm glad you ordered her to be here so that we can all learn a lesson.
No, of course, Emily is not merely your wife and partner.
She has a whole human being in her own right.
And she hates spiders, and genuinely.
And I appreciate that not only are you afraid of spiders,
which is a pretty common fear and not an unreasonable one, as we know.
My own wife was a whole human being in her own right,
was bitten not by a brown recluseuse but as a big scar from a spider bite
they can do some real damage. One should be wary about them even
though they are generally friends to all creatures except the ones they eat which
are also the ones I hate so I like spiders the enemy of my enemy is my
friend Spidey. I also appreciate the fact Emily that you are confronting your
fears. You learned to ride a Emily, that you are confronting your fears.
You learned to ride a bike, even though you are a strange,
almost Barnum-style freak who forgot how to ride a bike.
You should charge tickets.
You should go on speaking tours.
It's amazing to me.
But I appreciate that you did ask Ben to come home, but what you want to preserve is your own method of taking care of the spider.
And I want to preserve that as well, because after all, you know, I know that it causes
you distress to see Emily going through this long,
long process in the kitchen. But you have to understand, like she doesn't want to go to the
shoe first. She's got the jar. She's got to figure that out first. Obviously, part of the process,
I'm guessing, is that you want to see that spider in the jar. So you can look at it and go, Yeah,
I got you. And then once the jar is closed, and it has no air, you can watch it slowly die.
And that's part of the process
that you have of overcoming your phobia.
And also part of the process is apparently
filming yourself while doing it.
I'm not here to kink shame.
I think that that's a good process.
I think honestly, Ben, you should not watch these videos,
but Emily, you should consider putting them online
and making a fortune.
I think this could be a very popular account.
But mostly I think Emily just wants to be seen and heard
and understood as the individual that she is
who is not ready to just go to the shoe.
Now, she was a terrible way.
First of all, don't kill spiders.
Don't kill spiders.
They're easy to deal with
They're big lumbering dummies. They don't want to hurt you. They're afraid of you
I actually support the jar technique not so that you can turn it into a killing jar
But over time your fear you might be able to put enough of your fear behind you that you can actually take that jar and bring
It outside rather than smack a shoe against the wall and get spider guts all over your wall,
when that thing really truly means no harm, and actually does a lot of good around the house.
Unless it's a brand recluse. You should identify what the spider is, and then make a decision.
Maybe you can get a kind of spray if it's a terrible poisonous spider.
Do you know what I mean? If you really just want to kill that thing, I think that's reasonable.
If the spider's coming for you, That's a, there's a long distance possibility.
But until then, I encourage you to go on your spider trapping and killing journey that is your own.
And I hope that eventually, like, I mean, because that's the only way to get over phobias pretty much is immersion therapy, right?
Just do it again and again and again until it becomes a kind of routine for you and a very profitable YouTube channel.
This is the sound of a gavel. Judge John Hodgman rules. That is all.
Ben and Emily, thanks for joining us on the Judge John Hodgman podcast.
I'm Sequoia Holmes, pop-culturist and host of the Black People Love Paramore podcast.
Contrary to the title, it is not a podcast
about the band Paramore.
Each episode, I, along with a special guest co-host,
dissect one pop culture topic that mainstream media
doesn't associate with Black people,
but we know that we like.
Tune in every Thursday to the podcast that's dedicated
to helping Black people feel more seen,
here on Maximum Fun.
I'm Yucky Jessica. I'm Chuck Crudsworth. dedicated to helping black people feel more seen here on Maximum Fun. Rachel and Griffin McElroy, a real life married couple. Yuck!
Discuss a wide range of topics.
Music, video games, poetry, snacks.
But I hate all that stuff.
I know you do yucky Jessica.
It comes out every Wednesday, the worst day of the week, wherever you download your podcasts.
For our next topic we're talking Fiona the baby hippo from the Cincinnati Zoo.
I hate this little hippo.
Judge Hatchman, we're taking a quick break and you've got the Solid Sound Festival
coming right around the corner.
What more is there to say?
June 29th will be the Solid Sound Comedy portion
hosted by me and Jean Grey featuring Sydney Washington,
Brittany Carney, Eugene Merman,
Dave Hill, Todd Barry and more.
Come check it out if you're going to be in Western Massachusetts.
It's going to be a wonderful time.
And of course, a little band called Wilco is playing too.
You can go to Solid Sound, Google it, you'll find it.
It'll be fun.
Jesse, what's going on with you?
Well, I actually also have a live event for Once in My Life
on June 13th in Pasadena, California at LAist, the former KPCC at the Crawford, I will be
doing a live Bullseye interview with our pal, Paul Scheer.
Paul has a brand new book out.
I can talk to him about his book and his crazy life.
Paul is one of the loveliest and funniest dudes that there is.
I'm really looking forward to talking to him. Tickets are free. is crazy life. Paul is one of the loveliest and funniest dudes that there is.
I'm really looking forward to talking to him.
Tickets are free.
You can also get fancy tickets that come with Paul's book.
I would encourage you to do that.
You can find that information
by just Googling Jesse Thorne, Paul Scheer,
or going to laist.com, but it's June 13th.
And again, like you can come to the show for free.
It's gonna be a really nice time.
It's also John, very near Father's Day.
And I happen to have a shop that sells things that are perfect for Father's Day.
I happen to, including, I found a length of fabric, John, that is a printed cotton from
the fifties, specifically commemorating Father's Day that I made into pocket squares.
There's only a few of these left, but you can find it at putthisonshop.com.
Among the many, many other things, we've just added all kinds of new stuff to the store.
We've been adding and adding and adding.
I would recommend that a dad might enjoy what the new watches we've added to the shop.
He might enjoy one of the new bracelets or, or, uh, I just added a Tiffany tie
clip to the shop.
Um, there's also a lot of new ladies stuff in the store.
We've really gone wild adding stuff and many, many, many pairs of shoes.
If you want to really find pair of shoes, uh, there are a lot of them at
put this on shop.com right now.
And I just made a code weird dad.
Nice.
Use the code weird dad, get 10% off anything in the store.
So use that code.
If you're a judge, John Hodgman listener at put this on shop.com.
Uh, we have everything from, uh, jewelry for men and women to cards and games.
We've got, um, uh, as I said, shoes, vintage clothes.
Can I get a little leather baseball glove?
There is a little tiny leather baseball glove.
There's also, I have a few, a few left of these, like, uh, homework folders
that are made to look like 1989 tops baseball cards.
Yeah.
We've got Andre Dawson.
Of course, you know, the Hawk.
Okay.
El gato grande, Andre Scalaraga, the big cat.
Yeah.
We're sold out of Mike Greenwell of the Boston Red Sox.
I know that's your team.
Yeah.
We've got Danny Jackson, left-handed pitcher for the Reds.
Yep.
Another great ball player.
Uh, we're sold out. We're sold out of Big Mac great ball player. Uh, we're sold out.
We're sold out of big Mac Mark Maguire.
Uh, we got Mike's, we got Mike Scott, I think from the Houston Astros.
Another great ball player.
We've got, look, just go to put this on shop.com.
Take a look at all these wonderful treasures.
Uh, there's everything from, from, you know, things that cost eight or $10 to,
uh, look, I just posted if, if
your initial is R, I just posted a gargantuan sterling Tiffany bowl.
Saw that.
That you're going to lose your mind over.
It is your dad.
If your dad is named Richard or Rolf or Rory or Roatan, this is beautiful.
Tiffany silver bowl
right there waiting for you. Beautiful, beautiful gift.
Yeah, if your dad is is Rockwell, the guy who sings the
song somebody's watching me.
It feels that way. Feels like it. Yeah. Yeah. Anyway, put this
on shop.com and use the code weird dad, weird dad.
I listen. There's some real weird dad stuff in here like
this 1950s. Look at the Irish clip on bow tie.
Somebody's dad is going to get that and love it. You got an Irish Irish Irish American dad.
Go get this bow tie. It's terrific. But for the it's also good for people of all family roles.
There's we've added a lot of ladies jewelry lately that I really love. So go to putthisonshop.com.
We also have some awesome, this is something I got at a flea market in Arizona that I am
so pumped about and it's cheap, made it cheap.
These newspaper aprons, like the aprons that a guy who sells the newspaper on a street
corner or on a highway median or whatever.
Yeah, I know the guy you mean.
I have one for the Chicago American.
Two different styles for the Chicago American.
One for the Kiwanis Club and one for DuPont Imaging Systems.
I don't know.
And Chicago Today.
Sweet Newspaperman apron it's called. Go to putthisonshop.com.
Go to putthisonshop.com.
Just looking at this website will bring you delight.
There's so much fun stuff to look at here and get some.
I love looking at it.
Okay, we'll be back in just a second on Judge John Hodgman.
John, we have a lot more justice to dispense,
but we also have some good news to dispense.
That's exactly right.
We have a friend of the court here tonight with us.
It says you're a local talent, but that's not true.
He is a global talent.
He is a pan-dimensional talent who is simply manifesting on this plane of St. Paul, Minnesota,
briefly, and we're lucky to share meat space with him during this time.
You know him from a little something called Rift Rats
and Mystery Science Theater 3000.
Please welcome Kevin Murphy.
Yeah!
Thank you for performing the ceremonial kick.
You know, I haven't seen you, Kevin,
since we were in this very theater together
probably about four years ago.
That's right, yes. And what is it like to live in this theater?
I should go home every now and again, but you know, it just gets into your blood.
I know, absolutely.
You have your little hidey hole up there and you peer down on all the performances and you sing sad songs.
It's wonderful.
I've urinated in every corner of this theater.
Kevin, I saw you not all that long ago at San Francisco SketchFest. But since I last saw you, you have become a
novelist.
One of five novelists. There's five of us from Rift Racks.
I think there are in the world.
My Rift Racks, Kung Friars and I wrote a book, Connor Lestokka
and Sean Thomas and Bill Corbett and Michael J. Nelson.
And it's called, The Naked Clone, A Nick Nolte Mystery.
Now, when you say it-
It's a mystery novel.
It's a mystery novel.
And the detective is?
Nick Nolte. Nick Nolte.
Oh, okay.
I just assumed that the mystery was Nick Nolte
because I've always just been like, Nick Nolte. Well, we have a lot of fun with Nick Nolte because I've always just been like Nick Nolte
Well, we have a we have a lot of fun with Nick Nolte at riff tracks I think he's mentioned in just about every title that we've done and in all our live shows and and Mike Nelson does a great
impression a throat
severing impression of Nick Nolte
and
We thought of it. Oh, Nick Nolte is kind of like Tom Waits meets a Vitamix
It's even worse than that compadre
And I can't do it because I just might throw it I just don't have a beautiful throat but
So we decided we had always wanted to do this
Exercise that we've done in the past where someone takes the first chapter and then we hand the book off to someone else right takes the next chapter and we get
get to do no editing no revising we don't know what you know we know what
happened before but we don't know what happens next this is what's called an
exquisite corpse which is also Nick Nolte's wife's nickname for it that's
right one hell of a corpse Paco is for sure. And it's fun to
imitate him and it's fun to make well I mean now you look at the guy I mean maybe we pick
on him a little unfairly you know one bad mugshot and one video of you in your pajamas
diving through a dumpster. Suddenly you've got a reputation it's not fair. That's right
you wake up one time under the bench
in an airport concourse,
and then people start to think things about you.
So we've embellished his character to extremes.
The plot, as thin as it is, involves actors in Hollywood
being kidnapped and clones of them being put
out into the world to take their places.
Ah, that sounds good.
Sinister.
You said that you wrote every fifth chapter?
Every fifth chapter, yes.
Sounds like cheating.
I love it.
Next time count me in.
Writing a whole book is hard.
It is, yeah.
The Naked Clone A Nick Nolte mystery is available where, Kevin Murphy?
It's available at Rifttreks.com or at Amazon,
either as an ebook or in print.
Now you're not just an author and a singer
with a beautiful throat.
Thank you.
And obviously a comedic genius.
We have no choice but to stand this gorgeous threat.
Yeah, we have no choice.
We have no choice.
It's obligatory.
You are also a very accomplished nose-flutist.
You play the nose flute.
I am. I do.
Please don't take it out.
I won't.
Don't take it out and don't play it.
I just wanted to mention it and we're not going to talk about it again.
No, okay.
Because we've got a segment coming up called Swift Justice.
This is where we hear as many cases as possible and how much time, Jesse Thorne?
15 minutes, baby.
15 minutes.
And to make it even more challenging and fun, frankly,
Kevin, would you stick around and
I really want your expertise?
I really wanted to play the nose flute, but I'll stick around.
No, no, thank you. No nose flute.
I appreciate that. All right.
Why don't we get going on our actual segment, Kevin?
I don't know why you keep bringing up the nose flute.
It's a little. Yes.
So we already pulled your book.
Just take it easy with the nose flute.
All right. All right. All right. Let's put 15 minutes on the clock and welcome to the stage
Karsten and Abel. Karsten is a former community college teacher who currently writes and hosts
bar trivia. He is here with his son Abel who's a physics student at Bethel University. All right.
Welcome to the court of Judge John Hodgman.
Karsten, this is, this case regards a game of Scattergories.
Is that correct?
Yes, it is.
Very good.
Abel, you played this game of Scattergories
with your dad, is that correct?
That's correct.
Can you explain for those who may not know,
or for me who hates Scattergories,
how it's played again?
Yeah, so it's a fun word game where each round you roll.
It's a word game. We don't make your eyes.
Thank you. It's a word game.
Wow. You're really running into a a boggle buzzsaw over here.
I don't care for boggle either, but let's go ahead.
It's a word game. It's a word game.
OK, we got that covered.
You roll a 20 sided die each round, which gives you a letter, and there's a card with
prompts on it, and you have to come up with something that fulfills the prompt that starts
with the letter that you rolled.
So in the case of the game at hand and the dispute at hand, a letter and a category came
up.
What was that, please?
The letter was B, and the category was foods that are round.
Foods that are round that start with the letter B.
And Karsten, what did you offer as a reply?
Banana.
Banana.
Banana.
Foods that are round starting with the letter B. Banana.
How many points did you award your father for this incredible reply?
Zero.
Zero points.
I see.
Karsten, how is a banana round? Well, I mean going back to when this kid was 20 pounds in a high chair, I was slicing up the bananas.
Whoa, whoa, whoa, whoa, whoa, whoa, whoa.
Every one of them was round and that's how he knew them first.
Hey, hey, hey, hey, we don't have time for all this. This isn't like Will Begon.
I'm not going back to his birth. He knew them first. Hey, we don't have time for all this. This isn't Lake Wilbegon.
We're not going back to his birth.
I apologize, Carson. You were saying I don't want to.
I don't want to. I don't want to.
Oh, do you tell a kid, do you want bananas on your cereal?
Every one of them will be around.
Oh, so you're saying when you...
Slices of bananas are around.
But but but slices of banana starts with an S, doesn't it?
He was two.
He was learning the word banana.
When did you play this game of Scatagoras?
No, no, no, no.
When he had the medallions of banana.
Abel's a genius.
I mean, he is kind of, but...
This kid was running Backstreet Scatagories games
in the streets of St. Paul when he was two years old.
Taking his dad down.
When was the game, actually, though?
About five years ago.
About five years ago, and... So I was more than two. You were more than two. I was the game actually though? Not five years ago. About five years ago and?
So I was more than two.
You were more than two?
I was more than two.
And what do you remember of the night? Was this a hotly disputed answer?
Yeah. Yeah, I was.
Yeah. Who else was playing?
My two older siblings. It was just us four.
Right. Okay. And you awarded your dad zero points, but now you're suing to get the points back.
As I remember it, I conceded the point to keep the peace
so we didn't lose this game altogether.
Right.
The way that my family of origin has.
To keep the peace or retain the grudge?
This is a long and bitter memory for you both, isn't it?
Yes.
Kevin Murphy, what do you make of this case?
Well, in a purely Euclidean sense,
I kind of side with dad here,
because yes, slice it on a plane.
There is roundness, the quality of roundness in a banana.
Maybe not prima facie, but somewhere in there,
roundness dying to get out.
Thinking outside the peel, if you will.
Yes, thinking outside the peel.
You were right not to laugh.
Yes.
I knew it was wrong when I said it, and I apologize.
So you support the dad, then, Kevin Murphy?
Uh, yes.
I see.
And, Carson, does this still come up in conversation?
How do you keep this grudge alive?
Oh, well, it gets used both ways.
If I say something that the kids think is ridiculous.
Oh, and bananas are round.
If they if they say something that I think is creative thinking,
I say, ah, and bananas around.
The double edged banana, if you will.
Sure, sure. Why did you laugh at that?
That was terrible.
What's wrong with you? What sure why did you laugh at that that was terrible wrong with you wrong with you
able what would you have me roll if i were to rule in your favor so my dad's trying to
win points that are not justly awarded to him so i think it would be fair that i get to veto one of
his points in any future game of my choosing that he well Well, who won the game back five years ago?
Oh, no one remembers.
I don't know.
It's irrelevant. It's irrelevant.
Surely the winner would remember.
Well, we don't.
It's not something you remember. It's like riding a bike.
There were...
There were so many games, but only one banana dispute.
You gotta replay the game.
That's all you have to do, replay the game.
I'm not giving you a point for that.
That was very creative thinking.
But this is Scatagory's, god damn it.
Round banana will not stand.
I'm sorry, Kevin Murphy, but everyone, when you picture a banana, no, they say.
Yes, I say.
Picture a banana in your head. It is a crescent shape.
It is not round. I'm sorry, Carson.
It does not stand. You must replay the game
until there is an established winner.
Carson, I wish you the best of luck.
I'm gutted.
Thank you, Carson and Abel.
Let's welcome to the stage Christina and Nate.
Christina is an orthopedic surgeon
who likes to swim competitively.
Nate is a pathologist.
They have two kids and a cat named Suki. Two kids and a cat named Suki. Who seeks justice in this
big courtroom? I do, Your Honor. Christina, what is the nature of your complaint? Our cat Suki is an
indoor cat, never goes outside, and she likes to spend time looking out through the screen door,
but there's an orange cat in the neighborhood who comes by and taunts her.
Taunts her.
Taunts her.
Like you say that Nate has a feud with this cat.
He has a feud with the cat. But the feud is that he has figured out where the cat
lives and wants to go ask the owners to keep the cat indoors.
Wow. You want to tell the owners how to run their own cat business?
Okay. I mean, I'm not crazy.
Like, I don't think this is how the best defenses start.
Wait, wait. OK, I'm not crazy.
Yeah. I mean, I think the chances of success here are pretty low.
OK, my client is not crazy.
What is the nature of this orange cat?
Chaos, pure chaos, evil?
Describe this cat.
I just have to say we went on a walk earlier today and it was hysterical because the orange cat came wandering by and ran up to Nate and rubbed on his leg.
Yes.
As if they were friends.
That's right.
It was playing.
And I have video evidence too.
It was uncanny.
You have video evidence of the cat playing mind games with Nate?
I do.
Yeah, because it knew it was he was taking it to court and he was trying to.
He did.
Yeah, trying to influence the jury.
This was judgment day.
Yeah, absolutely.
We don't have that video evidence, but we do have some photographic evidence of the cats in question.
May I see that, please?
That is Suki sitting in a box
with a pair of dangerously placed open scissors.
You say you care about this cat?
That cat's gonna get a cut paw.
-"Mail me away from the orange cat, daddy."
That's a very cute indoor cat.
Now let's take a look at the orange cat.
Oh, look at that asshole.
Skulking away.
What might have the orange cat been doing
just before this photo was taken?
God only knows.
You say you know the owners of this orange cat.
You have identified who they are.
Yes.
You do not know the orange cat's name
because it doesn't matter.
It is a beast to you that should be stopped.
Exactly.
John, I believe its name is Nick Nolte.
I'll allow it for the purpose of this case.
Nick Nolte the cat.
Yeah.
You say it taunts Suki.
I hear that you taunt it with a garden hose.
Yes.
I mean, wait, wait, I'm not crazy.
My life hasn't been so deranged that I'm spraying a cat with a garden hose because I fear it.
Did you spray the cat with a garden hose?
Yes.
I see.
Thank you for your honesty.
How do you know that Suki is being tormented by this cat?
Nick Nolte will come in the backyard and just kind of be wandering around.
Suki will be-
Oh, how dare it.
Well, right.
I mean, it's my property.
And Suki will be sitting by the back door and will start making all these weird noises
and start jumping up on the screens and like, yeah, I mean she's
Honked off. She's freaked out. Yeah. Yeah. Yeah. Yeah. Would you say Christina that Nick Nolte bothers Suki or bothers Nate more?
I would say that at this point Nate definitely gets more incensed when the orange cat comes around than Suki does
I mean Suki is interested, but she's keeping it together.
And Nate is like tearing out of the house
like a bat out of hell.
You want to go over to the neighbors
and tell them to keep their damn cat home?
I'd like to try.
How would you phrase it?
You know, I'd maybe bring-
First of all, I'm not crazy.
Right.
No, I'd maybe bring a plate of cookies and say, listen, I'm sorry we
haven't had a chance to meet before. Uh-huh. Here's some cookies. Keep your damn cat
inside. No, I mean, you know, I'd be a nice guy about it. I'm not a monster. We should have just
ahead of time gotten a list of the different stuff you're not. Kevin Murphy, I don't have a lot of experience with neighborly relations in the Twin Cities or the Midwest.
How do you think that that would go over at a house?
Depending on the neighborhood.
You have a pet as well, do you not?
Yeah, a dog. I'm not a cat person. I'd rather have a pet spider.
I believe we have some evidence of that dog. Can we see that, please?
Her name is Vida.
There she is.
Oh!
Yeah.
What cat can compare?
I'm asking you.
So let's try this out.
Nate.
Yeah.
Take that microphone out of there.
Just pull it forward.
Now, pretend you have a plate of cookies,
and go tell Kevin Murphy to keep his dog off your damn property.
Kevin Murphy, here's some cookies, snickerdoodles.
I hear you play a mead.
That's a cookie made from a dog, Nate.
Disgusting.
I mean, if we could get together and hear a nose flute
sometime, I'd love that.
This isn't going well.
Jesse, get the hose. Get the hose, Jesse.
All right, Nate, please return to your area. You know, I
understand that you are protective of your cat, Suki. Your
cat is very cute looking. It is clearly an indoor cat. It kind
of reminds me of my cat, which is an indoor cat and kind of a
dumb dumb cat. But I'm going to suggest that perhaps perhaps
this other cat Nick Nolte will call it is actually bringing a
level of stimulation and excitement to Suki's life. And
one of the other things that you need to remember is that cats
are inherently anti anti capitalist, because every cat
knows none of this is your property. Leave Nick Nolte alone. This is the sound of a gavel.
Thank you, Christina and Nate. Let's welcome to the stage Kate and Brian.
Kate is from Minnesota, works at the University of Minnesota, and is part of a cookbook club.
She met her husband Brian at work through her dad.
At the University of Minnesota? at work through her dad.
At the University of Minnesota? You work with your dad at the University of Minnesota?
He used to work there. He's retired now.
And I'm sorry, Brian, what do you do? You hang around the university?
Well, of course.
Yeah. Do you have a position there?
A software development.
Oh, okay. Excellent. Who seeks justice here in my fake court?
I do.
Fine. Kate, what is the nature of your complaint?
I seek justice for myself and for the citizens of the state of Minnesota,
because we have been told that we play our childhood game incorrectly just because
it is different from the game played by the rest of the country.
Something's happening.
Kevin Murphy, you're a native Chicagoan, but you've lived here a long time.
Do you sense this?
I think this is the first time people in Minnesota has shown anger in about 35 years. It's palpable. It's palpable
I feel it. Yes. All right, please continue. I apologize. Our game is different and it is superior like our lake
And everyone here knows what I'm talking about it is duck duck
Crap And everyone here knows what I'm talking about. It is Duck Duck. Great Duck! Holy crap.
Guys, I'll leave if you want me to.
Okay, and I don't know what you're talking about. Brian, can...
Are you from Minnesota originally, Brian?
I am not. I grew up in Chicago as well.
Can you explain to me? You're from Chicago as well?
Yeah. What is your beloved partner talking about?
Duck Duck Goose. Right? Yeah. So the game, the childhood game that you and I and Kevin,
did you grow up playing Duck Duck Goose? Never played it. No, that's right. You never played
any recess games at all. No, just, you know, beat each other Goose? Never played it. No, that's right. You never played any recess games at all?
Just, you know, beat each other with a Whiffle bat.
That was our recess game.
Yeah.
Chicago.
Chicago.
Yeah, Chicago.
But Jesse, you've heard of it.
I've heard of the game Duck Duck Goose before.
What did you know?
Back at the Discovery Center School in San Francisco,
it was either Duck Duck Goose
or very occasionally Hamburger Hamburger Cheeseburger.
Oh. So tell me about Duck Duck Gray Duck.
Please Kate and only you.
It does bear a striking resemblance.
You do sit in a circle and you tap everyone on the shoulder or the head and you wait until you get
to the last person who becomes it by saying in our case gray duck and then you run around the circle you
Try to catch each other now there is a
Self-limiting factor here because you have to say a different color every time you tap someone and you cannot repeat
There's also the great psych out where you say
Green duck whoa
great psych out where you say green duck. Whoa.
And I don't know about everyone here, but I remember distinctly
being in kindergarten and being excited when somebody got the
big pack of 24 crayons and we learned new colors that we could
use in the game at recess.
What were some of the other fake out colors? I can't grass
duck.
Well, we didn't have green was the only good psych out one, but like I remember Seafoam.
That was like...
Seafoam duck. Yeah.
If you spent some time at a Benjamin Moore store, you could really come up with some real
innovations. Okay.
So there's a little bit more strategy.
It is a different game then.
Oh, yeah.
And what happens when you when you finally say gray duck, that person is it.
And what happens then?
Well, then you run around the circle and you try to get back to their spot.
Before they do. Before they do. Before they get you.
Right. Okay. And what is the what is the bottle of liquid that you're holding?
Oh yeah. So we're really proud of this. Like I'm wearing a gray duck shirt and like this is a bottle of vodka called gray duck.
I thought I something something alcohol molar.
I was well okay okay. I'll
Thank you for condemning me to check a bag at the airport tomorrow
If gives work at the Supreme Court, why not here? Yeah, that's exactly right. I very objectively have found in Kate's favor
Not exactly that's interesting because I was going to suggest an adult alternative called duck duck gray goose
But obviously the people of Minnesota have gotten there before me.
They're a little bit faster in the game of Duck Duck Gray Duck.
Look, we have almost a circle here.
I think there's only one way to solve this.
Let's play a game.
Is it okay if I tap you?
Consent?
Oh yes, you may tap my body or and I think my colleagues as well.
Orange duck.
Yellow duck.
Green duck.
Gray duck.
You didn't even run around.
He got me.
He tagged you? He tagged me. I don't think that. You got to even run around. He got me. He tagged you? He tagged me.
I don't think that.
You got to go once around.
Okay.
Get me.
Watch the ukulele.
Careful.
Brian, I love you, but obviously Kate wins.
It's a different game.
And I dare say, and I'm going to say this,
it's a better game than Duck Duck dare say, and I'm going to say this,
it's a better game than Duck Duck Goose.
Duck Duck Rae Duck wins.
Thank you Kate and Brian.
And thank you Kevin Murphy.
And thank you for having me out here.
How about Kevin Murphy from Rift Racks?
The Naked Clone, a Nick Nolte mystery.
Thank you, Kevin Murphy.
We will not see you again tonight.
Thank you very much.
That's it for this episode of the Judge John Hodgman podcast.
Thanks to Redditor Humphrey the Camel
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