Judge John Hodgman - Willy and Nilly
Episode Date: January 20, 2021We are clearing the docket this week with Friend of the Court Josh Gondelman! Scraping food scraps, kingmaking, office supply stealing, and much more! Plus more of the segment CREEPY COOL BABIES!Huge ...thanks to Josh for joining us this week! He's on Twitter @JoshGondelman. His podcast Make My Day is available wherever you listen to podcasts, and make sure to read his book of essays Nice Try: Stories of Best Intentions and Mixed Results! Â
Transcript
Discussion (0)
Welcome to the Judge John Hodgman podcast.
I'm bailiff Jesse Thorne.
We're in chambers this week, clearing the docket.
And with me, as always, is the man who judges all other men, as well as women, non-binary people and gender fluid people, Judge John Hodgman.
John Hodgman. Once again, I'm coming to you live on podcast tape from the solar-powered studios of WERU in Orland, Maine, 89.9 on your frequency modulation dial. If you're in Blue Hill or the
area, if not, go to WERU.org. Across the glass from me, our local Maine guest producer, engineer,
operations manager of the station, Joel Mann. How are you, Joel? Good, Judge. I almost called you Mole Jan.
I apologize.
My old name in high school was Mole Man.
Yeah, that's fine.
You know what?
I'm learning something new every day.
That's incredible.
How many years have I done this in Maine with you, Joel?
Five?
Yeah, five years.
Hard to believe.
I didn't know you were Mole Man before this.
Well, you know.
Why is that not your DJ name?
That's never mind.
We're going to be listening to some more Joel Bird and the Field Hippies.
I'm Mole Man.
Bringing you all the underground hits.
That's right.
We have a very special guest.
I want to get to him right away, but I've got to give Joel the market report.
Joel?
Yes, sir.
I was up at the Tradewinds.
They don't have smoked ham hocks.
I called the Shaw's in Ellsworth.
You're kidding.
No smoked ham hocks. I called the Hannaford in Ellsworth. No smoked ham hocks i called the shaw's in ellsworth kidding no smoked ham hocks i called
the hannaford in ellsworth no smoked ham hocks i got these beans that i want to make with smoked
ham hocks can't get them then i called john edwards market the very unfortunately named
market in ellsworth upscale went through a down period yeah it had a completely neutral period. I go there for my haircuts,
John. Yeah, right, exactly.
Ham hocks
come to Castine. They don't have ham hocks
at Joel Edwards, but I'm supposed to call
Sheila tomorrow to order them.
Sheila will get it done.
You're going to call Father's Country Hams.
Will they have some smoked
ham hocks for me? Yeah, Father's Country
Hams is nothing but smoked ham hocks. Well, I mean, smoked ham hocks for me yeah father's country hams is nothing but smoked
ham hocks well i mean smoked ham hocks and uh you know chicharrones and uh man father's country
hams and of course country hams well look if they want to sponsor this podcast that's great if not
let's stop talking about them anyone who's got a uh and uh and to those of you in the audience who
don't eat uh smoked ham hocks i apologize um let's move on yeah we have a guest on this week's
program who is this person this person is a stand-up comedian this person is a comedy writer
on desus and marrow this person is the host of the podcast make my day this person is the host of the podcast Make My Day. This person is the author of the essay collection Nice Try.
This person is well known across the globe for his well-earned reputation as the nicest man in comedy,
as evidenced by some of the three out of ten jokes that he laughed at before we hit record.
Josh Gondelman.
Hey, thank you for having me.
It's such a pleasure to be here.
I'm such a fan of the show, so this is a real treat.
Josh, let me tell you this right now.
Yeah.
This is a total delight.
Thank you.
You know why?
Why?
Because you are a total delight.
If you are hearing my voice right now, that means you're probably listening to this podcast.
If you don't know who Josh Gondelman is, you've made a horrible mistake in your life.
Yeah, Josh Gondelman is the Judge John Hodgman of stand-up comedians, but funny.
Okay, there we go.
Yeah, oh boy.
Really turned this into a roast of the judge.
No, no, I meant for that to be a roast of our podcast together.
I apologize that your name, John, is the name of the podcast.
And so it became very unclear.
Speaking of roast, I am personally endorsed by a different ham brand than Jesse made.
Then Jesse mentioned earlier.
Yeah, so I've got a you can't see it listeners but i'm wearing
a full ham jumpsuit yeah oh that's right you're not sponsored by father's hams you're sponsored
by stepdad's hams stepdad's hands yeah yep the hands you don't call dad their famous slogan i'm
not here to replace your father's country hams i just love your mother's hams.
Maybe if I make a ham
steak for you on a Sunday morning, I'll earn your
love. You can feel free
to call me Bill.
You don't have to call me Father's
Country Hams.
Well, I think listeners now know a sense of just how funny and delightful Josh Connell
is.
In this podcast, I dare say, has a reputation for being one of the nicer podcasts.
You know, we try to be nice to people.
We try to find the crux of their dispute, to listen and empathize as much as we can.
When we get something wrong, we try to address it and learn from it.
You know, Jesse and i have reputations as
nice guys but the truth is compared to you josh we're monsters we're human evil monsters
josh is genuinely one of the nicest and most generous people you know like he has been on
twitter what's your twitter handle josh everyone should know this write it down right now everybody it's at josh josh gondelman g-o-n-d-e-l man as
method man would spell it at josh gondelman your name j-o-s-h g-o-n-d-e-l-m-a-n like you'll get up
on a sunday morning say who needs a pep talk and someone will say yeah it's been going bad for me
and you'll say it's gonna be great and this gets me so steamed up when I see it happening.
I love it.
Because then you're like, who's feeling too, like they've been riding too high lately and needs to be taken down a peg.
Yeah, that's right.
And you'll just put people in their place, which is also important.
If people need to be unpepped, I will tell them, yeah, you know what?
You're right to be nervous that no one loves you.
No, I don't ever say that.
I would never say that.
And Josh, you say you're a fan of this podcast.
Thank you.
I am a fan of your podcast, Make My Day, on which I have been a guest.
You are a terrific guest.
We talked a lot about abandoned malls and secret societies.
It was so much fun.
And tell the listeners a little bit about your podcast, Make My Day, before we get into the justice that we need to serve.
My podcast is a one-on-one game show, or sometimes there's a team of contestants that are playing
collaboratively. So the guests always win. There's no tension. There's no stress. You don't have to
worry about who's going to win. And the winner always gets a $100 donation to the charity or aid cause of their choice.
It's very silly, very light.
And the premise of all the games are for the guests to cheer me up and make me feel delighted.
Oh, I have to say something, Josh.
You make so many good jokes and I laugh hard at a lot of your jokes on Twitter.
But it's such a delight to make you laugh too yeah it's just fun also josh you are a commonwealthium of
massachusetts i am by birth yeah where are you from in massachusetts i grew up in stonem
massachusetts stoneham massachusetts and you're a fan of dunin Donuts big Dunkin Donuts fan uh I will however I feel like
it's a big corporation they probably do some bad stuff I love their iced coffee I love their
beyond sausage sandwich I love their blueberry uh they changed the name it used to be the blueberry
cake donut but I think now it's blueberry glazed. But if it turns out, if someone's like, oh, Dunkin' Donuts, you know, they put every donut
has a one child's fingernail in it.
I'd be like, well, I disavow them immediately.
So I don't want to get caught on the record being gotcha loving a big corporation.
I'm not trying to put you on blast.
No, not you.
I love how much you love Dunkin' Donuts.
I love it.
I have a Dunkin' Donuts robe.
And sneakers.
You have a lot of Dunkin' Donuts swag.
And sneakers. Yes, and sneakers. You have a lot of Dunkin' Donuts swag. And sneakers.
Yes, I do.
The sneakers were given to me by a friend who works at Saucony, where the collaboration was.
And it was, I love them.
They're so comfortable.
Josh, I have a recommendation for you.
You already have a robe.
You already have sneakers.
If you get a giant bejeweled donut wrist piece you could go full duncan donuts ghost face killer
i would love yeah like a not just donut flat to the wrist but a big donut coming out in 3d
comes off about eight inches yeah yeah i want that i want that so bad i said to my wife maris
at one point last year um i, I said, sorry, everyone,
Josh is married.
The apologies have been mostly to my wife.
Joel was just signaling to me that he wanted your number.
Sorry,
Joel,
Josh is married.
Okay.
So you can still have my phone number,
but we can't get married or have any kind of romantic relationship, but my phone number is good for other stuff.
That sounds like what I said to every young woman i ever met in high school or college
hey whatever this is your this is up to you and phone numbers honestly they're good for more
than ever right back in the day you could only make a phone call or leave a an answering machine
message now you can text send a voice note the sky's the limit send pictures
send pictures right you want pictures of my dog you can that's what my phone number is for
but no romance i forgot that the make my day podcast is is sponsored primarily by phones
any of them good for more than ever it's phone numbers
call your stepdad tell him you'll never love him no matter how many hams he makes you Good for more than ever. It's phone numbers.
Call your stepdad.
Tell him you'll never love him, no matter how many hams he makes you.
No, you can love your stepdad.
I don't want to make it sound like stepdads are unlovable.
We encourage you.
We encourage you to love your stepdad if that's what you feel in your heart.
Yeah.
I mean, if he's got the right country hams, you might as well.
The point is, Josh, you're nicer than me. And anyone who follows us both on Twitter knows that you and I sometimes get into a little game where I insinuate, like, you know, you love Dunkin' Donuts, but I will often insinuate that you're a particular fan of powdered donuts, if you know what I mean.
You love that sugar.
You love that sugar on the donuts.
I will say that is not my preference i stay away from the powder i'm going to say for the record i know this josh is not addicted to
powdered donuts thank you it's just a game and sometimes josh people get mad at me for bullying
you about your fictional powdered donut obsession.
So I apologize for that.
I hope that that has never made you feel bullied.
It has never made me feel bullied or hurt.
I also kind of live in a zone where someone I like and admire and am friendly with and friends with, being bullied by them is such a comedy treat to me.
And it occasionally happens on Showtime's Desus and Mero, where they'll bully me.
And it's always a good time.
On their podcast sometimes, it'll find out secondhand.
Someone will text me like, hey, you know, Desus and Mero said on their podcast that
you were screaming racial epithets at Yankee Stadium.
And it's like, that's a joke.
You know, I would never go to Yankee Stadium as a Red Sox fan.
Well, I appreciate that, Josh.
Of course, you know, that permission structure is useless because this is an asymmetrical power structure.
You're on my podcast.
Maybe you felt bullied to say that.
I apologize.
But in any case, shut up now.
It's my podcast.
Let's go.
Okay, here's something from Matthew.
He says, as a former busboy, I get uneasy when dirty plates are sitting on the table
while my girlfriend and I continue our evening conversation.
I usually initiate clearing the table, and I do so by stacking one plate on top of another.
usually initiate clearing the table and I do so by stacking one plate on top of another. If there are scraps of food, I scrape the scrap from them onto one plate and stack that scrap plate on top
of the others. My girlfriend insists that stacking dirty plates is a breach of etiquette. She says it
makes the bottoms of the plates dirty. I think it's just common sense. I would like a ruling that allows me to stack the dirty plates without being made to feel weird about it.
Okay.
Josh, Jesse, listeners, Joel, Jennifer Marmer.
Whoa.
Whoa, it's all J's.
I never knew that before.
I'm looking from top to bottom, from the glass to the zoom.
Joel, Jennifer, John Hodgman, Josh, Jesse.
We've got to get some other alphabet letters in here.
We're missing some diversity of opinion.
Anyway, the point is, I'm going to have to recuse myself from this one because this is
exactly how I do it.
If it's not clear, what Matthew is saying is at the dinner table with his girlfriend and they're all done, he will start stacking the plates and setting them aside on the dinner table, not necessarily bring them to the sink.
And he will scrape the food onto all the food onto one plate and then stack them up with that scrap plate on top.
That's how I do it.
So I'm obviously biased.
So I'm going to recuse myself. Josh, I don't know how often you and Maris, your wife, are sitting down to dinner these days now that we're months and months into a pandemic stay-at-home situation.
But what do you do about the dishes when you sit down to dinner with your wife, Maris?
do about the dishes when you sit down to dinner with your with your wife Maris so dinner together is like one of the few things that has made this situation like it's one of the few comfortable
things that we do with intent and to take pleasure in during this uh pandemic that that it's very
nice to do so we do it we dinner together almost every night at the table um usually we clear plates independently we have a
dishwasher so that might change the calculus a little bit because if you are doing the dishes
and there's now now scraps if you do the the the scrap scrape and there's now gunk on the top of
the a little gunk on the top of the plate residually and on the bottom that does create a
little more work for someone who's washing dishes by hand.
So I understand if he's putting that on her, I understand her discomfort.
Otherwise, I am not put off by this.
We usually clear plates independently, though.
And then, yeah, we take care of putting them in the dishwasher.
And then I'll do the pots and pan dishes after that.
One quick follow-up question.
But first I want to thank you for saying scrap scrape.
Like that's a normal thing to say.
Thanks for endorsing that new phrase.
The scrap scrape and stack.
Do you mean,
you got a scrap scrape before you make your scraped stack.
Nevermind.
Yep.
What did you have for dinner last night?
What did we have for dinner?
Oh,
we had ordered chicken parm the night before, and it was two meals worth.
So we had chicken parm, and I sauteed some broccoli to accompany it.
So we would have a vegetable.
Yeah, very nice.
You would have to scrape that scrap, though, because you can't put a dish with half a chicken parm into the dishwasher.
You got to throw that away.
No.
Right, okay.
Yeah, certainly not. Jesse Thorne,
how do you deal with your scrap scrapes situation? I also have a dishwasher, but we've been working
on trying to get our kids to clear their places. So we will ask them to clear their places
individually. But in the event that we have failed in that mission i will scrap scrape um and i you know
i think that i understand the argument if you don't have a dishwasher because
um you then have to do extra cleaning on the bottoms of the plates but i will also say that back when I did not have a dishwasher and I failed to wash sufficiently the bottom of the plates,
I believe Judge John Hodgman listeners wrote in to call me a monster for insufficiently cleaning the bottoms of plates that had not had food on them
and would never have food on them unless you were using the plate upside down.
Well, I suppose I should have asked if they had a dishwasher.
That was information I probably could have used.
But I did ask for some more information because I wasn't quite sure I understood everything.
I asked Matthew for more information about what his girlfriend finds objectionable,
aside from just dirtying the bottom of the plates.
And he wrote, she also thinks, and I'm quoting here,
she also thinks it's distasteful to scrape one's plate scraps onto another plate in view of your companion.
I think that's gross, I guess.
And finally, she thinks it a little odd that I need to remove the dirty plates so quickly.
She takes that as a signal that I am not interested in the conversation, which isn't true at all.
I just get distracted by the dirty plates, and I keep imagining I'll set my elbow down in it or something.
Does that change your mind about anything?
Give you any further food for scraping thought?
It's pretty weird to leave them there.
That is pretty weird.
He really has found a way to make a pile of uneaten food more weird and gross.
You think that that's okay.
Cause you know, I already, I already said that I do what Matthew does.
I don't feel like getting up from the table.
And sometimes my family and I, we want it.
We finished eating and we want to play Monopoly deal or something.
We need some room in the middle of the table.
So you just keep a pile of mixed food waste at your dinner table?
On top of a pile of plates off to the side.
In case one of my human children ever feel like getting up and doing a thing.
Just clear it.
I'm sitting on the bench.
Okay, go on, Josh.
My concern here is not so much the detritus, the shipwreck of plates and gristle that adorns their table.
But I do think if you have a dining companion who is worried that you're signaling like, all right, time to go watch Seinfeld and syndication.
Let's leave this table by your actions.
That to me is paramount, making sure that they know I love this conversation.
I'm just going to get these out of the way.
I think like the social thing that I don't necessarily share her opinion that it's uncouth
to undress a plate in front of your loved one.
But I do think if she's like, oh, are you ready to get up?
I think you need to go a little.
It is nice to go a little extra mile to go, hey, let's keep hanging out.
I'm just trying to make the space more comfortable for myself.
So you're saying that somehow communication between two people who love each other will help the situation?
Like, I've got kind of an unorthodox style.
I'm kind of the old dirty bastard of podcasting.
No father to my style.
One stepfather, and that's stepfather's baked hams.
Joel, what do you do?
I mean, you're here in Maine.
You can call me Mole Man.
Oh, right.
Mole Man.
What do you do? I mean, you're here in Maine. You can call me Mole Man. Oh, right. Mole Man. What do you do?
I mean, you're here in Maine.
You just throw your leftover food in your plate into the wood stove, right?
Right.
Paper plates.
Right.
Figured as much.
I got to say, thank you for your input, Jesse and Josh and Mole Man.
Josh is correct.
Now I've come around.
I feel shame for keeping those dirty plates on the table.
It's just I want to – I'm like Matthew in the sense I don't want to rush from the table.
But it looks and feels untidy to me to have leftover dead plates in front of everyone as they're sitting, I don't know, talking about the issues of the day
or having a stimulating conversation or playing apples to apples or whatever. It gets in the way
of my enjoyment because it feels messy, more messy than a stack of dirty plates with food waste at
the end of the table. But I get it. I appreciate that Matthew's girlfriend finds that to be gross.
I think that he needs to hear her.
I think she needs to respect his level of comfort that he would not like to have plates in front of
them as they continue their evening. But I mean, she also needs to appreciate that it's beyond his
comfort level to just sit with plates in front of them. I guess the way she was raised in a family that did that.
But that he as a busboy has been trained to clear the plates. And it does not mean the dinner is over. It means let the coffee course begin or what have you. So Matthew,
I think Josh is correct. You should communicate to your girlfriend how you feel and hear what
she has to say and come to what seems like a reasonable resolution, which is when dinner is over,
say, I'd love to keep talking, but I'm just going to clear our plates. I'll bring them into the
kitchen and take care of that business there. And I'll come right back. I do recommend that
you do that. And if you aren't capable of communicating with your girlfriend,
I just told her for you, You're welcome. Judgment made.
We're going to take a quick break to hear from this week's supporters.
We'll be back with more cases to clear from the docket on the Judge John Hodgman podcast.
And later, the return of scary words from creepy children.
You're listening to Judge John Hodgman. I'm bailiff
Jesse Thorne. Of course, the Judge John Hodgman podcast always brought to you by you, the members
of MaximumFun.org. Thanks to everybody who's gone to MaximumFun.org slash join, and you can join them by going to MaximumFun.org slash join.
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Welcome back to the Judge John Hodgman podcast.
We're clearing the docket with our friend Josh Gondelman.
Josh and Jesse, excuse me, just really quickly before we get going.
I received all the photographs of your dishwashers.
Josh Gondelman, last time I made a knowing error by inviting people to send photographs of your dishwashers. Josh Gondelman, last time I made a knowing error by
inviting people to send photographs of their dishwashers, because one of the very, very common
disputes that comes up on the Judge John Hodgman podcast is how to load the dishwasher. And I
offered the first five people to send me photos of their dishwashers. I offered essentially a
John Hodgman masterclass in how to do it better than
they're doing it currently. But I realized I got them. Thank you for the photos. I'm going to
respond. It's not a good segment for the podcast because these are visual. I don't want to describe
these. And also a lot of people sent them to me empty. Like, how can I know? How can I know what
you're doing? You're right or wrong. But some of you sent in dishwashers that were loaded extremely poorly.
I'm going to be, I'm going to happily evaluate those on the Judge John Hodgman Instagram account.
I'll grab some of them and, and, and I'll critique them on the Judge John Hodgman Instagram account.
And we can all learn there while we're looking at the photos and if and uh luckily no one sent in any in any
joke like i was expecting someone to send in like a dishwasher that was just full of smoked ham hocks
am i doing it right you know it didn't happen okay so uh thank you for your patience and let's
move oh one other thing josh josh gonleman you grew up in Massachusetts. Did you have Channel 25?
It was Fox 25, I think, when I was young. It was Fox 25 by the time, yeah.
Yeah.
And you're younger than me, so you never watched the show Star Blazers, did you?
The Japanese dubbed anime Star Blazers?
No.
Oh.
Do you recommend it?
I do, and I highly recommend the theme song.
Have you ever heard it?
No.
Well, be patient, because you're not going to hear it today.
Okay, Jesse, let's go.
Oh, I'm on the edge of my seat.
Keep listening.
Here's something from Celeste.
She says, my friend Mike and I are on a board game review podcast.
We play a lot of lengthy, involved, European-style games together,
along with our other two panelists.
During these games, it sometimes becomes evident that one of us will not be able to win the game, as they are too far behind,
but that they still have a chance to influence who will win by throwing their resources behind another player of their choice.
In the world of board games, this action is called kingmaking.
I believe kingmaking to be a legitimate strategy,
allowing the losing player to feel useful
and engaged in play until the end of the game.
Mike disagrees and believes it is not
in the spirit of the game's design
and undermines the hard work and planning of other players
who may have gone on to win
if the kingmaker had stayed out of it.
He wishes to ban Kingmaking from our play.
This issue often leads to the other two panelists
sitting idly by while Mike and I
debate it heatedly during gameplay,
which is recorded for the podcast.
All four panelists have agreed to abide by your ruling.
Wow.
This sounds definitely like a long and involved podcast.
They don't keep it tight like us.
No, right.
Pow, pow, pow.
Dunkin' Donuts, scallops.
All right.
Now you got me.
You got me.
I'm going to go on a tangent.
You opened the door, counselor, when David Reese and I were writing out plot ideas for Dicktown, the only idea that we
scrapped, the only episode we scrapped was David Reese and I having to mediate between
two groups of rival podcasters who were in competition with each other for having the
world's longest podcast.
Like one podcast was like 14 hours long, which sounds like this board game podcast that Celeste and her friends are hosting.
Now, Gondelman, here's a little peek behind the scenes of the Judge Sean Hodgman ways and means.
The process.
peek behind the scenes of the Judge Sean Hodgman ways and means.
The process.
I'll get a lot of letters from people saying,
I would like to take, I have a podcast about XYZ,
and I'd like to take my co-host to task for doing ZYX on our podcast.
And you know what I do with those letters?
What do you do?
I dump them immediately. I print them out and throw them in a fire i a friend did that to me when i asked them to blurb my book
send me a video it was i don't know why i said a friend it was eugene merman
printed out my email and threw it in his fireplace and then sent me a video.
I think your book is lovely.
Thank you.
I don't even think there was text in the reply.
I think it was just the video.
The book Nice Try by Josh Gondelman is a wonderful book of funny essays
that you should check out immediately.
Signed, John Hodgman.
No, but when people write in and they say i've got a podcast and i want to take my podcast co-host
to the court i usually look at them with a somewhat jaded eye because i really most of the
time 99 out of 100 times it's someone who's trying to stealth buzz market their podcast
they don't really have a fight i was gonna throw Celeste's letter into the garbage right away.
Eugene Merman style.
I was going to throw it in the fire.
But I let Celeste off the hook because she did not name her podcast in the letter
and clearly was not intending to plug her podcast.
And for those reasons, and also because I think this podcast sounds so long
that I'm not worried about too many people listening to it,
I searched it up and I will plug it now.
It's called Which Game First?
And it's co-hosted by Celeste,
Evan, Mikey G,
Edward P,
and Joe, I think his name is Unfried, but it's spelled Unfried.
And I just, this seems like a fun group of people playing some fun games.
And their bios are terrific.
Joe Unfried, his bio is, Joe Unfried has always loved the alphabet.
Perfect.
Love them all.
Love them all.
Now, on to the meat of the matter.
Do you play long European style board games, Josh Gondelman?
No.
We play quick word games usually.
We do a Scrabble, a Boggle, Bananagrams, Codenames.
That's what our speed is at our home.
You also have a podcast, Make My Day.
Yes.
And you and your wife Maris have no children.
You have a wonderful little pug, right?
Mm-hmm.
So you have time to play long European-style board games.
I don't understand why you're messing with Boggle, the insult to good games.
We don't.
Well, I thought European-style board games means you play with someone who isn't your wife and everyone just kind of lets it go.
They're just like, he's what the men are like.
No, I think that these are like big, big involved, like Settlers of Catan, right?
That's sort of the Ur-European board game.
What do you think about this?
That's what it sounds like.
This king making technique, Josh.
What do you think about this? That's what it sounds like.
This king making technique, Josh.
So it feels to me like if that were to be prohibited in the intricate rules of the game,
it would be specified within the game.
And especially when you're reviewing a podcast, whether king making is allowed for within
the rules and makes the game unfun, right?
Like if you can lose and then immediately dictate who wins by allocating your resources resources that seems like a flaw in the game and is worth noting in the review but if king
making allows the game to go on with like a twist and a wrinkle then that also seems seems notable
to the to the gameplay and should be thought of in the review as well a twist in a rink what do
you think jesse thorn i'm terrified to play any board games for reasons that I've listed many times on this program,
specifically that if I win, I will feel bad for beating everyone.
And if I lose, I will feel bad because I lost.
And while I'm trying to win, I will feel bad for trying to win.
And if I don't try and win, I will feel bad for trying to win. And if I don't try and win, I will feel bad for selling
myself short.
It's a real win-lose-lose-lose situation.
Yeah.
Oh, sorry. I was just
listening to you, Jesse, but
I was also looking at Joe Unfried's
bio. It continues, he can swim.
Sometimes he wears glasses.
And sometimes he wears socks.
It sounds like a game of like one of those games where you have to guess a celebrity,
but you can't say any of the movies they've been in or something.
I think we've all played that and we've all chosen the celebrity Joe Unfried.
Joe Unfried.
Never fried.
You draw the card and you're just like, too easy.
All right. Loves the alphabet the alphabet sometimes wears glasses can swim and everybody in unit is like unfried look at the backing vocals to girls what's my weakness man like with that level of
confident enthusiasm like salt and pepper they're playing celebrity with you. One guy just goes, Anthony Edwards? Oh, close.
For me, ours.
Anthony Edwards, get out.
Joe Unfried.
It's Unfried.
Celeste, you wrote in, I'm sorry that I'm making Joe Unfried the star of your podcast.
It's not fair.
You put in the effort.
And I will reward your effort by ruling in your favor.
King making.
Look, everyone knows the law.
It doesn't say anywhere in the rule book that a dog can't play basketball.
Right, Josh?
It does not.
If it did, the Air Bud would be such a flawed movie.
That's right.
It wouldn't go anywhere. it wouldn't even have a
first act no no way they'd be like we want the dog to play and someone point to the rule book
and be like nah weirdos i guess we'll go back to being losers like i feel that it seems like a
really nice twist in a rink to have a situation where someone who is effectively eliminated from the game through attrition can now yet influence the game and have fun rather than sit around and do nothing on your podcast.
And if it's not officially prohibited by the game itself, to me it seems fair play i'd much rather be in a hours long
european style board game where even if i've lost i still get to play mitch mcconnell style
mind games with people behind the scenes and i appreciate i understand why mike might disagree
probably this guy doesn't know how to do it he's not a kingmaker you know what i mean josh
oh yeah he's just like i just want to play by. He's not a kingmaker. You know what I mean, Josh?
Oh, yeah.
He's just like,
I just want to play by the rules and do a good job.
And Celeste's like,
that's not what's happening.
You're sitting on the sidelines
of history
while kings get made
without your consent.
Yeah, exactly.
Celeste is sitting on the side
going like,
no, I'm still a power broker
in this land of Catan
or whatever.
So, you know,
I rule in Celeste's favor.
If kingmaking is not prohibited by the rules,
then it's fine.
I think it makes it more interesting and more fun.
Here's something from Liz.
My boyfriend has a Sharpie stealing problem.
Every single day he accidentally
steals at least one or two Sharpies from work, just sticks them into his
pockets and brings them home, then dumps them on some surface. We are overrun. The pencil drawers
and cups are full to bursting. Every time I do laundry, pocket Sharpies come tumbling out of
the dryer. He reaches into his pocket to pull out keys and boom, Sharpies flying.
Our dresser, Sharpies.
My car, Sharpies.
When I close my eyes, Sharpies.
His bosses even ask that if someone has taken the Sharpies home by accident for them to be returned.
But since he doesn't like his job, for good reason, he doesn't think he ought to return them.
He says that they're useful, so he doesn't think he should stop. Please order him to return at least most of the Sharpies and stop bringing home new ones.
I don't mind a few, as they do have some utility, but this is just excessive.
This is why I like this case, Josh and Jesse. Liz tells one story that turns into another story.
You think that this is just like my boyfriend loves Sharpies so much,
and I don't like them as much, and sometimes I'm doing the wash
and they fly out of his pockets and hit me in the eye.
But that's not the story.
Like one of those prank cans of mixed nuts.
Yeah, peanut brittle.
Oh, I'd love some peanut brittle.
Ah, Sharpies in my eye.
So dangerous.
The fine point ones, the worst Sharpies.
Look, there's one kind of Sharpie, the regular Sharpie.
Fine point Sharpies, get out of town.
Don't want you.
I rule against you.
No one wants you. Sorry. I rule against you. No one wants
you. Sorry. I heard their feelings. What about chisel tip? Chisel tip's fine. If you're a fan of
calligraphy, you know who's a fan of calligraphy? Joe Unfried. My middle school girlfriend,
Jennifer Tananga. That's what I was going to guess, but I didn't want to sound stupid if I
was wrong. Jennifer Tananga and also Joe Unfried.
It was either that or Anthony Edwards.
Everyone knows his grandfather was a master painter and calligrapher.
And it's where Joe Unfried got his excellent handwriting.
Yeah.
Wow.
True story.
But what's interesting, there's another narrative embedded in here.
There's a twist to this, which is that it's not just that her boyfriend is bringing home Sharpies from work.
He's bringing home Sharpies from work in vast quantities after he has been told not to.
He is having a Sharpie fight with his work.
He's trying to de-sharpify his office.
And I guess invite them to fire him or something.
I don't know.
office and I guess invite them to fire him or something.
I don't know.
There's a level of malevolence and what's the term of a disgruntlement that's going on that is unaddressed here in this thing.
Yeah, they're suffering from what in business is called Sharpie shrinkage.
And he goes back to the office or once he leaves the office for the day, everything anyone writes down is just temporary.
That's a problem.
Absolutely.
Things are getting erased willy and nilly.
Both.
Josh, is Desus and Mero the Showtime television show starring the great Desus and Mero?
Yes.
Probably the best show on television starring guys I know from an internet message board 20 years ago.
True.
I would say almost definitely.
Yeah.
That's true.
Until Jay Smooth gets a television show.
Everyone should check out the Desus and Mero show on Showtime.
I was a guest on the show when it was on another network.
And I can vouch.
Those two guys are two of the nicest
and funniest people in the world.
Wonderful.
Incredible.
Wonderful, hilarious guys.
Incredible.
And it's just,
I presume that they know that I'm in Maine right now,
so that's the only reason I've never been asked back.
In any case,
because it's hard,
it takes a long drive to get here.
In any case,
you're not in an office now with them.
You're not making the show. There's no production've been working remotely right but there was a time when you went into the production office
correct correct what was your what's your title at the show i'm a writer and co-executive producer
that's that's that's up there it's been it's been exciting it's nice to to be able to participate in
the show at that level it's very thrilling to to me, and I like my job very much.
So what office supplies would you steal when you were working there in the office?
What would you take home?
So there was never intentional theft, but I would occasionally take a ballpoint pen, put it in my pocket as I walked through the office, bring it home.
But then I would usually put it back in my pocket the next morning and bring it back to work to continue writing.
You just didn't want to break writing continuity.
Yeah, if you switch pens, I feel like the work suffers.
Are you telling me you never stole a pad of Post-its knowingly?
You never looked into the office supply cabinet and go like, what will I take home today?
I love these green tinted
steno notebooks. No, I'm very particular about little things like that. So I feel like stealing
a notebook is not only, look, I wouldn't do that to my work. But second of all, I would just have
a notebook that I would resent until I filled it up. When you say you're particular, though, you mean you're particular about being a virtuous person or you're particular about your office supplies?
No, no, no, no, no, no.
Particularly about my office supplies.
What's an office supply you love?
I have the – I'm not going to – I don't want to buzz market a big brand.
No, go for it. But I like a day planner that is thin and easy to carry in a bag.
And that the layout of the day planner is just like a month calendar with the squares.
So I can write in the squares instead of line.
Yeah.
I'm not worried about you buzz marketing a big company.
I'm worried about you losing your top sponsor phones by advocating for paper calendars.
You know that can be done on phones now i do and honestly
on my podcast i have to pretend like i use the phone calendar i would be like wow phones what
what is you i mean some phones don't have calendars they're plugged into a wall still
and i love those but the new ones they've got a calendar i can use jesse you're very virtuous too you probably never stole any office supplies from your place of work right no i and besides that uh i am the owner of
my place of work yeah yeah no i'm talking about before then oh like back when i worked at the
trust for public land that was the last time i had a real office job no i wouldn't because uh
had a real office job. No, I wouldn't because... Because they trusted you. Yeah, exactly. Those office supplies were designed to make conservation easements and public parks for the people of this
great nation. All right. You both are making me feel like a horrible person. So I guess now
I had to go return all of those green tinted Steno notebooks that I stole from writer's house from 1995 to 1999.
And Joel?
Mole man likes a good paperclip.
Yeah, okay.
I don't think I have –
You were waiting on that one.
You were loaded.
Don't – I know you – and I know WERU-r-u has some good paper clips here because don't think
i haven't looked at the office supply cabinet we've been keeping an eye on you yeah well casing
the joint you call it all right liz here's what i'm going to say liz your boyfriend is stealing
stealing from his office there is a self-destructive streak in what is going on here
he is either looking to hurt his office or he's
looking to hurt himself by getting reprimanded or fired from his office. The Sharpies, as we always
know, Sharpie hoarding is just a symptom of a deeper problem. And in this case, you need to get
to the bottom with your boyfriend as to what message he's trying to send to you and the world and his office by hoarding all these Sharpies.
As much as I love Sharpies, P.S., this is too many Sharpies, Liz's boyfriend.
Deal with the underlying issue and stop sabotaging your office and stop leaving Sharpie booby traps for Liz to find.
One Sharpie that slips through Liz's careful eye and gets into the laundry that'll
screw up a lot of your clothes too yeah i was gonna say they're going through the laundry that's
messed up you can't do that get it together liz's boyfriend look inside talk to liz figure out what's
going on in your life and stop hoarding these sharpies let's take a break. When we come back, the return of our smash hit segment,
Creepy Cool Babies. We'll be back with more soon on Judge John Hodgman.
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 maximumfun.org if you need a laugh and you're on the go
welcome back to the judge john hodgman podcast john it's time for perhaps the most beloved and only recurring segment on Judge
John Hodgman, Creepy Cool Babies. That's right, Josh Godlin. It's our proprietary segment that
we started a couple of weeks ago called Creepy Cool Babies. Now, I never presume that anyone is
up to date with all the episodes of Judge John Hodgman. So if I'm repeating information that you already know, forgive me,
but this will help listeners get up to speed.
Josh, a couple of weeks ago,
someone sent in a dispute between a friend and a friend.
The question was, is butt leg?
Is butt leg?
That is to say, is the butt part of the leg or is the butt just butt?
Quick answer on your part, if I may.
Butt's just butt.
Butt's just butt.
Obviously, butt's just butt.
Butt's not leg.
But Jesse pointed out that is butt leg sounds like the sort of question a two or three-year-old would ask.
It would get you thinking for most of the day.
So we asked listeners to send in questions that a two or three- old or a toddler might might pose that would be real head scratchers.
And that was wonderful. People sent in all sorts of deep questions that their toddlers had asked.
But it feared, if I may say, and this is why you're the nicest person in comedy and I'm the grumpiest person in humorous circles.
It feared on the cutesy. veered on the cutesy wouldn't you say joel veered on the cutesy cutesy yeah those kids were saying the darndest things they were saying
the darndest things it was very very cute but luckily the moment was saved by one a dad who
wrote in that his son i believe it was had asked him if he knew if he personally knew the soul harvester.
Which is a reference.
Still kills it every time.
The soul harvester.
This is a whole story that I won't get into, but the Soul Harvester is a reference to a very scary animatronic Halloween decoration sold by Spirit Halloween that the child had discovered online somewhere.
And so the next mission to our listeners, and one that I hope will continue, is we don't want to hear any cutesy stuff from your toddlers.
I'm sure they're all adorable.
Believe me.
I agree with you.
You can send me the cutesy stuff, too.
from your toddlers. I'm sure they're all adorable. Believe me, I agree with you. You can send me the cutesy stuff too. But for the podcast, we no longer want stuff from cool babies, but specifically
creepy cool babies, toddlers, two, three, four, five year olds, a little bit older, young kids
saying things that are scary. So let's get into it, Jesse.
Here's something from Erica about her six-year-old daughter. She says,
My eldest child is six now, but threw off some wonderful creepy vibes from a very young age.
One night when she was about three, we were talking about our dog,
and I told her one of my co-workers had a dog of the same breed.
I mentioned that the dog's name was Stewie, but left out the fact that Stewie had recently died. She replied,
Stewie is a ghost. She went on to tell me that he was with a little girl who was wearing all pink.
Genuinely creepy. Very creepy. Yeah. This kid brought in a second creepy baby from the spectral
realm. This creepy baby tag-teamed
it with a creepy baby that
died years ago, I imagine.
Yeah, this all-seeing
creepy baby
saw through the planes of existence.
Stewie is a ghost.
Very scary. Here's something
from Daniel. I took
a neighborhood walk this holiday season
with my six-year-old and he
earnestly warned me that the street we were on had a Jesus family statue, which is what he calls
a nativity scene. He also warned me that I shouldn't look at the baby Jesus's eyes or I would, quote, feel like I had to fall down.
Unquote.
We walked by and he told me when to avert my gaze and when it was safe.
Feel like I had to fall down.
Something happened between Daniel's child and that Jesus baby.
Very, very unnerving also jesus and the family statue is my favorite christian soul cover band you ever get creeped out in massachusetts by a catholic
iconography josh gondelman yeah i guess it eventually got so that i was just like oh this
is just like normal everywhere stuff but i think before I was anesthetized to it, I was like, whoa, this is a lot.
Yeah, no, I mean, there are some paintings.
My dad had two aunts, and they were obviously sisters of each other,
and one of them had never married, and one was a widow,
and they lived together for years in the same house
in Frankfurt Street in Fitchburg, Massachusetts.
And there were a lot of scary Catholic paintings,
including a lot of gore and a lot of staring baby Jesuses.
And they haunt me to this day.
I feel like I need to fall down thinking of them.
I understand.
I wish Daniel had been there
to tell me avert your eyes for your eyes they have no power over you if you don't make eye contact
that's right
baby jesus can't see you as long as you don't move
you're just standing there the water is rippling in the glass okay sean writes when my son was four he told us that he was a bad kid i want someone in the
audience to to remix that i mean maybe it's too much but to like drop in a baby jesus where the
t-rex is in jurassic park when my son was four he told us he was a bad kid we told him he wasn't and then he was in fact
a very good kid he smiled and said he was kidding then he looked at us and said actually i do crime
and i don't tell you so this is this i think was mistakenly sent in for creepy cool babies as a son of Massachusetts.
I can tell you this should go on your second proprietary segment.
Wicked cool babies.
Just babies ripping butts behind a 7-Eleven.
Actually I do not and I don't tell you.
actually i do crime and i don't tell you
do you guys think this is street crime crime or white collar crime i can't tell which i would be more impressed right because a four-year-old is not physically
imposing enough to do street crime you would think but also to have a sophisticated knowledge
of financial systems and computing would be would really blow me away at this age.
Yeah, I feel like we need more information to make that determination.
Like, does this kid have a green translucent visor?
Sean, let us know.
I'll read this last one if you don't mind, Jesse.
Sure.
This one comes from Nicholas.
My four year old came down in the middle of the night with her stuffed owl that plays music.
That alone sounds like a weird dream.
That's not possible.
Sure.
She said, owl is dead.
I went to change the batteries, but they were fully charged.
And the owl was not dead, but working.
I handed it back to her, and she happily went back to bed.
The next morning when I went out for a morning run.
All right, that's a brag.
The next morning when I went out for a morning run, I saw a dead owl in front of my driveway.
We live in a big city, so dead wildlife is not something I run into.
To this incident, my wife and I were freaked out when a few months later she came downstairs
a couple hours
after she went to sleep.
She had a big smile
on her face and said,
we're underwater.
No, I mean,
the catch here is that
if she was, they don't say whether she was wearing a green visor
could it could it could have just been a mortgage thing yep she's again very very knowledgeable it
creepy in a different way you want to shield kids from oh yeah no i just i just presumed that she
was predicting a catastrophic flood but you're saying that they might be foreclosed upon
yeah the debts outstrip the asset.
I got you.
Okay.
Yeah, these are all very scary children.
Thank you very much for sending them in.
We have a few more that I'll read next week. If you have some creepy,
creepy cool baby stories that you want to send in
or some wicked cool baby stories,
if you're in Massachusetts or New England,
just write to me at Hodgman at MaximumFun.org.
Speaking of creepy children,
before we close this segment, I just want to thank Aiden Kay,
one of our inspirations for this segment.
Josh, if you don't know, Aiden is 16 going on 17.
And he is one of the editors of the Spirit Halloween Wiki.
It's a wiki devoted to Spirit Halloween products and animatronics.
And he specifically works on the Harvester of Souls page.
And we had a letter from him last week.
He was very excited that we were talking about the Harvester of Souls
and the Harvester of Souls wiki page that he helps to co-edit.
I would like to report, Jesse Thorne, that I checked today.
The mention of Judge John Hodgman is now the top item in the trivia section
of the Harvester of Souls page where it belongs.
This is big.
Yeah, this is big.
Thank you, Aiden.
We're even above what had been the top trivia tidbit of the Harvester of Souls,
which, Josh, you may not know this, but the previous top trivia tidbit
for the Harvester of Souls animatronic is that its code name within the
company is Strawberry. So we're doing well. That kind of takes a little of the menace out of it.
Have you seen the Harvester of Souls, Josh Connellman? I'm going to look it up right now
to make sure I can picture it, but I might be picturing the wrong thing.
They could have at least chosen a menacing berry Gooseberry is not
Unmenacing
No oh I see it yeah
Very spooky
But imagine like
I'm the harvester of souls
Tremble before strawberry
You should do voices for these animatronics Josh
This could be another area of income for you
Can you do a high pitched gremlin cackle Oh a high pitched gremlin cackle Oh hell yeah I can do that to do voices for these animatronics josh this could be another area of income for you can you
do a high-pitched gremlin cackle oh high-pitched gremlin cackle oh hell yeah i can do that just
like it's me raspberry the demon from the great beyond
wow pack it in phones josh gonelman doesn't need you anymore
the spirit halloween store year-round is what i'm
throwing my chips in with uh aiden sent in uh after he mentioned and read aiden's letter on
the podcast last week aiden sent in a video which he posted to his youtube channel it's a very
charming video there is in fact a harvester of Souls right behind him, as well as several other animatronics.
Aidan mentions in the video that he, the 16-year-old going on 17 years old, owns 29 individual animatronics from the Spirit Collection.
Jesse, I'm going to give out a bit link so that listeners can look at this video but i'm urging you jesse
this is a real content warning for you because over aiden's shoulder is an upside down dracula
that is very scary yeah is there any wolf mans in there there are no wolf mans there is a creepy
clown uh and there is a harvester of souls and and a number of other ones john i have a i have
a comment here about this video yeah uh i i'm i'm checking it out on youtube it's a lot of fun aiden
is it is indeed a charmer uh i noticed in the comments this exchange so haunter's corner
uh asked did you actually create the Spirit Halloween wiki?
And Aiden replied, I did not create it.
No, which I like his honesty.
He's an honest person.
Yeah.
I and three other people are the current co-owners.
The person who started it hasn't been heard from in years.
So spooky.
So spooky. So spooky!
Wow.
Soul harvested.
Oh boy.
My goodness gracious.
Yeah, Aiden made a reference to the fact that I said we should interview him
and
before I agreed to
do that, I wanted to check out Aiden's
other videos on his YouTube channel
because my concern was
that he was maybe planning to
invade a state capital or something. But nope.
He's just a wonderful
person. I would say based on his
accent, I am the world's greatest accent detective.
He's probably from Philadelphia, South
Jersey or Baltimore area.
Tell me if I'm right, Aiden. But all
of his other videos, if they're not about Spirit
Halloween, they're about David Bowie and his favorite David Bowie songs.
Aiden's birthday is coming up on February the 7th.
Happy birthday in advance, Aiden.
I am hereby booking you on Bullseye.
Am I allowed to do that, Jesse?
I don't think so.
I think even I have to run everything through Robert Siegel.
Oh, okay. I don't think so. I think even I have to run everything through Robert Siegel.
Oh, okay.
Well, then I will do an interview with Aidan as a members-only special.
And Jesse, you can come on board if you want.
Josh, you can be there too if it's not too scary.
Sure.
The docket's clear.
That's it for another episode of Judge John Hodgman.
Our thanks to our friend Josh Gondelman for joining us today. You can follow him at Josh Gondelman on Twitter.
His podcast, Make My Day, is a true delight.
Recent guests include friend of the court Linda Holmes, our buddy Tom Sharpling, and Judge John Hodgman himself.
And speaking of delightful, Josh's book of essays, Nice Try, Stories of Best Intentions, and Mixed Res results is available wherever books are sold.
Our producer is Jennifer Marmer.
Our engineer in Maine is Joel Mann, program and operations manager at WERU Community Radio in Orland, Maine.
You can listen to WERU at WERU.org.
And you can follow Joel on Instagram.
His handle is TheMainMan.
Follow us on Twitter at Jesse Thorne.
Hang on, hang on.
Yes, yes.
You got to make a backup account.
Mole Man, The Mole Man.
I already have one.
You do?
Yeah.
It's private.
I'm not on your Finstep?
All right, cut his line.
Go ahead, Jesse.
Follow us on Twitter at Jesse Thorne and at Hodgman.
We're on Instagram at Judge John Hodgman.
Make sure to hashtag your Judge John Hodgman tweets, hashtag JJHO.
And check out the Maximum Fund subreddit to discuss this episode.
Submit your cases at MaximumFund.org slash JJHO or email Hodgman at MaximumFund.org.
We'll talk to you next time on the Judge
John Hodgman Podcast.
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