Judge John Hodgman - Wreathing Havoc
Episode Date: December 20, 2018It’s our last episode of 2018! We’ll be off next week for the holidays. Paul files suit against his wife, Lizzie. Paul loves to decorate for Christmas but Lizzie doesn't. He wants to add more to t...heir home in order to create some Christmas magic for their kid. But Lizzie thinks their tree is enough. Who's right? Who's wrong? Thank you to Travis Marttila for naming this week's case! To suggest a title for a future episode, like Judge John Hodgman on Facebook. We regularly put out a call for submissions.
Transcript
Discussion (0)
Welcome to the Judge John Hodgman podcast.
I'm bailiff Jesse Thorne.
It's our last episode of 2018.
We'll be off next week for the holidays.
This week, we're hearing the case Wreathing Havoc.
Paul files suit against his wife Lizzie.
Paul loves to decorate for Christmas, but his wife Lizzie doesn't.
He wants to add more to their home in order to create some Christmas magic for their kid.
Lizzie thinks their tree is enough.
Who's right? Who's wrong? Only one man can decide.
Please rise as Judge John Hodgman enters the courtroom and presents an obscure cultural reference.
I'm not talking about just hundreds of thousands of lights.
I'm talking four million lights.
We see one property that has four million lights.
Most people have never seen anything like
it. I know I never saw anything like it until I saw it. It was overwhelming. It took my brain a
second just to program what I was looking at. Bailiff Jesse Thorne, please swear them in.
Please rise and raise your right hands. Do you swear to tell the truth, the whole truth,
and nothing but the truth, so help you God or whatever? I do. I do.
Do you swear to abide by Judge John Hodgman's ruling, despite the fact that the only Christmas decoration he puts up is a multicolor, patterned, lit statue of Cthulhu?
Yes.
Very well.
Judge Hodgman?
At least it's not an inflatable.
Paul and Lizzie may be seated.
What about a Cthulhu that's like one of those
used car dealership
flapping guys
oh my dear elder god
Jesse
you're talking about
an inflatable Cthulhu
that sits on top of your house
and it's got arms
like those
car dealership
floppy dudes
exactly
but a bunch of arms
tentacles
Cthulhu yeah
alright
Jennifer Marmer
shut down the podcast
we're in a new business now
let's get some prototypes going we'll be ready for halloween next year bring us some sailcloth
and an industrial fan but in the meantime oh sorry but do you finish your thing
right what do no i think i'm finished i think you just got so excited about
uh me saying thulu all right if i didn't say this already, Paul and Lizzie, you may be seated.
Thank you.
For an immediate summary judgment in one of your favors, can either of you name the piece of culture I referenced when I entered the courtroom?
I'm not even sure I remember anymore. So, Paul, let's start with you.
I'm going to guess that that's a passage from Stephen King's It, and it's one of the children describing seeing the deadlights.
Oh, a moderately deep cut from Stephen King's It.
I appreciate that.
I'll put that in the guest book.
Lizzie, what's your guess?
I will guess it's from the film Deck the Halls.
Deck the Halls.
Is that with Sinbad?
That's Jingle All the Way.
Jingle All the Way is what I was thinking of.
This one is Matthew Broderick and Danny DeVito, I believe.
Oh.
Well, in this case, both and all guesses are wrong.
I'm sorry to say.
I was not quoting a piece of fiction culture, a scripted culture of any kind.
I was quoting Carter Osterhaus. He is a television personality of Home Remodeler and currently the host of the Great Christmas Light Fight Mondays on ABC. We get no money for that. Specifically, that was him commenting in an interview on ABC 7 New York yesterday about last night's big heavyweight show.
about last night's big heavyweight show.
I had never seen this show.
I'm going to stand with my friends Paul and Janie.
They're really into it, or at least Janie is, and Paul tolerates it.
Have you heard of this show, you guys?
No.
Actually, I've heard of it, but I've never seen it. Paul, you should be into this,
because you want to put up a lot of Christmas decorations, right?
Yeah.
Well, I want to put up a moderate amount of Christmas decorations.
Oh, come on.
For the sake of podcast drama.
So you want to put up a moderate amount of Christmas decorations. Oh, come on. For the sake of podcast drama. So you want to put up four million lights.
I want to put up something obscene.
Right.
Obscene amounts of Christmas lights.
Great, because you want to be on the great Christmas light fight.
Yeah, I would love to be on the great Christmas light fight.
Carter Oosterhuis goes from town to town looking at incredibly elaborate Christmas slash holiday light and sculpture and Santa's village decorations
and basically just goes, I can't believe what I'm seeing.
And then leaves.
And then at the end of it, there's a judgment that is made as to who is best.
And in this case, last night, I'm going to spoil it for you because it was on last night and this is going to air later on.
This old sawmill that had been turned into a, well, I think it was a grist mill.
They're still milling flour there as they had done since 1850.
But the family that owns it now decked that, like the metric by which these houses would be judged were
how many hundreds or thousands or hundreds of thousands of lights are there like you're telling
me there's 250 000 lights this was four million lights wow i'm looking at these pictures that i
found on uh internet image search and the most impressive one to me here is like exactly the scene that you would imagine with a lot of words like joy.
And then there's Snoopy here.
And then there's some snowmen.
And there's just seas of lights.
And then just in front of it is an enormous white Christ figure.
Yeah.
This is what I have wrought.
It's a weird piece of programming.
Like you would not know that there's a war on Christmas happening in this country.
The one that I'm looking at is Disney-themed.
Yeah, that was on last night's too.
And it features Mickey and Minnie Mouse and Donald Duck and Mrs. Donald Duck.
I can't remember what her name is.
Daisy Duck.
Daisy Duck.
Thank you.
You know, then it features other characters, and I buy all of them as celebrating Christmas.
You know, I just think, you know, just think Mickey Mouse is hanging out at Disneyland
doing the Christmas thing.
Then there's a bunch of the
101 Dalmatians, which
I don't think they have faith.
But even a dog
could get a Christmas gift.
Then there's just an enormous
Aladdin segment
that I'm pretty
sure they're not doing Christmas this year.
Right.
At Aladdin's palace.
Which character is the baby Jesus?
It's really hard to say.
Iago the parrot.
So coming back to you,
Paul and Lizzie,
uh,
you guys live in the Boston area.
I understand.
I know that because when we were,
when we were logging on, I understand
you're at the PRX Garage there in Alston,
Massachusetts, just down the road from Coolidge
Corner, my old stomping
not
grounds so much as well-manicured
streets.
That's true. Where do you guys live in that area?
We live about 15 miles
southwest of Boston in Norwood, Massachusetts.
Norwood, Massachusetts. Norwood, Massachusetts.
So you had to come into the big city, huh? What are you going to do after this? You're going to go see a movie at the Coolidge Corner Theater? Sadly, no. Our two-year-old is at a Starbucks
down the road with my cousin. So we'll be running back to take her to bed.
I'm glad your cousin is there. I know the Starbucks. All right. Well, while we have you
in Alston, let's talk about what's going on.
You have a home in Norwood.
You are married.
You have a two-year-old, did you say?
Yes.
And there's a cousin in the picture somewhere.
I know that.
That's what I know so far.
What else do I need to know, Lizzie?
So, yes, Paul and I are married.
We've been married for about three and a half years.
This will be our third Christmas with our baby,
even though, or our daughter, even though she's two. She's still your baby. Yeah, she is. She
always will be. So I am Jewish. I grew up not celebrating Christmas. And when Paul and I first
got together, we definitely celebrated Christmas together with his family, but we never really had
representation of Christmas
decorations around the house. So again, we've been living together. This will be our seventh
Christmas living together, but only our third Christmas tree. So things really did start to
change the year our daughter was born. She was born a week before Christmas. So yeah, so that
was the first year we weren't really traveling to see Paul's family.
So that was the first year we got a real tree in the house, which I was okay with and have grown to love actually having the tree.
But now that she's older and I think we're both kind of thinking about traditions we want to give her and celebrate as a family.
give her and celebrate as a family, Paul started really pushing or expressed interest in doing more Christmas decorations like the stockings and the wreaths and the lights on the outside and stuff, which I would prefer we don't for several reasons, which, of course, we can get into.
But that's kind of why we brought the case to you, Judge.
All right. So, Paul, what's your portfolio of Christmas cheer now in the house?
We have got, I would argue, not a lot. We do have the tree.
I'm not looking for your opinion, sir. I'm looking for the facts.
We've got the tree, which has lights, a collection of sterling silver snowflakes hangs on the tree.
Those were, I believe, my grandmother's, some store-bought candy canes, and a couple other random things hanging on the tree I think that my mom gave us.
How can you even claim to be a real fan of Christmas if you're not making your own candy canes?
I would like to get into candy cane making.
Oh, I know.
Okay.
I see where we're going.
Okay.
Continue.
We've got like a Frosty the Snowman book, which like sings a Frosty the Snowman song. Yeah.
You sent in several pictures of books and all the evidence, the photos that you sent in obviously are going to be at the Judge John Hodgman page at MaximumFun.org and also on our Instagram at Instagram.com slash Judge John Hodgman. And I see these pictures of books. I'm just going to take those off the table. This might actually help your case, Paul, that these are not Christmas decorations. They are simply Christmas themed books on a bare carpet. That is not a decoration.
We also have the candles.
Oh, yes. And we've got candles in the windows, but only some of the windows. So I think there's
12 candles currently.
Right.
And there's probably like 26 windows that-
There's 38 windows, Judge.
Okay. There's 38 windows. So we're about 20-some candles shy.
I see the photo of your 12 candles, and I see a photo of a single white stocking.
Yep, that's our daughter's stocking that my parents gave us.
It's very adorable, a white knitted stocking and a single hat with elf ears on it.
Yep, I think my parents gave that to us also.
I see an ornament of a menorah. That was just
gifted to us this Hanukkah
from my aunt,
which is unusual. As of this recording
it is Hanukkah, so happy Hanukkah to you. Thank you.
And a box
full of assorted
Christmassy junk that has not been
deployed yet. And a before and after
photo of your
tree, both before it is decorated and after it is
decorated and i will say first of all nice tree i see you have hung the elf hat sort of on the
corner of the window is that a tradition in i've never seen that before no that's just, um, we don't have, uh, curtain rods yet. So it's kind of a, like a little,
like a tooth there that you would hang a curtain rod from that was, I don't know. I had to put the
hat somewhere. Right. You need to, you need to get that hat off the floor somehow. And, uh, I like
this tree. I think it's a, first of all, it's a real tree, correct? It's a real tree. Yep. It's got very great limb distribution. It is full without being overly dense. I'm going to say I like the
tree. I can't see the whole room, but I don't love the placement. I don't know why you haven't put it
right there in the crook of those two windows. If you'd like to see what I'm talking about,
go over to our Instagram page and you can tell me whether I'm right or wrong. But I'm going to now turn to you, Lizzie,
and say this decorated tree is pretty sparse. Don't have a lot of decorations there.
You know, I would agree. Again, this is a new thing in terms of our ornament collection.
Right. Oh, I thought you just meant Christmas. I was going to say, I think it's been like 2,000 years.
Sounds like it.
No, it's new for us in terms of having a family set of decorations.
So I agree.
The tree is sparse and has a lot of potential.
I think that if we really focused our Christmas decoration efforts just onto the tree, We can make it something really special and
meaningful and beautiful. And I think ornaments have the opportunity to, you know, mark certain
occasions and periods of time. Paul did mention we've got some from his mother and many of those
were really for our daughter, but like, you know, baby's first Christmas and little shoes and stuff.
I think if we got carried away with, okay, we're going to put these garlands up and like get some other lights for outside and wreaths and just kind of spread
everything too thin, it might of course be overwhelming to us. But also I think really
just it could be more powerful way to decorate to just focus on the tree, at least until that
does get more filled out over the years.
Now, there are Hanukkah decorations out. There are a few.
Tell me what you got.
So we have a menorah that belonged to my great-grandmother.
Yeah.
A single menorah.
So you do not have an opportunity for four million lights?
That is true.
You don't have one of those four million candle menorahs?
The so-called festival of lights.
Yeah.
It's some miracle of the oil.
We could probably get four million lights on the outside of the house.
We're going to get back to you in a second, Paul.
That's not Hanukkah.
Oh, I'm sorry.
Yes, we have one Hanukkah menorah that, again, is a family heirloom.
What is the background of the menorah? It belonged to my great-grandma, Sarah, who she immigrated to New York, and she was about 13 from Russia, what is now Belarus.
And, yeah, she acquired this as an adult in New York, but it's now mine.
That's beautiful.
Yeah, thank you.
So that lives in a hutch with other fragile decorative items during the year and during the Hanukkah season.
We take it out and light it most nights of Hanukkah.
And we also have a large decorative dreidel that was given to Paul and I for our engagement from an old family friend of mine.
Oh, cool.
And that's the blue thing in this photo.
Yeah.
Okay.
It's kind of weird.
Oh, cool. And that's the blue thing in this photo.
Yeah.
Okay. It's kind of weird. It doesn't function as a dreidel, but it's a beautiful painted decorative piece that, again, we kind of store with all the Christmas stuff in this drawer so it comes out just Hanukkah time.
And last year we had this party for our daughter right around, it was during Hanukkah, it was around her birthday and Christmas, too. And so my mom brought up a large, just kind of a lunch bag of wooden dreidels.
I think she presumed that some of the kids at the present at the party would take it away.
Yeah, you got a bunch of dreidels in a candy dish here.
In a candy dish.
Again, they're just out because we have them.
Our daughter enjoys spinning them.
Oh, yeah.
She likes playing them.
It's a delight.
And that's it.
Oh, and two Hanukkah dish towels, which I didn't include in the evidence because I forgot we had them.
But I'm sure Paul will bring that up.
I put out a Hanukkah dish towel on the first night of Hanukkah.
What's on the Hanukkah dish towel?
Just out of curiosity.
That is a embroidered menorah.
Okay.
And the words, happy Hanukkah.
Not an heirloom of some kind.
Not at all.
It was, again, a gift last Hanukkah from another aunt.
How do you feel about those dish towels?
You know, I am pretty ambivalent.
They lived at the bottom of the dish towel drawer. and I found them, and there's a towel.
Your Hanukkah display right now is taste.
Okay.
And I don't think those dish towels are—
Yeah, you're right.
They don't kind of mix with the vibe.
Sorry, Ant.
Oh, she definitely won't care or listen.
Well, I mean, I'll say that your Hanukkah display is pretty sparse as well, but I grew up in Brookline, Massachusetts, and there's a large Jewish community there. And a lot
of my friends were in our Jewish. I've seen my share of Hanukkahs. And I would say that in
comparison to Christmas, it is not a highly decorated holiday, typically. It is more
restrained in its finery, whereas Christmas can go hard. That's true. And I'm certainly not Yes. Definitely we can have more lights. I know this is actually the biggest tree we have had by a little bit,
but the lights, as Paul pointed out, don't really...
It could be a little more filled in because now we have a larger tree.
It's a little sparse.
Let's take a quick recess and hear about another show on Maximum Fun.
Judge Hodgman will talk to Paul about his relationship with Christmas
when we come back in just a minute.
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Court's back in session. You're listening to Wreathing Havoc.
We've heard from Lizzie about her holiday decorating vision.
Now let's get back in the courtroom so Paul can talk about why he loves to decorate for Christmas.
Paul, why is it important to you to add more?
Where did you grow up?
You're not from Massachusetts.
What's your relationship with where you grew up and what Christmas was like there?
I grew up in Des Moines, Iowa.
So it's very kind of Midwestern upbringing.
Yeah.
I wouldn't say that my mom was, or that my parents were like insane with Christmas decorations.
Although I think if Lizzie saw it, she probably would say that they were insane with Christmas decorations.
They didn't really do any lights on the outside of the house except for the candles in the window.
Until maybe I was about like seven or eight years old, I think.
I was about like seven or eight years old, I think.
I know that one year, like I just begged my mom enough that eventually she like broke down and put some lights on the outside of the house because like I had advocated for
it so strongly.
Yeah.
On the inside of the house, my mom had like a snowman collection.
I remember she probably still does have the snowman collection, even though she lives
in Florida.
They would have a lot of Christmas decorations, Christmas cookies.
I mean, like starting from the day after Thanksgiving through New Year's Day. I remember like lots of Santa Clauses and reindeer and just all the shows and the whole thing.
I'm going to make a judgment here soon but you know
as far as I'm concerned I always get weirded
out when there are too many Santa Clauses around
you know what I mean
because there's one dude
why are you going to have 15 different
statues and illustrations
often in wildly
distinct styles
Santa takes many forms
I mean
that Santa is an interdimensional shapeshifter who can get into houses that don't even have chimneys.
That's probably the most plausible explanation of that myth if we were going to translate it into reality.
But I don't want to see that happening.
It just depends on what timeline you're talking about, like Spider-Man.
Yeah, that's right.
Into the Santa-verse.
Yeah.
So there's a lot of Christmas sprinkled around your home growing up yeah definitely but i'm interested in
this thing of you demanding or asking for lights on the outside of the house when you're did you
say you were seven years old why did you want that so badly well you know we would drive past
those houses with not that would have the four million lights or whatever it was.
Did you ever have a situation which I've heard about in a number of communities?
And it was true in northeast Philadelphia where my mom grew up, where like there will be one block that is known for the decorations and like all the houses go really wacky.
What I liked about it was there's one neighborhood in Des Moines, and they still did this last time I was there.
And I wouldn't say it was really wacky.
It was very tasteful.
And they would do the thing where every house in the neighborhood would do the thing where you take, like, the white paper bag or the one-gallon milk jug and just put, like, a tea candle inside.
Yeah.
And kind of line that down the street.
Candelaria.
Is that what that's called?
That's what it's called, Candelaria.
Candelaria.
I've never seen it done with a gallon jug, though.
I think that's gross.
Paper bag, nice.
Well, in Iowa, they would do it with gallon jugs.
You would go through those neighborhoods in Iowa and see those decorated homes that are all decked out with lights all over the place and Candelaria.
And you're like, someday I want to live in a house like that.
Exactly.
And make my Jewish wife live there.
Pretty much.
All right.
Well, I knew that I wanted to have a home
that looked festive and merry and bright.
Did you think that it looked cool?
Did you feel light shame?
Yeah, a little bit, yeah.
I was like, oh man, we just got these candles in the windows
and we got these trees in the yard and there's no lights on any of the trees.
And like there should be because everyone else has them. And like, yeah, definitely a little bit of light shame.
All right. Does this make you feel any differently about his schemes and plans that he's come to me to approve of, Lizzie?
Do you want your husband to feel light shame?
No, but I also don't think there is that pressure around our neighborhood currently.
I think a lot of this, again, is because of our daughter and he wants to kind of recreate that sense of wonderment for her.
But, you know, I think in those first years that I knew him, like he never decorated for Christmas. I don't think this is like an internal urge that he needs to do, because if it was, then he would have advocated for a tree
for those other years before we had our daughter. He was waiting to see how long you would stick
around him. Oh, well, I will definitely say that this is not like a deal breaker situation. I think
we both are in agreement that we're going to raise our daughter with both of our traditions. And I think we both agree that the compromise is this somewhere in the middle. But I will order you guys to be divorced if I have to.
Oh.
Yikes.
I learned something from the Great Christmas Light fight.
You got to keep the stakes high.
Yep.
Keep them high.
Artificially high.
And also a lot of yelling.
Here comes Santa!
Oh my goodness!
What am I seeing right now?
That's what Paul wants people to say
when they walk by your house.
Yeah.
Paul, a lot of this case will be decided on taste.
Okay.
So tell me what you want to add, your dream holiday scheme.
Okay, here is what I want.
My plans would be to put some, we've got like a side porch, which I think I sent you a picture of.
And I would like to put some garlands up on those.
White lights.
I only want to do white lights
on the outside of the house
to compliment the white lights and the candles.
I want to complete the windows
with a candle in every window,
or at least a candle in every window
that like people would see from the street. and we've also got like a front porch but i'd like to put lights kind of
around that as well um we've got a couple of new trees in the yard which i would like to put
some white lights on at some point this is all kind of like a five-year plan i wouldn't all go
out and do this all at once but as those those trees grow, you're going to spend your daughter's college fund on this. If I have to put some lights on those trees in the yard, you know,
Lizzie has talked about putting some evergreen trees in our front yard, which I feel like if
you've got an evergreen tree in the winter time, you've got to put lights on it. So, you know,
I would like to be able to have the freedom that as our outdoor area is improved that i can make christmas
lights additions to it as necessary to complement the new additions it's like we're going to probably
put in like a fence next summer and once that fence goes up i would like to put on some lights
and even potentially uh some wreaths um lizzie is very anti-wreath for some reason.
I don't get it.
When the poor children come by wanting to sell wreaths to me,
well, not the poor children.
I work at a school, so when the kids are selling wreaths, I would like to be able to buy a wreath from them.
You meant poor children like pathetic children,
not impoverished children.
Yes, pathetic children, exactly.
I would like to do a Santa ritual with our daughter.
My Santa ritual?
I mean, I would like to pretend that Santa Claus is coming on Christmas Eve,
put out the cookies, the carrot, the glass of milk,
and then fill up the stocking with some stocking stuffers
so when she comes down on Christmas morning,
she can feel feel like santa
claus was there the night before different people do different santa rituals john so some people
will do stocking some people will do a plate of cookies uh some people will do elf on the shelf
i would like to do some people will at some point spill santa's blood so that the coming harvest in
the next year
will be a good one.
Of course.
There's a variety
of different Santa rituals.
Oh, yeah.
I mean,
this goes back to Saturnalia.
Yeah.
And Sol Invictus.
Yeah.
Yeah.
I, myself,
in our family,
we take Santa's firstborn.
Let us never forget
that this began
as a pagan holiday.
It is not a Christian holiday.
It is a pagan holiday
to bring light
to the longest night of the year
by accidentally setting a tree on fire.
Yeah. Yeah. Right. And that's kind of the soul of my argument is that all of the elements from Christmas that I want to use are like not Christian elements.
You know, all of the secular parts of the holiday are the parts that I'm really interested in.
So I don't really see that it being incompatible with any of Lizzie's Jewish traditions or Jewish upbringing.
And the final thing I would like Lizzie to do is, you know, some of the houses in our neighborhood are decorated in a way that I will admit is not great.
And I think that she shouldn't, when our daughter is around, make comments like, like, oh, that's awful.
What does not great mean?
Tell me about how your neighbors have terrible taste.
There's a few houses where they really kind of like mix the aesthetic.
So they'll have like a cartoon Rudolph next to like a very realistic looking Santa.
Right.
And to me, that doesn't quite,'t quite you know again they're from the different
universes and the worst are when spider-man is there with batman and they both have santa hats
on yeah yeah you know and i'm not trying to do anything like that um but if we saw something
like that and delighted our child i'd want her to be able to be delighted by it and not have uh
her mom saying like oh that's bad's bad and that's no good.
So how do you feel about inflatables?
I would not want an inflatable for myself.
I don't mind them.
For whom would you want one?
For Santa, of course.
Maybe someone around the block
so I could drive by it like once a week.
For those who don't know what an inflatable is,
it's literally an inflated large,
maybe five, six six seven or eight
foot tall soft sculpture of a snowman or a santa or a sleigh or whatever and it's often has a
lighting element in it and the genie from aladdin that you for example and on the great christmas
light fight message boards uh inflatables are kind of considered cheating they're kind of yard
filler and i think they're pretty cheap looking myself.
Sorry if you love them out there in the world.
But the fact that you said that you wouldn't want an inflatable for your yard makes me turn to Lizzie and say,
you know, I know this isn't your thing, but at least we're starting from a ground level where I, Judge Sean Hodgman,
say that Paul's taste is pretty good in this regard.
I would agree with that.
Okay. Now, Paul, you did also want to add a cagatillo?
No, that was something I added.
I came across that in some of the research I was doing, and I was very intrigued.
And I offered that up to you as potentially a suggestion that if you do happen to rule in Paul's favor, that maybe we could have this as well.
So for those who do not know what a Cagatillo is, and until an hour ago, I did not know.
And my eyes had never beheld this Cthulhu-like horror.
There is a tradition in Spain of decorating the nativity with a cogoner, which is a statue of a man pooping.
That is a lot of different. And I'd seen these before.
It reminds you when you're in Spain, like, oh, this is another country where traditional taboos about a statue of a man literally squatting and pooping are different than they are in, say, Des Moines, Iowa.
are different than they are in, say, Des Moines, Iowa.
But it is a good luck charm or a good luck figure, kind of mischievous figure fertilizing the earth with his poop.
And then there's another iteration of it.
And you said a photo of this from Catalonia called a cagatillo.
And that is a big log with a face on it that kind of looks like it's squatting down, getting ready to poop.
And it's smiling.
And according to you, I was going to blame Paul for this, but you put this in my brain forever.
You fill the smiling log with sweets, fruits, and nuts.
And on Christmas Eve, the whole family gathers, and I'm quoting here, to sing traditional
songs during which the log is hit with a stick.
And when beaten hard enough, the log will, quote, defecate and spill its contents.
It's like a wooden Spanish poop pinata.
Yeah.
Do you want one of these, Paul?
Did you just type into the internet weird goy stuff?
That would have been good.
No, I think it was just Christmas decoration and things like that.
I don't know, just kind of get a wider perspective on it.
I'm delighted by it. Yes.
Oh, you want one?
Oh, yeah. I think it's great.
I'm all about bringing in as many little treasures from different cultures.
So I love that there's a bowl of dreidels there.
I love that we've got a menorah
decoration on the tree.
And, you know,
if there's going to be a
strange smiling log.
I understand. But you understand
where Lizzie is coming from, you know, because
she's seen, we've all seen
how a Christmas decoration
collection
can grow and grow and grow and become increasingly this gaudy horde.
Right. Yeah.
Lizzie, are you concerned that if we start on something, the line will just get moved and moved and moved?
Yeah, that's part of it. I think just having objects in our home that are just used for about a month each year and then we have to, you know, put them away and take them out and like put them up all over the place.
And yes, of course, it will grow.
I kind of like the idea of just the ornaments because they are smaller and easier to store and we can just like put them in a drawer.
But yeah, imagining like many, many garlands and lights and also things that like the tree have to be disposed of like wreaths or garlands
that are alive or you know used to be alive yeah what's your anti-wreath bias yeah i think again
all of this i agree that paul has good taste and that like when i see houses with wreaths
and white lights i think it does look beautiful but it doesn't look like my house and
i think that's part of it too like not just, not just am I overwhelmed by the thought of all this Christmas stuff in my home, but Christmas is such a dominant holiday and piece of our culture that for someone who didn't belong to you growing up or didn't belong to me growing up, I should say, I always identified as it was something that wasn't that I wasn't a part of and I don't have any like negative connotations like
it's not it's not warlike or you know I have anger towards this except for the really tacky
inflatables I will I do have some anger towards that but it's more just like I don't know that
that doesn't feel like home and I realized, I joined and made my home with someone who does celebrate Christmas.
But I think there's ways we can incorporate it without just the stuff and the decorative.
So, you know, you joked about Paul making his own candy canes.
You know, I wouldn't put that past him.
Just this weekend, he made gingerbread cookies with our daughter.
I would really love to focus on the experiential stuff and make traditions that certainly can have
a Christmas focus, but things like that. His mother has these awesome Christmas cookie recipes
that I'd love for us to learn from her. I could see us like going to the Nutcracker or something
like that, especially as our daughter gets older, a town tree lighting, things like that.
I'm open to embracing the Christmas spirit.
I just don't love it to be all over my house.
I think when I come home, I want to I want that to feel less Christmassy because I see it everywhere.
It's all over the place.
everywhere. It's all over the place. And for our daughter, too, you know, I want her to identify with both cultures and as even a half Jewish person that she is, you know, it can be overwhelming.
Like her daycare, for example, has a huge Christmas tree and Christmas lights and 14 wreaths. And I
am fine with that because that's her this woman's house. But, you know, she already sees that all
day. It's not like there's I don't't think she's, you know, missing out on anything just by our home having a big beautiful Christmas tree and that being it. Isn't a huge baked in tradition of Hanukkah decoration at that level, right?
That the celebration of Hanukkah is much, much less traditionally performative other than through ritual and food and communion and experience.
It's not decorative as Christmas has come to be in these United States.
It's not decorative as Christmas has come to be in these United States.
Don't you have some concerns about the fact that you might be pushing some of the Jewishness to the margins at this time of year of your family?
Because it's half of your family's culture and tradition.
I hear that.
But I choose not to listen.
I hear that, but it sounds like the teacher from Peanuts.
No, I mean, and I realize I'm coming at this from like a place of privilege. of Christmas and the Christmas spirit was to welcome the stranger and to give goodness to everyone
and to bring everyone in
and to open your door to everybody.
To welcome the stranger
and shove a bunch of Christmas in their faces.
My understanding was that the true meaning of Christmas
was to engage in a fight in the news media
over the decoration of coffee cups.
That's a more recent tradition.
I'm a little younger than you are.
So that was part of it.
And then my other thing that I really think and why I think that coming, I realize that maybe Lizzie looks at it and says, you know, that doesn't look like my house when she's coming home.
And there's a very powerful bit of testimony that she gave and i hear that but what i would say lights at this time of year as you
pointed out and hanukkah is the festival of lights is uh you know something that goes back to
paganism and something that probably is even you know deeper part of being human where like at this time of year when it's
like cold and dark and we don't see a lot of sunlight that having our world lit up even if
only artificially you know helps make us feel um more complete inside and that so that when i come
home and it's four thirty in the afternoon and it's already dark and that's
like totally awful at least I'm coming home at 4 30 and it's dark and my house is lit up and it
looks festive and merry and bright and it makes me feel warm inside and that is the thing that I
like about it and I think that that is something that um isn't exclusive to christmas paul i have a note here from our producer before i go into my
sadness shed to celebrate this advent a la jason sims and come up with my verdict if he doesn't
bring up his fourth grade story please prompt him to oh okay when i was in fourth grade i loved christmas so much and my mom was like a um like a
room mother and i had like somehow convinced my fourth grade teacher that like the thing i needed
to do was to leave like the school christmas assembly early and like run back to our classroom
so i did this and like i ran back to the classroom and I dressed up like Santa Claus.
And then when all the kids came back from the Christmas assembly down in the gym or whatever,
I passed out Christmas treats to all the kids as they came in because I'm that enthusiastic about Christmas. Lizzie, what do you think about that fourth grade story?
It's so heartwarming. I love picturing Paul as a little guy. Yeah, that's so sweet.
That's so sweet. And had I been in that class, I would have gratefully accepted the treats.
Does it change your mind about the wreath?
Yeah. I mean, I didn't buy the like wanting to help the poor kids because like you also
sell like cookies and other random stuff throughout the year.
They're not poor kids.
Yeah, and he also supports his classroom with our personal funds.
So, you know, he doesn't have to buy the wreaths.
I mean, again, I would be fine with a tasteful wreath if you should order it so.
But, meh, I don't think we need a wreath.
Yeah.
I think I've heard everything I need to in order to make my decision.
I'm going to go contemplate by the sadness tree.
I'll be back in a moment with my verdict.
Please rise as Judge John Hodgman exits the courtroom.
Lizzie, would you like to share any more noises of moderate displeasure?
Yeah, I was worried about that.
Sorry.
Maybe like a an eh.
Oh, like if I saw a decoration I didn't like?
Yeah.
Like, ugh.
Ugh.
Oh, gosh.
In voiceover, this is called efforts.
But this is you recording voiceover for a video game,
the premise of which you don't like
holiday decorations. Sounds like a fun game. Lizzie, how do you feel about your chances?
I'm not sure. I think I got my point across, but I honestly don't know how the judge is
going to decide our case. How do you feel, Paul? I'm concerned that I didn't lay out
a specific enough list of demands.
Really?
Are you sure?
And like every Christmas,
I'm going to somehow come out
without everything that I want.
Can I tell you guys,
I just decorated my home for Christmas,
which in my house
as a relative non-decorator
means I went to a big box retail store, purchased one string of icicle style lights and hung it
over the entranceway to my home. And I was thinking, well, I did that. What are you going
to do? And then my seven-year-old and my five-year-old noticed that I had done it,
ran to the front window in the kitchen, and my daughter said,
Oscar, it's the most beautiful thing in the world.
Oh.
Wow.
Anyway, we'll see what Judge John Hodgman has to say about all this
when we come back in just a second. Hello'm your judge john hodgman the judge john hodgman podcast is brought to you
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Please rise as Judge John Hodgman re-enters the courtroom to present his verdict.
You may be seated. Cthulhu bless us, everyone.
verdict. You may be seated. Cthulhu bless us, everyone. So I've heard a lot of testimony,
and contrary to Paul's belief, a lot of very specific requests. A real Christmas list,
if you will. A very specific presence that he wants. And I will say, however, that my worst fear was that I was going to have to be talking to a person whose taste in decorations do not align with mine.
As listeners may know, I'm not a colored lights person.
I wasn't raised with colored lights and I don't like them.
Your mileage may vary. I appreciate that.
I do not care for inflatables or the crossing of IP streams, as it were.
I shouldn't have said IP streams. I meant
intellectual property streams, but sometimes Christmas gives us other little gifts,
such as commercial creations like Frosty the Snowman and Rudolph the Red-Nosed Reindeer
and nativity scenes, for example. I mean, pick a lane. And I find a lot of that stuff to be
tacky. I think that while four million lights, actually the gristmill with four million lights and the great Christmas light fight was pretty amazing, but also a terrifying display of obsession and power hoarding, electricity hoarding.
And, you know, I'm sensitive to these things because lots of times Christmas decorating in particular is coded to class.
So when I would drive up and down that one block of Mayfair in northeast Philadelphia where my mom's family grew up and lived and saw those super duper highly decorated houses with Christmas lights all over the place and, you know, phony Santas on the roof
and so forth. You know, that's a working class Irish and German neighborhood, at least it was
at the time. Whereas in Brookline, Massachusetts, which is a much more upper middle class to
affluent class, the decorations would be what might be snobbly called more tasteful
or restrained. And though my family was working class, that's where I grew up and where my taste
was imprinted. You know, if you had come to me, Paul, saying you really needed to have
a 45-foot wooden soldier out there, I would have had a different problem as a judge. But instead, this is not a question
of taste, because I think you and I share more or less the same taste in terms of lighting,
in terms of your aesthetic. I kind of feel and get it. And I share with you the pleasure in seeing
tastefully deployed lights in a time of extra special darkness this holiday season of all holiday
seasons. Both literal darkness, because it gets dark so early, as you point out, and
existential darkness of the times we live in. That's how I feel anyway. But I was quite moved
by Lizzie saying that what you describe does not look like her home.
And while I appreciate that your decorations are essentially secular,
you made an argument that they were partially pagan, pre-Christian Christmas,
and also just sort of contemporary mythological,
Santa Claus coming down and eating that cookie.
If you and your wife were both either non-religious or both raised in a Christian tradition,
I think this would be a less of a thorny dispute to settle.
But whether you wish to acknowledge it or not,
But whether you wish to acknowledge it or not, there is an overwhelming, the Jewish part of your visual heritage within your house, with what are undeniably Christian, though secular, you know, traditionally Christmas, which means Christian, whether you like it or not, decorative displays, is problematic.
or not decorative displays is problematic. And whether Lizzie feels it particularly keenly,
if you are going to raise your daughter truthfully in both traditions and meaningfully in both traditions, I'm not sure that you want to have a passive display of Christian dominance over the Hanukkah season. Even though it's beautiful,
it codes as Christian. So I advise, first of all, contemplation on that point and discussion,
further discussion as you guys move forward in the celebration of this holiday. I love Lizzie's
idea of focusing on the experiential more than the decorative, making Christmas cookies, etc.
But also, I would trust, and I'm sure Lizzie did not mean to exclude, the various traditions and
rituals and contemplations of the Hanukkah season and sharing equal time and equal importance in your house. I never put up lights. I never put up those icicle lights that Jesse
Thorne put up in his house. I never put up anything outside of my house because most of my adult life
I never had a house, had an apartment, still do. My restraint in decoration was tree-focused,
very specifically tree-focused because I like a Christmas tree.
I like having it there. I think it provides a lot of delight and joy to me and the children that
live with me. But it also, the reason I never got into decoration wasn't so much philosophical,
but even just decorating a tree, decorating requires a lot of bending over and picking
things up and putting them on top of something else, which is my least favorite activity. So I'll do as little as possible.
I appreciate that you want to do more, but there has to be a guideline, Paul, that you don't do
too much. As you say, you have some specific wants. And as you say, every year at Christmas, you didn't get everything you wanted.
And now that you're a grown-up, you want to have everything you want.
But that's not what Christmas is all about.
Sometimes you don't get that big track programmable space tank that you wanted so badly and asked for.
I never did.
Tim McGonigal did.
Why was that allowed? Why did Cthulhu allow that injustice to occur? That has been a point of contemplation for me for the rest of my life, and I'm glad to have that point of contemplation.
Santa Hodgman will not give you everything on your list, though you have been very nice and not naughty at all.
I am ordering restraint for this year.
I'm going to be very specific.
You must get more decorations for your tree.
That doesn't look good the way it is. Get like 10 to 20 percent more.
You guys both can pick these out.
They don't have to be Christmassy
because there's all kinds of decorations.
Nor do they have to be Hanukkah-y.
But like, Lizzie, you get out there
and get some decorations that you like.
I agree that the focus should be on the tree.
That's your starting place.
That is the center point from which Christmas explodes.
You need more lights on that tree as well. That has the center point from which Christmas explodes. You need
more lights on that tree as well.
That has to happen this year.
You need to get
some window dressings
for your windows.
Because that elf hat looks weird
hanging there. It looks really intentional
and part of some tradition that I do not
understand. Like the
hanging elf hat is something you do.
I don't know that.
Or else come up with a tradition for that.
So that's the primary thing.
I'm going to say right now, like dioramas within the house, we're going to put a long hold on that.
I'm also going to say something that's going to be controversial to you guys or to Paul, I think specifically, but to listeners of the Judge Sean Hodgman podcast, you know my stance on this.
And if you have kids in the car or near you who harbor certain ideas about Santa Claus, you may want to pause this podcast now. I feel very, very strongly based
on personal experience that teaching children that Santa Claus is an actual being that comes
into their home is a lie that suits no one and often is very painful when it is revealed.
I believe that people, if they wish to talk about Santa Claus, should tell their young
children that Santa Claus is as real as their favorite characters in books. That does not mean
that you cannot have your cookie and have a little bit eaten, or tell the story about how Santa Claus
comes and leaves presents, but Santa is a character, not a real person. And you will find that kids'
brains can include both of those realities in ways that when
it becomes clear to them that it's just a story, they're not traumatized.
The outside of your house, everyone can take a look at it online at our Instagram page
at Judge John Hodgman.
It's pretty grim.
No offense to you.
It looks like a dark, scary, haunted house.
No offense to you.
It looks like a dark, scary, haunted house.
And I think that it is okay to light up that house with a minimal amount of purely secular lighting.
And I am talking about you need to supplement those candles,
those electric candles,
and put one in all the, at least the street-facing windows.
That will look beautiful.
And Lizzie, if you put those evergreen bushes or, you know, those fir trees in your yard,
you're damn right Paul's going to put some lights on there.
It's fair.
I am going to say no wreath.
I don't know why Lizzie hates that wreath, but a line must be drawn.
And there you're going to stop. Essentially, I'm finding in Lizzie's favor, focus on the tree. Grow your
traditions from there. Do not try to vomit Christmas all over your house to make up for
something you feel you didn't have enough of when you were seven. You're moving forward, and your forward motion must include as much Hanukkah as Christmas.
And you have to work really hard, since Hanukkah doesn't have as many visual signifiers,
to make sure your daughter understands that and experiences it.
This is the sound of a gavel.
Go get under the mistletoe and kiss you guys.
Judge John Hodgman rules.
That is all.
Please rise as Judge John Hodgman exits the courtroom.
Lizzie, how do you feel?
I feel great.
I think this really is a great compromise.
And I'm really kind of excited that Judge ruled on the Santa thing, threw that in there.
I wasn't even going to bring that up, but I really like that
because, yeah, that does kind of creep me out that we would teach her
that someone would just kind of come in the house and break in and stuff.
So, yeah, thanks for that one.
Paul, how do you feel?
I feel pretty good about it.
I think that getting the lights, a few lights on the outside of the house and finishing off the candles in the windows is just what I wanted.
So I feel good about it.
Well, both of you, thank you for joining us on the Judge John Hodgman podcast.
Happy Hanukkah and Merry Christmas and Cthulhu take us all.
You too, guys. Thanks for having us.
Thanks for having us.
Another Judge John Hodgman case is in the books.
In a minute, we'll do swift justice.
First, thanks to Travis Martilla for naming this week's episode, Wreathing Havoc.
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Hashtag your Judge John Hodgman tweets.
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I always enjoy seeing those Judge John Hodgman tweets.
Seeing those hashtags fly by.
Yeah, usually they're just pedantic corrections of you,
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I like them too.
I'm glad to know that people are listening and that they care, so thank you.
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This week's episode recorded by Alex Birch at the PRX Podcast Garage in Alston, Massachusetts.
Our thanks to our pals over there at PRX and a special shout out to their podcast network, Radiotopia, home of a number of buddies of ours.
Keep up the good work.
Our producer is Jennifer Marmer.
Now, Swift Justice answering your small disputes with quick judgment.
Are you ready, Judge Judgment?
Judge Judgment.
You know, it's a very hard podcast name to say.
Yeah.
I have to admit it.
Yeah.
The Hudge Non-Judgment Podcast is hard to say, but I'm ready.
John says.
Here I come.
No, this is John from Garfield.
Oh, okay.
Excuse me.
Some members of my family refer to yellow cake with chocolate icing as chocolate cake.
I seek an injunction prohibiting this gross misuse of the phrase.
Bailiff Jesse, this has been something of a long episode, something of a heavy episode.
Uh-huh.
So I'm not going to go into great depth or detail here because, you know, it's the holiday time, the end of the year.
We've all worked hard and it's time to relax and take it easy if we can.
Plus, in five minutes, I have an appointment to go a-wassling.
Fair enough.
So let me get you wassling right out the door and say,
Hades, no.
Chocolate cake.
The cake has to be chocolate.
Chocolate frosted cake is chocolate frosted cake.
John, I hope that you are able to lord this over your family this whole holiday season.
Specifically Garfield and Odie.
That's right.
That's it for this week's episode.
Submit your cases at MaximumFun.org slash JJHO
or email Hodgman at MaximumFun.org.
No case too small.
Remember, we'll be off next week.
We'll see you in 2019 on the Judge John Hodgman podcast.