Judge John Hodgman - Wrecks Libris

Episode Date: March 2, 2016

Jeanna files suit against her husband Craig. She insists that Craig mishandles books, by dogearing the pages and using them as doorstops around the house.  ...

Transcript
Discussion (0)
Starting point is 00:00:00 Welcome to the Judge John Hodgman Podcast. I'm your good time, winter time guest bailiff, Monty Belmonte from WRSI 93.9 The River in Northampton, Massachusetts, in for Jesse Thorne. This week, Rex Libris. Gina files suit against her husband, Craig. She insists that Craig mishandles and abuses books. For instance, a curious incident of dog-earing the pages in the nighttime, using them as a doorstop to create a room with a view,
Starting point is 00:00:31 and to kill mockingbirds. She claims that Craig should Jane Eyre on the side of caution. Craig. Ooh. Craig says that insults his pride, and she's prejudiced. He eats, prays, loves books and will love them forever. He'll like them for always. And as long as he's living, a bookworm he'll be.
Starting point is 00:00:52 Who's right? Who's wrong? Only one man can decide. Please rise as Judge John Hodgman enters the courtroom and issues the obscure cultural reference. I am not sure that I exist, actually. I am all the writers that I have read, all the people I have met, all the women that I have loved, all the cities I have visited, and all the monsters I have judged.
Starting point is 00:01:20 Fun time, winter time, guest bailiff slash punsmith, literary humorist, Monty Belmonte, will you swear in the litigants? Gina and Craig, please rise and raise your right hands. Place it on this six volume signed first edition of War and Peace. Do you swear to tell the truth, the whole truth and nothing but the truth so help you aslan or whatever i do i so swear do you swear to abide by judge john hodgman's ruling despite the fact that his three books the areas of my expertise more information than you require and that is all buzz marketing are actually dog ear proof yes i guess thank you judge h Hodgman, you may proceed. So first of all, Gina, this is an unprecedented episode of Judge John Hodgman, because here we are in the lovely studios of WRSI, the River 93.9 FM in Northampton, Massachusetts, with our guest bailiff, Monty Belmonte.
Starting point is 00:02:20 Hello. Hello, Judge John Hodgman. But also in studio are both the plaintiff and the defendant, Gina and Craig. This has never happened before. I have judged people live on stage before, but not in studio. And for some weird reason, when you asked them to rise, I motioned to them, no, don't do that. Don't actually stand up.
Starting point is 00:02:44 And the reason for that is that we normally would add a sound effect. And occasionally, when people on the podcast are asked to rise and we're talking to them remotely via computers, I hear them actually get up and I'm just like, oh, come on, don't waste our time. But I don't know why I waved you guys off. I want you guys to stand up, so please stand. Yes. It's like live Foley.
Starting point is 00:03:12 And now Gina and Craig, you may be seated. I think you should actually leave the courtroom when it's time to leave the courtroom too. This new student, we'll see.
Starting point is 00:03:20 We'll see when we get there. We'll see. You know what? We're going to win. We're in completely uncharted territory at this point and because this case is so cut and dry, we will probably have to, we will probably have
Starting point is 00:03:28 to, you know, what's it? Elongate? Stretch it out? Stretch it out. Yeah. Pad it out. We'll probably have to pad it out in a lot of different ways. Right.
Starting point is 00:03:37 So, yeah, I might just leave the studio and go over to... Sylvester's? Sylvester's for a cup of coffee yeah more buzz marketing well you know what i'm i'm a local hero you certainly are i watch people give you looks when we go in there and get our coffee before the when you come to do and as a local hero what do i do i ignore them right i do not make eye contact with them and if i and if i accidentally do i blame them you know but it is nice to be back here in my part-time home region of the pioneer valley of western massachusetts in the middle of
Starting point is 00:04:11 a cold cold winter we're going to talk about that in a moment but gina and craig welcome to the show for an immediate summary judgment in one of yours favors uh can either of you uh name the person i was quoting as i did not enter the courtroom? I guess all artifices away. Yeah. As I was sitting here. As you were sitting right here. Looking at you uncomfortably in person.
Starting point is 00:04:32 I am wearing dark sunglasses in the antique Chinese court tradition to hide my soul from you guys. Ogre face. In China, in antiquity, that's what judges would do they would wear tinted glasses i didn't even know they had sunglasses back then i learned something new every day so uh craig you have been brought to court by your wife gina so you have the option to guess the person i was quoting or to throw the guess to Gina? I don't think this is correct, but I was going to guess Harold Bloom in The Anxiety of Influence. That is a guess.
Starting point is 00:05:12 Gina. Craig took the guess. So what are you going to guess? I don't even have a guess. You have to guess. Phil Collins. All guesses are wrong! As a caveat, we don't play Phil Collins
Starting point is 00:05:27 at 93.9 The River that much there's just a calendar with his face on it from Rhino Records okay nothing against Phil Collins very very
Starting point is 00:05:34 very defensive maybe early Genesis so we should we should say look nothing against Phil Collins fans Monty Belmonte
Starting point is 00:05:42 is the morning DJ and uh and uh and i would say uh chief personality chief among equals yes many very talented talented disc jockeys here at wrsi including michael sokol and joan holiday and khali smith and funky phil straub emily bork yeah so many talented folks so i don't mean to run them down in any way. But Monty is concerned that listeners to this podcast might think that somehow this station isn't cool because it's got a Phil Collins calendar on the wall. And so just to clarify,
Starting point is 00:06:20 they do not play Phil Collins very often because that might get in the way of playing Car Wheels on a Gravel Road by Lucinda Williams five times a day. Right. Every day. We like to fashion ourselves as Sioux Sioux Studio Cool. I don't think a day has passed that I have listened to W.R.S.
Starting point is 00:06:35 by the River. Would you like to make a wager? Where? I know that you have the log. I have the actual data. It's uncanny to me how often. That's a great album. Perception is reality reality but also sometimes wrong
Starting point is 00:06:45 that is a great album also taking a little tour of the studio before i reveal to you what the answer was i was very excited to see a poster behind gina and craig for the shea theater yes which is in turner's vault yes and you have coming up on march 4th is this am i reading this correctly friday march 4th uh red barat yes is coming to play the shea playing the shea theater little like buzz marketing i i run the the board of the shea it's a non-profit theater owned by the town of montague and we have our grand like light up the shea opening weekend then that's what's starting out with red barat let me tell you all far from come from far and near to go on march 4th friday to see red barat play the shea because that band is amazing yes and sunny jane who is the leader and the lead percussionist has a much probably the best
Starting point is 00:07:48 mustache totally entertainment yours comes close look i'm no slouch but if you guys you guys have seen my mustache you check out sunny jane and red barat yeah that is going to be a good time winter time fun time yes it is. Or early springtime. Almost. Summertime and wintertime and other time and this other time. I love that song. Where's the ukulele? I don't have it. Oh.
Starting point is 00:08:15 So we're padding this out, you guys. A little bit. I don't know how you feel about this issue. This is a case about a guy who is willfully damaging books from public libraries and and it seems very hard for me that he can mount a defense of that that will be justifiable to this court but first of all let me explain to you that your all guesses are wrong the person i was quoting was the author Jorge Luis Borges, one of my very favorite authors, author of many short stories, I think, that have library in the title, certainly the Library of Babel, who was himself a librarian until he fell out of favor with Juan Perón and his wife Evita Perón
Starting point is 00:09:02 because he refused to support their regime and was fired from his job as a librarian. I think it was the Miguel Cane Library. I might have that wrong. And instead made the Argentine National Poultry Inspector, which was not a great idea because I think he was probably almost blind even by then. A lot of people died from salmonella in Argentina in 1946.
Starting point is 00:09:30 And you can lay it all at the feet of the master Jorge Luis Borges. You said lay it and poultry. I know that you don't like puns, but you inadvertently created one. Nope, I don't think so. Okay. Wordplay at best. puns but you inadvertently created one nope i don't think so okay wordplay at best then after uh perone uh both perones were overthrowns in a game of thrones or that's terrible i hate myself then borges was made the director of the national library of argentina where he was
Starting point is 00:10:01 the now completely blind librarian, one of the greatest writers and bibliophiles of all time. And I wonder how he would think about Craig dog-earing the books from his library. He's dead now, so you don't need to worry about him. But you do need to worry about me. I can see you, unlike Borges. I am alive, and I can see you, and I can judge you. Now, I pretty well brought the case against craig gina you want to you want to add anything to your complaint i felt that you
Starting point is 00:10:33 might feel that way not to presume but i it pains me you presume of course you make a prez out of you and me it pains me to see happy now it pains me to see him do this because not only does he do this he will do it to a high degree not just the tiny corner of the page but as far as i would say a quarter of the page dog-eared running into the text with library with library books and i feel that's an important distinction between dog-earing library books and dog-earing books from your own personal collection oh the humanities oh the human it hurt it hurts me to see him do this and pass on this behavior to to whom minors specifically our son your son who is eight who is not here he's not here no we're gonna get to why you're here in a minute okay but how often craig do you dog ear library books in this way
Starting point is 00:11:34 well i say it's when i have a simple if then if i go to the library book then some books gonna get dog-eared when you're just browsing through the books at the library to dog-ear them out of habit no i mean if i like to save my page, I mean, usually I check those out. All right, let's talk about this now. You guys are not from the Pioneer Valley. No. Where are you from? Guilford, Connecticut.
Starting point is 00:12:14 Guilford, Connecticut. What brings you to the region today such that we could be in studio together? My parents took my children away on vacation, and we thought we would take a mini break ourselves over the school vacation week, so we went to the Berkshires. Oh, very nice. What'd you do? We just hung out.
Starting point is 00:12:33 We went out to dinner and had dinner out. We like to plug local businesses. Do you want to say where you had dinner? Really? Yeah. The Prairie Whale in Great Barrington. Oh, I don't know that one. Do they serve Prairie whale there?
Starting point is 00:12:46 They do. Prairie whale sounds like a Rocky Mountain oyster. Sounds like a euphemism. A prairie whale is a pig. Is it? Is that so? Oh, and I did have a pork dish, so yes. Well done.
Starting point is 00:12:56 Is that true, Craig? Yeah, according to their website, it's 19th century slang for a pig. Oh, boy. Did you fold over that website after you finished reading it? No, I tried, but it didn't work. Were you at the public library, and when you finished reading that website, did you take a key out of the keyboard just to... You're here in the lovely western part of my home commonwealth.
Starting point is 00:13:23 Our former home commonwealth as well oh are you massachusetts we were for 12 years our children are born bostonians i see we lived in we were not from there but we lived there for 12 years yes where are you from originally i'm from long island and he's from hartford oh okay oh nice were you a whalers fan? Uh-oh. He's taking off his pants. What's happening? Hartford Whalers socks. Oh, Hartford Whalers socks. He's trying to curry favor.
Starting point is 00:13:52 Do you have Lennox Prairie Whalers socks? I like it. Hartford Whalers socks. Very good. You know, favor curried. You win. Goodbye. Told you it'd be short uh and so what do you do down there in guilford connecticut i'm a freelance writer and craig i'm a physician you're a physician
Starting point is 00:14:14 all right and what library do you frequent in guilford craig the guilford free library and um the library at yale too though i don't routinely check out books from there you mean sterling memorial library sterling memorial library in the medical library as well and the library at Yale too, though I don't routinely check out books from there. You mean Sterling Memorial Library? Sterling Memorial Library and the Medical Library as well. I see. I've never been to the Medical Library, but Sterling Memorial Library is one of my most favorite places on earth.
Starting point is 00:14:36 How often do you go to the library? We go to the library weekly, typically. More to get books for our kids. The younger one is five, so we go through a lot of picture books but the older one it's books for him to read and usually for me to read with him as well okay and so that would be going to the guilford free library that's your your average everyday lending library yes okay and so when you go uh if you go once a week would you say you dog ear a page in a book every visit no i mean gina is nodding is she a is she a a line otter
Starting point is 00:15:13 a line otter is another rare species from western math what's a line otter it's like an otter that they go in these lines throughout the uh connect. Damn you, Monty Belmonte. Even your name is wordplay. True. Go on, Craig. Answer the accusation, please. So typically, picture books do not get dog-eared. If I am reading a paper book, I will dog-ear to mark my page.
Starting point is 00:15:41 Name a book that you took out of the library to read. Recently, for example, I just read My Side of the Mountain with my older son. Okay. Did you dog ear that one up? Yes. Okay. And so do you dog ear at home when you're working through the book, or do you just go in the library and take volumes off the shelf and just say,
Starting point is 00:16:00 this one looks like it needs a little punching up? Just in the home. Just in the home. The privacy of my own home when people aren't watching. Why are you doing this to books that do not belong to you and are being shared by fellow citizens? Well, I have a couple of thoughts on this. I have no doubt.
Starting point is 00:16:19 The first is that I think it's a little bit precious to say that books are um so fragile that we can't manipulate them with our hands i mean that's one of the pleasures of reading a paper book versus a e-book for example paper books are actually much more durable than electronic documents when you think about it because you've tried to destroy them too. And you know. And I personally enjoy when I get a library book out and there's evidence of people having used them before. I know when I was an undergrad and I did use Sterling for research, et cetera. It was always actually really nice to look to see when students had checked out the books previously, what had been marked there. To see the marginalia that students would put there and i will say that i don't write in books that aren't my own but when people underline a passage or you know write a marginal
Starting point is 00:17:16 note i actually find that very interesting it's sort of an uh it's it's a very interesting artifact when you find a book that someone else has written in. I remember, I mean, first of all, you may have found some notes by me in Borges' Fictiones, because that's where I first, Sterling Memorial Library is where I first read Borges. And then my favorite one was my friend Christine was dating a dude and we were at his apartment this was when we were in our 20s and he had a copy of Communion by Whitley Strieber and I stole it because I wanted to read it and I really enjoyed reading his notes you know what Communion is about Whitley Strieber documenting his belief that he's been abducted by aliens since he was eight years old and in one particularly strong passage of alien abduction narrative christine's ex-boyfriend
Starting point is 00:18:12 wrote i really grok this i loved that so much but you know what was true about me writing in the borders of a library book at Sterling Memorial Library and then Christine's ex-boyfriend writing in the borders of Communion is we're both in our late teens and early 20s, we were dum-dums who thought we were better than everyone else because our natural inclination is to feel that way when we were 19 years old. So you don't write in books not that aren't books that aren't my own right okay no of course so why bend over the pages why damage the pages of the book and the collection that the library is trying to keep i'm not going to give
Starting point is 00:19:01 you the argument that most of the books that i've gotten in the library have already been dogged multiple times because i you know i don multiple times. Sounds like you're giving it to me. Is it really damaging the book? It doesn't affect the utility of the book. It's not like I'm ripping out a page that I want to keep for my collection. I would never fold over a page of a rare or precious book or a picture book where it would actually affect the images in the book. I'm simply using it to mark my page. Do you fold over as much of the page as Gina asserts? She makes it sound like I'm trying to fold a paper airplane out of the page.
Starting point is 00:19:37 I'd say it's an eighth or a sixteenth of the corner of the page. Do you have a book with you? Not on my person, but I could demonstrate for you. Is that your notebook? Yes. Here, let me see it. Just so that I have a visual sense. So this is your notebook here.
Starting point is 00:19:57 And let's pretend I'm reading a book and I'm you. I want to mark my page. Do I do this? Yes. Or do i do this yes or do i do this now i'm like really there's like more than is really ruining his notebook do i do that amazing to watch no no no no the first one the just the sort of a right angle because because the way that gina described it she said you were doing more like this like half of the whole page folded over or maybe a whole page just sort of crumpled up like this was this would mark your place i think
Starting point is 00:20:30 oh no see accident i accidentally tore out this page so that's not something you do not routinely but do you ever fold it up from the bottom i if i do it from the bottom it's something that i want to come back to and that's a very small okay so if you were to do it from the bottom you would do it kind of like just a tiny one a teeny tiny one oh this one already has it done so I won't do that page but I'll do oh these all do this one is a little teeny tiny one okay right but but then you never do this no no all right good here's your book bag how did it feel to see me bending up all your pages well i mean the way you bend it up is a little bit different from what i do but i know that you're making a point i i really was it made me feel uncomfortable just watching it gina
Starting point is 00:21:18 has anything that your husband just said changed your mind about his treatment of library books? No. Okay. No, because— Explain to him why you feel it is wrong for him to bend down the corners of library books. I have two points. First, I feel that if you take out a library book and there are several pages bent over or put back. Even if they're put back to their former position, they're still creased.
Starting point is 00:21:49 They're much more likely to tear. It weakens the quality of the paper. These books are supposed to be read, theoretically, hundreds, depending on how long they stay on the shelves, thousands of times. You're talking about the Da Vinci Code? Talking about the Da Vinci Code. And it just compromises the quality of the book and if that happens to a library book the librarian is not going to keep it on the shelf and say look at all these these are the best pages that got turned down because they've been dog-eared we can really learn something from these dog-eared pages they're going to get rid of the book and i just I just wanted to, I just remember an example, a specific example of when we lived in Boston,
Starting point is 00:22:29 we lived in Arlington, and that has a fantastic library, and I wanted to read Revolutionary Road, and I just went to the shelves and I took out the library's copy of Revolutionary Road. It was a first edition. And that is an old book. Yeah. The first edition of that book with its original cover art
Starting point is 00:22:49 was still sitting on the shelves all these years later in the public library. And it wouldn't be there if people mishandled it. And now any old person can go to the library and dog ear that book.
Starting point is 00:23:04 And I feel in that... We're not talking about any old person. We're talking about one old person. Yes. Your husband. Yeah. Would you dog ear a page of Revolutionary Road, Craig? First edition.
Starting point is 00:23:15 If I looked and I saw that it was a first edition, again, I said- Yeah, but it sounds like you're not the kind of guy who, I wouldn't even know how to see it if it was a first edition and it wouldn't occur to me't even know how to see it if it was a first edition, and it wouldn't occur to me to look. So if you saw that it was a first edition, you're saying now you wouldn't. No, and I am curious when you get an older library book, do you often look at the copyright page? Because it is interesting to see how old that edition is.
Starting point is 00:23:40 Yeah. I mean, I don't want to give the impression that I feel like books are simply just a tool. I mean, I love books and I love handling books, but I think that the aging of the book is what makes it interesting. Let me ask you, have you consulted with the librarians at the Free Library of Guilford about this practice? I have not. You haven't asked them, do you mind if i do this i have not asked them that why not i guess it hasn't come up what do you think they would say well i guessing from this line of questioning that no i don't i haven't i have i'm not holding
Starting point is 00:24:21 any cards here i don't have a Guilford librarian in my pocket, although they are famous for having pocket-sized librarians there. It's a very weird system. I think that, honestly, I guess would you be getting a librarian who's an idealist or would you be getting a librarian who says all the books? I'm talking about the human being who works in the library that you go to every week and that you have to see and is your fellow neighbor and citizen. Not a hypothetical librarian.
Starting point is 00:24:51 I think some of them might have strong objections to it. I think some of them maybe just sort of recognize that this is the way that either a majority or substantial minority of people handle the library. Can we call them? The Guilford Library? Yeah. Why not?
Starting point is 00:25:06 Yeah, let's call them. I'll do the talking. It's my podcast. Good afternoon, Guilford Library. May I help you? Yeah, hi. My name is John Hodgman, and I'm recording a podcast right now. Do you mind if I put you on the podcast?
Starting point is 00:25:26 I'm sorry. This is just a circulation desk at the library. Oh, I just have a really quick question about library policy. Okay, well, I need to send you up to the reference desk. Okay, great, thanks. Hold on. This is going to be a dream come true for this librarian. Reference, can I help you? Yeah, hi, my name is John Hodgman, and I'm hosting a podcast, and we're talking about libraries.
Starting point is 00:25:45 And first of all, is it okay if I, I just have a very simple question to ask you. Is it okay if I record you? Can I know the question beforehand? Sure. The question is, does the library have a policy about library patrons dog-earing copies of books that they borrow? Actually, I might not even be the person to ask that. Okay. Let me put you on hold.
Starting point is 00:26:14 All right. Monty, I told you we were going to pad this thing right out. Yeah, right? Now we got hold music. We should Shazam this and see what it is. Guilford Library, may I help you? Yeah, hi. my name is John Hodgman, and I was just curious, I have someone here who is a patron of your library who routinely dog-ears pages, you know, folds over pages when he wants to mark his place. Does the library like it when that happens,
Starting point is 00:26:40 or would they prefer that he not do that um i'm not sure could you hold on just a moment sure no wonder you have just decided to dog your pages because nobody at this library knows if this is a something you should do or not they're not you would think they would shoot from the hip as a librarian and just say yeah the policy that i've created right now is never do that it might be that i have this is nancy can i help you yeah i'm very sorry to bother you nancy my name is john hodgman I'm the host of a podcast, and I'm talking here with one of your patrons who routinely dog-ears, that is to say, folds down the corners of pages of books that he takes out of the library.
Starting point is 00:27:13 And I asked him what he thought the librarians would think of that, and he said he didn't know. So I thought I would call. He's on the line now. I won't tell you his name because I think he's embarrassed. He'll be able to know by the person that returns all the dog-eared books. Right. Well, we think that you're borrowing public property that's owned by the town, and we try to keep it in good condition.
Starting point is 00:27:33 At time to time, we do have repairs for spines that come loose or lose pages. But we would ask that no one puts markings or dog-eared pages. It's not nice for the next person who would be checking it out thank you that way thank you nancy that's also my position okay uh i really appreciate talking to you and is it okay if we include your comment on the podcast sure thank you very much all right so should we take another call this is the sound of that gavel i mean the truth is nancy couldn't have put it more plainly it is inconsiderate to the next person and you can't know that the next person is going to enjoy the dog gearing the way you enjoy it and so you have to be thoughtful of
Starting point is 00:28:14 the next person but that is not where the complaint ends is it gene uh it's not let us hear more complaining public property sorted private book property is another story i understand i can certainly it's your book do what you like with it uh he has a policy of um he likes in our house to keep the children's bedrooms slightly ajar so they don't slam when there's a draft oh the doors yes the doors all right that's his thing he uses a the closest book at hand to put on the floor between the door and the door frame to keep the door from slamming during the night and he'll use any book that's closest to the door and i have found him using library books to do this and if not library books books from our own personal collection and usually it has to be a heavy book a hardcover book not a paperback that you know is more ephemeral so I once found him using my childhood illustrated dictionary that I was given many years ago by a dear neighbor,
Starting point is 00:29:28 that I found was very, very inconsiderate. And indeed you sent in some evidence, a photo of the dictionary being used. So I came up with a solution to stop him from doing this. I put a wooden block near the door to suggest use the block. But I did this. I wanted to send you a dramatic reenactment. So I put the dictionary there, moved the block. Oh, this is a staged photo.
Starting point is 00:29:52 That's staged. I admit that. Well, now I don't know what to believe. Well, now there's more. So I moved the block away to stage the photo. That night, the block wasn't there. What did I find there? A library book. How do you respond to that
Starting point is 00:30:06 accusation why didn't you leave the block there if you're so worried about the library books i did but it was slightly a few inches out of place which you didn't see so then you got a library book from the dresser let me say that in terms of heavy, dense objects in our house, in any context, in any place you're standing, there is likely a book within arm's reach because we have a lot of books. Okay. I do not remember taking Gina's childhood dictionary
Starting point is 00:30:44 and putting it there. I may or may not have. As you know, clearly if the one person saying it's possible, they're an intruder came into your home at some point. I'm saying the one person that's tripping over all these books in here. So many books in here. It's like garbage.
Starting point is 00:31:04 The one person, person i gotta steal this block what am i going to replace it with because if the door slams and the kids wake up i know i'll grab this childhood dictionary the one person that admits putting the childhood dictionary there is my wife just to state for the record this whole thing there's like a whole speaking books this might be a whole gone girl situation i think situation. I think I'm being gaslit here, is what I'm saying. You're saying you're being painted as a villain, but in fact your wife is doing it all herself? She did stage a photo. I have to say it undercuts your case a little bit.
Starting point is 00:31:38 I did specify that it was a dramatic reenactment. What if you did that and a terrible draft came in and smashed up your childhood dictionary it doesn't seem to be worth that much to you now can we just come back to the dog earring for one moment well it's settled law settled law as of minutes ago i asked you what have you ever asked the librarian what they think and you said no the it never came up you know why you never asked them because you knew exactly what they were going to say because you know the the the utterly clear golden rule logic behind not damaging even in a small way something you are borrowing from someone else well i mean you talked to three librarians and only nancy rendered an opinion which sounded like a preference and not a policy.
Starting point is 00:32:27 We're going to provide you a copy of the audio of Nancy and you can listen to it again and see if she's really that ambiguous. We're moving on to private home book abuse and use here. I have made my ruling. If you bring it up again, I'm going to reveal your name to Nancy and your photo. Monty, get a photo of him. Will do. Now, this is a fair court, and I will give you a fair hearing, both of you, for your various book-related reenactments and staging and phony evidence and everything there's no this is no way is reflects prejudice of any kind of how i'm going to hear the second phase of the trial
Starting point is 00:33:14 which is use of books at home complaint number one using books including library books as doorstops complaint number two what's complaint number two what other what other misdeeds are going on at home at home is this is only private books we have several very nice hardcover books sure and when the uh defendant uses hardcover books if they're his or a picture book he will just take the jacket off and just toss it wherever it lies. Craig, do you do what she accuses you of doing? Perhaps I'm misunderstanding the use of a dust jacket. My understanding was that the dust jacket should not be on the book when you're reading it.
Starting point is 00:33:58 It's to make the book look nice on the shelf, so you take it off when you read the book and you put it back on. I don't just throw them in the bathtub or the toilet or anything like that. I put them on the shelf, often where the book has come from, while I'm in the act of reading the book. I can't stand to read a hardcover book with a dust jacket on it myself. And I will routinely take them off, though I do not know what the purpose of the dust jacket is. I mean, it's to protect the volume, right, Monty? From dust. From dust, right, you would think, right?
Starting point is 00:34:24 Unless you get the dust-proof paper from back to the future part two right uh but but the accusation like how long will the book not have its be separated from its dust jacket typically forever all right gina you've gotten you've had it pretty good so far but i will just because I have to actually look you people in the face for once doesn't mean I can't yell at you. You just take it easy over there. I'll have order in this courtroom.
Starting point is 00:34:54 Name a hardcover book that you read and you took the dust jacket off. First one comes to mind. I'm trying to think because I just was, do you have one? The one that you were when the other night you came into the room it took the dust jacket off and chucked it at me i was sapiens that's the name of the book sapiens what's that sapiens what's that it's um it's a book about a anthropologist writing about the sort of the dawn of civil civilization as people transitioned from uh sort of how homo sapiens took over from Neanderthals.
Starting point is 00:35:28 Yeah, yeah. And that was— Nonfiction or— It's nonfiction. Right, okay. Sounds good. It is good. It is good.
Starting point is 00:35:34 Why'd you throw a book jacket at your wife? I was just making a joke because we knew we were coming on here to discuss this. Oh, okay. I admit that. Okay. But once again, fake evidence. I have a specific example. Fraud.
Starting point is 00:35:51 That's fruit from the poison tree. I never understood what that meant. I have a very specific example if I'm allowed to. If you give me a faked photograph or some other piece of evidence that that wouldn't have happened unless you were coming on this podcast then i may throw your case out okay um my we have several books a few books not even several that have come down to us from family members. And my son is reading my father's, again, first edition copy of A Peanut's Treasury. It's from the 1960s.
Starting point is 00:36:32 And of course, like all hardcover books in that room, the jacket is removed and tossed aside and left on the floor. If I did not pick them up and pile them up and put them somewhere, they would stay there. Well, who's doing this, Craig or your son? Both. Both. You're about to say j'accuse.
Starting point is 00:36:54 And then I toss myself. Pourquoi? I always enjoy a good j'accuse. I don't know. Je les accuse. That means I accuse them, I think. I don't know. I didn't know if I wanted to accuse a minor who can't defend himself, but he's learning.
Starting point is 00:37:10 What are they for if not to be accused of things they can't defend themselves of? He's learning at the foot of the master is a concern of mine. The specific case of the Peanuts dust jacket, which you have sent a photo of as well. That's an accurate photograph. How do I even know at this point? Fruit of the peanuts dust jacket which you have sent a photo of as well that's an accurate photograph how do i even know at this point for the poison tree why are there poison trees also by the way is it biblical i don't remember where you get your poison from uh bitter almonds uh okay so here it is yeah this dust jacket is pretty torn up. It's torn, and I just want to say... How did it get torn up, Craig?
Starting point is 00:37:45 My father is very meticulous, and he had that book for 50 years with no tears in it, and then it's in our house for 10 minutes, and the jacket's torn up. In that particular instance, I will say my son was doing this on his own because he reads comics on his own. Yeah, is this a fight with your son or with your husband i think he's modeling bad behavior do you have any proof of that the peanuts treasury yeah but how old is the son again he's eight yeah guess what guess what maybe maybe he's maybe he's just eight doesn't doesn't know that it's a first edition of a Peanuts treasury.
Starting point is 00:38:25 But that's just one example. There are other dust jackets which he removes. They're all over the place. I either pile them up and stick them back on the shelf where they tear. They never read the book and then put the dust jacket back. And by they, you're talking about your sons or your husband? I'll leave the son out just the husband what happens is i just get double clutter because he never says oh i'm done with the book
Starting point is 00:38:53 i'm gonna reshelf it let me get the dust jacket no the dust jacket has scattered to the four winds and is lying around someplace you have a lot of winds and drafts in your home you have a book doorstop yeah see so your accusation is that craig will take the dust jacket off a book such as sapiens throw it at his wife never pick it up finish the book and just throw it there and leave the book and assume that i'll deal with it or just it gets trashed craig are you mindful of the work you leave for others? Yes, and I'm very appreciative of the work that my wife does, which is greater than mine to keep the house neat. I will say sometimes if I can't put the jacket back in the book when I'm done with the book, if I don't know where it's been put. You're accusing your wife of cleaning up after you too much is that right well i mean that does sound like that
Starting point is 00:39:46 doesn't it your hands are tied no i will say put the dust jacket that i left on the floor into some other place that i can't find i don't know what to do with this book anymore i guess i'll leave it in the oven my practice is to put the book jacket on the shelf and then retrieve it from it when i put the book away. Would you say, Craig, that you and your wife have a different relationship with books? Well, I think that's pretty clear. I will say we're both lovers of books and avid readers. When I was a kid, really reading was my primary escape.
Starting point is 00:40:24 And I wasn't a kid doing a lot of sports or anything like that so i read a ton and um but do you think as you were growing up that you had a more physical relationship with books in the way you do now that is different from your wife's well i will say my dad maybe this is its nature and nurture but he is a inveterate dog ear of books as well that is where i learned it yeah um and that i i don't want to give the impression that our books are generally in horrible condition in our house we all sometimes are not as careful with with our books you know i mean just like any object which you own. Sometimes— Your argument is she had an accident once, and therefore you can routinely be rough on books on purpose. I would say that if you looked through our books in our home, you would not see a section of books that are in horrible condition, which are mine, and a group of books that are in terrific condition that are hers.
Starting point is 00:41:23 Overall, our books are in excellent condition. Gina, you disagree that overall your books are in excellent condition i think they're in good condition but i i give myself more of the credit for that because you're picking up the dust jackets yes i'm picking up the dust jackets and i'm putting them away when they otherwise get left on the floor do you guys keep separate libraries? Not really, no. Your collection of books is all mixed together on a shelf? Yes. How many books would you guess you have, Gina? In the house? Yeah.
Starting point is 00:41:53 I would say probably a thousand, a lot. And you have them all up on shelves? It sounds to me, from your description... It's my goal for them to be up on shelves, but they're not often always there. Are they organized in any way? It's just the children's books are kept separately from the adult books, but they're not otherwise. I have a collection of first editions, and I have a lot of signed books from when I used to work in publishing. I keep those separate.
Starting point is 00:42:19 What did you do in publishing? I worked in marketing. For which publisher? Random House. Oh, sure. I've heard of it. It's a big one nice yeah yeah but i have i have lots of those that i keep that i keep separate uh-huh uh and the children's books listen i don't want to talk about the children's books because the children are monsters to books that's just what they do all right i'm talking about the
Starting point is 00:42:42 man child who's your husband that's a different story okay is your house a mess no okay it's not and craig you agree your house is not a mess no i think our house um it is you know it's it has moments of clutter but i think there aren't many people with small kids that don't have areas of clutter or moments of clutter in their homes i'm just trying to discern to what degree this is an issue of you see clutter where Craig does not. And is that true? Yes. Overall?
Starting point is 00:43:13 Yes. One thing that I'm really enjoying about having you guys in studio, and I'm sorry that we can't share it with you, the home listener, is the reactions from both of from both litigants but but especially right now craig i've seen this a couple of times where you truly you your head kind of goes back and your eyes widen a little bit and you start shaking your head like what are you even talking about as the person in the house who does most of the work to keep the house clean and who also cares the most if the house is clean because for my own sense of well-being and comfort um there are others in the house that don't see the mess see the problem and so they just ignore it but then
Starting point is 00:44:02 when i take step well this is a whole other thing but when I take steps to declutter and move things around, then I'm accused of mishandling and losing their things, which I find unfair. Are we talking about children or Craig? Craig. When did Craig accuse you of mishandling something? Oh. Craig, do you have any complaints about your wife mishandling your personal items? No, I appreciate everything that she does for us all right now try a non-lying version um do you know what she's referring to oh I do what I do I you know unfortunately and this is
Starting point is 00:44:40 I take some ownership of this is we know my boys and I that the easiest way to find something is to ask mommy where it is because mommy is likely the person to have put it there and uh it's our own fault for not putting the stuff away uh sometimes so I will own that well what what was what what is she talking about where she cleaned something up and you're like, you moved it. What? Give me one example. Well, I mean, there's certain books for work that I've left out that I've had some difficulty locating. There was a book that you couldn't find recently.
Starting point is 00:45:19 It was a pulmonology book that you couldn't find and accused me of mislaying that ended up being in a box of books you never unpacked when we moved a but i first had to be accused of uh mislaying it second of all if i if you can't find a book and i put it away where do you think i'm gonna put it like in the fridge i'm gonna put it with other books do you think maybe one of your creepy lying kids stole it in his sleep doctor heal thy kid all right i think i've heard everything i need to in order to render a decision i am going to leave the room wow and go into my my special guest chambers here at WRSI The River 93.9, Bailiff Monty Belmonte. Would you ask them to please rise?
Starting point is 00:46:11 Yes, please rise as Judge John Hodgman leaves the radio studio. Should I rise? Here I go. Not a sound effect. Actually has left the room. Craig and Gina, that was quite the, uh,
Starting point is 00:46:28 the endeavor there. We, you had a judgment about the library books for sure from a librarian. Are you comfortable with that decision? Craig, no more dog earring library books. Cause librarian says so. I will abide by the judge's ruling on this,
Starting point is 00:46:42 the judge or the librarian. Well, I'm going to have a word with nancy to be honest but i would like to actually see if there is an official policy or it's just a preference stated on because you just so doggedly want to dog ear when you go to a sorry i can't hear you normally i can come in come back in come back in but no no no i want to i want to keep this but is there any chance that craig brought up the idea of dog-earing books at the library? Yes, he did.
Starting point is 00:47:06 I see. Thank you very much. Okay. Monty, get Nancy's email address. Guilford Free Library. Will do. As I was saying, when you rent a parking space, you know, like you put in a couple quarters of a parking space, do you paint that space? Do you decorate it the way you want? It's yours temporarily. Do you feel like you can do whatever couple quarters of parking space. Do you paint that space? Do you decorate it the way you want? It's yours temporarily.
Starting point is 00:47:25 You feel like you can do whatever you want with it? Well, you know, we did live in Boston where historically you'd put a bureau or a lawn chair there to state the claim. That's been outlawed by the city of Boston, though, I believe. Which I applaud, by the way. So you think that is a good decision, but your student should be allowed to use public property
Starting point is 00:47:38 to dog here in any way, C. Fitt. Well, as I said, I'm going to abide the court's decision, but I'm just seeking clarification. We'll be back in just a moment with Judge John Hodgman's decision. 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. Thanks to everybody who's gone to MaximumFun.org
Starting point is 00:48:06 slash join. And you can join them by going to MaximumFun.org slash join. The Judge John Hodgman podcast is also brought to you this week by our pals over at Made In. Jesse, you've heard of Tom Colicchio, the famous chef, right? Yeah, from the restaurant Kraft. And did you know that most of the dishes at that very same restaurant are made with made-in pots and pans? Really? What's an example? The braised short ribs, they're made in, made in.
Starting point is 00:48:39 The Rohan duck, made in, made in. Riders of Rohan, duck! What about the Heritage Pork Shop? You got it. Made in. Made in. Riders of Rohan. Duck. What about the Heritage Pork Shop? You got it. Made in. Made in. Made in has been supplying top chefs and restaurants with high-end cookware for years. They make the stuff that chefs need.
Starting point is 00:48:56 Their carbon steel cookware is the best of cast iron, the best of stainless clad. It gets super hot. It's rugged enough for grills or an open flame. One of the most useful pans you can own. And like we said, good enough for real professional chefs, the best professional chefs. Oh, so I have to go all the way down to the restaurant district in restaurant town? Just buy it online.
Starting point is 00:49:21 This is professional-grade cookware that is available online directly to you, the consumer, at a very reasonable price. Memorial Day from the 18th until the 27th. Visit madeincookware.com. That's M-A-D-E-I-N cookware.com. The Judge John Hodgman podcast is also brought to you this week by the folks over there at Babbel. Did you know that learning, the experience of learning causes a sound to happen? Let's hear the sound. Yep, that's the sound of you learning a new language with Babbel. We're talking about quick 10-minute lessons crafted by over 200 language experts that can help you start speaking a new language in as little as one, two, three weeks. Let's hear that sound.
Starting point is 00:50:21 Babbel's tips and tools are approachable, accessible, rooted in real-life situations, and delivered with conversation-based teaching. So you're ready to practice what you've learned in the real world, and you get to hear this sound. It's not just like a game that pretends to teach you a language. It's also not a rigid, weird, hyper-academic chore. It is an actually productive app that actually teaches you while you are actually having a nice time. And you get to hear this sound. Here's a special limited time deal for our listeners right now. Get up to 60% off your Babbel subscription, but only for our listeners
Starting point is 00:50:58 at babbel.com slash Hodgman. Get up to 60% off at babbel.com slash Hodgman spelled B-A-B-B-E-L dot com slash Hodgman. Rules and restrictions apply. 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
Starting point is 00:51:46 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-H. 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.
Starting point is 00:52:13 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 please rise as judge john hodgman re-enters the courtroom
Starting point is 00:52:38 why aren't you standing up oh here we go stand up why aren't you standing up oh here we go stand up okay this is great we should have gotten robes or i could have dressed up like a police officer my my underwear is robes i just can't see it please be seated gina you're in a bad spot you obviously are a very happy couple and have a lot of affection for each other. You have spawned progeny. You guys are in it forever. But you are
Starting point is 00:53:15 a neat person who now shares a home with three dudes, two of whom are children and are just by nature unneat and the other one is a guy who not only defaces library property but defends it even after one has ruled against him willful willful and intelligent man. And more to the point, I asked, is this a larger issue of clutter that you see clutter that your spouse doesn't? Because you and I are in the same position.
Starting point is 00:54:00 I am an only child. So I grew up having everything exactly where I wanted it to be. And it is the psychological bane of my existence that I now live with other human beings who have no regard whatsoever for where I put my things down. And so things will constantly be moved. Things like pens, Monty. Pens and books. Not really books so much. And more, of course, that my wife and I have children who are just a mess.
Starting point is 00:54:38 They don't know. They're not real humans yet. And my wife, whom I adore, also is in many ways a very tidy person, but she just, I see more clutter than she does. This is constant. This is constant. You know, there is a battle that goes on in my house, and I feel you for this, about leaving things at the end of the counter in a heavily traveled walkway in the kitchen, you know, heavily traveled path. And it's nobody's fault,
Starting point is 00:55:10 but my wife believes that leaving things at the end of the counter is putting them away. Whereas I believe leaving things at the end of the counter is an invitation for me to trip and fall, especially when it's a banana peel um and this sounds like i'm complaining about my wife i'm not i'm just saying she sees the world in a almost congenitally different way when it comes to that and leaving shoes out you let the record show that gina pointed at craig jacques hughes l accuse craig see i don't really know french very well yeah but i can count in french thanks
Starting point is 00:55:52 to hamilton musical that's our mandatory hamilton reference for the show oh yeah we'll talk more about that later yes and i'm here to tell you that I can rule up, down, and all around town in your favor if I choose to. But this is never, ever, ever going to change. Because look, you're the daughter of a man who kept a first edition childhood copy of a Peanuts treasury in perfect condition from when he was presumably a child, right? He didn't mess that thing up the way your dumb kids messed it up in a day and you're looking at a situation where like you're you're your father's daughter but craig is his father's son dog you're second generation dog year dog year the second lord dog year the second and you your worry it must be bone deep that your sons are going to get not just his habits but whatever genetically inside of him looks at a
Starting point is 00:57:07 piece of public property and says this is mine to destroy let the record show that the plaintiff is nodding sadly since we're here you may say you may speak it's not just me yelling at you guys now here's the thing craig i don't want to talk about this library thing anymore it's obvious that what you are in the habit of doing is in fact destructive however mildly what pleasure you take in finding dog year into facebooks and the stories that they tell and i agree that there is pleasure there uh does does not empower you to continue the tradition for a future reader whose preferences you don't know. And as they are shared property of the free library,
Starting point is 00:57:58 consideration insists that you not continue in this habit that you have, and ideally not pass along this moral lapse to your children by modeling it for them. Take good care of the books you take out from the library. And I don't know if your library accepts donations, but I think you owe them one on that note. Now, your own books, and I think you owe them one on that note now your own books and i think you obviously agree with this i mean you didn't state it and even gina said do whatever you want to your own books take all those dust covers beat them up write in them dog ear them because i do think that there is something pleasurable about the physical mangling of a book that you enjoy and especially over time the book takes on a patina of use
Starting point is 00:58:52 just as you perceive clutter differently in the world though i think you also perceive proper care of books in an almost genetically different way. The fact that you would continue to defend defacing public property to me suggests like you just, you see the world in a, you're a sociopath is what I'm saying. In this area. You know what I mean? You just don't see
Starting point is 00:59:18 you just don't see things the way they are. See things the way they are in your own mind. And while it is certainly within even a fake court's purview to ban you with potential real-world repercussions of punishment via Nancy, if you continue to mess up the Guilford Free Library's collection within your own life, the truth is the court has very little power to change how you read, enjoy, and experience books. With only the exception of this. Don't make extra work for other people.
Starting point is 01:00:02 In life, sometimes you can't merge your libraries. Sometimes you have to keep separate libraries, even in marriage, literally, because someone has a collection of books that is meaningful to them and they don't want your 35 copies of Communion junking it up. And more figuratively as well,
Starting point is 01:00:19 where you have to mark out territory so that you can come back to that territory and see it in the way you left it. Craig, map out your own space for your junk. Do whatever you want to books. Don't leave book jackets around and don't use books as doorstops. The only caveat, I mean, obviously I finding in gina's favor on almost all points if not all points here but i do this court does want to say and it's not just because we're sitting
Starting point is 01:00:52 right in front of each other craig i do not hate you i respect i respect your right to really dig into books physically but you have to do that only on books that you own and not make extra work for others. Let's play Brass Bonanza as we go out. This is the sound of a gavel. Judge John Hodgman rules that as all. Go Whalers. Gina, Craig, how do you feel about Judge John Hodgman's decision?
Starting point is 01:01:22 There's very little repercussion for you, Craig, it seems, except for the library books. And it seems like you got nearly everything you wanted, Gina. I knew he would find the crux. He found the crux. And he spoke to exactly what the real issue is that bothers me. And then he said it exactly how I would say it. Do you believe that you will stop dog-earing library books now that the librarian scolded you on this podcast? I will abide by
Starting point is 01:01:48 the decision of the court and by Nancy. I will also like to, I'll buzzmark it, two more local hero things. One, go to the Montague bookmill in Montague where one Judge John Hodgman may have actually written a book or two, and look in their bathrooms where they have collected
Starting point is 01:02:03 all of these found items from books things that people wrote in books pictures that were left in books so there is a purpose for that and there was an exhibit at mass mocha the museum of contemporary art where you were just nearly at we actually went to that exhibit ah so there you have and i submitted a photo from that exhibit as part of my evidence because more false evidence it was not it was real it was your photo or was a photo from the exhibit from someone else it was a photo i took of an object in an installation in the exhibit but it was not his and you didn't try to portray it as his i didn't that's great i think it's pretty honest i think i'm being honest there
Starting point is 01:02:39 right for some reason i just see this old-timey photo of a cat riding a dog so i don't know what you think this is fun for me maybe you and i just see things differently maybe well thank you both for being on the judge john hodgman podcast and being here live in the studio it's fun to watch all of your non-verbal communication i thought you might get divorced there for a little while no i would never divorce these guys monty come on thank you guys very much thank you stick around while we do the wrap up I guess yeah hi this is Judge John Hodgman I am sometimes
Starting point is 01:03:11 a resident of the Pioneer Valley of Western Massachusetts and we plugged a lot of great things and I just want to go over them again
Starting point is 01:03:18 Monty so people don't forget yes let's Sylvester's Sylvester's Coffee here in Northampton where the Graham Cracker was invented by Sylvester Graham, his former house. All right, we can't do a fact for every one of them.
Starting point is 01:03:30 Okay, fine. WRSI The River 93.9 FM and online at? WRSI.com. Where you can listen to Monty Belmonte every morning. Is that not so? Yes, that's true. Or you can maybe see him in person on Friday, March 4th to see Red Barat at the Shea Theater in Turner's Falls, which is going to be an amazing concert. Yes.
Starting point is 01:03:49 Go get your used and defaced books at the Montague Book Mill. We also plug Mass Mocha, the Museum of Contemporary Art in North Adams. Big ups also to the Shelburne Falls Bowling Alley. We didn't plug them, but they're great too. We went there after going to Nancy Dole's. Second oldest bowling alley in the country. Is that so? Yes.
Starting point is 01:04:07 I don't even know where the first one is. Candlepin Bowling. Matt did a great job of sneaking us in between two birthday parties. Big downs to the West Leiden Road, which was too slick, and so our car spun around. I hate that. Turn into the skid. I know. Monty, I thought we were going to die.
Starting point is 01:04:27 Yeah. But if you visit Western Massachusetts, just like Gina and Craig did, did either of you die? Not yet. No, we're doing just fine. And did you have a nice time? We had a fantastic time. It was terrific.
Starting point is 01:04:39 All right. Very good. Go, Massachusetts. Thanks to Alex Overall for his suggestion, Rex Libris, for suggesting this week's case name. To suggest a name for a future case, like us on Facebook, we regularly put out a call for submissions. If you have a case for the judge, submit it at www.maximumfund.org. The Max Fund Drive is coming up shortly. That's true.
Starting point is 01:05:02 From March 14th through the 25th, put it on your calendar. New members get all sorts of goodies. Don't want to miss out becoming a member and supporting the podcast, so you can get in on that. I've been your good time, wintertime bailiff, Monty Belmonte. Julia Smith produces the show. Mark McConville is our editor. Thanks for joining us for the Judge John Hodgman podcast.
Starting point is 01:05:23 Maximumfun.org. Comedy and culture. Artist owned. Listener supported.

There aren't comments yet for this episode. Click on any sentence in the transcript to leave a comment.