Judge John Hodgman - Forensic Mom and Unnamed Creepout Boy

Episode Date: January 27, 2021

The rollicking times continue in the Court's Chambers as we clear the docket! The number of holes in a straw, homemade washcloths, Philadelphia sports fandom, Bioshock, and much more! Plus the possibl...e conclusion of the segment CREEPY COOL BABIES and a brand new old timey ragtime tune!If you want to check out our pal Aidan's video response to JJHo Harvester of Souls chat, visit bit.ly/soulharvesternumberone. And make sure to listen to Friend of the Court Mark McConville's podcast MASCOTS!

Transcript
Discussion (0)
Starting point is 00:00:00 Welcome to the Judge John Hodgman podcast. I'm bailiff Jesse Thorne. We're in chambers this week, clearing the docket. And with me, as always, is a giant hole digging machine that after it bores into the earth, then pulls the dirt out of its earth on its screw and then goes clank, clank, clank, clank to shake the dirt off of it. Also, Judge John Hodgman.
Starting point is 00:00:28 Are you journeying to the center of the earth over there in Los Angeles, Jesse? I'm pretty sure that the foundation of the two houses being built immediately across from my house are journeying to the center of the earth. Oh, this is a reference to sounds outside your home. Yes, that will undoubtedly intrude there she is the sound boom boom boom boom yeah that's the one you're saying we trade we traded uh blowy the leaf blower for the giant diamond tip uh journey to the center of the earth drill? Yeah, it is really, it's a real monster, and it's been going for weeks now. It's making me completely insane.
Starting point is 00:01:11 And now it's making you, the listener, completely insane. Well, hopefully we're moving slowly. We're no longer digging a hole, but moving slowly into a new and better normal. slowly into a new and better normal. It is Wednesday as we are recording this January the 20th at 1 40 p.m eastern standard time here in Maine where I am joining you Jesse and Jennifer Marmor in Los Angeles from Maine the solar powered studios of WERU 89.9 FM in Orland, Maine, and also WERU.org with our local Maine engineer, operations manager, Joel Mann, aka Mole Man. Hello, Judge. You've journeyed to the center of the earth a few times yourself, right, Mole Man?
Starting point is 00:01:54 Yes, I have. Absolutely. And I only mentioned the date because I woke up this morning and I was feeling guardedly optimistic about what was going to happen, but I was nervous. I was nervous because you never know what's going to happen. And I'm here to tell you, Jesse, that as I drove here to WERU, my fear that something bad was going to happen came true. Because when I reached the Shell Station at the intersection of Routes 15 and 1, right before I get to WERU, and I went in to get a couple of chicken tenders,
Starting point is 00:02:26 which has now become my routine on a Wednesday when I come here to record. I went over to the chicken stand, and there were no chicken tenders. And Jesse, do you know what happened? I don't know. No, I wasn't there. You were there. I know. I said, what happened to the chicken tenders?
Starting point is 00:02:42 She said, we don't have any. You were there. I know. I said, what happened to the chicken tenders? She said, we don't have any. But there are some more coming out in one minute. Jesse. Wow.
Starting point is 00:02:55 I got the freshest chicken tenders I've ever had in my life. I waited. Straight from the frying pan into your mouth. Straight from the frying pan into the fire of my belly. I was like, it happened. The thing I've been waiting for so long, the thing that I didn't imagine was possible, the thing that I didn't dare to dream was going to happen. Because it just, after four years of disappointment and frustration and sadness and trauma, not just for me, but on a national level. I never thought that it would actually happen that I would get the freshest chicken tenders right out of the fry later. And eat them so joyously in the parking lot of WERU.
Starting point is 00:03:39 And also Joe Biden and Kamala Harris were inaugurated. Not sure if you knew that happened yet. Maybe it hasn't come across the wire to you there. No, I don't follow the news. I don't know. You know, normally we want these things to just be timeless and we don't mention the date or anything else. But I'm just going to say, like, it just happened that they were sworn in
Starting point is 00:04:02 as I was driving out here, even before the chicken tenders. It wasn't until I was eating those chicken tenders in the parking lot. And it wasn't until really – I didn't even believe that it had happened. And it wasn't until really I heard on public radio, by the way, your friends, Jesse, your best friends in the world, public radio. Everyone knows you love them. All of my wedding party. Robert Siegel was there. Linda Holmes.
Starting point is 00:04:34 Linda Holmes was there. The Car Talk guys were there. The ghosts of Click and Clack. One of them is still alive. I'm sorry. My hometown heroes. Who else was there? Linda Wertheimer.
Starting point is 00:04:49 She was there. Bob Edwards. It wasn't until I was eating those chicken tenders and listening to NPR. And what I heard were the sound of bells. And I didn't know what they were until NPR told me. Thanks, NPR. And it was the bells at Howard University chiming 49 times for the 49th vice president of the United States, Kamala Harris. And I lost it. The combination of the chicken tenders and that,
Starting point is 00:05:22 lost it. The combination of the chicken tenders and that. This historic one. Pow pow. It was a one-two punch to my tear ducts. Following the hook with the uppercut. I know. And look, nothing is fixed. Everyone knows that
Starting point is 00:05:38 nothing is fixed. Two weeks ago, I was feeling pretty optimistic. I drove out here to WERU two weeks ago this Wednesday. Today, I was feeling cautiously optimistic and said so on the podcast because we were waiting for the results of the John Ossoff race in Georgia and hoping that the Democrats are going to retake the Senate. And I was feeling pretty good. And then I walked outside and learned that the Capitol had been invaded. So I don't know.
Starting point is 00:06:02 Anything could happen after this. In two hours, aliens could blow up the Grand Canyon. I've learned. Yeah. I wish there were – where did you learn that from? The movie Mars Attacks? That. I was going to see my lived life experience of seeing Mars Attacks and also experiencing things that I thought were completely implausible happening with swiftness in my life.
Starting point is 00:06:28 Well, John, I'm a journalist, so I don't express my private political convictions in public because I don't want anyone to think that it would prejudice my interview with Tina Fey. But I will say this uh i am proud as uh as a californian and as a bay area in yeah that uh our our nation's first uh asian american first african-american and first woman vice president is from oakland yeah nickel Dime. And I'm proud that she is also another auspicious first, the first vice president that I, as a teenager, saw having lunch with Willie Brown in a fancy restaurant in downtown San Francisco when I was 16. You saw history in the making. And maybe you made it happen.
Starting point is 00:07:24 Right before she became district attorney of the great city of San Francisco. I'm telling you. So nothing is fixed. Things will go wrong. But this is better than it was. I'll say that much. You can't unring a bell. We worked too hard, all of us together, to get to this point.
Starting point is 00:07:42 And I thank you for doing the work that you did, for talking to your friends and neighbors, doing anything that you did to help get to this point, because this is better intrinsically, in my opinion. And I would dare say the cost of losing this moment would be unbearable. Well, John, I want to say you're welcome. And I'm glad you enjoyed my interview with Tina Fey. Yeah, of course. Things will get bad. Things will not be perfect.
Starting point is 00:08:15 Things will get worse. Things will surprise you and hurt you. But you can't unring those 49 bells. And I just want to say that I know that there are members of the audience, longtime listeners who I've had email exchanges with over the past few months, who aren't happy about this moment and feel differently about issues of the day. And let me say, you know, you are welcome here. We have our differences, and I won't compromise my values, and if you want to talk about it, email me.
Starting point is 00:08:59 But you're welcome here, and you can take the measure of my character, my heart. You can take the measure and listen to the people who are on this podcast as guests, friends of the court, litigants. Take the measure. And if you still disagree with them, so be it. That's democracy. This is a little thing I just made up. Just made that up. Not quoting anybody, Jesse. Nope. Just off the dome. Anyway, the point is, Joel, that's it. I'm not having any more chicken tenders. What kind of sauce did you get? No sauce. I have no having any more chicken tenders. What kind of sauce did you get? No sauce.
Starting point is 00:09:26 I have no time for sauce. Wow. Well, I'm in a car. I'm parked. Parked in a car. But the point is, it's done. No chicken tenders will ever be better. And also, I can't go on eating all these chicken tenders.
Starting point is 00:09:39 It's got to stop, Joel. So that's it for me and the Shell station. Hold me to it, okay? Check out the mac and cheese. No. That's it for me and the Shell Station. Hold me to it, okay? Check out the mac and cheese. No. That's it. Here's something from Leslie. She asks, does a straw have one or two holes?
Starting point is 00:10:01 My adult son Skyler says one. He's clearly wrong because it's a cylinder with two holes top and bottom. There's much arguing about this on his Instagram. The poll on Skyler's Instagram has one hole in the lead for now because his friends are clearly ridiculous. We need a resolution. This is very serious. If you dig a hole, it has only one opening. Therefore, there must be two holes in a straw. Also, please tell Jesse that I went to UC Santa Cruz and Skylar is there now. I want to say this, John. Please. I've been told this, but I am also telling Jennifer Marmer, a fellow banana slug. Oh yeah, Jennifer Marmer. She just gave two thumbs up and I won't ask her to comment on either holes or the meaning of today
Starting point is 00:10:49 because she's chewing on some food. Yeah, this is the kind of conversation that you would have at UC Santa Cruz. Yeah. Particularly on April 20th or frankly any other day. So Jesse, as a UC Santa Cruz banana slug who's obviously thought about this in a dorm room before, does a straw have one or two holes?
Starting point is 00:11:12 Gut reaction. There's probably a mathematician's answer to this. So UC Santa Cruz, despite its well-earned reputation as the home of white people with dreadlocks, has an excellent math department and one of the best physics departments in the country. I'm sure the physics majors at UC Santa Cruz would have strong physics-informed answers to this topography question um to me you're hedging i would say it has two holes i would say it has two holes but i would also uh not feel strongly enough about it to even enter into an Instagram debate about it. Even in that most hallowed hall of our nation's discourse, an Instagram post, I would not desecrate it with my own argument. Here's what I say to you, Jesse. Common sense answer, straw has two holes. Common sense. Is there a mathematical answer? straw is two holes. Common sense.
Starting point is 00:12:26 Is there a mathematical answer? Of course there is. Look, John, when I was growing up, the son of a union man in Scranton, Pennsylvania. The no malarkey answer is two holes. The mathomalarkey answer, More complicated, but stand by. First, I just want to apologize for the sound I made when you asked if there was a math answer, and I went, ooh. I'm very sorry. That was terrible. I'm trying to do better on my reacts.
Starting point is 00:13:01 Yeah. So, you know, nice try, Leslie, for trying to buzz market your son's Instagram. It is Skylearns if you want to check it out, everybody, but it's private. I couldn't even get into it. I can't see where this argument is going down. Skylearns, S-K-Y-L-E-R-N-S. But I don't need to see where this argument is going down because it went down a long time ago. This is this is a reference to a widely discussed Reddit thread from three years ago where people were fighting for a while about whether or not a straw had two holes. It's done.
Starting point is 00:13:35 It's done-zo. It's like the hot dog is a sandwich. It's been covered. It's not a sandwich. Now, if you peruse that Reddit thread, which is now closed, you will see that there are basically two answers. One, common sense, two holes.
Starting point is 00:13:50 It's a cylinder like a hot dog, but cut off each end and take out the meat. Two holes. Two, that it has one hole because it is a torus, which is a mathemalarchy shape. Essentially, picture a donut take that straw down and
Starting point is 00:14:07 squash it on down to a donut shape and you would say reasonably that that donut shape has one hole in it that is to say it is topographically or topologically akin to a donut.
Starting point is 00:14:25 And I'm using one of those words wrong. Look forward to your letters. Now, this may be true. If you're making this argument that topologically or topographically it has one hole, you may be absolutely right, math and malarkey-wise. But I don't like you because you're just stirring the pot. A pot is itself a hole. You're stirring the pot for no reason.
Starting point is 00:14:48 And if you've ever used a donut-shaped straw, you know that your nose is very wet right now. Now, I'm not going to say that the sides of a straw have no mass, but if you were to mush it up into a donut and you preserve that material, then that flat straw would resemble more of a plane in the way a donut itself is more flat than it is tall, right? It is planar. And the hole would be in the middle of that plane. And therefore, it would correspond to a dictionary definition of hole. And obviously, dictionaries are not proofs.
Starting point is 00:15:24 But I haven't been getting feedback right now in real time from Emily Brewster and our friends at Merriam-Webster, who are, it so happens, coincidentally backing up my opinion, which is that a straw has no holes. A straw has no holes. It's a cylinder that is open-ended on each side, but a hole is defined by the dictionary is something that is cut into something else, like the middle of a donut is cut out, like a hole in a piece of fabric, a plane, or a hollowed out area like a hole in the ground,
Starting point is 00:16:03 such as a party hole. Check out Going Deep with David Reese on the subject of how to dig a hole. In this case, what you have on the end of either end of the straw is not a hole in something. It's not a hole into the straw matter. It is an absence of something that happens to be defined and circumscribed by the circumference of each end of the straw. It's nothing. It's not a whole, at least not defined by the dictionary and me. And I'm going to take my definition and call that law because A, it's our podcast, Jesse. B, because now I'm going to make those Donald Ducks in mathemalarky land even matter. Because I out-sophomorically dorm room funk them.
Starting point is 00:16:53 No. Think about that. Yeah. Think about that at 3 a.m. when you're smoking a clove cigarette. Wink, wink. No holes. Topologically speaking. It's just a cylinder that's open on both ends. Nothing's been cut into it. No holes. I will read the full explanation from our lexicographer friends at Merriam-Webster, specifically their science editor, next time.
Starting point is 00:17:22 That's a tease. Not today. Too long. Next time. We're going to take a quick break to hear from this week's partner. We'll be back with more cases to clear from the docket on the Judge John Hodgman podcast. You're listening to Judge John Hodgman. I'm bailiff Jesse Thorne. Of course, the Judge John Hodgman podcast always brought to you by you, the members of MaximumFun.org. Thanks to everybody who's gone to MaximumFun.org slash join. And you can join them by going to MaximumFun.org slash join. The Judge John Hodgman podcast is also brought to you this week by the folks over there at Babbel. Did you know that
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Starting point is 00:19:31 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. The Rohan duck. Made-in, made-in.
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Starting point is 00:20:47 this Memorial Day from the 18th until the 27th. Visit madeincookware.com. That's M-A-D-E-I-N cookware.com. Welcome back to the Judge John Hodgman podcast. We're clearing the docket this week. Here's something from Ray. After dating long distance for over two years, my partner and I have been living together happily for five months. But there's one disagreement we need settled. My partner's mother knits and gave her a handmade washcloth. The washcloth has a unique coarse texture, which I would value to better clean
Starting point is 00:21:26 tough grease stains and other such messes in the kitchen. My partner has a strong sentimental attachment to the cloth, and she doesn't want it used in such a filthy way. So we keep it hanging by the sink to dry hands after washing. But we have plenty of viable hand-drying cloths that could be used instead. I would like the judge to order that this washcloth become a proper cleaning cloth rather than a simple hand-drying cloth. So, of course, Ray sent photos of the cloth that his partner's mother had knitted for them. And we'll post those pictures on the Judge John Hodgman Instagram and on the show page at MaximumFun.org. But Jesse, you have access to these pictures here. How would you describe the cloth that Ray would like to use
Starting point is 00:22:19 to scrub pots and pans? It was described as a washcloth. It's certainly significantly larger than a washcloth made of toweling that you would use in the shower or to wash your face. Yeah. I would say it's about three or four of those in area. It's a marled red and white pattern. Marled? The red looks like maybe a kind of burgundy. And it's not entirely clear from the pictures what type of material it is. One presumes that it's cotton. And it's got a loop on the corner for hanging.
Starting point is 00:23:01 It's a very sweet, very clearly handmade but well-made item. And it's a, you know, it's, I would say it's red and white and nubbly and soft looking. And in terms of its size, based on this photograph and the spice rack next to where it's hanging, it's about, it's longer than it is wide, but it's about the length of three and a half jars of powdered garlic. And I think it's very handsome looking. But let me ask you this, Jesse. What do you use to scrub, like, dirty dishes?
Starting point is 00:23:44 Like, with tough grease stains and other such messes? I use a brush with a long handle. Long handle brush, right? Would you use your mother-in-law's handmade washcloths? I would not. My mother-in-law has never made me a washcloth by hand and I would be surprised were she to do so. But if she did, I would not use it for that purpose, no. Unless she had specifically told me it was a dish scrubbing washcloth, which is not
Starting point is 00:24:10 a type of washcloth. Yeah, I don't know why Ray would want to use this handmade washcloth to clean up tough grease stains aside from spite. You can't clean up, this is not, unless this is secretly made from like steel wool, it looks like it's soft and nubbly and would not do a great job of scrubbing up tough grease stains. And why would you use something like this when there are so many existing products that are better for scrubbing up grease stains. One, because they are tougher and more abrasive but without scratching,
Starting point is 00:24:52 like my very favorite cleaning sponge, the Dobie. You ever use a Dobie, Jesse? I haven't, but it sounds great. We also just got a special brush for cleaning cast iron pans. I just bought it on a whim and I texted home to find out what the brand name of it is, but no one is responding to me. So that will remain a mystery. But that's a good stiff brush. It's great for cleaning out cast iron pans.
Starting point is 00:25:21 In no case would you be using a nubbly soft washcloth unless it had been hand-knit by your loved one's mother as a gift and you wanted to spite that person. Maybe what you really want to do is you want to rub that washcloth and that handmade gift right in your partner's mother's face. and that handmade gift right in your partner's mother's face. I don't know why you'd want to spite the mother of the woman that you claim to love, Ray. I don't get it. Functionally, it makes no sense. And, you know, your devaluing of your partner's affection for this gift as a sentimental attachment, do you think that was going to win me over?
Starting point is 00:26:04 I'm not a robot. If you had shown me that her mom had knit adobe or steel wool washcloth, then I would say, yes, you can be practical and use that to clean up tough grease stains. But sentimental attachment is normal and human for gifts that are given by your mother. I don't know what you're trying to prove here, Ray, but I think it's pretty clear that you're wrong. Go get some disposable, tough, abrasive items to clean up that grease. And instead, use that washcloth as a cold compress as you try to cool yourself down after the hot burn that I just put all over you. I judge in Ray's partner's favor.
Starting point is 00:26:50 I have to say this, John. Yeah. I've recently had a real revelation in the area of kitchen cloths. Tell me. I'm the primary caretaker for the kitchen in my home. Yeah. Not the exclusive caretaker by any means but the primary one and um for years i used kitchen towels that i had purchased from a friend who's a vintage
Starting point is 00:27:15 textile dealer yeah so i would see her at the flea market and i would i would see that she had a a big pile of cotton cloths with you you know, little kitty cats wearing different outfits embroidered on them from the 50s or 60s. And she'd say $3 a piece and I'd just buy as many as she had and use those for a while. And that went well. But not that long ago, this friend of mine named Ryan Cecil Smith, who's a wonderful animator and comics artist, introduced me to this store in Little Tokyo here in Los Angeles called The Good Liver. And it's a store that is the store equivalent of that giant German catalog that I talked about once many years ago on the show, which is to say that it is a store that sells sort of high quality, I guess you could say artisanal, but many of them are actually industrial, simple home goods.
Starting point is 00:28:15 Yeah. Ranging from, you know, a nice pair of organic cotton socks to a lodge cast iron pan. cotton socks to a lodge cast iron pan. And they have a collection of kitchen cloths that has given me so much pleasure and satisfaction in using. They're very reasonably priced and they have different kitchen cloths for different purposes, some for cleaning up messes, some for drying dishes. The ones that i have enjoyed the best are on their website called cleaning cloth the description of which is this is a cotton cleaning cloth made in sweden yes that one has a very nubbly texture and then i am especially especially in love with Japanese kitchen towel, which is a simple and very beautiful soft cloth that is made of a cotton rayon blend.
Starting point is 00:29:12 It is actually surprisingly absorbent, but very soft and very durable. And they're both, you know, they're not shop cloths. They cost about 10 bucks a piece, but they're sizable. And I've been using them for years with very little degradation in their quality. So tell me the name of the company again. Uh, the company is called the good liver, good dash liver.com.
Starting point is 00:29:36 Love them. Love them to death. Beautiful store, beautiful website. Nice people. Also, if you go into the store, they'll wrap anything you buy up all Japanese style. And you're like, oh my God, I would, I would have paid you $20 to do this. And I'm just going to take it home and unwrap it. Joel, you ever hear of the good liver? Not mine. Yeah, no, I'm not surprised. These are beautiful towels. They do not, they, they offer no partnership with this podcast.
Starting point is 00:30:04 We just align with them in beauty i'll check it out these look good here's something from jillian she says my husband and i recently found out we're expecting our first child we're very excited sports are important to both of us but we come from different fandoms i'm a philadelphia girl My husband grew up in New Jersey, but he's a Jets, Rangers, and Yankees fan. He hates Philadelphia teams and fans and will openly root against my teams, even during the Eagles Super Bowl. That's not its official name, by the way. People in Philadelphia make this mistake all the time. It's just called the Super Bowl.
Starting point is 00:30:43 It's never the Eagles Super Bowl. The Eagles don't actually automatically win it. There's no official, but that speaks to Philadelphia fans. Okay. Go ahead, Jesse. I apologize. How do we raise this child? I'm willing to separate the four professional teams, two for me and two for him. And I'm willing to divide the child down the middle if that's what's necessary. Now, she doesn't say that in the letter, but she implies that. I also find my husband's dislike of Philadelphia to be irrational. Or should we just stuff our teams down our child's throat and hope they come to our side later in life?
Starting point is 00:31:20 I hashtag trust the process and think you can help us. Of course, John, you wouldn't know this, but Philadelphia fans did not hashtag trust the process. That was the whole problem. I certainly did not know that. But I hashtag trust what you told me. I mean, I know a little bit about up there in Mayfair, Philadelphia. I was recently talking with our friend Mark McConville on his new podcast that's entirely about sports mascots called Mascots. I was talking about the Philly Fanatic, which was my first mascot because the Boston teams didn't really haveascots. I was talking about the Philly Fanatic,
Starting point is 00:32:05 which was my first mascot because the Boston teams didn't really have mascots. You should check out the mascots. I saw you nodding there, Jesse, but listener, check out the mascots. All the episodes are great.
Starting point is 00:32:19 If you want to listen to my episode, stick around to the end to hear about a surprise mascot named baba doom that i did not know about even with my love of extinct hockey i should i i did not know about baba doom check it out but jesse you grew up in the milieu of sports fandom what's your what's your gut feeling about how to raise a child in fandom? This is my worst nightmare. I mean, this is truly my worst nightmare would be
Starting point is 00:32:53 if my wife, Teresa, had I not met her before I moved to Los Angeles, had I met Teresa in Los Angeles, and rather than being a native of the San Francisco Bay Area, that she were a native of Los Angeles, had I met Teresa in Los Angeles, and rather than being a native of the San Francisco Bay Area, that she were a native of Los Angeles and for entirely justifiable reasons were a Dodgers fan, a fan of the Los Angeles Dodgers. I don't like, I see those couples at the ball game sometimes and, you know, they'll show them on the Jumbotron so everyone can boo. But it's really, and I think it's amazing that they've managed that relationship,
Starting point is 00:33:31 but it, it is truly terrifying to me. Like the one unreasonable request, I think that I've made of my children, you know, the, the one thing that I said, my child will never be a blah,
Starting point is 00:33:44 blah, blah, is not that I don't want them to become lawyers or I don't want them to become artists it's you know it's not that I want them to fall in love with a certain kind of person
Starting point is 00:33:56 it was just as long as they're not Dodgers fans as long as they're not Dodgers fans is this because I mean there's a rivalry between the San Francisco Giants and the Los Angeles Dodgers. Is that true? That's absolutely true, yeah. And it's a rivalry just born out of sort of like Northern California City versus Southern California City.
Starting point is 00:34:15 The two big metropolises, they're naturally going to mix it up a little bit. Or is it because one of the teams is like the worst thing in the world, like the Yankees, the worst franchise in the history of baseball. Just not in terms of success, but in terms of being like awful people. No. In the specific case of the Giants and Dodgers, it's a rivalry that goes back about 125 years. years. For many years, up until 1958, when both teams moved from New York to the West Coast, they were the two National League teams of New York City, the Brooklyn Dodgers and the New York Giants. You know, the Dodgers famously playing in Brooklyn at, at Ebbets Field and, and the Giants playing at the polo grounds in New York. And, um, and then that rivalry, I think was heightened and sharpened by the rivalry between Northern and Southern California. And I think you'll find that,
Starting point is 00:35:18 you know, having a little bit of a little brother complex. San Francisco Giants fans hate the Dodgers more than the Dodgers fans hate the Giants, simply because Los Angeles is a city five times as big as San Francisco. But no, I don't think the Dodgers are a fundamentally evil team in the same way that the New York Yankees are. Right. I don't think many people would argue that the Rangers or the Knicks or, you know, none of the Yankees are the evil New York team. The Jets are not even a New York team. Right. And so, yeah, like it's a mixed bag. And I do think that there is something to be said for New York and Philadelphia sports fans. I would say New York, Philadelphia and Boston sports fans being different in the context of American sports.
Starting point is 00:36:38 Yeah. So thank you, Jesse. But when I say that everyone involved with the Yankees is terrible, I don't mean that they're individually terrible people. But Jesse, you're a baseballian. The Yankees suck, right? They're evil. Yeah, they're evil. I mean, like, obviously, no one is going to watch Pride of the Yankees and come away thinking that Lou Gehrig was a bad person.
Starting point is 00:37:00 No, no, no. He was fundamentally evil for playing for the new york yankees which are fundamentally evil joel yankees evil or no definitely evil right yes yeah yeah if you want to root for a bunch of bullies fine that's your team i get it but here there is a this is the thing i don't know a lot about sports but i do know the yankees suck. And I do know that the Philadelphia fans and New York fans are diametric opposites. I don't know how two of them could be married to each other. Where was your wedding? In a bar fight?
Starting point is 00:37:40 And I understand, Jillian, why your husband has strong opinions about Philadelphia fans. Because they throw batteries. They're rough and tumble. Because they boo their own legendary players. We can agree that the Yankees as a whole, as a franchise, as a brand, is evil. But when I say everyone involved with the Yankees, including their fans, are terrible people, that's an exaggeration. But when I say that all of the Philadelphia fans are terrible people, of course they are. They're doing it on purpose.
Starting point is 00:38:21 It's fun for them to be terrible. That's their whole thing. That's their whole thing. That's their whole thing. And they're also, I would add, John, they're not evil. So I would argue that the Yankees fans hauteur an expectation that anything other than a championship is a failure on the part of their team is an expression of the team's general identity as evil uh i would say that the philadelphia fans tendency to throw batteries at mike schmidt or whatever right uh is bad but i would not call it evil and i exact. It is an ineffable difference. Yeah.
Starting point is 00:39:06 But there is something oddly honorable about the awfulness of Philadelphia sports fans. It is honorable awfulness. So obviously I am biased because this is my mother's hometown. But I am not going to recuse myself and instead try to be objective. Jesse, what do you think the solution here is? Now, I'll point out that this family lives in Bucks County, Pennsylvania, in a town that is considered to be a suburb of Philadelphia. a suburb of Philadelphia, that this town is all-team Eagles, all-team Phillies, all-team Flyers, all-team – what's the sport I'm missing?
Starting point is 00:39:55 76ers. Oh, all-team Liberty. I mean Philadelphia Freedom. That's the United States tennis team. Do you know that Philadelphia Freedom, that's Billie Jean King's started the United States tennis team. Do you know the Philadelphia Freedom? That's Billie Jean King's start of the United States tennis league. Philadelphia Freedom is the team in Philadelphia. She is an ownership stake in it.
Starting point is 00:40:16 And she got her friend Elton John to write the theme song. The song Philadelphia Freedom is about the professional tennis team. It's all Team Philly. Hooray for professional tennis. Hooray for homosexuals in american culture it's all team philly in this town and it's definitely team wawa i also learned and definitely team except except being the 1970s 1980s i guess still still operating today uh uh very influential german heavy metal band the that was co-founded by bassist Peter Baltes, the only, quote, notable person on this town's Wikipedia page, now living outside of Philadelphia.
Starting point is 00:40:54 So this is all Philadelphia town. Jesse, what do you think about this idea, in this context, of both parents advocating for their own teams and letting the chips fall and the kids decide. Yeah, I think ultimately in this case, it may be a situation where the children can decide when they come of age, they can shed their milk name and choose their own teams as long as it's not the Yankees.
Starting point is 00:41:32 Fair enough. I will defer to my sporty friend. I think, you know what, dude, take your shot. Try to convince these kids to like the Jets in Bucks County, Pennsylvania. See what happens. See what happens. You're going to get pelted with batteries. I hope they're 9 volts, too.
Starting point is 00:41:53 Try to convince your kid to like the Jets if you live at the Jets stadium. Sorry, George R.R. Martin, one of the biggest Jets fans. Even he knows. Good luck. Good luck, New Jersey. You live in Bucks County, George R.R. Martin, one of the biggest Jets fans. Even he knows. Good luck. Good luck, New Jersey. You live in Bucks County, Pennsylvania now. Good luck. But the kids can decide just as long as it's not the Yankees.
Starting point is 00:42:14 Okay, let's take a quick break. When we come back, creepy children and a brand new old-timey ragtime tune. Hello, teachers and faculty. This is Janet Varney. I'm here to remind you that listening to my podcast, The JV Club with Janet Varney, is part of the curriculum for the school year. Learning about the teenage years of such guests as Alison Brie, Vicki Peterson, John Hodgman, and so many more is a valuable and enriching experience. One you have no choice but to embrace because, yes, listening is mandatory. The JV Club with Janet Varney is available every Thursday on Maximum Fun or wherever you get your podcasts. Thank you.
Starting point is 00:43:01 And remember, no running in the halls. It's tricky. Let me give it a try. Okay. If you need a laugh and you're on the go, call S-T-O-P-P-P-A-D-I. It'll never fit. No, it will. Let me try. If you need a laugh and you're on the go, try S-T-O-P-P-P-D-C-O-O. Ah, we are so close. Stop podcasting yourself. A podcast from MaximumFun.org.
Starting point is 00:43:44 If you need a laugh and you're on the go. Welcome back to the Judge John Hodgman podcast. We're clearing the docket this week. We have a dispute here from Milo, who wishes to bring his brother Zane to court. Milo writes, I would like to order my brother Zane to try the video game Bioshock. I myself have played it and have deemed it to be a top quality game. Okay, Jesse, hang on. Let me just jump in here and jump to the chase and say, yeah, Zane, play Bioshock already.
Starting point is 00:44:17 It is, as Milo says, a top quality game. You ever play Bioshock, Joel? Pong. All right, check it out. B out bioshock top quality game but zane you agreed to give this game a try when you got to diamond level on brawl holla and you got to diamond level i happen to know so it's time to make good on your verbal contract and go below the sea to rapture the best virtual underwater game city based on the philosophy of capitalistic extreme self-interest called Objectivism as invented by Ayn Rand. Make sure when you're playing it, Zane, to check out the secret level where Paul Ryan and Stacey Abrams are playing doubles underwater tennis with Phil Donahue and Ayn Rand's ghost. Very surprising secret level.
Starting point is 00:45:00 Sorry to cut this short, Jesse, but we have to move on because of promises that I made to listeners. A lot of these later segments the past couple of weeks have been rollicking along here in Maine, have been voted to listener interaction letters and quotes from children and other games that I've initiated. And it's made a lot of homework for me as I've had to judge dishwashers and gather letters together. And, you know, look, I'm a little behind. So let me just do a little housekeeping. On the Star Blazers theme song promise, it's still in effect. We're just putting some things together to get it right. On the dishwashers that I'll be judging, I will be doing it on Instagram coming up this week.
Starting point is 00:45:40 Just be patient. I know last week we heard from Aiden, who runs the Harvester of Souls page on the Wikipedia about Spirit of Halloween. I referenced his video. I forgot to give you the Bit.ly, the direct link to his video response to Judge John Hodgman podcast. You can check it out by going to bit.ly slash soulharvester1, soulharvester1. And, of course, we do have a few more quotes from creepy cool babies that I wanted to read to you. So let's get these out of the way. Jesse, these are the last creepy cool babies, okay?
Starting point is 00:46:12 John, before you start reading, I have a creepy cool baby to contribute. What? I'm trying to get through these things and you're adding to my homework pile? Okay. I can't wait to hear it. John, yesterday I picked my child Frankie up from preschool. Yeah. And as I drove him home on the 110, the Arroyo Seco Freeway, from Pasadena to Los Angeles, he looked at me in the rearview mirror and smiled his broadest, most beautiful smile.
Starting point is 00:46:41 And I have a very, not to brag, but I have a very beautiful child. All your children are very, very beautiful. Frankie smiled his broadest and most beautiful smile and i have a very not to brag but i have a very beautiful child all your children are very very beautiful frankie smiled his broadest and most beautiful smile and he said daddy and i said yes frankie and he said daddy when we get home i hope mommy didn't get runded over by a car accident. Oh my God. I don't know why I'm laughing. It's to prevent myself from feeling the terror. Just with the sweetest, kindest eyes, John.
Starting point is 00:47:21 The broadest of smiles. A loving lilt in his voice. I hope mommy didn't get runded over in a car accident. That is, for those of you who just started listening to the podcast today, that is the soul of this segment called Creepy Cool Babies. It was Cool Babies. Now it's Creepy Cool Babies. It's parents or other guardians of human children writing in where their kids say things to them that are strange, weird, unsettling, or creepy. That is the soul of the segment. Let's
Starting point is 00:47:53 harvest that soul right now. We heard from a listener named John. This is also a smiling one. Kids smiling is scary because what are they smiling at? John writes, several years ago, when our now 10-year-old was a toddler, he wandered into my and my wife's bedroom early in the morning. He walked over to my side of the bed and with a big smile said to me, today is your last birthday. John goes on to say, it wasn't even last birthday. John goes on to say, it wasn't even my birthday. Creepy. Yay. This is another one, Jesse.
Starting point is 00:48:37 This one is also from the car. I think creepy children have a lot of time to think in the car about creepy stuff. It's meditative for them. They're watching the world fly by them. They know that they're in a moving container of death.
Starting point is 00:48:53 They're thinking about people getting runned over. They're thinking about death. Stephen writes, one time when our child Maeve was a toddler, I was driving them in the car. Maeve asked, Daddy, do you want to be buried or cremated? To which I responded, I guess I would like to be cremated. And Maeve replied, how much does that cost? And I said, Maeve, I have no earthly idea. After a brief pause, Maeve heaved a big sigh and said, well, I guess I'll find out soon enough anyway.
Starting point is 00:49:44 This is a really quick one from Sarah. Sarah wanted their three-year-old to stop getting up at night. Apparently, Sarah's three-year-old would get up in the middle of the night and, quote, smush his little mouth into the crack under the door and yell for us. So we got the three-year-old a walkie-talkie, and now he likes to whisper creepy things into it. A couple of weeks ago, he hailed us in the walkie-talkie and while talking to us suddenly said, Who's that weird guy? I jumped out of bed and ran into his room.
Starting point is 00:50:15 There was no weird guy there. Unfortunately, I was wearing pajama shorts, and he was so freaked out by my bare legs, a rare and even weirder sight in Minnesota, that he never said another word about the weird guy. Sarah, you freaked out the creeper with your bare legs. Who creeps the creepers? All right, this is the last one because this is a threefer.
Starting point is 00:50:39 Amanda wrote in about her three-year-old who has creeped her out not once but thrice. And now she does not give a name for her three-year-old, which itself is pretty creepy. Amanda, you should probably name your child. It's weird. It's creepy that you haven't. Creepy out number one. We were returning from a doctor's appointment. At a red light, my three-year-old said, it's burning.
Starting point is 00:51:02 Hurry this way. He repeated it several times. I realized we were stopped next to a hotel that had had a fire with fatalities in it in the 2000s. Creepy. Creep out number two. I work in forensics. We can just end it there. Creepy. Yeah, done. I work in forensics and he tells me on a monthly basis to be careful upstairs because it is dark and there is a big monster. Upstairs is where they deal with the forensic biology stuff, which are the more gruesome investigations.
Starting point is 00:51:35 How does he know? Creepy. Also, what's happening? Do you guys live in a forensics lab? I don't understand. That's creepy too. Finally, creep out number three my three year old woke up from a nap a few months ago and said my sister isn't here yet
Starting point is 00:51:51 he didn't know that I was pregnant at the time and we didn't even know we were expecting a girl yet I was sure we were going to have a boy turns out my nameless child was correct and we now have a daughter it's a gift of foresight like Alicia Witt and Dune. My brother is coming with many Fremen warriors.
Starting point is 00:52:09 Creepy. So that's it, Jesse. I want to say that we saw Amanda in Atlanta when we did our show there, now almost a year ago. And we hope soon we can come back to Atlanta, which is a great town, and celebrate Georgia going blue and do a show for you there. Maybe we'll see you there, Amanda. Name your child before then because I'd like to meet him.
Starting point is 00:52:32 And also, Amanda, because I read your letters out loud, that's compensation. So you can't sue me when I sell Netflix a show based on you and your creepy son called Forensic Mom, Unnamed Creepout Boy Who Live in a Lab Solving Crimes and Slaying Monsters in the 404. It's going to be a big show. All right, Jesse. That's a good title.
Starting point is 00:52:52 I think you can sell that to FX. Long titles are really in, I think. They're Google-able. Okay, that's all the creepouts we have. And everybody, I don't need any more creepouts.
Starting point is 00:53:02 I'm creeped out already. I'm trying to reduce my homework load. So don't write in with creepy stuff unless it's really creepy and you can send it in. But don't worry. There'll be other chances to engage. And thank you for playing along and giving us so much fun stuff and violating your children's privacy with us. Thank you. John, before we go, we have a letter from Jess. I'm writing to you in regards to episode 447,
Starting point is 00:53:30 specifically the tale of woe of Abigail's allium aversion. In discussing the case, John says, fresh garlic on my flap steak is my favorite ragtime tune. Well, when I heard that, I knew I had to write it. I play the fiddle and was intending to work this up and record it with my string band. But then the pandemic happened and no one could gather together to play music. In all honesty, though, rags are meant for piano. So I enlisted my incredibly talented ivory tickling friend, James Rohr, to record it for me. As an aside, James fronts my favorite local Boston
Starting point is 00:54:06 band, the Blue Ribbons. All right. So here, a year after the inspiration, I'd love to share with you your favorite ragtime tune, Fresh Garlic on My Flapstick. Jess, P.S. Jesse, I hope you doubly enjoy this as the only ragtime tune I know of which can repel Dracula's. Let's listen to a little of Fresh Garlic on My Flapsteak. Oh, it's very bouncy. It's a bouncy, bouncy little tune. Jesse, we can use this as a bed. You can take us out on the credits. The docket is clear. That's it for another episode of Judge John Hodgman. Our producer is Jennifer Marmer. Our engineer in Maine is Joel Mann, program and operations manager at WERU Community Radio in Orland, Maine. You can listen to WERU at WERU.org and you can follow Joel on Instagram.
Starting point is 00:54:57 His handle is TheMainMan. Follow us on Twitter at Jesse Thorne and at Hodgman. We're on Instagram at Judge John Hodgman. We're on Instagram at Judge John Hodgman. Make sure to hashtag your Judge John Hodgman tweets, hashtag JJHO, and check out the Maximum Fund subreddit to discuss this episode. Submit your cases at MaximumFund.org slash JJHO or email Hodgman at MaximumFund.org. I want to mention we've had a lot of rollicking docket episodes lately. Someone asked on Reddit why that was. There's a couple of reasons. One is that it's difficult for us to book litigants into studios these days. In fact, impossible to do so safely. And it adds a
Starting point is 00:55:40 lot of complication to have people record from home. We also have all had significant life complications due to the pandemic, not least of which were those which befell Jen and myself as the parents of young children. And so don't expect that this is a forever change to the show, but do know that this is what we're doing most of the time for a little bit, and I hope you enjoy it. We'll see you next time on the Judge John Hodgman Podcast. Surprise post-credit sequence. Hey, it's me, John Hodgman. I just wanted to say thank you, Jess, for submitting that ragtime tune. It was very rollicking. It is the unofficial rollicking theme of the rollicking docket. The sinking ship that we're all on board together.
Starting point is 00:56:31 The rollicking docket plowing the frothy Maine here in Maine. Now, let me just add this, Jess. One note. I love this song. It sounds like the music bed beneath an old silent comedy from that famous comedy duo, The Judge and Bailiff Jesse, which we should make a movie of Jesse at some point. But all good theme songs need lyrics and there are no lyrics to your ragtime song. So listeners, you want to listen again to Jesse's song and write some lyrics, garlic on my flap steak, send in the lyrics to me.
Starting point is 00:57:06 I thought I was making homework for you, but I'm making more homework for me. Send in the lyrics to me. I'll pick the best one. You'll get a free t-shirt and I'll sing them on the air. Alright, that's it. See you next time on the Judge Sean Hodgman Podcast.

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