Judge John Hodgman - Good Old Onion Shop

Episode Date: March 25, 2020

Judge John Hodgman and Bailiff Jesse Thorn are clearing the docket! They talk about pizza as a snack, parents talking on the phone with their adult kids, using the rimshot sound after telling a joke, ...gelato tasting, and office potlucks!Here is Jesse's guide to LA, as mentioned on the show.

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 to clear the docket. With me, as always, is America's favorite hero dog, Judge John Hodgman. What's a hero dog? A hero dog is a dog who's a hero. He's either like, or she is either a firefighter or dialed 911 when something went wrong at the house. Like a Paw Patrol?
Starting point is 00:00:29 No, no, no. I'm talking about a real life hero dog. Paw Patrol is fiction. What? Those aren't real dogs. Wait a minute. Yeah. My six-year-old neighbor is pretty clear that they're real.
Starting point is 00:00:42 Yeah. I mean, you're going to have to check your sources on that. I might be wrong. It's possible that it's an animated series that some devious Canadians have made based on the real life exploits of a group of variously skilled and color coordinated actual dogs who can talk. But you're talking about dogs who are true heroes in this life. Yeah. Not a hot dog that is as large as a submarine sandwich, which is what I thought.
Starting point is 00:01:11 Dogs who sniffed out bombs. Yeah. There's all kinds of hero dogs, John. Yeah. Service animals. Service animals. You could tell if you're going to have a seizure or something.
Starting point is 00:01:23 St. Bernard's. Oh, yeah. That bring brandy or whatever to people who are stranded in the Alps. I think it could be brandy, could be anything. It's really the dog's choice. Yeah. Although more and more of those dogs are like wearing little visors and sleeve garters and making craft cocktails. That's right. The St. Bernard mixology movement is real.
Starting point is 00:01:46 I have an important update on past matters on the Judge John Hodgman podcast. Please. Some time ago, a month or two ago, on a Docket episode, you and I discussed our favorite grocery stores, supermarkets specifically. Yes. You talked about one that's on the way to Max Fun Con. Jensen's in Blue Jay, California. I talked about the Town and Country Market in Porterville, California. We have gotten a lot of feedback on this matter, or at least I have. And when I say a lot, I mean an unimaginable volume. It all concerns one specific thing. We described, apparently apparently i don't remember saying this it might be that everyone had a collective hallucination but we described liking
Starting point is 00:02:32 them apparently because they had straight aisles straight aisles and everyone in our uh everyone within the sound of our voices at that time has at this point tweeted at me to say all grocery stores have straight aisles. That's not true. Yeah, I would say two things to this. And I think it's really just going to be a matter of clarification because I really want to put this issue to bed. Sure. Number one, I live in Los Angeles where there are many what you would call regular supermarkets, the kind of supermarkets you would find in any major American city or suburb. And the kind of supermarkets that could be Ralph's, they could be Kroger's, they could be Lucky's, they could be Albertson's, they could be Safeway's, they could be Piggly Wigglies, whatever your regional supermarket chains are,
Starting point is 00:03:25 and the grocery business is largely regional. That's what most of the grocery stores here are like. I do most of my shopping at Trader Joe's, which is a little smaller and a pretty different experience, and sometimes the farmer's market, which is obviously a very different experience. But I know what those grocery stores are like. There's one called Superior Market or El Superior near my house where I go when I, that's the closest grocery store to my house. So when I need an onion, that's where I go. That's the good old onion shop for you. Exactly. And there's also a Food for Less and a Smart and Final at which I sometimes stop to pick up.
Starting point is 00:03:59 It's my favorite. Smart and Final? Yeah, Smart and Final. So fatalistic. It's so fatalistic. It's actually named, I know this, this is an actual fact about Smart and Final. It's named after two men, one named Smart and one named Final. Oh, how is Final spelled? F-I-N-A-L.
Starting point is 00:04:17 It's very strange. It's very, very strange. Okay, so what about the Isles? But you live in Brooklyn, New York. That's correct. Okay. So what aboutine aisles, but certainly have much narrower, taller aisles in a smaller space that makes the place feel fancy but cramped. It's like a maze that you would put a mouse in to train it to do a thing, but instead of there being a treat at the end of the maze, there are treats on all of the walls of the mazes,
Starting point is 00:05:04 and that's why I go into one every day. And they're all gluten-free. Yeah, and I usually don't come out for hours. So I will say, for me, if I said straight aisles, I wasn't saying that I can't find straight-aisled grocery stores elsewhere. It's just that the grocery store I love
Starting point is 00:05:22 is like the platonic ideal of a grocery store that could be in a dream sequence from a Coen Brothers movie. Yeah. Like it is grand, long, wide aisles with no specialty areas, no turns and twists, just every type of regular groceries that exists in America or elsewhere in the world because there are there's a great Asian grocery section and uh great Latinx groceries um in this grocery store as well so for me it's an overall aesthetic experience of 1967 ishness or 1974-ish-ness that makes me appreciate the bounty of American small to mid-sized town and suburb life, which is, to me, a fun thing to visit because I've never lived in one of those places.
Starting point is 00:06:17 Yeah, Jesse, the feeling that I have when I go into Jensen's is the feeling of like going to the Star Market in Brooklyn, Massachusetts, big open suburban grocery store or picture even better. The grocery store that at the end of Fantastic Mr. Fox, the Wes Anderson film, where they all dance in the middle of these broad, long, straight aisles. It's glorious. Yeah. And many new and upscale grocery stores, even mid and lower market grocery stores, are built to simulate intimacy using, you know, spotlighting and islands and little, you know, specialty counters and so on and so forth. And in these grocery stores, none of those things exist at all. There is but aisles. There is only aisles as far as the eye can see. And those aisles contain every Frito-Lay product on earth. Do you know what the name of my grocery chain is? What's that? Aisles for miles, then death. We're going right up against smart and final.
Starting point is 00:07:23 Let's clear that. I'm glad we cleared that up. Let's clear up the docket. Here's something from Chris. He says, Every Friday, our employer caters a lunch for our team to help bring together the disparate parts of our operations and develop a sense of camaraderie. On occasion, that Friday meal will be pizza and salad
Starting point is 00:07:39 from a local pizzeria. A few Fridays ago, my colleague Nick said that he doesn't believe pizza to be a full meal. He considers it more of a snack or something you eat after 2 a.m. Judge, I ask you to declare pizza a true meal of delicious proportion and to order Nick to acknowledge pizza is in fact a meal. Nick's a little bit of a pizza buzzkill, really minimizing pizza. Makes a little bit of a pizza buzzkill. Really minimizing pizza.
Starting point is 00:08:06 What do you think, Jesse? Of course pizza is a meal. It is a food that is a combination of different things intended to create a meal. Not unlike a sandwich. Right. But it's not a sandwich, right? No, it's not a sandwich. I don't want to go down that aisle. But like a sandwich, it is a way of combining grain, fruit, vegetables, and protein the office is serving confit duck or Mongolian hot pot.
Starting point is 00:08:54 It's not a sit down food for sure. It's different from fondue Fridays. Yeah. But here's what I would say, Jesse, and I agree with you strongly, but I do see where Nick is coming from. Because I would guess that Nick and Chris, who work together in this office, but I would guess they're both probably in their 20s, you know? Yeah. Because A, they're really focused on the free food they're getting at work, which is a really exciting thing, especially when you're a young person. And B, Nick is really interested in his own opinion. And C, Nick thinks that pizza is a snack. And I think that a metabolic argument could be made
Starting point is 00:09:35 that for a person, say under 25, pizza is a snack. That's something you have as you could have like three slices of pizza as an appetizer before you eat 100 mozzarella sticks or whatever. You know what I mean? Like pizza is something you have on the bus home before you eat 10 pounds of pasta or whatever. So I think that there is a sliding meal scale here. sliding meal scale here. But I would say for the majority of people on this earth who are in a working profession, ages 25 and up, pizza counts as a meal. Particularly when served with a salad. Oh, yeah. That's a classic. What's your favorite kind of pizza, Jesse? This is really going to blow a lot of minds.
Starting point is 00:10:21 I'm ready. Are you ready for me to drop a bomb? Yeah. I like pepperoni pizza. It's kind of the best pizza, isn't it? It's so good. It's so good. I honestly, I still am at a point where I find vegetables on a pizza to be an inconvenience.
Starting point is 00:10:38 I like a mushroom pizza. I like black olives from time to time. Pepperoni pizza is the default. I'm finally turning against anchovy pizza, I got to say time to time. Pepperoni pizza is the default. I'm finally turning against anchovy pizza, I got to say. I love anchovies. I used to love anchovy pizza because it was so rare because no one would ever get it with me. So every now and then I would get myself one. But then recently I did that and I was like, hmm, too salty. I will say this. too salty. I will say this. One thing I noticed when I was visiting Venice, Italy,
Starting point is 00:11:13 the famous Water Street City, that's what it's called. We went to dinner at a little family restaurant and there was a table of six native Italians, maybe Venetians, But they were all talking Italian. Possibly Venetians. Possibly so. They were all men and women ages 35 to 65. Every one of them got a whole pizza. Each. And ate it.
Starting point is 00:11:38 Now, this wasn't like an 18-inch pizza. This was like a 12 to 14-inch pizza. And they serve pizza in Italy, at least in Venice, the only place I've ever been in Italy. They serve it to you whole, they don't cut it up, and you have to slice it up yourself with a knife and fork and eat it like that.
Starting point is 00:11:52 But they really put it away. So I would agree, Nick, if you go to Venice, pizza's a snack there. You're a snack, Nick. So are you, Chris. All our listeners are snacks. there. You're a snack, Nick. So are you, Chris. All our listeners are snacks. Here's something from Randy. My husband and I are the proud parents of two young adult children who do not live with us. When my children call me, I drop whatever I'm doing to talk to them, and I prefer not to be the one to end the call. My husband finds this frustrating because I will sometimes get off the phone with him or not be as helpful as I could be when we're doing chores. I think the most important thing is that the kids know we are always available for them. He would like me to change.
Starting point is 00:12:33 I would like him to adopt my habits. Please help us settle this. This is when I'm feeling keenly, you know, because we have an 18-year-old child. Yeah. And that person, whom we love, and I don't want to brag, but we love our children. Braggy, but acceptable. Right. She's going to leave the house.
Starting point is 00:12:54 She's an adult now. She's going to leave the house probably to go to college. I've tried to sabotage all of her college applications so she wouldn't leave. I always say, oh, I'll mail those in for you, honey. And I put a slice of pizza in each one. But then maybe that'll get her into the college of pizza. I don't know. But I think she's going to go to college. I think she's going to leave. And it's going to be very sad. It's going to be a hard adjustment. So I feel Randy here. I did notice something in Randy's phrasing. Would you read the first line again?
Starting point is 00:13:30 My husband and I are the proud parents of two young adult children who do not live with us. Yes. They do not live with you. They're not young adult children. I get they're young, but I come from book publishing where young adult has a significant meaning, has a very specific age range from Donald J. Sobel age to Judy Blume age. And once you hit 18, and especially if you're living out of the house, you're an adult. You're not a young adult child. You're an adult. It's a hard transition.
Starting point is 00:14:01 I appreciate why you don't want to do it. But unless your teenagers are in boarding school or they have legally emancipated themselves from you, they're adults now. And that's the problem, Randy. You miss your adults that used he's glad that his adults are thriving in the world, but he needs you for those chores. Is that what she said? Yeah, she's missing out on chores. Oh, here it is. It could be helpful when they're doing chores if she would just get off the phone. My husband finds this frustrating because I will not be as helpful as I could be when we were doing chores.
Starting point is 00:14:42 Like, what a sad portrait of retirement that is. Like, I hope that when our younger child decides to become an adult and thrive and leave the home, that my wife and I are not just taking out the garbage every hour. Sit around and relax. This is your chance. Read a book. Look, obviously all parents deal with the emptying of their nest in different ways and in different emotional ways. And you have to be accepting of them. But this idea that like you can't talk to your adult kids because you've got chores to do, wife, that that's a little bit of a flag for me. Unless you're desperately trying to save your orange grove from an early frost and you've got to be out there with hair dryers blowing on those trees or whatever, the chores can wait.
Starting point is 00:15:28 Talk to your kids. Agree or disagree, Jesse Thorne? Yeah, I think that's true. The only thing in this note that gives me pause is Randy saying that she prefers not to be the one to end the call. I understand that sentiment. It does place a burden on your children.
Starting point is 00:15:51 Oh, interesting. So I think that it is, that is a reasonable point of compromise with Randy's husband, that she can have with her husband, which is that I would not say, I don't think it's necessarily a good or healthy point of pride to say, I never hang up the phone. I think the odds are that that gives the children more of a feeling of responsibility and burden than it does a sense of comfort that they're always available for them. But in general, on the broader question, I agree. Were I in that position,
Starting point is 00:16:27 I think I would also like to think that I would prioritize talking to my kids over anything that wasn't an emergency, simply because I know now as a parent of young children and as a medium adult right now in my life, it's so difficult for me to carve out the time to talk to my family and my wife's family, both of whom I really love, that I'm really grateful when they make it a priority to take my call when I'm able to make it. Thank you, Jesse, as always, for your other point of view, because I mean, I honestly didn't occur to me like I I just figured she meant she doesn't want to end the call and her kids still want to talk to her. Like they don't want to get off the phone with her because they're asking her life advice and stuff. But you're right.
Starting point is 00:17:12 Maybe, maybe the kids want to go and they need a little prompt from the mom. All I'm saying is Randy's husband, don't be standing over your wife going, hang up the phone so you can help me clean these gutters. Like that's not cool. I would, I would consider it a lot cooler if he was saying, I wish you would end this hang up the phone so you can help me clean these gutters. Like, that's not cool. I would consider it a lot cooler if he was saying, I wish you would end this call now so we could get back to playing this game of Monopoly deal that we've got going on here,
Starting point is 00:17:33 or we could get back to working on this crossword puzzle or watching this movie or spending this time together now that we have this time together again. But the chores thing, I don't like it. Let's take a quick break. More items on the docket coming up in just a minute on the Judge John Hodgman podcast. On the Judge John Hodgman podcast. Hello, teachers and faculty.
Starting point is 00:17:57 This is Janet Varney. I'm here to remind you that listening to my podcast, The JV Club with Janet Varney, is part of the curriculum for the school year. Learning about the teenage years of such guests as Alison Brie, Vicki Peterson, John Hodgman, and so many more is a valuable and enriching experience, one you have no choice but to embrace, because yes, listening is mandatory. The JV Club with Janet Varney is available every Thursday on Maximum Fun or wherever you get your podcasts. Thank you. And remember, no running in the halls. If you need a laugh and you're on the go, try S-T-O-P-P-O-D-C-A-S-T-I. Hmm. Were you trying to put the name of the podcast there?
Starting point is 00:18:45 Yeah, I'm trying to spell it, but it's tricky. Let me give it a try. Okay. If you need a laugh and you're on the go, call S-T-O-P-P-P-A-D-I. It'll never fit. No, it will. Let me try. If you need a laugh and you're on the go, try S-T-O-P-P-P-D-C-O-O.
Starting point is 00:19:04 Ah, we are so close. Stop podcasting yourself. A podcast from MaximumFun.org. If you need a laugh and you're on the go. Welcome back to the Judge John Hodgman podcast. We're clearing the docket this week. Jay says, every time my dad makes a pun, which thankfully is not very often, he ends it by saying, ba-da-boom. What? My siblings and I. Read on. Read on. My siblings and I always cringe at this, since it's supposed to be ba-doom-psh.
Starting point is 00:19:42 Please order an injunction against our dad that if he must say a pun, he should end it with or no ending at all. P.S. When our father remembers we hate Bada Boom, he corrects it. That's in scare quotes to Bada Bing. This is also unacceptable. OK, Jesse, what's what are the odds, in your opinion, that this weird dad knows exactly what he's doing in driving his kids crazy by saying, bada-boom, when clearly he means,
Starting point is 00:20:15 ba-doom-ch. If I were one of those English bookmakers that takes bets on anything, I'd lay it at at least four to one that he knows. Four to one? Does that mean it's likely that he knows? I think it's very likely. One to one would mean he definitely knows, right? Yeah. Okay. I don't understand odds. No. Yeah. One to one. Yeah. That's why I lost all my money at the hermit crab races in Jamaica. I would say this. If he does know,
Starting point is 00:20:42 if there's a 25% chance that he's doing this on purpose just to make his kids cringe, I don't necessarily congratulate him just for that, but then taking it to the second level and go, oh, you mean bada boom is wrong? Well, then how about bada bing? That's a real masterstroke. That's great. But I would guess, Jesse, if I were a betting person, and of course I don't bet anymore after the hermit crab race fiasco. Lost it all. Yeah.
Starting point is 00:21:15 Lost it all betting on Little Reddy. He seems so fast. His shell was painted red like the flash. Come on. The little jerk went sideways. You ever see a hermit crab race? They're a real thing. Really?
Starting point is 00:21:30 Like in a, is this like a street con? Probably. When I was a little kid, you know, like third grade, I would guess, my parents took me to Jamaica. And, you know, we just stayed in this sort of medium level resort hotel. And I remember three things. First of all, the issue of Ghost Rider that I got, very meaningful to me, was a pretty good issue. Second, swim up bar. Obviously I wasn't going to get alcohol, but I was swimming up to that bar to get a soda. And third, hermit crab races every afternoon on the patio.
Starting point is 00:22:10 Guy draws a circle on the ground, puts a bunch of hermit crabs with painted shells in there, takes bets as to which hermit crab is going to get out of the circle first. I always bet on Little Reddy. I always lost. Wow, that was an aggression listen dad i'm gonna bet this weird dad does not understand what he's doing then in fact uh he is meaning to do but the classic rim shot and snare which is used traditionally to accentuate the punch lines in catskills comedy acts in the middle of the 20th century. And there's a variation of that, of course, which is ba-dump-bump.
Starting point is 00:22:50 But since when pressed, your dad is hyper-correcting to ba-da-bing, we know he's not saying ba-dump-bump. But the other half of ba-da-bing, which is ba-da-boom. Ba-da-bing, of course, is not from the Jewish-American Borscht Belt comedy tradition, but from movies about Italian-American organized crime. It is the name of the Naked Dancing Club and the Sopranos, itself taken after the Bada Bing catchphrase of Sonny from The Godfather, played by James Caan. Now, the Wikipedia page for Bada Bing, which exists, suggests that maybe Bada Bing is an onomatopoeia also coming from the sound of a rimshot and a snare but don't uh but i don't buy that this is the one thing on wikipedia i don't buy because both in the godfather and in general usage bada bing means it happened very easily or it was no problem i did it bada Bada bing. As in, hey,
Starting point is 00:23:45 Michael Corleone, it is easy to shoot a police captain at close range. Bada bing. Just kidding, my brother, Michael. That is irony. It is not easy. That's a famous line from The Godfather. Yeah. Legendary script. Yeah. Merriam-Webster, which of course I have an internal beef with because I think a hot dog is a sandwich, but still a respected dictionary, defines bada bing as used especially to emphasize something regarded as surprising sudden effortlessly achieved or impressive and just how the the rim shot and snare is now wholly referential that no one ever does that in comedy unless it's to make a joke about that in comedy i don't think anyone would ever now say
Starting point is 00:24:26 bada bing without specifically referencing The Godfather. Is that true? Or is it still like a genuine Italian-American thing to say? Bada bing, bada boom. If you know, if you're from one of those communities, let us know in the Reddit. But yeah, your dad is wrong. By the way, Merriam-Webster doesn't offer an etymology, but does cite the first known use of bada bing in 1965, which would make Sonny's use in The Godfather an anachronism, but who knows? They think the hot dog is a sandwich, so they could be wrong. Bada bing. Effortlessly proven by Judge John Hodgman.
Starting point is 00:24:58 Here's something from Diana. I was walking with some friends after dinner and stopped at a sidewalk gelato stand that seemed to be popular. I tried two samples, but I didn't really like either of them. They were bland, gritty, and icy. I asked for three more samples and equally hated them. I felt bad but walked away without purchasing anything to the horror of my friends and also of the scooper. Should I have been obligated to complete a purchase? friends and also of the scooper. Should I have been obligated to complete a purchase?
Starting point is 00:25:30 Before we answer that question, I will say I do think you are obligated, Diana, to at least know the difference between gelato and sorbet. Because you clearly were sampling sorbet, which is gritty and icy, and not sampling gelato, which is smooth and creamy. Well, now with that said, what do you think, Jesse? Two, then three, then nothing. Okay or not okay? I think that she can walk away at any time. Can walk away at any time. Yeah. I think it is her choice.
Starting point is 00:26:00 That said, I think that when you take multiple samples in that context, the implied context is that you're doing it to select a flavor, not to decide whether you are going to have any. And that was particularly true after she had three more after the first two. Five is a lot of samples in any context. Five is a lot of samples in any context. Five is a lot. So I will give you an example here. At the Pasadena City College flea market, where I go every Sunday, there is an Italian ice stand. The Italian ice stand offers free samples. Yeah. They put them out on the counter and they are sales inducements. They are encouraging you to buy some Italian ice today. I don't feel bad tasting them and deciding not to buy Italian ice that day. But if I went up to him and said, can I taste five different flavors of Italian ice, then decided not to,
Starting point is 00:27:01 I would feel bad. So my position is that while she was within her rights, I don't think anyone was wrong to be horrified by her actions. Well, I mean, and you make a good point, which is in the case you're describing, they're leaving out samples in little cups, right? Yeah. For you to just grab. And if you were to go up there with a big tote bag and just shove 10 or 15 samples into the tote bag and walk away, that would be gross.
Starting point is 00:27:38 But you don't need to get 15 different samples. If you're asking the person to actually scoop a little sorbet or gelato five times, now you're taking up a good chunk of their day. And remember, service people are people too. You know, when we were visiting Venice, Italy, we went to a lot of gelato stands because there are a lot of them there. And the service person there, I was very thoughtful. I knew exactly what I wanted. I wanted some strawberry sorbet. I didn't need to taste it. And I said, in my attempt at Italian, I said, I would like some of that fragallo.
Starting point is 00:28:16 And she looked at me. She literally rolled her eyes and said, fragallo. I'm like, okay. She made me feel really bad. I took my strawberry sorbet and I went out and I was saying to my children, the woman in there was mean to me. And our daughter was like,
Starting point is 00:28:38 no, I think she was just, you know, politely correcting you. I'm like, it did not feel polite. It felt like humiliating. And I get it. Like trying to speak in another language can be annoying after a while if you're a service worker. I get it. I guess I deserved it. My daughter's like, she wasn't being mean. And then this other family came out of the same thing because we're sitting outside. This family of three Scottish people come out and they were just like blinking and almost in tears. And the daughter said to the
Starting point is 00:29:06 mother, she was so mean. One of the great confirmations of my life. But even if you are facing a service person who is mean and ridiculing you, the truth is, Diana, Jesse Thorne, O Bailiff, My Bailiff is right. Five Samples is really pushing it. And, you know, it's not like you have to buy something from it to pay the service workers back. They're not getting money out of this deal. It's not like they get a commission on this sale. But it's a little annoying to take five dips and say, no, thanks, and walk away. I would say instead, Diana, I'm really sorry.
Starting point is 00:29:40 None of these are for me, but thank you for your time. And then put a dollar or two in the tip jar. That's a nice way to say thank you for taking the effort to put five little spoons of frozen ice into my mouth. I don't really like gelato. Really, no? I mean, I would. Look, given a choice between eating gelato and not eating anything,
Starting point is 00:30:04 I'm going to eat gelato every time. Don't get me wrong. Yeah, you're not going to starve to death. Yeah. I just think that gelato as an alternative to ice cream is presented as like a fancy slash better option. And I strongly prefer ice cream. Yeah, it's airier. It's not as dense as gelato.
Starting point is 00:30:23 I prefer the air and the high fat content combined. That is my ideal ice cream is a fatty ice cream that also has the air introduced to it through churning. You know, everyone knows I don't have a sweet tooth, but there are two things I need in life to live. Air is obviously one of them. Yeah. And high fat content. That's about it. For me, it's air and churning. Okay, let's take a quick break.
Starting point is 00:30:51 When we come back, we'll hear a case about office potlucks. 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 learning, the experience of learning causes a sound to happen?
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Starting point is 00:34:07 From the 18th until the 27th, visit madeincookware.com. That's M-A-D-E-I-N cookware dot com. Welcome back to the Judge John Hodgman podcast. We're clearing the docket this week. Here's something from Alex. He says, I work at a public agency that seems to celebrate any event or holiday with an employee potluck. I have a restrictive diet and would like to just bring my own lunch to these events. My coworker, Kristen, says that's fine, but that I also have to make and bring something for the office, even if I don't eat anything else.
Starting point is 00:34:45 What do you say, Judge Hodgman? Jesse Thorne, I don't work in an office. You are there at MaxFun HQ. You have some staff meals, right? Yeah, occasionally. Do you ever have a potluck type situation? Like the holiday party, everyone brought something. I remember KT brought that amazing tomato soup cake.
Starting point is 00:35:04 That's true. A lot of people brought things to the holiday party. Everyone brought something. I remember KT brought that amazing tomato soup cake. That's true. A lot of people brought things to the holiday party. We usually, if we're going to do something like that, we're usually providing the main food. But I have certainly worked in offices that had potlucks. I mean, I think this is going to be another one where I will equivocate and say, you are by no means obliged to participate in an office potluck. That is the nature of the potluck. You can participate in it or not participate in it. However, I would say that it is antisocial to not participate. And if you have a restrictive diet, I respect that. And you by no means should have to eat anything that does not fit your diet. But I
Starting point is 00:35:46 think it would be generous and pro-social of you to nonetheless contribute something to the potluck. And if it's something where you make enough of it that you can make a full meal of that one dish because it conforms to your dietary needs, that's great, but there should be extra for others. And I wouldn't say that it is a hard and firm obligation. A potluck, I think, is pretty much always an optional event. But I would say that you're going to be a lot better off in the long term in terms of building the camaraderie and so on and so forth with your colleagues with whom you spend each day if you are contributing to everyone, even though you are benefiting disproportionately little.
Starting point is 00:36:32 I don't think that presenting a pie chart of how you're not going to get much out of it is going to be the answer. Yeah. My contribution to the potluck is this PowerPoint deck about how potlucks are unfair to everyone and we should ban them. Yeah. But again, I wouldn't consider it a hard and fast obligation. I think that Alex is within his rights, but I think just Alex would be happier and have a happier life if he was doing this nice thing for everybody that everybody does together. Yeah, I, as always, appreciate your insight. And you touched on something that I also felt I wanted to say here.
Starting point is 00:37:17 Kristen, your coworker, Alex, is a nudge and is, you know, poking at you to contribute. That's annoying. I agree. However, Kristen's right. Making your own food and eating it silently at your desk and ignoring the potluck, that is not in the spirit of the potluck. Because the spirit of the potluck is not merely swapping food. It is also, as you point out, Jesse, it's about community building. It's about camaraderie. It's about people in the office getting to know, like, here's my favorite recipe for tomato soup cake. Oh, really? Interesting. I add a little extra tomato soup in my tomato soup cake. Here's mine. Or, you know, this is my grandmother's macaroni and cheese recipe.
Starting point is 00:38:02 my grandmother's macaroni and cheese recipe. By the way, my name is Alex and I can't eat macaroni or cheese. So instead, here is my bowl of gruel. I've made enough for everyone. Make enough for everyone is the simple and obvious answer of the food that you can eat, Alex, and let them share in your dietary restrictions so they get to know you better. And the fact of the matter is just because it's called pot luck doesn't mean it's always pot good luck. Sometimes you have to eat bad food that other people eat. Share of yourself, Alex. Don't be selfish. Don't hide your gruel under a bushel.
Starting point is 00:38:43 We also heard from a listener named Bart about the docket-clearing episode called Serendipity. We had talked about maybe opening a Just Dips restaurant called Serendipity. Yeah, by the way, the CDC called me and told me to take that podcast down. Not allowed. All-dip restaurant, not okay.
Starting point is 00:39:03 Here's what Bart had to say. I asked the court to place an injunction from naming such a restaurant if established serendipity. In the winter of 1997, I went to eat with my dear friend Tom. Upon his decision to order a French dip sandwich, he declared he would like to open a restaurant where everything on the menu was dipped. declared he would like to open a restaurant where everything on the menu was dipped. The restaurant would be named Dunkashane, pronounced as the Wayne Newton song so Americans would understand the joke. Tom lost his battle with cancer in 2008 at the age of 37.
Starting point is 00:39:39 And that's the reason I bring forward this complaint. Also, this is for everybody who had a good idea but never did anything about it. Oh, that's a sad story uh and thank you uh for sharing that with us bart and obviously our condolences to you and tom's friends and family that's a very very sad loss and a very very fun idea and good joke and especially since uh it would have served a French dip. And if people don't know what a French dip is, Jesse, you're in Los Angeles, the birthplace of the French dip. Can you tell us a little bit about it? Yeah. French soft roll and thinly sliced meat. Roast beef specifically. Typically roast beef, although there are other alternatives.
Starting point is 00:40:32 Oh, there are? Interesting. I like a lamb dip. Sometimes cheese is added, and it is then dipped in jus, the juices of the meat that have been concentrated. And it's a wonderful sandwich. I will say this, John. Yeah. There are two restaurants in Los Angeles that claim to have invented the French dip. No one has been able to establish which of them did.
Starting point is 00:40:59 One is a restaurant called Kohl's that is downtown. One is a restaurant called Kohl's that is downtown, and one is a restaurant called Philippe's the French Dip that is near Union Station, which is not far from downtown, but actually adjacent to Los Angeles' Chinatown. And I have no, I can claim no insight as to which of those restaurants invented the French dip. as to which of those restaurants invented the French dip. I can, however, say that Philippe's the French dip is dramatically better than Kohl's. Maybe a decade ago, Kohl's was turned into what I would call an exposed filament light bulb theme restaurant.
Starting point is 00:41:40 You mean they went Brooklyn style? They went Brooklyn style. It's subway tiles, sleeve garters, and exposed filaments. And it's perfectly fine. It's not a terrible restaurant. And it's better than that the restaurant, you know, this great institution had gone out of business. But the food is unremarkable. And it is in an unremarkable and frankly, unoriginal context.
Starting point is 00:42:05 Philippe's the French dip is has concrete floors covered in sawdust, a giant lunch counter with like 12 lines and ladies who aren't allowed to touch the money because they're preparing food with hairnets who get your sandwich for you, like purple pickled eggs and big jars. And it is everything that you wish a restaurant that has existed for over a hundred years could be. It is so great. And the food is really good
Starting point is 00:42:35 and very reasonably priced to boot. It is a real kind of normal person's lunch restaurant that you could go to anytime. And I love Philippe's The French Dip. It is on my recent guide to Los Angeles. Oh, where can I learn more of your guide to Los Angeles? People are always asking me what they should do when they visit Los Angeles. And I typically get as far as telling them to go to the Museum of Jurassic Technology,
Starting point is 00:43:01 which is the best thing in Los Angeles. But then I get tired and I just can't answer, you know, when two people ask you that question a week, you just, you're like, well, here's one thing, goodbye. I thought I would be more helpful if I wrote up, you know, 15 or 20 things in a place that I could just point people to. So at my personal Tumblr, yes, that's right. I still have an extant personal Tumblr. And you can tell by the graphics that it's from before the days when I had a beard. So I think those graphics were established nine years ago or something.
Starting point is 00:43:34 But at jessithorn.tumblr.com, you can find my guide to Los Angeles. And it's like 15 or 20 great things to do in L.A., some, you know, restaurant tips and activity tips and so on and so forth. Uh, just stuff that I really like. It's, it's very biased, but, um, so am I. Well, Jesse Thorne, I look forward to checking that out. I will also say, I don't know when the next time I'm going to be in Los Angeles is, but next time I'm in Los Angeles, if your schedule permits, let's the two of us go to Philippe's, the French dip and each of us have a French dip and presuming that, you know,
Starting point is 00:44:12 our society is still a place where restaurants can serve open containers of beef juice for you to dip your food in. Let's each dunk a French dip in honor of Tom. Dunk one out for Tom. Oh yeah. Or maybe even better, get 21 sandwiches for a 21 dunk salute. I like a lamb dip with blue cheese, double dipped. I like pickled beets and a pickled egg.
Starting point is 00:44:36 I'm not going to have all of those things, but I'll definitely dunk a dip in honor of Tom. You're going to have to eat a little bit of the pickled beets because there's just a lot on the plate. It's probably too many for me. Oh, trust me, the pickled beets were not the problem. The docket is now clear. That's it for another episode of Judge John Hodgman. Our producer is Jennifer Marmer. Follow us on Twitter at Jesse Thorne and at Hodgman.
Starting point is 00:44:59 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 at MaximumFund.reddit.com to discuss this episode. Submit your cases at MaximumFund.org slash JJHO or email Hodgman at MaximumFund.org. Hey, let me just jump in here for a second. I've really been enjoying the Maximum Fund subreddit a lot. Hey, let me just jump in here for a second. I've really been enjoying the Maximum Funds Reddit a lot. I'm getting in there all the time to mix it up in a friendly style in the comments for Judge John Hodgman, also for iPodius, which is my and Elliot Kalin's iClaudius podcast. disagree with or wish to bring to our attention, by all means, you may always email me at Hodgman at MaximumFun.org. But you can also copy or just go there and post it because I'm going to
Starting point is 00:45:50 be in there and I'll be responding to you and we'll have a little conversation about it. Tell me your favorite French dip at Philippe's. Tell me your favorite dip and sandwich. Tell me your other names for all dip restaurants since it's pure fantasy at this point. I really enjoy it over there. Thanks for setting it up, Jesse. Thanks for inventing Reddit. Hey, I'm glad to. It made me rich, so I'm happy.
Starting point is 00:46:14 Yeah. And now you're married to Serena Williams, the tennis star. So overall, everything's coming up, Jesse, founder of Reddit. I guess we'll see you next time on the Judge John Hodgman podcast. Maximumfun.org. Comedy and culture. Artist owned. Audience supported.

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