Judge John Hodgman - Injunction Junction

Episode Date: September 13, 2023

Dan brings the case against his wife, Carrie. Dan wants to build a model railroad in a small switching layout that simulates a switchyard. This type of model railroad does not move in a loop. Carrie s...ays that a model railroad is pointless if it doesn’t move in a loop! Who's right? Who's wrong? Thanks to reddit user u/themadjuggler for naming this week’s case! To suggest a title for a future episode, keep an eye on the Maximum Fun subreddit at maximumfun.reddit.com! Check out the evidence at instagram.com/judgejohnhodgman!Judge John Hodgman’s Van Freaks Roadshow has begun! It's not too late to get your tickets for LONDON this FRIDAY! For 30% off, use code JUDGE2023 at checkout! Visit vanfreaksroadshow.com for ticket links, other dates, cities, and more information! And SUBMIT YOUR CASES along the tour route at maximumfun.org/jjho! 

Transcript
Discussion (0)
Starting point is 00:00:00 Welcome to the Judge John Hodgman podcast. I'm bailiff Jesse Thorne. This week, injunction junction. Dan brings the case against his wife, Carrie. Dan wants to build a model railroad. He'd like to build this railroad in a small switching layout that simulates a switchyard. This type of model railroad does not move in a loop. Kerry says a model railroad is pointless if it doesn't move in a loop. But Dan thinks it could be really cool. Who's right? Who's wrong? Only one can decide. Please rise as Judge John Hodgman enters the courtroom and presents an obscure cultural reference. Copper comes from Arizona.
Starting point is 00:00:43 Peaches come from Georgia And lobsters come from Maine The wheat fields are the sweet fields of Nebraska And Kansas gets bonanzas from the grain Old whiskey comes from old Kentucky Ain't the country lucky New Jersey gives us glue And you, you come from Rhode Island and little old Rhode
Starting point is 00:01:07 Island is famous for you. Bailiff Jesse Thorne, swear the litigants in. Dan and Carrie, please rise. Raise your right hands. Do you swear to tell the truth, the whole truth and nothing but the truth? So help you, God or whatever. I do. I do. Do you swear to abide by Judge John Hodgman's ruling, despite the fact that he's not wearing a hickory-striped cap and overalls? I do. I do. Judge Hodgman, you may proceed. Is that what that engineer hat pattern is?
Starting point is 00:01:37 Hickory stripe? It's called a hickory stripe. Hickory stripe. Had I only ever known. I am not wearing such a cap. I am actually wearing a linen blue shirt with a little lobster on it. Because lobsters do come from Maine. And I am in Maine with Joel, the Maine man man, program and operations director here at WERU 89.9 FM.
Starting point is 00:01:59 Joel, how are you doing? Really good, Judge. Good to see you. Yeah. Thanks for being here. What's your Instagram account again? The Maine man. The Maine to see you. Yeah. Thanks for being here. What's your Instagram account again? The Main Man. The Main Man on Instagram.
Starting point is 00:02:08 Yeah. M-A-I-N-E-M-A-N-N. Correct. Right. Right. And how's that doing? Doing great. I only need 48 more followers. Until what?
Starting point is 00:02:17 I hit the 2 million mark. Whoa, 2 million? 2 million. Wow. Wow. I'm catching up to the Kardashians. I don't have 95 000 how'd you get two million joel finally decided to put feet on main m-a-i-n-e because of you that's why you know before you go away this summer wait a minute i'm looking at your instagram it does
Starting point is 00:02:38 not say two million what does it say it was like almost two 2000 oh i guess yeah okay well okay thanks so 2 million and 48 is what we're looking for today okay gotcha jesse thorne nice to be back with you missed you when we had bonti on it's fun with monty but it's fun with jesse how's your social media jesse i only need 48 more until you what i don't know just feel like i should at least get as many more as joel does that's right 48 everyone gets 48 dan and carrie you may be seated i hope let's get you 48 more followers each of you at least for an immediate summary judgment in fact i'll add a bonus 48 to the person who's able to guess the cultural reference that i sung when I entered the courtroom. Oh, Dan, let's start with you. That sounds like a promotional video for Rhode Island.
Starting point is 00:03:33 It's definitely pro-Rhode Island. It's definitely pro-Dialand, for sure. I'm going to throw a hint to both of you to see if you can follow my chain of thought here. So the name of this episode, as offered by Reddit user TheMadJuggler, which is a little scary, is... That's just the name they assign you if you don't pick something. They're like, what? Yeah. TheMadJuggler39295979 underscore nerd.
Starting point is 00:04:07 five nine seven nine underscore nerd anyway the name the name that that we chose from the many terrific ones that were suggested over on the reddit injunction junction now i don't know your ages and i don't wish to know but if i were to sing conjunction junction what's your function that mean anything to you yes yes it does okay So maybe that's a little hint. So promotional song for Rhode Island. We put that in the book for you, Dan. Carrie, do you have a guess? Well, I feel like this has to be some sort of reference to a children's cartoon. Obviously, I'm thinking about Schoolhouse Rock. But I'm drawing a blank here.
Starting point is 00:04:43 The only children's program I know with trains was Shining Time Station. There are a lot of children's programs with trains. Shining Time Station. Who's the tank engine? Thomas the tank engine. You're going down the right track, if I may, Carrie, with Schoolhouse Rock. But you're never going to get track, if I may, Carrie, with Schoolhouse Rock, but you're never going to get there. Those all guesses are wrong. The reason I sang that song is because it's one
Starting point is 00:05:11 of my favorites. It was introduced to me by Monty Belmonte on one of his radio shows long, long ago. The name of that song is Rhode Island is Famous for You. It is by Arthur Schwartz and Howard Dietz, but most famously, at least to my ear, performed by the great jazz vocalist and pianist Blossom Deary. Now, Schoolhouse Rock was the first season of Schoolhouse Rock, which is all about multiplication. Three is the magic number, etc. All the songs were written by the great jazzy composer Bob Durow. But Blossom Deary sang the figure eight song. And later, unpack your adjectives. And Blossom Deary is a really, really cool vocalist.
Starting point is 00:05:54 You know Blossom Deary, Joel? You know jazz, don't you? A little bit. Yeah. Blossom Deary. Do you ever hear of her? No. Okay.
Starting point is 00:06:00 Never have. And I love Schoolhouse Rock. And Schoolhouse Rock was something that existed. It stopped being on television in the year 2000, 23 years ago. But I mean, just imagine a time when networks voluntarily provided educational cartoons with really incredible songs, not just about multiplication and adjectives and conjunctions, but also financial literacy and how to avoid debt. It should be mandatory watching for everybody who hasn't watched it. Go check out Schoolhouse Rock. conjunctions, but also financial literacy and how to avoid debt. It was incredible. I don't know. It should be mandatory watching for everybody who hasn't watched it.
Starting point is 00:06:29 Go check out Schoolhouse Rock. Figure eight is a beautiful song and Blossom Terry is a wonderful singer. All right. That was just the thing. Oh, the other thing is this is an unintentional plug, Dan and Carrie, because Janet Varney and I, as promised, are in the midst of recording our Mottos of the States podcast. And let's just say that this song features prominently in a particular episode dedicated to Prode Island, our Prode Island episode. And if you want to hear me sing the whole thing, because it gets a little wacky, check it out. It'll be in your members feed.
Starting point is 00:06:59 Thanks again for joining MaximumFun.org and supporting us. All right, Dan and Carrie, you are joining us from Michigan, USA. It says here, Dan, that you are an airline pilot and you race cars as a hobby? Yes. Two daring professions for an extremely soft-spoken fellow. Well, I don't know how daring either of those really is.
Starting point is 00:07:20 I'm a risk manager. I would not like to hear that over the PA if I were flying in a plane with you. What kind of planes do you fly? You fly commercially? Yeah. For a airline, you will not get a medallion on. OK. So I fly the Airbus for them.
Starting point is 00:07:40 What size Airbus do you fly? A320 and A320 family. Is that the double-decker one? No, that's the 380. 320 is the narrow body. So you need like about 48 more. Yeah, yeah, about 48 more. Everyone needs about 48 more to get that double-decker, I feel like, roughly speaking.
Starting point is 00:08:01 And Carrie, you were married to this person? Yes. Very good. How long have you been married? About eight months. Good. That's the perfect amount of time to develop model train problems. Well, we've been together for about 13 years, so most of the stuff has shaken out between now and then. Most of the stuff has shaken out between most of the stuff is fast
Starting point is 00:08:25 it's well marinated well good i'm glad i'm glad to hear that and we'll get into the dispute about it but i just want to say it says here that you have uh you do not fly planes or race cars but you do have 16 cheap we have a lot of librarians on the show. Carrie, as you probably know, you almost certainly have the most livestock of any of those librarians. Yeah, I'm a I'm a librarian and I started knitting in grad school. And seven years later, I now have a flock of sheep for the wool. I can't run out. It's not required, is it, if you take up knitting to start acquiring sheep? No, but it's optimal.
Starting point is 00:09:17 What kind of sheep do you have? I raise Shetland sheep and Gotland sheep. And how many do you have currently? 16. Seems like you need about 48 more. Well, welcome to the show. Who seeks justice in this court? I do, John.
Starting point is 00:09:36 What is the nature of the justice you seek? State your complaint. Well, we both have kind of all engrossing hobbies and we are very, very supportive of each other. And I wanted to pick up this kind of minor hobby. And Carrie has interjected herself into my plans and doesn't think that a switching layout for a model railroad is a legitimate way to go. So I'm seeking an injunction so I can do as I please with a secondary hobby. So I'm going to get more into the details of what a switching
Starting point is 00:10:14 layout is compared to a traditional layout, which goes in a circle, it goes choo-choo. Your layout would not go in a circle at all. Correct. And Carrie, why do you feel that the train should go in a circle? Well, I think when you picture a model train, little village with maybe, you know, a tunnel and maybe some pretty trees and like there's a whole setup and there's a loop and it's really quite cute. I was kind of on board with the idea of having a model railroad set until he showed me some YouTube videos of ones that people have made. And it wasn't what I was expecting. They just look really lame. I was expecting. They just look really lame. The trains are, it's a very short track. They just go back and forth. It's very two-dimensional. And I just think it's really ugly. Dan, I've honestly never heard of a model train set that doesn't go in some kind of loop. Normally what I'm picturing is a basement with about maybe three doors propped up on sawhorses and then a massive landscape made of modeling clay and miniatures through which
Starting point is 00:11:41 a couple of trains make an endless cycle. That to me is like classic dad model train. And do you have any kids? No kids. All right. So classic pre-dad or maybe never dad basement model train set. Something that might be featured on the weird dad blog of the year. The switching layouts, it's a thing.
Starting point is 00:12:03 It is truly a thing. There's some standard ways to do it. You can kind of put trains together. I would hope so. Like you would simulate in a railroad siding or a switchyard. It's a little different, but it is a legitimate thing that model railroad people do. Can you describe what it is specifically? So it'd be a one or a number of mainline tracks. And then you're going to have spurs that come out
Starting point is 00:12:34 from there going to they call them industries. So you might have your, you know, glue factory or whatever on the railroad siding. For Shetland sheep. Yeah, well, there you go. Yeah, so you can, you know, go back and forth and pick up your cars with your locomotive, put the trains together, and then you can, you know, imagine yourself going off onto the main line from there. So you're describing rather than a picturesque village with hills and little stations and little conductor guys and all of those classical elements that we might imagine,
Starting point is 00:13:14 basically the pile of train tracks that you go past on an elevated subway once in a while. Absolutely. Right. Just a dirty rail yard where hobos congregate. And did you mention a glue factory? Well, I mean, it's something that you could do. You could put in some picturesque little rabid dogs. Yeah, maybe a trash can with a fire in it. But you say you put your train together on the side tracks, and then you go onto the main track, and you imagine the journey you will take.
Starting point is 00:13:47 And you really have to imagine it, because it can't go very far, right? Because it just goes until the end of the track. Go off the edge of the table, yeah. And you sent in some evidence, including a very detailed website, that made me feel like I had had a brain injury and can no longer comprehend language. The Model Railway's Shunting Puzzles website. Classic shunting puzzles. Ingle Nook sidings. And this is just the first paragraph.
Starting point is 00:14:15 Possibly the most salient feature of Ingle Nook sidings, the classic British shunting puzzle par excellence, is its sheer simplicity. There may in fact be some modelers who never really look into this shunting puzzle because it may first seem hardly seem to offer much operational challenge. But as is so often the case, first impressions can be misleading. The brainchild of Alan Wright, 1928 to 2005, is one of those rare examples where a clever and well-balanced combination of a reduced setting and input actually provides an unexpectedly rich end result. And Ingle Nook Sightings is a picture book example of reduce to the max. What is a shunting puzzle, Dan? So what you can do is you kind of randomly place different cars at different spots on the
Starting point is 00:15:01 layout there. And then your job is to put together a specific train in a specific order onto the main line there. So it's a simulation of what... Yeah, what an actual engineer would do. Yeah. It's like solving one of those puzzles that you move tiles around and you try to get a picture together.
Starting point is 00:15:21 Correct. And here's a picture of Alan Wright, which we're obviously going to... Well, it's copyright Chris McKenzie. Let's see if we can get the rights from Chris McKenzie. You can go see this at the show page of MaximumFun.org as well as our Instagram account at Judge John Hodgman.
Starting point is 00:15:35 I'm going to get Joel Mann to post it on his Instagram too. Judge Hodgman, I'm going to say that our audience can go to our Instagram or to the show page to see it, but it ain't much to see. It's just a picture of an elderly British man sitting down having typically eccentric elderly British man fun like you would have in his cozy cottage in his cozy village while murders are happening all around him. Dan, what is shunting and why does it appeal to you? So shunting is the same thing. I believe shunting is just the English version of switching here in the U.S. OK, gotcha. Just a different term for the same thing.
Starting point is 00:16:20 But it kind of looks fun. Like, I don't know. It looks like good medium, medium slash boring fun. You know, something to do on a cold winter afternoon. But, you know, not something that's all engrossing. It's not a whole big, huge thing, which is great. What do you mean? You've had enough of all engrossing things?
Starting point is 00:16:41 Well, my main hobby with the cars takes up the lion's share of my free time. Yeah, you did send in exhibits A through H, and only one of them has to do with shunting. There's just one. The rest is all race car stuff. What kind of car do you race? This year, I'm racing a Honda Fit. A Honda Fit? A Honda Fit, yeah. There's a picture here of you and your father with what looks like a Mini Cooper as well. That is true, yeah. I like your commitment to racing practical economy cars. You're really sort of shrugging it off talking about your Honda Fit and your shunting puzzle.
Starting point is 00:17:20 It still just strikes me that you carry people's lives in your hands every day. Oh, people get sick of hearing about it, though. I mean, it's just another heavy equipment operator, you know? It's no big deal. I don't think Dan should start bragging until he adds that second deck. Let's take a quick recess and hear about this week's Judge John Hodgman sponsor. We'll be back in just a moment on the Judge John Hodgman podcast. by you, the members of MaximumFun.org. Thanks to everybody who's gone to MaximumFun.org slash join.
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Starting point is 00:20:39 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 at babbel.com slash Hodgman. Get up to 60% off at babbelcom slash hodgman spelled b-a-b-b-e-l dot com slash hodgman rules and restrictions apply in any case um so you love to race cars another another fun risk management. If you've got to move to model trains, why aren't you moving to, like, model bullet trains that could go off the track and take out a load-bearing wall in your home or something? You know, you get enough of it. Sometimes, you know, medium boring is a good thing.
Starting point is 00:21:40 You just want a calm, easy shunting puzzle. Exactly. Why shunting puzzle. Exactly. Why shunting? Why now? Why you? Well, looking forward here to a cold Michigan winter coming up and looking for something a little fun to do. Was there a particular inspiration? Did you find this really web, not even web 1.0, web 0.05 website for the shunting, Ingle Nook Siding's shunting puzzle? And you just got in your head that you wanted to be like that guy or what? What was the inspiration? The YouTube algorithm is, I don't know, very powerful, I guess. And it was suggested to me and yeah. You're saying it was this or q anon yeah that's two two possible different tracks that you could have taken i guess i prefer this one so carrie you you didn't want to see this stupid thing how did how did how did dan
Starting point is 00:22:41 first present this stupid thing to you? And how did you feel about it? When he mentioned, you know, wanting to build a model train set, I was initially on board. I like the idea. I think they're really cute. I think they can look kind of neat. And I like the little villages, you know, that we'd see when we'd go to the hobby shop. Yeah, they got everything you can
Starting point is 00:23:05 get a little courthouse a little judge john hodgman in there a little jesse thorn free t-shirts for anyone who sends in pictures of their model train set that's judge john hodgman themed yeah absolutely and so uh when he showed me a youtube video of of what he was thinking of i was i was just really surprised i wasn't't wowed. It was disappointing. The things don't really go anywhere. The models are really just kind of flat and bare bones, and it doesn't look cute. What was the action happening on this YouTube video? YouTube video. I saw, you know, a sort of flat-plainted plane with some tracks on it that cut off at either end and just little trains very slowly moving back and forth, like slower than you would think a model train would normally go. This just wasn't what I was picturing in my head,
Starting point is 00:24:04 and I feel like if we're going to have this in a shared space in the house, it needs to be something that we both like. Was there an operator visible in the video? No, not in the one that I saw. So it was just trains moving slowly back and forth, solving problems. It was so slow that you couldn't even tell that there was a problem or what the solution was. You say this would go in a shared portion of the house. Where was Dan proposing it be? Initially, I thought it was going to be in the basement because that feels like a traditional
Starting point is 00:24:37 place for model trains. But he wants to have it in the den. It's the space that he uses for his office, but it's also a space that I share. Do you hang out in the den together with any frequency? Yeah, pretty frequently. It's the spot in the house where we've got the TV, and it's where the dogs like to hang out. So it's kind of the, you know, the spot where we'll sit down at the end of the day. Carrie, you're interested in knitting to such an extent that you make your own yarn
Starting point is 00:25:13 from your own sheep. Would you consider yourself to be the more aesthetically oriented in your marriage? Oh yeah, probably. How would this train sit in your den? That's a great question for Dan. So the neat thing about these shunting layouts is you can just build them on a shelf. And so I was just going to put a shelf above my computer workstation there up on the wall.
Starting point is 00:25:39 So it doesn't seem like it takes up a particularly large footprint. It does seem like it takes up a particularly large footprint. I kind of imagined you, Dan, sitting at the den with a little desk in front of you and your shunting problem in front of you. Like, what's his name here? Ye olde Alan Wright. Rest in power. Sitting there solving your problems while Carrie sits next to you knitting. It seemed like a pretty cozy scene.
Starting point is 00:26:07 Is this something you're going to keep up on your shelf, though, and bring it down to work on from time to time or what? I think it's something that, yeah, you designed to just pull down off a off the shelf and put on the desk. Carrie, it sounds like it's pretty low, low impact in the home. Are you opposed to this because it's but ugly or because it's just not what a train set should be? Both. I mean, it is but ugly and the den is already ugly enough. That's the one room in the house that I'm not proud of. And I feel like it's adding insult to injury to put another really ugly thing in there that I have to look at. What are the other ugly elements of the den? to put another really ugly thing in there that I have to look at. What are the other ugly elements of the den? The main ugly element of the den is the couch that we have in there.
Starting point is 00:26:57 It's a couch that was a hand-me-down from Dan's uncle. It has moved with us across several states. But the dogs love it. And so I haven't been able to convince him to get it out and get a new couch. Now, regarding this couch that you just mentioned, Carrie, I'm getting word that some evidence has just been entered in for consideration, including a photo of this couch.
Starting point is 00:27:20 So I'm going to scroll down here. It says the picture of the couch in dan's office complete with sad dog who paradoxically loves this couch and oh my word oh my as i say on love island oh my days that is that is a grim looking couch i must say it's one thing that I cannot unsee. Wow, it really, to say it's threadbare, distinctly understates it. But also to say that this sweet greyhound loves it also understates the matter. It's clear that this greyhound's greatest passion in life
Starting point is 00:27:59 is to hang its long droopy face off the edge of this sofa. Two of the three seat cushions do not have covers. Yeah, well, you know, greyhounds are famous for their love of putting their butts directly onto uncovered foam rubber. It's just a texture that they love. The arms are threadbare. The seat is literally uncovered. It is literally uncovered. Like it has the wrapping of the foam rubber is 40% missing to say nothing of the actual upholstery.
Starting point is 00:28:34 This is one of two greyhounds that you have, Carrie? Yes. What are their names? March and Lola. March is the one on the couch there. Dan, this couch looks pretty bad. What's your connection to this couch? It's there.
Starting point is 00:28:51 You know, I'm not going to deny it looks horrible. It does look horrible. It is still comfy, though. And it just, just haven't gotten around to replacing the thing. Karen, let me clarify something. Because on the one hand, you said Dan has his office in this den and obviously he's storing this ancestral couch
Starting point is 00:29:07 which no one should have. I'll be honest with you. This seems like his room and yet you call it a shared space. Is this his room in the house
Starting point is 00:29:19 or is this truly a shared space? I think it started off as a shared space. Oh. But when the dogs fell in love with the couch, I want to spend time with my dogs. If they want to hang out in a room, I don't want to feel rejected. And so I'll go sit with them. And if we're
Starting point is 00:29:44 hanging out after work, that's where we're at. So I do think it's a shared space. I have two further questions. Do you have a regular living room that you ever hang out in together? We have a regular living room, but we don't hang out in it very much. It's where the dogs hang out. The dogs hang out in the living room when you're at work? Yes. There's a little baby gate that keeps them in. And then do you have a room that is your own, Carrie, just out of fairness? Yes, I do. I have a craft room where I keep most of my yarn and my knitting stuff and have a little cozy chair. Good. Well, I'm glad that everything is in balance here, except the problem is that your dogs
Starting point is 00:30:29 are dictating where you live and how you live, which is not uncommon. I mean, we've seen this a lot. I mean, I almost feel like I need to. And the fact of the matter is everyone has different taste and different styles of comfort and coziness. But I'm going to say objectively, this couch is trash. I mean, it's trashed. Fully trashed. We do throw a blanket over it, you know, and we're not taking pictures, I guess. I kind of feel like setting aside this whole model railroad thing and just figuring out what to do about this sofa.
Starting point is 00:31:03 I feel like this is a bigger issue in your life. Carrie, would you like to get rid of the sofa? Yes. I really want to get rid of this couch. Sorry. Sometimes I don't remember what's a couch and what's a sofa. This is something that happens between me and my wife, who's a whole human being in her own right. I always say sofa, and then she says, no, it's a couch. And then I say couch, and then, no, it's a sofa and then i said couch and then no it's a sofa and i don't know anything anymore this couch this this couch with that is well loved and a terrific dog bed is in my opinion no longer fit for humans dan you want to keep it well i i don't know about wanting to keep it as much as just not wanting to do a replacement.
Starting point is 00:31:45 It's a lot of money and messing around. No, no, no, no. And I'm sensitive to that. I'm just trying to get a sense of whether you are, I put this without being cruel. You see this thing, don't you? Well, you know, it's also nice that I can, you know, have my morning cup of coffee sitting on the couch. And if I spill a little bit on it, it's like no big deal. No, it might even be an improvement.
Starting point is 00:32:09 But I think what I'm what I'm sensing and tell me if I'm wrong here, Carrie, that. That Dan, would you say it's fair that Dan appreciates comfort, thrift and practicality over style and aesthetic? Oh, definitely. And Dan, does that not also affect your choice of model railroad? Yeah, I mean, it still works as a couch. So, yeah, function over form, I guess. But as far as a model railroad goes, now it's sort of coming into focus to me why your idea of a model railroad is just enough track to watch it go.
Starting point is 00:32:48 Like, just enough track that it moves. Anything else would be a waste. Waste of space, waste of time, waste of track. Well, I think it's, yeah. I'm not going to call it superfluous, but yeah. Yeah, yeah. Competing worldviews here. Carrie, does this manifest in any other ways? Well, yeah. Competing worldviews here. Carrie, does this manifest in any other ways?
Starting point is 00:33:05 Well, yeah. He's kept around a junk car for a long time out in the yard because it might have some useful parts. So, all right, this project car that you mentioned, Carrie, we have a photo of it here. And wow, yes, this is definitely a yard car. What kind of car was this, Dan? It was a 2003 Nissan Sentra. It's a two-door. It was blue, but the front, what would you call that, bumper?
Starting point is 00:33:38 Is red? Yeah, yeah, red. The fellow I bought it from, I think, took it on a few cornfield excursions. Maybe it looked like that when I bought it. So why did you buy it? Why did you buy it? I was looking for a bunch of parts to use in one of the race cars. So I scavenged the engine out of there and transmission and a couple of things from the interior.
Starting point is 00:34:02 So where is it on the property? It is right in between my shop and Carrie's kind of main holding paddock for the sheep. So it's not only super ugly, it's also in Carrie's way on a regular basis. Yeah, that seems like a very convenient place to have a dead centra for sure. Yeah, yeah.
Starting point is 00:34:23 I mean, you seem to recognize that this this car does not look good right dan would you agree oh no it's it's absolutely horrible um yeah here in this case you can look at this and be like yeah this is a car from a stephen king book that if i keep it on the property any longer it's going to start talking to me psychically and start killing my friends. Well, you know, it's bad when your non-nosy neighbors are asking about it. Have you had any interest at all in someone taking this dead center off your hand? Oh, I would love for it to be gone. All right.
Starting point is 00:35:00 We'll post it on our Instagram, our relative social media posts. See if anyone, how much, how much are you willing to pay someone to take it? Oh, I'd part with 500 bucks to make it go away. There we go. So you can see that this kind of looks not up to snuff in the car department, but when you look at the couch in the den, you still see like functional couch. Yeah. I mean, it still does the couch stuff you can you know take a nap on it and the dogs can hang out on it and if you throw a blanket over it it doesn't even look all that bad dan you mentioned that you're that yours and carrie's hobbies do not normally interfere with one another what what other hobbies do you have aside from hoarding animals, Carrie? Sorry, herding animals.
Starting point is 00:35:49 I do a bunch of stuff. So, like I said, I knit. I have been known to make some little model cars. I paint sometimes. I'm into watercolor. I studied art in college, so you can see the through line here. And yeah, I'm just into a lot of stuff. Yeah.
Starting point is 00:36:18 I also can see quite a bit of Wallace and Gromit merch submitted in evidence. Wallace and Gromit merch submitted in evidence. Yeah, you know, I wanted to show that, you know, we can decorate cute little things. I think it'd be really fun to decorate a little train village. I'm into like painting the little models and stuff. Dan, would you be opposed if you got this, uh, this shunting set, would you be opposed to a carry decorating it properly or, you know, less depressingly? I don't think so. I don't know how much a, uh, the aesthetic thing might affect the functionality but it's something that
Starting point is 00:37:06 we'd have to uh uh we'd have to look into you'd be concerned a little model chapel or town hall or whatever might get in the way of the shunting might distract from the shunting if you want to do all the aesthetic stuff there's significant preparation you got to do and all that you're not just throwing the track down and working the thing so you gotta worry about you know all how the terrain flows and all that kind of stuff so um it'd be extra to do for sure what about uh what about what if you were to do a traditional model train set that had a shunting side track for you like carrie makes a traditional model train loop and then there's a shunting puzzle that's connected to the loop. And that is something that people do, which is neat.
Starting point is 00:37:53 But then you're talking about putting it in the basement and during the winter, yeah, we have an old farmhouse. So cold, crummy basement in the middle of winter doesn't sound like all that super fun to me. Right. You want to be able to get to your shunting as quickly as possible. Absolutely. You don't have to go down to the basement and sit down there in the cold. Carrie, do you want to have your own model railroad? You know, I kind of think I might.
Starting point is 00:38:20 Are you willing to have one in the basement? I don't know about the basement. I might be able to integrate it into the craft room, though. It seems like you both have a fair amount of balance in terms of your independence of your interests and you have enough space to maintain that independence, which a lot of people don't have. Yeah, we're the worst kind of, you know, our best kind of only children. So we do very well kind of doing our own thing and leaving each other be, which is why, you know, so feel violated when my interest has been commented on called, you know, stupid and pointless. Specifically the shunting set or other hobbies of yours? Oh, no. Just she's been wonderfully supportive of everything that we've done over the years.
Starting point is 00:39:12 And this is like the first case of just like that is that's really stupid and pointless. Carrie, Dan said that he feels violated by your making fun of his switching set, his shunting table. How do you feel about that? I feel like that's making a mountain out of a molehill, if I'm being quite honest. If I was doing something really dumb and had, I don't know, like a weaving mill in the house that was ugly and loud, I think he would be within his right to say, hey,
Starting point is 00:39:46 please don't do that. Dan, tell me the dimensions of the shunting puzzle you want to build. Maybe 24 or 36 inches long, 12 inches wide. So about the size of a normal bookshelf. Yeah, yeah, yeah. Small. Carrie, you sent in a photo of a shunting puzzle. This is not the shunting puzzle,
Starting point is 00:40:07 correct? This is an example shunting puzzle? Yeah, this was one of the examples that I turned up when I was doing my research. It's just so ugly. So did you pick this one because it's the ugliest possible version of a shunting set or because this is the one that dan wants to build well i think it's the one he probably would build and and that's why i picked it um i think that the couch and the centra demonstrate the the finish quality we're looking at and um it seemed like it would probably be representative of what would end up in my house. Right. You don't trust Dan to make a pretty shunting set.
Starting point is 00:40:52 No. No. And does Dan's aesthetic of practical over comfortable over aesthetic branch out to other parts of the house, or is it sort of contained in the den? In the house, it's mostly contained in the den. There's a few household projects here and there that we could prioritize but haven't, but it's really minor compared to the den. And why don't you want to hang out in the living room? Why is the living room only suited to be a prison for your greyhounds? It's hot in the summer, cold in the winter.
Starting point is 00:41:30 It's kind of a big room. It's not particularly cozy. Is the den the best hang in the house, Carrie? Yeah. It's cool. It's kind of dark. And like I said, it is the spot that the dogs favor. So if I'm going to be sitting down to knit, I don't want, you know, the dogs to be, you know, meandering around, wondering why I'm not following them to the den.
Starting point is 00:41:57 It's easier to just end up there. I can just picture those two greyhounds looking over their shoulder at you going, come on, come on. We're going to the room where the whole couch is a giant chew toy. Why don't you want to come with us? Dan, if I were to rule in your favor, it says here you'd like me to order that you are allowed to build your shelf setup and not get any guff about it. That's pretty self-explanatory. I think it is, yeah. Carrie, you want there to be a train set with a landscape where the train goes around in a loop.
Starting point is 00:42:28 You want there to be a loop no matter what. Yes. The loop takes you on a journey. It's about, you know, it's what you picture when you think of a train set. You need to have it. Even though it would probably take up more room in the den than this shunting station, which you can easily put away on a shelf. Yeah. Okay.
Starting point is 00:42:51 And Dan's workspace, he has his computer in the den as well. Describe what his workspace looks like. I'll let Dan take that one. All right. It's medium, medium messy. I mean, easily cleaned in 10 minutes, not 30 seconds. But you have a workshop, don't you, Dan? You mentioned that the Nissan Sentra is blocking access to the workshop or something like that, right?
Starting point is 00:43:16 Yeah, I have a shop out. Yeah, I have a race car shop. And then, yeah, and then I have a little half a machine shop in part of the basement. And then a little 3D printer upstairs. So it's kind of my junk is spread out all over the place. Carrie, since the den is the best hang in the house and it's where the dogs want to be and you want to be with the dogs and your husband from time to time. Do you take issue with his workspace being in the den? Or is that tolerable for you that's tolerable
Starting point is 00:43:47 okay carrie does have some crimes against the aesthetics from time to time uh in the right i'll i'll allow it but but hey i don't have a problem with it because it's part of her hobby it's part of what makes her happy. And so I can look past it. What are her aesthetic crimes, Dan? You opened this door. We have a, well, she has a hoop house out in the yard that is pretty ugly. What is a hoop house? Is that a place you go to learn to sneak things into prisons? The hoop house is like a greenhouse, but it doesn't have like solid end walls. It's like a bunch of hoops with plastic sheeting over it.
Starting point is 00:44:41 I bought a kit online and I built it. And it's where I grow vegetables and the chickens like to stay in there in winter. And so it's a nice sort of multi-purpose space. The hoops are like archways that are covered with a tarp. Yeah. Got it. And Dan, you find this aesthetically unpleasing? It's aesthetically unpleasing, but I mean, it's part of what she needs to do to do her thing. And so I can easily look past it because it's part of what she does to make herself happy.
Starting point is 00:45:13 That makes me happy. And then she does the sheep out in the circle drive for that no-mo-may deal. And that's, I can live with that, but that's a little annoying as well. I feel as though I lost understanding of English there for a second. What is the sheep in the circular drive for no-mow-may? There's a whole big thing in May where people are not mowing their yards. I might be able to explain it a little better. their yards to, Carrie might be able to explain it a little better. Yeah. So there's this, there's this concept of no mow May where you don't mow your lawn in the
Starting point is 00:45:51 month of May so that, you know, the flowers and stuff can bloom and support pollinators. And it's supposed to be, you know, good for the environment and the bees and all that. And so after I let it grow through the month of May and in early June, I, you know, I put a little sort of temporary fence around that part of the yard and I put the sheep on there to graze it. It's like an eco-friendly lawn mowing. Yeah. This seems very adorable and cute. What's your opposition to this, Dan? Number one, it makes it so it's not a circle drive. So that can be a little annoying. And it just, I don't know, having sheep running around your yard and not out in pastures is a little weird. I just have one more question.
Starting point is 00:46:40 Only because you both mentioned that you're both only children. only because you both mentioned that you're both only children and you obviously live on a property in Michigan that allows you with a lot of personal space to build race cars and park dead cars and raise sheep and roost chickens and hoop houses and craft rooms and everything else. I just, and I'm not asking to be judgmental, but really out of a spirit of hope.
Starting point is 00:47:07 Do you happen to have separate bedrooms that are separated by a reflecting pool? That's what that couch is. All right. That is where if I can't sleep, I go down and sleep on the crummy couch. All right. I think I've heard everything I need to
Starting point is 00:47:22 in order to make my decision. I'll be back in a moment. I'm going to go into my legal hoop house and I'll do some hula hooping as I meditate, you know, for the kids. I'll be back in a moment with my verdict. Please rise as Judge John Hodgman exits the courtroom. Dan, how are you feeling? I'm feeling pretty good. You think the switching thing is going to happen? Yeah, I think I think there's going to be probably a good compromise, would be my guess. Put it out in the hoop house? That'll work.
Starting point is 00:47:53 Carrie, how do you feel? You know, I'm feeling pretty good. I think that the evidence has shown that Dan can have these hobbies, and they just kind of turn into a giant car in your yard. And I just don't want to see that with our house. So I think we're pretty good. Well, Dan, Carrie, we'll see what Judge Hodgman has to say about this when we come back in just a moment. 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
Starting point is 00:48:46 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. Are you trying to put the name
Starting point is 00:49:15 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, try S-T-O-P-P-P-A-D-I.
Starting point is 00:49:26 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. We are so close. Stop podcasting yourself. A podcast from MaximumFun.org. If you need a laugh and you're on the go.
Starting point is 00:49:49 Judge Hodgman, the Van Freaks Roadshow is in full effect right now. As this podcast releases, we are in the islands off the coast of Western Europe. That's right. Dublin, headed to London, England. That's right. Going to do shows at King's Place and have a great time at that London podcast festival. Then we're headed back across the pond with first a tour through the Midwest and Southwest, then all the way up the East Coast from Atlanta to Brooklyn, New York City. Yeah. Atlanta is technically a coastal city,
Starting point is 00:50:19 I think. I think that's a, if you ask around Atlanta, they'll say, yeah, technically we're part of the coast. Lexington, Kentucky, Chicago, Illinois, Madison, Wisconsin, St. Paul, Minnesota, Austin, Texas, and then Atlanta, Durham, Charlottesville, Washington, Portland, Boston, and Brooklyn. And I'm talking about Portland, Maine, of course. We're going to some of our very, very favorite theaters to see some of our very, very favorite audiences that we've seen before and played for before, plus brand new places where I've never been in my life. Looking at you, Lexington and Charlottesville. Can't wait to visit new places and to be out there on the road with you. We'll have surprises, special guests. We'll sing songs. We wear outfits.
Starting point is 00:50:53 Jesse dresses like Bull from Night Court. I have some Canadian jurist robes that I got. Judge Hodgman, I have a badge that I wear that I had to send in a fax certifying that I wouldn't use it to impersonate an officer of the law. There's no better way to certify a thing than sending in a fax. It just makes it legal. Yep. And we'll have special merchandise that you can't get anywhere else. And we mentioned last time, we do stand up during the show. We move around on stage.
Starting point is 00:51:25 We have visual elements. We have so much on the show that you never get to hear if you just listen to the live shows on the podcast. So much happens in those rooms, I can't even begin to tell you, and it's going to be a lot of fun. So, go get your tickets at vanfreaksroadshow.com. Also, submit your disputes. If you live in any of these cities, think of who's wrong in your life about something, and just go ahead and write to us via vanfreaksroadshow.com. You'll see the prompt when you go there,
Starting point is 00:51:49 vanfreaksroadshow.com, including the incredible new illustration by Tom DJ of Jesse and I maniacally riding a Mitsubishi Delica to hell, basically. It's incredible. vanfreaksroadshow.com. Go check it out. to everyone in dublin who cannot to send tom an email please moderate the blood red streaks in our yeah make it more
Starting point is 00:52:14 psychedelic make the wheels bigger make the flames larger but we don't need the red the red streaks in our eyes make our make jesse's grin maniacal. Make my terror more palpable is an incredible illustration. Thanks, Tom DJ, for making it. And you can only see it right now at Van Freaks Roadshow dot com. Please rise as Judge John Hodgman reenters the courtroom and presents his verdict. You know, first of all, I should say I take it back, Dan, when I said that I would feel nervous if my pilot got on the PA and said, I just consider this to be a risk management exercise. I might feel like, okay, that's a different point of view. But the truth is, I would be happy to fly on any plane that you were piloting. Because, you know, Tom Cruise Maverick?
Starting point is 00:53:03 because you know Tom Cruise Maverick? You are as appropriate for any fixed-wing aircraft, unflappable, calm, collected, and someone focused on the practical and getting from point A to B and then going literally back from B to A, which is how a lot of plane travel goes, right? You know, there are routes that go in a circle sort of, but mostly you go from one city to the other and then turn around and go back and go back to the other, et cetera, et cetera. And honestly, that's how most train lines go to the idea that trains go in a
Starting point is 00:53:37 circle as a philosophy is artificial. That said model train sets should be in a loop. I've always wanted to have model train set. You know, we got, we got one of the weird dad blogs of the year up there over at the weird dad blog of the year website, which you can find through our show page of, uh, one of these weird dads is making an incredible model train set every year for the holidays. And I look to look at looping model train sets.
Starting point is 00:54:04 I've always wanted to have a huge model train set in my basement full of all little details with a little graveyard and people are actually attending a funeral in the graveyard. Just microscopic detail. You know, it's like, yeah, when we fly,
Starting point is 00:54:21 we fly to mock God or whatever, but we model train set build in order to be God or whatever and create a world. I had never heard of a shunting puzzle before. And I'll be honest with you, Dan, it freaked me out. I did not understand it. I did not understand what the appeal could be. I did not understand what Alan Wright was doing at his weird, cozy little British table until you explained to me that it is truly a puzzle. You are putting cars in order in the complicated way that engineers of linear actual trains have to do it in a switching station. Or as they say in England, I guess, a shunting pitch.
Starting point is 00:55:10 This is something that is completely different from a model train set. Now, Carrie, I appreciate your trepidation here. Because you have seen and witnessed and lived with the places where Dan's imagination takes him. witnessed and lived with the places where Dan's imagination takes him to ever increasing speeds on a racetrack in cars that are unfit for speeds higher than 35. And then there is that old Nissan Sentra in the yard, scrapped for parts with no plan for what to do with it afterward. Quite honestly,
Starting point is 00:55:41 Carrie, if Dan given his track record, literal track record were to be proposing an actual or traditional model train set then i'd be worried for you because then i feel like it would get too big and too out of hand and would take up too much space and would totally overflow into the den, which is already a shared space that is a place where you are not entirely comfortable because even though it is a shared space, the couch belongs to the dogs and the junk belongs to Dan. And having a full model train set
Starting point is 00:56:22 in there would totally edge you out at that point. But Dan doesn't want to build one of those things. And for that, I mean, if I were in your shoes, I'd be grateful. He just wants to build a big puzzle that uses model trains that can live on a shelf. To me, this is inherently reasonable, and I am going to allow it. But before you celebrate, Dan, we need to have a talk about this couch. I'm very sensitive.
Starting point is 00:56:55 I don't want to come at you and say that what you love about this couch you shouldn't love. You love what you love. You like what you like. It's fine. In my very strong opinion, this couch has seen its day. And if you are willing to spend $500 on a shunting station or pay someone $500 to take a central away or both, I would take one of those $500 if it's within your budget to upgrade that couch. Not restore it, not throw a blanket over it, but get a couch that is dog-friendly and dog-resistant,
Starting point is 00:57:35 but more to the point, carry-friendly. I'm also going to order that you really, that you tidy up your workspace. If is not tidy do the best you can make sure that the shunting station that you build fits tidily in that shelf above so you can take it down and put it back and it's not going to be all over the place and i'm going to order that you allow and indeed work with carrie to decorate it and make it not look like a blasted plane of Mordor. But insofar as it does not interfere with the shunting, give it a little bit of cozy shunt. You know what I mean? So that she can have some fun with it too.
Starting point is 00:58:18 This is the sound of a gavel. Judge John Hodgman rules that is all. Please rise as Judge John Hodgman exits the courtroom. Carrie, how do you feel? I'm really pleased with the ruling, even though it wasn't technically in my favor. It sounds like we're going to get a new couch and I'll get to do some decorating on this shunting station. Do you got any big ideas? Definitely some fall foliage.
Starting point is 00:58:47 Dan, how do you feel? I'm feeling good about this. I'm really feeling good about it. It wouldn't hurt to get a new couch either. It would be a little bit to get used to, though. Dan, Carrie, thanks for joining us on the Judge John Hodgman podcast. Another Judge John Hodgman case in the books. In a moment, we'll have swift justice.
Starting point is 00:59:06 Our thanks to Redditor TheMadJuggler for naming this week's episode Injunction Junction. Join the conversation over at the Maximum Fun subreddit. That's MaximumFun.reddit.com. That's where we've been asking for those title suggestions. Evidence and photos from the show are posted on our Instagram account at Instagram.com slash judgejohnhodgman. Make sure to follow us. We've been giving people the opportunity to guess at the cultural reference there via the medium of video. Video. We've pivoted to video. You can see what it looks like inside the studios of a real community radio station in Maine.
Starting point is 00:59:45 Yeah. You know what? I'm going to do a video tour of the station before I head back to Brooklyn in a few weeks. I'm going to do a whole video. Joel, would you mind if I did that? I'd be glad to take you on that journey, John. Okay.
Starting point is 00:59:56 We're going to do a tour. John, do you know that joke, What's a Twain? About three pounds. It's what a wabbit takes when he goes on a twain. Okay. Judge John Hodgman, created by Jesse Thorne and John Hodgman and ended forever by Jesse Thorne just now. This episode engineered by Bob Wittersheim at Audio Acres in Chelsea, Michigan, and by Joel Mann at WERU in Orland, Maine.
Starting point is 01:00:28 Marie Vardy runs our social media, our producer, the great Jennifer Marmer. Now, Swift Justice, where we answer small disputes with quick judgment. Emma says, my partner wears jeans, pants, or shorts any time that he's not in bed. I think he should get some lounge pants
Starting point is 01:00:44 and embrace his comfy self. He says he's not in bed. I think he should get some lounge pants and embrace his comfy self. He says he's perfectly comfortable in his leg prisons. I don't know what kind of formal tweed trousers Emma's partner is wearing when trying to lounge in the D-van or what have you. I'm sure that he's perfectly comfortable. And as long as he's not wearing his pants to bed, I feel okay with it. That doesn't mean Emma that you can't poke around, say on a website or a stitch fix. I'm just saying,
Starting point is 01:01:16 see if there might be something a little bit less structured, a little bit more cozy for him to wear that you could throw his way. Come holiday time. See if he takes the bait, but I don't think you can compel him to wear that you could throw his way come holiday time, see if he takes the bait. But I don't think you can compel him to wear athleisure any day of the week. If he's comfortable in his pants, that's the way he's comfortable. Just don't wear your pants to bed. That's the only thing I say. We need cases, John. Yes, we do need cases. Specifically, we need robot cases, or as we used to say, robot cases. I'm looking for disputes between your
Starting point is 01:01:46 friends, your coworkers, your parents, or whatever about like, who are the best robots in science fiction? Is it like R2-D2 or Vincent from the black hole? Who's the cuter? Who's the cuter robot? Which of the Boston dynamics robots are the scariest? They're all terrifying, but which is the one you would not want to meet in a dark hallway? Anything and everything to do with robots, we want to hear your disputes about it. Whether they are real world thought experiments, philosophical disputes, whatever they are, get your robots. And if you can bring your robot on the show with you, that'd be terrific too. If you can bring your robot on the show with you, that'd be terrific too. We also need all kinds of disputes, especially ones that come from the many cities to which we are traveling on our Van Freaks Roadshow Tour.
Starting point is 01:02:37 So if you live in one of those places, make sure to go to MaximumPund.org slash JJHO. Submit your case and let us know that you live in one of the places to which we will be traveling. Let us know where you live when you submit that case, because we are looking for local cases. This is a circuit court situation. We judge real cases live on stage. Yeah, we need cases in places. Maximumfund.org slash JJHO. Don't think your dispute is too big or too small. We judges them all.
Starting point is 01:03:04 We'll talk to you next time on the Judge John Hodgman podcast. Maximum Fun, a worker-owned network of artists-owned shows supported directly by you.

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