Judge John Hodgman - Mayo it Please the Court
Episode Date: June 25, 2025Brandon says that sauce is one of his major food groups. His wife, Jacqueline says the sauces take up too much fridge space! She wants to put away groceries without playing fridge Tetris. But Brandon ...just loves sauce! Who's right? Please consider donating to Al Otro Lado. Al Otro Lado provides legal assistance and humanitarian aid to refugees, deportees, and other migrants trapped at the US-MX border. Donate at alotrolado.org/letsdosomething.We are on TikTok and YouTube! Follow us on both @judgejohnhodgmanpod! Follow us on Instagram @judgejohnhodgman!Thanks to reddit user u/jiminycricket81 for naming this week’s case! To suggest a title for a future episode, keep an eye on the Maximum Fun subreddit at reddit.com/r/maximumfun! Judge John Hodgman is member-supported! Join at $5 a month at maximumfun.org/join!
Transcript
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Welcome to the Judge John Hodgman podcast.
I'm Bailiff Jesse Thorn.
This week, may-o-it please the court.
Jacqueline brings the case against her husband, Brandon.
Brandon loves sauce.
He says sauce is one of his major food groups.
But Jacqueline says, Brandon's stockpile takes up
too much space in their fridge.
Actual major food groups like vegetables can't fit.
And yet Brandon keeps buying more sauce.
Jaclyn wants to put a cap on the sauce count.
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.
I'm Lewis the lifeguard, and I'm happy to say
I rescued a drowning potato today.
They drowned it in sour cream, oh, what a shame,
because food's so much better when it's practically plain.
Bailiff Jesse Thorne, please swear the litigants in.
Brandon, Jacqueline, please rise and raise your right hands.
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 his obvious bias, given his inherent sauciness?
Yes, I do. Yes, I do.
He's a saucy J for judge.
Judge Hodgman, you may proceed. Sorry, I was. He's a saucy Jay for Judge. Judge Hodgeman, you may proceed.
Sorry, I was too busy thinking about all my favorite sauces.
Mayonnaise, Dirkie sauce.
Um, oh, Arthur Bryant's barbecue sauce from Kansas City
with lard in it.
Sorry.
Brandon, Jacqueline, you may be seated.
I promise you that I am completely impartial,
even though I love sauce.
But in order to give both of you a fair shake,
can either of you name, fair shake of sauce,
can either of you name the piece of culture
that I referenced as I entered this courtroom?
Jacqueline, we'll start with you.
I would have to guess that it's like
a Humpty Dumpty commercial.
A Humpty Dumpty potato chip commercial?
Yes.
I love it.
I would only guess that because I know
that we are reaching you in wonderful Toronto,
no, Ontario.
Ontario.
In Hamilton, yes.
In Hamilton, Ontario, not Toronto, Ontario.
Correct.
I knew which province, but I didn't know the city, but I also knew you enjoy up there in
Canada Humpty Dumpty brand potato chips.
We do, yes.
In many flavors, including tomato ketchup flavor.
Yes. And many flavors, including tomato ketchup flavor. Yes.
And roast chicken.
Roast chicken.
And give me another one.
Fries and gravy.
Uh, fries and gravy. That's their version of poutine and then all dressed, of course.
Yes.
Yes.
Jesse Thorne, how do you feel about all dressed potato chips?
That's all the flavors.
When we were last in Canada in Vancouver, British Columbia, we took the opportunity to stop by some convenience shops
and purchase all dressed potato chips, which are fantastic.
I agree.
Yes, they're great.
I think they're fine.
I think I'm the one person in podcast land
that does not love them.
I think they taste a little muddy.
You know what the problem is? Not enough mayonnaise.
Yes, I agree.
You know what? Yes. Brandon, you love sauce. I think they taste a little muddy. You know what the problem is? Not enough mayonnaise. Yes, I agree. You know what?
Yes. Yeah.
Brandon, you love sauce.
What's your guess?
I'm gonna guess that that is from some
bizarre Massachusettsian morality play
that you saw as a child.
You're not wrong, but you're definitely not right.
We were not forced to watch this as morality play You're not wrong, but you're definitely not right.
We were not forced to watch this as morality play in Massachusetts, rather we were forced
to watch this as a morality public service announcement in every state and commonwealth
of these United States as part of ABC's Saturday morning cartoon lineup.
Most people remember Schoolhouse Rock, which is the short cartoons about civics. Back
when we thought it was important for people to know about civics. We also thought that it was
important for kids to know about nutrition at one point in this country. Wild, isn't it?
Bizarre.
And indeed in 1985, there were a number of different
cartoons, short cartoons, as part of a pack of PSA programming called
the Bod Squad, including I Hanker for a Hunk of Cheese.
A Slab, a Slice, a Chunk of I Hanker for a Hunk of Cheese.
By Time for Timer was the name of the cartoon guy who sang that.
But this was sung by a guy named Louis the Lifeguard, who was advocating that you should by Time for Timer was the name of the cartoon guy who sang that.
But this was sung by a guy named Louis the Lifeguard, who was advocating that you should not drown your food in condiments,
making the frankly very specious claim that food is better
when it's practically plain.
I don't agree with Louis the Lifeguard, obviously.
I love my I love myself a sauce. But I do agree and appreciate that
there was a time when major corporations are like, maybe we could do something good with
broadcasting. It was something in any case.
Yeah.
I was turned on to this, in fact, by a Redditor in the Maximum Fun subreddit named Dinosaur1972.
I'm guessing that he is one year less of a dinosaur than I am, as I was born in 1971.
I'm also guessing that their pronoun is he, and if I'm wrong there, I do apologize.
But in any case, Dinosaur1972 brought this to light in a conversation surrounding our episode number 642, Condiment Crimes with
Nick Weiger and Amelia Moreno of the Doughboys podcast.
And Dino Star 1972 was saying that they were reminded of this old PSA.
I had gone back to that one to remind myself, what is the main one?
When it comes to condiments in the United States, I have a theory. But I'm
going to ask you, Brandon and Jacqueline, for another bite at the apple with honey and mustard
on it. You're in Canada. There's a condiment that I consider the main condiment has traditionally
been ketchup. But in recent years, and I think in the future, this condiment will be the main one.
Do you remember what we were talking about?
For America?
Let's say for America.
I'm going to guess ranch.
I was actually going to guess the same one.
I believe you.
It's a tie.
Ranch is the same one. I believe you it's a Thai ranch is the main one. In Canada of course it is
no name brand poutine gravy in a can. That's right. Yes. Or Swiss chalet sauce also in a can or in
Quebec Saint-Subère sauce which is also in a can. Tell me more about these wonderful sauces.
Swiss chalet is a kind of a garbage restaurant that we have here in Canada that's a very much a like after
church sit down family kind of thing and it serves rotisserie chicken uh and they have this
i don't know highly inscrutable sauce just called chalet sauce that is gravy in appearance but
quite like kind of acidic almost like a vinegary gravy
that's kind of bright and a little spiced.
Oh, shoot.
It's kind of like if you took a chicken gravy
and then filled it up with like HP sauce,
so you had that kind of acidity and like depth and spice in it.
It's very weird and good.
And then Saint-Soubert is the Quebecois equivalent
of Swiss Chalet and their sauce is similar,
but a bit different.
Also the subreddit foodtoronto has an entry saying,
Chalet sauce is not good and the world needs to know.
I agree with that.
I am not a Chalet sauce fan.
I wanna have it.
Yeah, it's time you're up.
You have to go.
That description sounds pretty good.
You need to try it.
Jacqueline, you bring the case against your husband, Brandon.
Yes, I do.
And your contention is that Brandon has too many condiments
in your Ontarian fridge.
Let's get into it, Brandon.
Obviously, you love sauce.
As you mentioned, HP sauce, which.
Is not terrifically common in the United States.
It's a British sauce.
I believe that it is short for Houses of Parliament sauce.
I think that's right.
Tell me what HP sauce is and then we'll talk about all your sauces.
Okay.
HP sauce is kind of like if you made ketchup out of raisins.
So far so good.
And it is like very, it's like a brown sauce.
But the records show that I think I heard our social media manager
Dan tell for either laughing or gagging in the background.
It was sort of a sound.
It is like it's a ketchup kind of consistency,
but it is like more of a brown than a red and it is sweetened,
I think, with like dates and raisins and like it kind of has this
Marmalade kind of taste to it with a bit of spice and a lot of vinegar
Taste as well. Yeah, it's also not a fan of that disgusting pretty good
You do you enjoy it Jesse you like a brown sauce a classic British brown sauce is pretty good
Yeah, says your malt vinegar spirit vinegar
molasses sugar dates, dates, corn flour, rye flour,
salt, spices, and tamarind.
Plus, John, don't forget the fermented juices
of parliamentarians, pressed parliamentarians.
So is HP sauce the main one for you?
You're right.
Ranch, I believe, within a generation,
will become the default condiment,
more popular than ketchup in the future.
It's already the most popular salad dressing by far,
according to the Association for Sauces and Dressings.
I looked that up today.
ASAP.
ASAP.
Can I become an affiliate member or something?
But is HP Sauce the main one for you, Brandon?
No, I'd say that, I don't know, like ranch is also very popular here and it's pretty
popular in our household.
Our three-year-old loves ranch.
Our six-and-a-half-year-old also likes ranch a lot. And it's very versatile.
So, but it's definitely not my favorite.
I feel like just like a general kind of vinegar based hot sauce
would be kind of my main one.
Because I can have that.
Hot sauce is the main one.
Yeah, in that I can do that, I can put that on anything.
Like pretty much any meal that you give to me,
I would put that on.
And what is your main one of the main ones?
I kind of like to break things.
How many different hot sauces do you have?
We're gonna get into it, but just give me a head count.
Six.
I probably have like eight or so in the fridge right now.
It was six literally 15 or 20, 10 seconds ago.
I heard six.
How many is it?
10?
Wait, hold on, John, now it's 12.
I mean, it also depends,
this is part of my contention of the case,
is it depends what you constitute a sauce.
And there's also like, there are sauces that I have
that are spicy, but they're not hot sauces.
Yeah, but we know what a hot sauce is.
Yeah, like a proper hot sauce.
I probably have one, two, three, four, five, six, seven, eight,
probably about eight or nine, I'd say.
And just for the audience at home,
he used his finger to count the sauces
in his hot sauce mind palace.
Yeah.
I was in the fridge noting the locations.
Jacqueline, does Brandon have notes in front of him right now? He does not, surprisingly.
I have them here.
Oh, he has them on his phone.
Would you take his phone away from him, please?
I would gladly take his phone away from him.
This is not an open book test.
It's got to be all off the dome.
Would you say Jacqueline that Brandon's big problem is not having too many sauces, but
generally being indecisive?
Because I asked him a simple question, what's the main one?
And he's like, all of a sudden, it's Sophie's choice over there.
Yeah, I think it's both.
I mean, all right, Brandon, I'm going to ask you again.
Your main sauce is hot sauce, vinegar based hot sauce.
Yeah.
What you know that I'm not ordering you to get rid of everything but the main one I hear you yet
But if you were if you had to take one hot sauce with you one vinegar based hot sauce with you on a trip to the moon
What would you take?
Okay, I really like
Frank's extra hot Frank's extra like Frank's Extra Hot. Frank's Extra Hot.
Frank's Hot Sauce, very famous of course
for claiming to put the flavor back in hot sauces
because it doesn't just taste like hot.
Okay, but you like it extra hot.
I like the extra hot, the black label.
And Jaclyn, okay, black label, I didn't even know that.
I've seen Extra Hot, maybe that's a Canada thing.
Maybe.
Unless you're getting like a barrel aged reserve
that I don't even know anything about.
I only eat Frank's gold hot.
It has gold flakes in it.
I only get the blue label,
you can only buy it in duty-free shops.
Jaclyn, you don't like any sauces. You hate all sauces.
Yes or no?
No.
When you eat your, when you eat your French fries, what do you put on it?
Nothing?
Nothing or mayo or seasoning.
All right.
You win.
Good idea.
So what's your complaint?
Too many sauces?
There are too many sauces, especially for our size of fridge.
And there are no foods on which to put the sauces, even if I wanted them, that can fit
in the fridge.
So when I go grocery shopping and bring home food,
I cannot fit them anywhere.
You're saying your Ontario kitchen counters
are just stacked with rotting meats and vegetables
because they can't go into the fridge
because of Brandon's precious hot sauce collection.
Yes, or I have to call him in an emergency panic,
saying, come and organize this fridge
before I throw all the food out, including your sauces.
Where do you call him when it's an emergency?
Is he off at a workplace or something?
He's here in the studio.
Here in the studio? That's right, Brandon.
You're recording yourselves in Ontario because you are an audio
engineer or some of some kind.
I'm a cinematographer, but I did do live sound for a number of
years, mostly in like churches and venues and stuff like that.
Super cool. Yeah, you both sound terrific. Nice job. Thank you.
Thank you. And Jacqueline, how do you pass the time there in
Canada?
I am a fire alarm technician in training.
So I am in the trades.
Fire alarm tech in training?
Yes.
You're going to fire alarm college?
Already went, I just have to pass my test now.
You're not talking about like smoke alarms in a house,
you're talking about larger systems,
or what are you talking about?
Yeah, mainly bigger panels, bigger systems in businesses and industries.
But I also do annual smoke alarm tests in residences.
How did you get involved in fire alarm tech?
I wanted to be an electrician and I went to a pre-apprenticeship for that.
And then I could not find a job and, uh, got an opportunity to take
fire alarm college anyways, which would.
Make me a higher paid electrician.
If I still go into that.
It's not really called fire alarm college.
Is it
college for fire alarm technicians.
Really?
Yeah, that's what our program is called.
I have to make a correction before I get some letters by the way.
It's not the association of sauces and dresses.
It's the association of dressings and sauces.
I think they call it ASAD and they figured out that they had to change it.
So I apologize to both of these, institutions, the association of sauces,
dressings and sauces and fire alarm college.
And you hate all kinds of fire, right?
Like flames, but also mouth fire.
Cause you hate hot sauce.
I hate mouth fire.
Yeah.
You want to put it out.
I do.
In fact, you want to take a fire extinguisher and blow it into your Brandon's mouth.
Yeah.
A fire extinguisher full blow it into your Brandon's mouth. Yeah, a fire extinguisher full of mayonnaise.
Whoa.
All right, you've mentioned mayonnaise a couple of times.
Is that your main one?
I, you know what?
I think so.
It used to be margarine, but Brandon-
Wow.
Brandon squashed that.
Margarine's not a sauce.
Can we?
Now, all right, everybody listen.
I think margarine might be a sauce. Can we? Now, all right, everybody listen. I think Margeryn might be a sauce.
If like Jacqueline, you live in 1960.
I just need to, I just need to,
I want everyone to tune into what's going on here, okay?
Because both of these people,
Brandon and Jacqueline are really lovely. Right.
But when we talk about specificity is the soul of narrative, right?
This is kind of what I'm talking about here.
Right. Cause we have on the one hand, this, uh, look white guy with long hair and a
beard who's involved in cinematography and audio engineer and has a podcasting
studio.
Okay.
That's a cliche. It's cliche. Yep. Even though he has a podcasting studio. Okay, that's a cliche.
It's cliche.
Yup.
Even though he has a mustache and not a beard.
Everyone can check my work on the YouTube channel
at Judge John Hodgman Pod.
Whereas on the other hand, we have Jacqueline over here,
who's a five foot tall person,
wanted to be an electrician,
is settling for a higher paying job
as a fire alarm technician
and whose favorite sauce is margarine. So specific. Like it's just like when you're creating a
character, maybe that's so specific it goes around the horn and becomes unrealistic. Do you know what
I mean? But it's just, it's just really something. But Brandon, of course, you're not a cliche,
you're a whole human being in your own right. And I respect that. I'm just fascinating something. But Brandon, of course, you're not a cliche. You're a whole human being in your own right,
and I respect that.
I'm just fascinating.
And I like, you know what?
I like Marger, I like Margeran too.
So you're not inherently anti-sausage.
You're just anti-Brandon's many sauces.
Yeah, I'm a basic B when it comes to sauces.
I'll let that pass without comment from me
because we've got some wonderful evidence to look at here.
These are some photos that were sent in.
They will be available on the show page at maximumfun.org.
Of course, across all of our social media and if you're watching on YouTube right now,
you can see them on Judge John Hodgman.
Well, you already are.
Judge John Hodgman pod.
Our YouTube channel, go there and please subscribe.
Hit that bell, hit the share, hit the blah, blah, blah.
You got it.
Anyway, exhibit A, who took this photo?
That looks like my photo.
And essentially we're gonna be looking,
and I want you to pay close attention to this Brandon,
because you don't have your notes anymore.
Yes.
Three tranches of sauce here.
Exhibit A, fridge door sauces.
Exhibit B, fridge top shelf sauces,
and Exhibit C, sauces in the cabinet.
Oh, and Exhibit D, excuse me, four tranches.
All the hot sauces lined up.
Can I just say that we first see this picture
of the fridge door sauces, and I thought,
well, I wonder where they put their milk.
Although you're theoretically not supposed to keep your milk in the fridge door because the temperature varies the most. Right.
But it never been a problem for me. But then I thought to myself, well, this is a fair number
of sauces. It's not an excess of sauces. This isn't an insane amount of sauces.
Then I found out about tranches two and three. Yeah.
Uh, working backwards tranche, uh, three, there is a, is a cupboard sauce, a cabinet
sauce, I should say.
And that's where you find your Diana sauce.
It looks like you have some Heinz 57 sauce, which is a, uh, not ketchup, right?
That's a, like a different kind of steak sauce. It's like an HP sauce have some Heinz 57 sauce, which is not ketchup, right?
That's like a different kind of steak sauce.
It's like an HP sauce made by Heinz, right?
Yeah, basically.
Okay, so let's take a look at this fridge door.
Here's what I can see, and I'm not even zooming in,
in the sauce category,
because it looks like you have some juice in there
and some Smucker's jelly, which I don't count as a sauce.
Is jelly a sauce, Jesse?
Well, mint jelly count as a sauce. Is jelly a sauce, Jesse? Well, this is for Jesse.
Mint jelly could be a sauce.
Mint jelly could be a sauce, right?
What do you think, Brandon?
I was gonna say mint jelly could be a sauce.
You ever put that grape jelly on your lamb?
No, I don't know if jam is a sauce,
but what complicates the issue is, is chutney a sauce?
Because if jam is a sauce and chutney,
if jam is not a sauce but chutney is,
I don't know, that seems like an arbitrary distinction.
I would say chutney is a relish.
A relish.
I'd be like that.
That's good.
And then I would call relish a sauce.
You'd call relish a sauce?
Yeah.
I almost called you Diana, I'm getting chicken.
I'm just joking.
Sauce Diana over there.
It claims relish is a sauce.
Okay.
Well, let's, well, I'm sure there'll be discussions in the, in the YouTube comments.
Let's hear of them.
But for now, that's not what's on trial.
I'm not on trial.
Uh, Brandon is Brandon.
Why don't you take us left to right through these sauces?
Uh, okay.
It's starting at the top.
We have some Jamaican jerk,ican jerk marinade kind of slash sauce.
Mm-hmm.
The next thing is a ginger and garlic paste.
I don't think that counts.
It's a paste.
Yeah.
And then there's hoisin.
The next one is a...
Paste could be a sauce if you're in preschool.
That's true.
Elmer's sauce.
That's right.
It goes great on crayons after you've said that.
Yeah.
And then we have a hoisin sauce.
And then next to that is a...
Oyster?
No, that's a purie purie hot sauce.
Oh, I thought for sure it was oyster sauce.
Okay.
Tartar sauce.
Tartar sauce.
There's a sambal paste.
Yeah.
And then what do you got? Some chili crisp there?
No, that's fermented chili and bean paste.
It's more of a cooking sauce too.
I thought I had the eagle eye for sauces. All right.
I thought that was a chili crisp too.
Same brand though. I think it's Lao Gan is the brand.
The Lao Gan chili crisp is the best.
Yeah, I've recently purchased the, what I think is illegal version of that, which is one that
has chicken in it.
And you can just like leave it on your counter, but I don't think you're allowed to have it.
But I found it at my local Asian supermarket and it's pretty dang good.
You mean it has chunks of chicken?
It has it has chunks of chicken in it.
I wouldn't call that a sauce.
I would call that something that you shouldn't eat.
Chunks of chicken in your chili crisp?
Yeah, they have a beef version and a pork version, but you can't really get them.
Not in North America, but at my local market.
And it's not legal for you to have?
I think it, when I purchased, when I looked at it,
it said chili with chicken, and I thought,
I know that that's not allowed.
So then I looked at the ingredients on the back
and it had one of those, you know when you go to
like an Asian market sometimes, they'll have a label
printed over top of the ingredients?
Yeah.
And I read that and there was no chicken in it.
And I go, oh, well, I'll try this,
maybe it's chicken flavor, our son is a, Oh, well, I'll try this. Maybe it's chicken flavor or son is a vegetarian.
Perhaps they'll like to try this.
I bring it home.
I peel off that label.
They tricked it and there is chicken in it.
They just didn't put it on the, uh, import label, I guess.
I guess it makes sense.
Jesse, anytime you have some like ramen or some nice noodles or whatever, and
you put some chili crisp on it, don't you often feel like what's missing
is chunks of chicken?
I didn't know I was talking to a chicken smuggler
this whole time.
What about the second stack of sauces here?
Yeah, thank you, Jesse.
We have some Worcestershire sauce and a hot mustard
in that red bottle.
That's Diana sauce behind that.
Cucumber salad dressing.
And then Caesar salad dressing behind that.
And then 57.
And then a Guinness flavored bullseye.
A ketchup.
And then I think that's-
What is a bullseye?
Oh, but-
Is it a brand of barbecue?
Yes, it's another bar- very sweet barbecue sauce.
A Guinness flavored barbecue sauce, okay. And then- Heinz ketchup. Heinz ketchup. And French's mustard.
Yes.
And then behind that, I think, is Greek salad dressing.
And then there's prune juice next to that, because we have a three-year-old.
Oh, I was going to say, given the amount of exotic hot sauces you're taking in, I couldn't
imagine regularity with that. Oh, I was going to say, given the amount of exotic hot sauces you're taking in, I couldn't
imagine regularity would be a problem for you.
The countertop chicken helps.
And then let's go to the sauces in the top shelf of the fridge.
And when we say top shelf here, we mean this just happens to be the top shelf, not like
these are your top shelf sauces
and there are many other off brands below, right?
This is more sauce.
No, this is where the Frank's Gold Hot is.
Yeah.
I can see some sriracha in there way in the back
because it's overdone at this point.
It's a cliche itself.
Tell us what else you've gotten there.
So starting on the left we have maple syrup and then we have various salsas. There's three salsas there. What are their brands and why do you have three of them? I think it's a La Costina
or Herdez salsa and there's a green like a salsa verde in the back. Uh, and then there is the one in front of that is like a medium salsa, but it's more of like a Pico de
Gallo kind of style. And then the selection brand is like the trash, uh, like, you know, old El Paso
style taco night kind of thing, which I think are different salsas. Like that's a different vibe.
Yeah. One of them you mentioned is trash and yet it's not in the trash. Well, it's good
It's good like trash for me is an affectionate term often in an affectionate way. Yeah, it's affectionately trashy
Have we named all the sauces on the top shelf yet?
Not not even close
But Brandon Jacqueline says that this is only about two- thirds of your total sauce supply or your total normal complement of sauces.
I feel like when those photos are taken about a week or so ago, and since then I have purchased
a few more.
And I typically would have maybe a couple other options.
Like I got like a Chipotle ranch, mostly for our eldest because he liked mixing hot sauce with his ranch,
so I figured, consolidate.
And then, what else did I get?
So you got rid of your ranch and hot sauces?
Well, eventually they will be gotten rid of
when they are consumed.
Why reward his creativity
when you could actually reward a corporation
that is making a version of what he's making at home?
Fair.
What else did I get? I don't know, I think I got a couple other, that is making a version of what he's making at home. Fair.
What else did I get? I don't know, I think I got a couple other,
like I got a barbecue sauce.
I may have gotten another hot sauce, I'm not sure.
How long have you been married, Jacqueline?
We are just approaching our 14th anniversary.
Oh, happy anniversary in advance,
and it sounds like you have at least two human children
that I've heard made reference to, is that right?
That's correct, we have two.
And would you say that Brandon is a good cook?
Absolutely.
And you enjoy the food that he makes?
Yes, mostly.
Because that's the problem, right, Jacqueline?
That's like, you know, Brandon likes what he likes,
you like Brandon, you like what he likes too,
but you don't like having to sort through it
every time you want to put a head of lettuce away or whatever.
Is that what's going on here?
Yes. You refer to it as Tetris fridge Tetris.
Yes. Tell me about your fridge.
How it doesn't seem very large.
No, it is definitely not very large.
It is. the standard size fridge from like 20 years ago,
probably, it's like the old, just regular front door,
single style freezer on the top, fridge on the bottom,
with the two produce drawers on the bottom
and the deli drawer in the middle. Oh, well, I'm looking at the top, fridge on the bottom with the two produce drawers on the bottom and the deli
drawer in the middle.
Well, I'm looking at the top shelf here and it looks to me like the fridge is pretty narrow.
Yes, it is quite narrow.
Yeah.
This is what you might call an apartment fridge.
Yeah.
Now-
You live in an apartment?
We do.
We live in a two-bedroom second floor in a four-plex old house that's been here.
In Ontario, are refrigerators provided by the landlord?
Generally. They are.
Yes.
In this case, you do not own this fridge.
You can't just replace the fridge, or can you?
No, we cannot.
No. Right.
And have you ever faced a situation
where you just couldn't get stuff into the fridge
for the sauces?
Like what went bad?
Lettuce, fruit.
Fruit.
Other vegetables, I think cucumbers one time.
Have you ever tried fermenting those things
into a hot sauce?
Yeah, it just sounds like they didn't go bad.
Sounds like they went good.
Yeah, they're halfway there.
Yeah.
Brandon, Jacqueline suggests that your good fresh food
is going bad because your hot sauce
has to be chilled at all times,
but it sounds like there's some hot sauce
that doesn't even make it into the fridge,
or maybe not hot sauce, other kinds of sauce.
Like are there things that should be refrigerated that even you
can't fit into the fridge?
No, the only thing that I think I notice as a problem is sometimes we will get
some beer that I would like to be refrigerated and there's just no room for that.
Why?
Why would you even care about that?
Well, it is partly the reason why I got a cooler on her back deck so I can fill
it with ice on the weekend and just put stuff there.
Well, why not get a little sauce fridge for yourself then?
We are extremely limited in our two-bedroom apartment with two children in like floor
space.
There's like basically no floor space and limited outlets as well.
So that's the main difficulty there. no floor space and limited outlets as well. Yes.
So that's the main difficulty there.
I think you should lift your kids' beds up on top of four kegs.
Why do you need three different habanero sauces?
I get one as mango, but even you acknowledged that one is the same as the other, just a
different brand.
That was an honest mistake.
There was a time when I was going through a period of making Jamaican patties at home
and I would use that chili sauce as flavor.
It was more of a cooking liquid than a seasoning sauce.
So I would use half a bottle in a recipe because my other problem is that I only know how to cook
for like 10 people.
Like I don't know how to cook for our family.
So I make very large batches.
So we have, I would use like half.
Just store the leftovers in the fridge.
Oh no.
And well, the freezer's also quite full.
How many sauces you have in there?
I do have I have a lot of like stocks and gravies, if that counts.
Yeah, it does.
OK, OK. I'm counting it.
It's probably four, four or so ziplocs full of stock and gravy.
Brandon, I noticed you didn't have any A1 sauce in your fridge.
No, they don't tend to carry it at our grocery store that we usually go to but when I made a restock recently
I went to the fancy grocery store. I did see it, but it was about like
I guess it was an import sauce in Canada
I suppose but it was about like it was like also like seven bucks or something like that for a bottle
So I just I didn't bother you have any of that. You have any of that gentleman's relish? I looked for gentleman's relish in the British section,
and I could not find it.
I shouldn't be adding to your collection at this point
because Jacqueline, you want me to to lessen his collection.
Yes, that would be the ideal.
You'd like it to go back to one bin of sauces, dressings in the door, walk away.
Right. That's where you want it to be. Yes.
That would be how do you feel about that?
Brandon?
Uh, a little stressed.
Um, I think that the part of the problem is that like, what is a sauce is kind of
like difficult because like a lot of those are not like, I have a big bottle.
You just spent a lot of time.
I know that you weren't a hot sauce guy, but at the same time you're going to be that guy.
It all comes down to the definition of sauce.
But I mean-
The problem is categorically,
it's hard to define what a sauce is or isn't.
John, this is a topic that's come up on Jordan and Jesse go,
I'm not going to tell you what kind of word sauce is.
Brandon, how many of the sauces in your refrigerator
would be as safe and stable on your counter
or in your cabinets?
That's a good question.
I imagine like diners and stuff like that,
like ketchup and mustard are just kind of sitting out,
but that always kind of weirded me out a bit.
I mean, have you considered that vinegar based hot sauce is
made of vinegar in large part to make it stable?
Literally no, but that's a very good point.
It's a very good point.
So according to the internet, among the shelf stable when opened
condiments and sauces and there are like the primary reason to keep them in the
refrigerator would be to preserve quality for a longer period of time but
given that you're going through them half a bottle at a time I don't know if
that's a concern, but shelf
stable include mustard, ketchup, hot sauce, soy sauce, vinegar,
barbecue sauce, oyster sauce, honey, and most jams and
preserves. Mayonnaise once opened is susceptible to
spoilage along with salad dressings, pasta sauces,
and some other commercially prepared sauces.
Well, does that sound like a solution to you?
I mean, if I don't know where Jesse sourced
that list of recommendations,
I presume it's from Joe Rogan's website or something,
or like, QAnon, or I don't know, but it's the web anyway,
so it's gotta be correct.
It says here that I'm low-T? Yeah, because you're refriger I don't know, but it's the web anyway, so it's gotta be correct. Is this your good I'm low T?
Yeah, because you're refrigerating your hot sauce, bruh.
No wonder.
But if you were to find a reliable resource to which of your sauces that are currently
refrigerated might be counter stable, would that be a possible solution?
Do you think Jacqueline, would that free
up enough space in the refrigerator?
I would love to say that it would, except the only thing that we have less of than fridge
space is counter space in our apartment.
Well, you have two bottles of Diana sauce. You got to give up something.
I've got to sacrifice.
Yeah, you're the one who has to sacrifice.
I could, I could potentially create cupboard space where they could, there
could be like a, a sauce cupboard.
That sounds fun.
Well, I do have this question since you are cooking for large groups that don't
exist, are you also buying ingredients in bulk that perhaps you could maybe not buy in bulk?
I'll ask Jacqueline because Brandon, I don't think will answer honestly.
Does he buy in bulk?
Some things he does buy in bulk, yes.
The soy sauce, as previously mentioned, he buys in three liter jugs.
And is that for economy sake Brandon?
Yeah, yeah I'm very conscious of like deals and trying to like you know stretch our dollar
and there are like certain places that I know where to get certain things and yeah so I
often will buy large quantities and then we'll slowly winnow them down.
Um, Jacqueline has said that vegetables have gone bad waiting for a chance to be
refrigerated because your fridge is too full of hot sauce.
How do you respond to that, Brandon?
I don't deny that that has happened.
I think that it has been a very rare occasion
where we haven't been able to fit something.
Our produce drawers do get quite full.
And it doesn't take much in a small fridge.
You get a bag of carrots and a bag of lettuce
and you're kind of full.
Yeah, also because no one ever wants to eat those things.
Well, there's that as well.
It says here that your ideal ruling
is that Jacqueline simply acknowledged
that the kitchen is your domain and she should keep her hands off. Jacqueline, is that fair?
No.
Why? I mean, does he do a good job managing the kitchen?
I would argue no. He does a good job at cooking. But organizationally, maybe it's his own version
of organized chaos,
but I only see the chaos.
He has his own system, but it is not a system that is understandable to you.
Correct. I will say in his defense, I am vertically challenged,
and so I cannot see half of what is in our cupboards.
Yeah, but when you finally get your,
finally get your accreditation as a fire alarm tester,
Canada gives you a nice ladder, right?
You would think.
Is one possible solution to this,
to move all the sauces to dad height cabinets?
Yeah, and all the other ingredients.
I think part of the problem for Jacqueline, if I can speak, is that like, yeah, why don't
you speak to your wife and tell her, I don't mean to speak for her, tell us and her her
feelings.
But this is in her in her place.
I think that because she has some difficulty seeing things in the fridge, like if the
fridge is open, and there I know there's food in there,
and she could call me and I'm at the studio,
and I'll go, move the yogurt, and then in behind this,
there's a container full of, like, chicken that you can have.
Like, I kind of just know the geography of it.
You're hiding chicken everywhere.
And she...
We established, Brandon, that you have an elaborate,
up-to-date refrigerator mind balance.
I kind of do.
You literally, when you were counting sauces
at the beginning, before we put up the photographs,
you were moving your hands around the refrigerator,
counting the sauces.
Brandon, do you mind me jumping in and telling your wife about your feelings? No, it's wonderful.
On your behalf?
I appreciate it.
Oh, then let me tell you about Jacqueline's feelings.
Okay.
Maybe.
And Jacqueline, you can tell me if I'm on the money here or not, but it's like you have
a system.
It is quote unquote controlled chaos,
what I call intense visual clutter that makes me want to scream. But you know where everything
is in the refrigerator and the cupboards, but everything is quite full and maybe Jacqueline
is tired of feeling that she has no place or space in the kitchen. This part of the
part of your family life that is typically shared. Do you feel chased out of your own kitchen to a degree, Jacqueline?
I very much do.
All right. See?
Now I know your wife's feelings. I can talk for her.
I hear that.
But what about your feelings? Do you feel...
Look, I'll be honest. I'll be plain, nagged by Jacqueline vis-a-vis these sauces.
When she says, I came up with a good solution.
Get rid of two-thirds of your stuff and keep it in this box.
How does that make you feel?
No, I don't I don't feel nagged.
I would never say I feel nagged, but I do feel that on a podcast.
Yeah, you wouldn't say that.
But do you feel it?
No, no, it is not.
I don't feel nagged.
I do feel that.
But because like if if the if the fridge is opened a hundred times,
like I'm opening it eighty-five times.
You know, like I'm in... I just... I have a thing that kind of works.
And it just... And it's not just for me accessing my sauces,
it's for me preparing all of the meals.
And I feel like if...
There probably is a better way that perhaps things could
be organized or that food.
How could there be a better way? This is the way you thought of. How could there be a better
one?
There's always room for improvement. There's always room for improvement. But perhaps there's
a way that like Jaclyn's, the things that she needs to access could be more visually
apparent than, you know, she doesn't have
to see, you know, my bottle of dark soy sauce every single time she's looking for lunch.
Uh, Jacqueline, what would you have me order if I were to order rule in your favor?
I would order a-
How many of these sauces do you want in the garbage by the end of the day?
By the end of the day?
Uh, definitely get rid of the doubles. By the end of the day? Definitely get rid of the doubles.
Definitely get rid of doubles.
Definitely get rid of the dubs.
Limit on a hard limit on the number of hot sauces he is allowed in the fridge at one time.
And a general limit on how much condiments in general need to be in the fridge at one time.
If I were to ask you to name three hot sauces, or not even hot sauces, three hot sauces or
sauces or condiments or relishes or toppings that you could get rid of off the top of your
head right now, what would those three be?
Man, probably Diana sauce.
I'd leave behind.
It's not even yours, dude.
Well, I use it for occasion.
I guess I would leave behind all of my wife's clothes.
Margarine.
Just so that we could move faster.
Yeah, margarine, Diana sauce.
Probably the barbecue sauces.
I would probably leave those behind.
And like a Caesar dressing, I don't really,
I'd probably leave that behind too.
Let me ask you a different question.
This is the last question I'm gonna ask.
Do you remember the photo of all of your hot sauces
on the counter?
Yes.
Okay.
What are they left to right, do you remember?
How many of them can you name?
I know that they're...
I'm gonna get the order wrong.
You don't have to get them in order.
Okay.
There is sambal oelek, there is a green chili pickle, there is...
There are two scotch bonnet sauces, there was a mango sweet hot sauce, there was the
sriracha, there's the puri pururi sauce, there is the fermented chili bean paste,
there was the peanut chili crisp, there might be all of them.
Well, you get to keep all of those for sure.
Unfortunately, you have to say goodbye to your Black Label Frank's Red Hot Sauce.
Oh my god. And as far as the rest of your stuff,
I'll be back in a moment with my verdict.
I'm going into my chambers to think it over.
Please rise as Judge John Hodgman exits the courtroom.
Jacqueline, how are you feeling about your chances right now?
I'm feeling pretty confident
that I've been seen
as the sane one in this situation.
The defender of the lettuce.
Yes.
Brandon, how are you feeling?
I feel fine.
You always feel good when you're thinking about your special
sauces, right?
Yeah, and in my mind palace.
Brandon, if you could recommend one sauce to our audience,
one sauce that they might not already have
in their refrigerator or their cabinet, what would it be?
I'm actually gonna say HP sauce.
I think it is great.
It's good on meat grilled things.
It's also my favorite breakfast sauce.
Like I will have that with eggs and toast
and hash browns and sausage.
I think HP is great.
Well, we'll see what Judge Hodgman has to say
about all this when we come back in just a moment.
BANGING
BANGING
Judge John Hodgman, we are taking a break from the case,
and you have a brand new season of your podcast,
E Pluribus Motto, right around the corner.
I'm concerned that there are Judge John Hodgman listeners out
there who have yet to check out
your show E Pluribus Motto with the great Janet Varney.
I hate to think that it might be true,
but it might be true that there are some people who have made the terrible mistake to not listen to season one of E Pluribus Motto,
co-created and co-hosted by me and your own Janet Varney of the JV Club.
This started as a Max Fun Drive challenge.
Couple of years ago, Janet Varney said, hey, if we reach a certain number of new and upgrading
members, would you like to do a podcast all about the
mottos of the US states? And I was like, of course I do. And guess
what? Of course, listeners came through. And now we're doing it.
We have our second season coming out, covering such states as
Maryland, Minnesota, Wisconsin, the Commonwealth of Kentucky and
the Commonwealth of Pennsylvania, the state of Nevada and the district of Washington, district of Columbia.
We'll be talking about all of those state Commonwealth and district mottos,
plus trivia regarding the state snacks, the state mammals, the state birds,
the state monsters. It's a lot of fun. And we really hope that you join us.
We're having a great time recording the episodes this season, and it starts right now.
You don't have to go back to listen to season one
in order to understand what's happening.
We're just talking about state trivia.
But if you want to go back, it's all available for you now.
And if you want to start listening season two,
it lands in your podcast device, July the 8th.
It's called E Pluribus Motto and it's a lot of fun.
Jesse Thorne, what have you got going on?
Well, John, we're recording this a couple of weeks before it is released.
So I don't know what the state of the world will be when this episode is released.
But I can tell you that right now, as we record this,
the president has sent the National Guard to my hometown,
or at least the city in which I live, Los Angeles, California.
Certainly your home state.
Yeah, and ICE is raiding workplaces,
detaining people, and deporting them,
people who are not criminals.
Yeah.
And this is something that is an issue
that is very close to my heart
as someone who has lived almost my entire life.
Other than living in the dorms at UC Santa Cruz,
I've lived essentially my entire life
in places where immigrants are a substantial portion,
and in many cases, the majority of the residents.
My own stepmother came to the United future of their lives and their families.
We ran a fundraiser a few months ago for an organization called Al Otro Lado,
who do direct services for migrants on both sides of the US Mexico border.
We raised $1,000,000 for the fundraisers, and we're going to be an organization called Al Otro Lado who do direct services for migrants on both sides
of the U.S.-Mexico border.
We raised over a quarter million dollars.
And it's more important now even than we knew it to be then because cuts in federal budgets and in money that has,
the withholding of money that has been appropriated
by Congress have meant that the migrant education efforts
that Al Othro leads have been defunded.
So one of the things that Al Othro Lado does
is at the border and at detention centers,
they teach workshops for migrants who are not provided with lawyers
in what their basic legal rights are as refugees.
And those previously were paid for substantially by the federal government
and they've been completely defunded to zero.
by the federal government and they've been completely defunded to zero. So this is one way to directly affect the lives of migrants in this country.
And so whether you have already joined us or whether you haven't, I hope that you will
join us. We'll put the URL in the episode description,
but it's alotrolado.org slash let's do something.
That's alotrolado.org slash let's do something.
I would love to see the top of that
fundraising thermometer explode.
As I said, with our matching grants, we were already over a quarter million
dollars, um, the folks at Aloha Trollado have been awed by your generosity.
And so have I, you know, this is, this is our home and our, our friends and
family members, and in some cases ourselves who are being attacked and
they deserve our support. So you can go to
alotrolado slash let's do something and take a stand for people who have never needed our
help and support more.
Absolutely. I mean, it's been said a lot of times about this particular presidential administration, but the cruelty
is the point and the terror is the point.
The utter cruelty of the ICE raids that are random and targeted at people who lots of
times are just trying to check in and make sure that they're in the country legally and
then they're being arrested and detained and deported, just to scare people.
The subversion of the democratic process of federalizing
the National Guard, which is under the control of each and every state that has a National
Guard, and taking it to turn it against its own state and its own citizens is designed
to terrorize you. Be safe, but do not be afraid. Otherwise, you're in their hands.
Take care of yourself and take care of others.
We're with you. What's the URL again, Jesse?
It's alotrolado.org.
Again, we'll put that in the episode description.
Good.
Everybody who's a supported, you rule.
A-L-O-T-R-O-L-A-D-O dot org. Let's do something.
All right, let's get back to the case.
Please rise as Judge John Hodgman reenters the courtroom and presents his verdict.
Very, very few people love mayonnaise more than me. And like you,
Brandon, I have a mental mind palace in which I keep track of all my mayonnaise at all times.
I can tell you exactly how many tablespoons of mayonnaise are left in my jar of Hellmann's and exactly how many squeezes are left in my squeeze bottle of Japanese import Kewpie mayonnaise,
not the domestic made stuff because that doesn't have the MSG in it.
And I love sauces.
I love them too.
I think they're delightful.
And I agree with you that not all,
even not all hot sauces, I mean,
obviously this goes without saying
to most people who like hot sauces,
but people who don't necessarily enjoy hot sauces
may not understand, they are not the same.
They have very different flavor profiles
and they do different things.
I am inclined to enjoy your collection of hot sauces and other sauces and condiments.
I am a condiment guy.
But the problem is that this is not a collection.
It is settled law in the court of Judge John Hodgman that the difference between a collection and a hoard
is a display case. And that does not just mean buying a display case and throwing all of your
comic books or all of your like, you know, little plastic baseball helmets that you make
Sundays in or whatever into them willy-nilly. A display case means the things are displayed in a way that it is visually,
if not appealing, at least a parsable to understand what's going on.
Instead of the mad chaos of your fridge, which fairly speaking is most people's
fridges is mad chaos.
What I am saying is that when I look in your refrigerator, I do see a mess.
And if you want to justify the pleasure that having this collection of sauces
gives you, you should treat it as a collection and treating it like a
collection means being a little pickier, taking care of your collection and realizing when something
is not being used or is not worthy of the collection anymore. Certainly getting rid
of doubles. You say that you have a system in your head where you remember exactly how
much you have of everything and yet you have two jars of mayonnaise.
Brandon, I am not one to complain about an excess of mayonnaise,
but that was a mistake that needs to be rectified immediately.
Understood.
You can consolidate one of those jars of mayonnaise into another. What an afternoon you'll have.
What an afternoon you'll have.
This also might involve culling of things that just aren't in use regularly, or do not meet the standards of your collection anymore, because there are
two problems with your system.
You are cooking not only to serve your fascination with cooking and the fun of
cooking and the hobby of cooking, and all the sauces come into play there right but you are also cooking for a family of four one of
whom is a vegetarian two of whom are children you don't need kilograms of
potatoes you need to be able to learn how to cook and provision for four.
And similarly, I'm going to encourage you to reach the next level of maturity in your
cooking journey, which is follow a recipe.
I know all cooking guys like to believe they can just do it off the dome.
I honor your hobby and I want you to continue it, but you've got to
make room for others in your life.
One of the ways to do that is to cook for fewer people.
Another way to do that is to call your collection and make it a true
collection and make sure that each piece of it is beautiful and a part of it.
And I appreciate that you're buying soy sauce in bulk, but that squeeze bottle
with the painter's tape on it that says soy sauce looks janky as F.
Get a nice glass bottle that you can put your soy sauce in.
Go through all of your collection of sauces and condiments and read
the instructions for storage.
If they can be put on a counter,
find a nice way to store them on a counter.
Get them out of the fridge.
If they need to go in the fridge,
get them all fitting into that bin.
All of your matching sauces,
all of your same form factor sauces, your tall bottles,
could easily be stored together in one of those bins.
Figure it out.
I think it's gonna mean culling by about 10%,
maybe 15%. But what I want you to do is have it be so that when Jacqueline opens the door,
she not only can put a head of lettuce in there, but also be like, what a beautiful collection of
sauces. Because it is beautiful.
I mean, it is beautiful.
You're sharing with your family.
You're sharing your passion with your family.
You can make it look good and also make space.
And I'm gonna say this.
Yes, you gotta get rid of that Frank's red hot.
I apologize.
It's your punishment.
Yeah.
It's your punishment.
Yeah.
Brandon, I guess I'm ruling in your favor
in the sense that I want you to keep your collection,
but really I'm ruling in Jacqueline's favor.
You got to call it down, not not to punish you,
but to make it look pretty, to honor the hobby that you enjoy.
This is the sound of a gavel.
I want some fancy sauce. Yeah.
Can I have fancy sauce?
Judge John Hodgman rules. That is all.
Please rise as Judge John Hodgman exits the courtroom.
Jacqueline, how are you feeling right now?
I'm feeling pretty great.
Yeah, I think that ruling is just what I was looking for.
How about you, Brandon?
I think it's a very wise, wise ruling.
I will abide by it.
I am really kicking myself for forgetting my Frank's red hot.
But yeah, I'll take that loss.
Yeah, how are you gonna make
your famous buffalo wings now?
It's a great question.
Well, Jacqueline, Brandon, thanks for joining us
on the Judge John Hodgman podcast.
Thank you.
Thank you so much for having us.
Another Judge John Hodgman case is in the books.
We'll have swift justice in just a second.
First, our thanks to Reddit or JiminyCricket81
for naming this week's episode.
We ask for those name suggestions on Reddit
at reddit.com slash R slash maximum fun.
So join us there for that.
You can find evidence from our show on our Instagram account
at Instagram.com slash Judge John Hodgman
along with other fun stuff.
We're also on TikTok and Utah.
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Follow and subscribe to see our episodes
and video only content.
Leave it in AJ, leave it in.
Oh, I ran into AJ by the way, yesterday at Commonwealth.
The new bar that Stu and Charlene,
Stu from the Flophouse
and Charlene his wife was a whole human being on right.
You know, they own Minnie's bar and Hinterland's bar.
Well, they just bought the bar where they first met in New York City, Commonwealth.
And he had a little meetup of some of some podcast guys and AJ was in town
for the live show of blank check.
And I got to meet him.
I had met him before, but it was really nice to see him.
Really lovely guy.
And he's going to send me some coupons for ghee butter.
How about that?
Yeah.
Anyway, it was a friend and ghee is a friend indeed.
How dare you?
But thank you.
Uh huh.
Our YouTube comment of the week comes from user sports, not sports from our recent episode
4k, no, those dose in swift justice.
I was asked, can bananas be juiced? Can you squeeze bananas
to get banana water out of it? I said, I don't think so. You can't squeeze bananas any more
than you can get blood out of a stone. But Sports Not Sports says that banana water is a thing.
Sports Not Sports commented, Woodstock Foods distributes organic banana water,
described as plant-powered hydration.
According to Martha Stewart's blog, banana water is water that has been steeped with banana peels
to create a liquid plant fertilizer similar to compost tea. I didn't want to know about compost
tea. Never mind banana water that's been steeped in banana peels.
Don't go to that Pasadena farmers market. Cause that compost tea guy will corner you.
Well, sports, not sports.
I appreciate your bringing this disgusting product to my attention, but I agree with
your own comment as you go on to explain that this is not the banana water you're
looking for or that I am steeping peels and water makes a banana flavored water.
Sure.
But I'm talking about is anybody squeezing bananas
to get banana water?
If you are, let me know.
Send me an email or send me a video
of you squeezing bananas at hodgemanatmaximumfun.org.
You just invented a new subreddit.
And SFW.
Look, I want this YouTube channel to thrive.
Yeah, I'll this YouTube channel to thrive. Uh huh.
Yeah, I'll say it again.
Send me a video of you squeezing a banana to Hodgman at maximum fun.org.
Maybe we'll put it up on the YouTube or maybe we'll just put the
audio up on the podcast.
Meanwhile, I don't want to just hear about banana water.
What kind of sauce or condiment is your main one?
How many hot sauces do you keep in your sauce stockpile?
How many stocks do you keep in your freezer?
Tell us all about it in the YouTube comments
of this episode.
We premiere every episode of Judge John Hodgman
live on YouTube, Wednesdays at 9 a.m. Pacific.
That's noon Eastern.
The live chat when we're premiering is usually popping.
So why don't you come on in, stop in, subscribe,
like, share, and I hope you'll join the fun.
Judge John Hodgman was created by Jesse Thorne and John Hodgman. This episode engineered by Brandon at his studio, Evil Empire Studios in Hamilton, Ontario. Our social media manager, Dan Telfer,
the podcast is edited by AJ McKeon. Guy provided by AJ McKeon. Technically his wife is a whole
human being in her own right.
Thank you.
Our video editor is Daniel Spear.
Our producer is Jennifer Marmer.
You ready for Swift justice, John?
I'm ready.
Okay.
Designer world 9178 says on the Max Fund sub Reddit,
my husband says the predator that our Beagle
most resembles is a wolf.
I say our Beagle is most like a bear.
Who's right?
Well, I'm not the dog expert.
This feels like, I'm going to be honest.
This feels like a question for our friend, Julie Klausner.
Julie Klausner is the number one beagle enthusiast in America.
I know that dogs are descended
or have a common ancestors as wolves do.
They are canine in their genetic family.
But I do not think a beagle looks like a wolf so much.
They're too cute and cuddly.
Nor do they look like a bear,
though they are rounder like a bear is round.
I'm going to say that the predator that your beagle most resembles is a sofa throw pillow.
That's my final ruling.
You know what?
I'm going to quote my favorite video on the internet, which is Glowrilla on British television.
You all got foxes?
All right, fair enough.
You got to go watch that video where Gloworilla finds out that foxes are real.
I gotta go watch some videos, but before I go watch these videos, Schultzbuster over
there at Maximum Fun Subreddit mentioned that they're going through the back episodes and
they love disputes between bandmates.
We've had disputes between Rolling Stone cover band bandmates. We've had disputes between a Rolling Stone cover band bandmates. We've had disputes
over who's the true hero of the band Van Halen. I'd love to hear some more band-related disputes.
Does your band have a pre-gig ritual that you hate? Do you all disagree about what the name of your
band should be? Are you and your bandmates deadlocked over the direction of your next
double album? Put the creative and creative differences and send us your bandmates deadlocked over the direction of your next double album?
Put the creative and creative differences and send us your band related disputes, your rock and roll or other kind of band related disputes.
Send them to maximumfund.org slash JJ HO.
Or why don't you go ahead and email me directly.
Hodgman at maximumfund.org.
That's right. My mailbox is open again.
I'll see your emails.
Hodgman at maximumfund.org or maximumfund.org slash JJ HO. And that's where we want to hear about all disputes, right, my mailbox is open again. I'll see your emails. Hodgman at MaximumFun.org or MaximumFun.org slash JJHO.
And that's where we wanna hear about all disputes,
right Jesse?
Indeed, no matter what your beef is,
please submit it to us at MaximumFun.org slash JJHO
or Hodgman at MaximumFun.org.
We'll talk to you next time
on the Judge John Hodgman podcast.