Judge John Hodgman - Nom de Broom Live in Vancouver
Episode Date: October 1, 2025Live from the Hollywood Theatre in Vancouver, B.C., NOM DE BROOM: Taryn brings the case against their sister, Lauren. Taryn and Lauren are both practitioners of the king of Canadian sports, which is, ...obviously: CURLING! Taryn owns a controversial curling broom, and they have named it in honor of Beyoncé. But Lauren hates this broom. She will not even say its name, say its name. Who’s right? Who’s wrong?PLUS in Swift Justice we hear cases on: a family book club where just one person has read the book, proper nail clipping technique, and proper sandwich cutting technique. Make sure to stay tuned to the end for Friends of the Court Deb Perelman and Kenji López-Alt to weight in on their sandwich cut preferences!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/banjo_solo 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
Discussion (0)
It's the Judge John Hodgman podcast, and I am Bail of Jesse Thorne.
With me is Judge John Hodgman.
This week's episode recorded live in Vancouver, British Columbia.
We talked about a family book club.
We talked about cutting fingernails.
We talked about cutting sandwiches.
And we talked about what to name your curling broom, very Canadian.
And when we talk about the very best way to cut a sandwich,
we referenced some testimony from some expert witnesses.
Make sure to listen all the way to the end of the episode
to hear these voice memos from Deb Perilman
and Kenji Lopez-Alt are friends from the recipe podcast.
Let's go to the stage at the Hollywood Theater in Vancouver.
People of Vancouver, you asked us for live justice,
and we are here to deliver it.
The Court of Judge John Hodgman is now in session.
Please welcome to the stage, Adam and Catherine.
Adam brings the case against his wife, Catherine.
Catherine bought her family, Moby Dick, for Christmas,
with the intention of starting a family book club.
No one in the family read the book except for Adam.
Catherine never even started it.
Adam is here for literary justice.
Please rise as Judge John Hodgman enters the courtroom.
Welcome to the courtroom. Thank you, Adam and Catherine.
You may be seated.
Adam, you seek justice in my fake courtroom?
I do indeed.
So tell me about the Christmas when you got Moby Dick as a present.
Christmas of 2011 was the first Christmas that I spent with Catherine's family
back when we were dating.
Oh, wow.
And when Catherine presented everyone except me with a brand new shiny copy of Moby Dick.
Dick. I used this copy that my dad bought used before I was born.
She didn't give you a copy of this book? No, no, no. Okay, go on.
It was obviously important. Catherine, you see this? I'm ready to judge. Oh, can I
interject? No. No. You'll get your piehole, ma'am. In a moment. Thank you very much.
It was obviously important for me to, you know, show well for Catherine's family. And I think I did so.
So, Catherine, you gave a copy of Moby Dick to everyone in your family except the person you were dating to form a family book club. Is this correct?
Sort of. So it was one copy per household.
So we were living together at the time, so we only needed one. So actually, the copy that I got for me was for us, although Adam already had a copy.
I was going to ask, Adam, did you suspect that the entire family was playing a joke on you, tricking you into reading Moby Dick?
It was difficult to calibrate to Catherine's family.
Where's your copy?
I don't know.
I looked for it.
To be fair, this was a long time ago.
I mean, what, 14 years now, right?
Yeah, 13.
14 years?
Yeah, you haven't had time to read Moby Dick in a decade and a half.
Copics probably not even shiny anymore.
Go back in time, if you were, to the old wailing days of Nantucket or 2011,
when you were coming up with this idea to have a family book club.
What was your motivation?
and what was your plan?
Okay, so Adam made it sound like he was trying to impress my family,
but actually, we were trying to impress him with how literate we were.
And I think we failed.
So it was a family-wide prank.
No, we were dead serious.
So we are terrible cooks in our family.
Adam showed up.
He makes the most amazing Christmas meals,
and we're like, we have to keep this guy around.
Everyone has to work together for this.
What's your specialty, Adam?
Oh, Italian food.
Whale steaks?
Whale steak.
Italian.
Italian food.
Italian food.
Well,
well, carbunara.
Perfect.
So you were trying to impress him
by pretending you were all going to read Moby Dick.
We were going to read Moby Dick.
So why didn't it happen?
So Adam was reading it for work purposes,
and he gave me a running commentary of it,
and to be perfectly honest,
he didn't do a good job of selling it.
He said that there was a lot of antiquated setology in it,
And, you know, there are only so many hours in a day.
Remember how I was going to bring this gavel down so hard against you, Catherine?
I'm going to read it this year.
Wait, wait. Remember how you just said setology, meaning the study of whales?
Gavel lifted.
We're back to neutral.
Unbiased once more.
You have a chance.
Why would someone who knows the word setology not want to read Moby Dick?
There's no more whaley booker.
around.
I really want to read it.
Adam, maybe someday.
Adam Catherine said
that you were reading it for work.
Are you a harpoonist?
No, I'm a musician.
You're in the Decemberus, I presume.
I'm a trumpet player.
I play in the Calgary Philharmonic.
We were playing an opera of Moby Dick that year.
Oh, okay.
And tell us about Moby Dick.
Good book?
The first and last fifth of the book are amazing.
That leaves three.
I'm not great at subtraction.
There's a middle three-fifths?
Those middle three-fifths are...
It's just antiquated scotology.
Antiquated setology and nine gams.
And, you know, you got to get what you can.
I know what a gam is.
Sorry?
I know what a gam is.
Yeah, I know you know what a gam.
They're ladies who are married to gamps.
It's when two boats tie up to each other so they can meet each other and hang out and exchange news.
That's right.
Because do you know what, Catherine?
I'm reading Moby Dick right now.
Oh, I am aware of that.
Oh, are you?
I'm reading it out loud on my substack.
I know.
Did you know that, Jesse?
I don't subscribe to the sub-tac.
Yeah, good.
You'd love it because I read it in my main accent.
Oh.
Do you really?
Ah, yeah.
Oh, no.
Call me Ishmael.
Those are the first three words.
That's as far as I've gotten.
I did read that part.
Sounds like a real nightmare, John.
Oh, it's good.
Can't catch a nantucketit.
from here.
It's a lot of fun.
Really punishing our fans, are you?
I would say that I am not past the first fifth for sure,
so I'm not getting into the boring gams part yet.
Yeah, though the gams are okay,
but when you read a long chapter about the philosophical affect
of a whale's head and you finish it and you turn the page
and you see that the next chapter is called
Right Whales Head, Alternate View.
It's a dark moment.
Do you know why the...
Is this book I have a point-counterpoint format?
So your whole family gave up on it?
Or do you think they ever even tried?
I don't think they tried.
Did you even try?
I read the first couple of chapters, and I've never given up.
Sometimes the chapters are only like two pages.
The first couple of chapters is maybe 15 pages of prose.
I'm going to read it.
Adam, do you believe her?
Yes, I do believe her.
Would you like her to read it?
I think there are probably better things to read.
Go on.
What I would like,
Catherine only reads books that I recommend to her
when someone in a more authoritative position
also recommends them.
Okay.
And a book that I love
and that I think Catherine would love
and that I've heard you speak about before
that I would love if you could recommend to her
is the Broken Earth trilogy by N.K. Jemison.
I do recommend those.
That's an incredible trilogy for sure.
Oh, I'll read them for sure.
There you go.
But why don't you, I'm curious about this, why don't you...
Don't patronize the nerds, ma'am.
Why don't you read the books that your beloved husband, correct?
Yes.
Now, husband, your beloved husband recommends to you.
Well, sometimes I do.
I would like to point out in...
Does he recommend a lot of stinkers?
Well, there are just...
What's the worst one he ever recommended?
I think Adam knows.
I'm going to evade that question by saying that for Christmas, a few years,
After this Christmas, I read Dune as a Christmas gift to Adam.
And I liked it.
That's doing a lot for a husband, I must agree.
Wouldn't you want me to compel her to read Moby Dick?
I mean, you could.
You are, of course, the judge, and I trust your judgment.
I think for me, especially these days, I'm leaning more into escapism in me.
my art consumption. So something of grim reality like Moby Dick.
It's a lot of fun this book, Moby Dick. It's very funny. When you listen to me read it out loud
on my substack, you will hear how funny it is. And indeed, I am not ordering you to read Moby Dick,
Catherine, but you and your entire family shall listen to me read it. How many are in your family?
I have two parents and two brothers. Is that four households, including yours? Yes. I
We'll give you three free subscriptions.
The others must pay.
Until then, you have to read
at least the first book
in the Broken Earth, Joel, you by Encave Jemison.
Okay.
To make up for your failure to
fully prank Adam.
I deserve this punishment.
This is the sound of a gavel.
Thank you. Adam and Catherine.
Swift, Justice continues.
Please welcome to the stage.
Swift, Swift, Swift.
Melanie and Steve.
Melanie and Steve.
Welcome to the courtroom, thank you for being.
Melanie brings the case against her husband, Steve.
Melanie says, Steve cuts his nails wrong.
Steve says the way he clips his nails is fine.
But it gives Melanie the ick.
Judge Hodgman, you may proceed.
Melanie, you have the ick with your husband, Steve, over this issue.
How does he disgust you with his fingernails?
First of all, can I just thank Melanie
for recognizing this is a black tie occasion?
You both look wonderful.
Thank you.
We're on date night.
Oh, wonderful.
So how does your husband
disgust you with his fingernails?
So what he does
is he will take the fingernail clipper
and he'll clip like one third of the way
and then after that clip is done,
he just rips it off.
Steve, you've heard the reaction from the audience.
You're very,
very lucky there is not an old fruit concession in the back of this room.
Why do you, why do you do, you have the nail clipper in one of your hands?
Why don't you just complete the job with the clipper?
So earlier in my life, I had really bad ingrown toenails.
They had to do surgery on it.
I remember the nurse kept going around and around.
This is definitely helping me with my ick.
Right?
So I got really sensitive to the length of toenails.
After that, sometimes, the part I also want to just interject,
we sat down.
I thought we were specifically talking about toenails,
and she said they're all included.
I'm sorry, I had fingernails here.
It's all ten nails.
It's all ten nails.
Let me just take a quick look at your fingernails, please, Steve.
Mm-hmm.
Mm-hmm.
Thank you.
And now, toes?
Toes, please.
Toes, please.
Let the record reflect that Steve is placing toes on me.
I won't ask for the other toes just because those other, I think they're probably the same, right?
Very close.
In the interest of time, I'll not make you just robe your other foot.
Steve, isn't this painful and doesn't it go horribly wrong frequently?
Not frequently.
And also, I don't understand.
All right, we'll follow up on that.
You had to go to the hospital to have your ingrown toenails dealt with.
I feel like that was earlier when I was a minor and I can't speak to like, whatever they do to you.
But I have yet to make the connection as to why you do your, why you do your, why you're,
rip your fingernails off your fingers
and your toenails off your toes now.
Well, it's basically the fingernails and the toenails.
I wouldn't want any of that to grow in
and cause me discomfort.
Yeah, but you could clip them frequently.
I feel like clipping them leaves you
with raggedy edges that are just waiting to do.
Raggedy, more raggedy than tearing them off, Steve.
Are you familiar with asparagus?
I'll see where you're going with this, counselor.
But watch your sense.
What does this have to do with asparagus?
Am I going to have to smell your pee?
You will not.
If you could, you might smell it from where you are.
It's not that kind of story.
None of that has helped me understand anything.
Can you help me understand the asparagus thing here?
If you farm asparagus and you're more like a gardener about it
and less like a farmer about it,
you grab a piece of asparagus and you break it off.
Depending on how the asparagus is feeling.
Oh, I didn't realize you were talking about the famous parable of the asparagus farmer.
What's something that's relatable that will help me explain myself?
What famous story do I know?
Oh, yeah, the old asparagus farmer yarn.
When you farm asparagus, you're not precious about it.
You tear it out of the earth.
Mommy, mommy, I cannot sweep.
Tell me the story of the tree.
Do you spelligas Fobo?
No, you must read Dune.
A picture of my children's growing up.
The asparagus breaks off where it's best to break off.
It's up the ground, it's not really done yet.
If it breaks off at top, then that's where you have to leave that asparagus,
and some of it, I think, is just 99 out of 100 times, no problem.
You're letting the nail speak to you.
And what happens the one out of 100 times when it goes,
wrong. Horrible infection?
I mean, not horrible infection.
Why are you waving to the audience?
Don't expect.
Like, they all know? You know.
He's like, you all know.
He's like, no, no, not horrible infection.
I rather enjoy it.
What happens when it goes wrong, Melanie?
He gets a little wound.
He gets a little wound.
And how does this hurt you exactly?
What are you the damages against?
you. So it's not exactly
damages against me, but like
I'm a nurse. And I'm specifically
a skin care nurse.
Yeah.
So in that case,
there's like, is guidance
on how you're supposed to cut nails.
And because why? I mean,
I would imagine that there's a chance of infection
if you wound yourself that
way, if you pull a nail off.
As people get older.
Wow. Wow. Wow.
They don't heal as well.
and you're opening yourself up to infection.
You're saying that he could bleed to death from his pinky.
No, more sepsis.
I'm more concerned about sepsis.
You're a good point.
You ever hear the story about the asparagus farmer and the sepsis?
Too many times.
Obviously, Steve, you have some unresolved trauma
during your childhood experience with ingrown toenails.
You had to go to the hospital.
You don't even remember what happened exactly.
You have a mental block.
You had some, you went into a fugue state
where you imagined everyone follows asparagus husbandry.
There's something that you need to work through.
Good news for you, Steve.
You're married to a nurse
who knows how to cut nails clinically.
I order you to cut his toenails and fingernails
properly from now on
so that he can work through his trauma
and maybe you two can have some romantic time together.
This is the sound of a guy.
Thank you, Melanie and Steve.
Let's bring out our next litigants.
Please welcome to the stage, Colin and Sam.
Colin and Sam are good friends who agree on everything with one exception,
the correct way to cut a sandwich in half.
Judge Hodgman.
Colin and Sam, you may be seated.
Welcome to the courtroom.
You are friends.
Yes.
Which one is Colin?
I'm Colin.
I'm Colin.
I really wanted you to both raise your hands at the same time.
Sorry, drop the ball on you.
I'm calling too.
Because I would have said, oh, they must be brothers and members of the same Viking tribe.
Yes, yeah.
Yeah, I was going to ask if you met at the Vat Guy Club.
You both seem to have, you both are gingers.
Yes.
Both have great big ginger beards.
One of you has ginger hair on top.
You both look like you met at a Renfair or a caber,
tossing festival.
How long have you been friends?
Subtraction is hard.
Eight, maybe ten years.
Oh, okay. Yeah, very good. Ten years.
Closer. Yeah. Yeah. Almost as long as there's been a
Moby Dick Book Club that hasn't been.
Yeah, precisely. And sorry, you are Sam?
I'm Colin. You are Colin. You're the accused. I'm calling too.
This is the accused over here.
You're calling. No, Colin is right. Sam is wrong.
even though I am on the left
Colin, Sam,
Colin.
Jesse, you know that story about the asparagus farmer
who lost his mind,
lost his mind and didn't know where he was anymore
and language didn't seem to work anymore?
Yeah, my gam told me that story.
Jesse, if I turn around,
are these two guys going to still be there
or am I hallucinating?
I'm 60% confident they switched places at some point.
All right. One of you actually, you have a notes in your hand.
I do.
And which one are you?
I'm Sam.
Really?
It depends on the day.
Colin.
Yes.
Sam.
Got it.
Sam.
What's in your notes?
Well, it's.
evidence to help me
explain
how I cut a sandwich because
every time we seem to explain it
people don't quite understand
the monstrosity.
Let me see the note. Monstrosity, yes.
I see.
May I show this to my bailiff?
You may.
Entering to evidence, Collins
drawing.
Don't reveal that to the audience
just yet. Sam's drawing?
Can I root? No, that was actually
Can I reveal, hold on, can I reveal that he signed and dated it?
I'm going through my notes here, and I still don't know which one of you is Sam or Colin.
You're?
Sam.
Sam.
Colin.
Yes.
Let me see if I can understand this.
This is a very controversial topic regarding how to cut a sandwich in half, correct?
Yes.
And people feel very strongly about this one way or the other.
So before we begin, before you explain how your friend,
whose name I've already forgotten, cuts his sandwich,
I just want to appeal to the audience.
What you're going to hear is shocking.
If you are repulsed or disturbed,
I only ask that you express this very loudly.
Colin, how does Sam cut his sandwich?
Horizontally.
Jesse, show the picture.
Yeah, yeah, come on.
That is to say, anti-diagonally.
Anti-diagonally, anti-vertically.
Like, I'd be okay with straight up and down, too, but like...
If you imagine that a loaf of sandwich bread has two bulbs atop it,
where it has spilled forth over the pan,
he has cloven the sandwich down through those bulbs.
No, across.
He has, if you imagine
a sandwich has two bulbs
at the top
and what I'll call a shaft below.
He has
horizontally sliced across the shaft
generating two half sandwiches
which are not identical.
One has bulb, one only
shaft. Correct.
Colin, why is this wrong?
Oh, Sam's family runs a cafe.
So it's not just that Sam is wrong.
He's learned it the wrong way, and they're handing out wrong sandwiches.
No, I'm just concerned for the people of Greenwood, BC, that they would encounter such monstrosity.
I'll shout out to Greenwood!
All 12 of us.
Sam, your family runs a cafe in Greenwood, BC.
That's right.
Do they cut sandwiches this way?
when they are selling them to people
for their hard-earned loonies and tunis.
They actually do not cut the sandwich at all.
It is cut just...
Oh, well, that explains it.
You never saw.
No, I...
You had to make this up for yourself.
You're like a feral child.
I've been out on these mean streets.
It's been hard.
Why is...
How would you prefer to cut the sandwich?
I would prefer diagonally.
I would be okay with vertically,
but diagonal gets the best bite.
It just seems that there was a lack of thought put it to this.
You know, we have friends of the podcast, Kenji Lopez-Ault, great food writer,
Deb Perilman, the Smitten Kitchen, also an incredible food writer.
They do an incredible podcast together called The Recipe,
and I heard them have this exact fight.
And Kenji made the point that if you cut a sandwich diagonally,
it actually maximizes the interior biteability.
That is, it reveals more interior sandwich than any other cut, according to him.
And that it's easier to eat because you can get the corners in your mouth more easily.
Deb cut the sandwich horizontally, put that on the internet, and was destroyed.
I think she said that she got 640 direct messages within five hours calling her a monster,
and the story was picked up by NPR and the Washington Post, and her life has never been the same.
You are also going to be on blast now.
Yes.
But why does this hurt you if he's eaten the sandwich that he likes?
It's just we found that 1%
non-compatibility.
Non-compatibility.
And it's just how can someone so,
how can that 1% be so monstrous?
Like, you know, that's my, like, you know,
couldn't you just like different music or something?
What's your favorite kind of sandwich?
Ooh, that's a tough club sandwich.
Got it, got it.
Traditionally.
What a short road you went down.
I know.
I was shocked.
I've never been that quick.
Colin, best sandwich?
I'm into Italian subs these days.
Italian subs?
You can't cut those diagonally?
No, you can't cut them diagonally, but you don't cut them horizontally either.
You don't cut them lengthwise.
Like, I hate to bring this up, Jesse, but I'm sure you've seen the burrito
cuts, the horizontal burrito
cuts.
No, I haven't seen those. I just saw something die
inside of Jesse. I'm very sorry.
I got to do a whole rest
of the show, man.
I'm sorry.
They take the burrito and they cut it down.
Yeah. Not a cross.
Like that? What do they eat it with a
spoon?
Basically.
Yeah. You haven't
look, Colin, I know where you're coming
from.
I agree. I agree.
grew up being a horizontal cut
person. That's just how my
mom and dad packed my lunches for me.
And when I first cut my sandwich diagonally, I thought
I am murdering my mother and father.
I am murdering the Hodgman family tradition.
And yet, I like it better that way.
I am team diagonal as well.
But you have not shown any damages. This does not affect your
sandwich. Everyone in life has to eat their own
And indeed, a sandwich is a very personal thing.
How you have your sandwich, how you cut it, how you eat it, how you enjoy it.
I think we have to leave it to Sam to enjoy his sandwich.
But I do order this.
You ever heard the story about the asparagus farmer?
Often.
Asparagus farmer knows you don't just cut the asparagus.
Willing-nilly where you want, the asparagus shows you where it wants to be cut.
Next time you have a sandwich,
Don't cut it.
Just sort of like break off a little bit.
Let it speak to you.
Find the natural fault in the sandwich
and then tear it apart like an animal.
And for you,
other one.
Colin.
May I defend myself?
No.
I just found me your favor, but go on.
The timer screen is already red, sir.
This is the sound of a gout.
Thank you, Colin and Sam.
Vancouver, are you ready for
Mega Justice?
Let's bring out our litigants.
Please welcome to the stage, Terran and Lauren.
Tonight's case, Nam de Broome.
Taryn brings the case against her sister, Lauren.
sister, Lauren. Taryn and Lauren
are both practitioners of
that king of Canadian sports
curling.
Yeah, that's right.
You heard me, hockey.
Take off, you hosers.
And fuck you, too,
five pinballing. Yeah.
Someone had to say it.
Someone had to say it.
But not you. But not me.
Jesse said it. You made me say it.
Anyway, Terran owns a controversial curling broom
And she named it an honor of Beyonce
But Lauren hates the broom
She won't even say its name, say its name
Who's right, who's wrong, only one can decide
Please rise as Judge John Hodgman enters the courtroom
And delivers an obscure cultural reference
Hey, man, all I did was cut his bulk mescaline for street sale and neglect to pay him.
Chris, on the other hand, crushed his head with a curling rock.
Bail of Jesse Thorne, please swear the litigants in.
Taryn and Lauren, please rise and 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 swear to abide by Judge John Hodgman's ruling,
despite the fact that he only likes that weird kind of bowling
they do at that one bowling alley he likes in Maine.
Possibly candlepin bowling, but I don't remember.
Well, let's see. It's not duck pin.
It's not duck pin with the rubber bands around it,
and it's certainly not five-pin bowling.
There are ten candlepins.
The king of bowling.
Darren and Lauren, you may be.
seated for an immediate summary judgment in one of your
favors. Can either of you name the piece of culture that I referenced
as I entered the courtroom?
Taryn, you go first. Sure.
I will go with
an interview with
Brad Gushu from the podcast
Broomgate.
Why is your
cultural reference more obscure than mine?
I'm a Canadian
curler. All right. Lauren, are you
a Canadian curler? Oh, very much so. So did you get my obscure cultural
reference? I don't think I did, but I prepared a guest, which is bed knobs and broomsticks
starring with Angela Lansberry. I love that guess. I love both of those guests, but all
guesses are wrong. Of the two, probably, Lauren, you were closer because it is from a movie,
and it involves brooms. It's from bed knobs and broomsticks starring Jason Stathor.
No, it was from a movie called Men Withes.
Brooms, a 2002 Canadian comedy that I have never seen, but was referenced on our one and
only other curling episode on Judge John Hodgman, I think it was episode 652. But in any case,
don't write me letters. In any case, you're both wrong, so we have to hear this case. Taryn,
you bring the case against Lauren. Is that correct? I do. And you are sisters, siblings. And
who is the older one? That would be me.
Okay, so would you like to start dominating the conversation now?
I'll let her go first.
Okay, well, tell me, one of you should tell me about curling,
and tell me all about curling and why it's better than hockey and five-bin bowling.
That would be for Lauren.
All right, Lauren.
Well, curling is a game played with 40-pound stones on a sheet of ice where you throw the stone down the sheet.
Your teammates sweep with a broom to control the speed of the stone,
and you try to get it to the end.
It'd be closest to kind of a bullseye at the other end.
Have you ever done the version of curling
that's a combination with the Canadian table game of crookanol?
I don't think I have.
Well, I guess one on you there.
I think it's called curl a croak.
Curlinole? I don't know what it's called, but it sounds fun to me.
All right.
And what you have, Taryn, in your hand, is a broom.
We're going to talk about this broom in detail in a second.
But first of all, you both curl, you're part of a curling league.
Looks like you're wearing some merch from your curling league.
What is the name of your team?
Our team is called the grippers.
Okay.
And a gripper is the sticky shoe, because you have a slidey shoe and a sticky shoe.
Got it.
Each person wears one of each type of shoe?
Yes.
Oh, okay.
So you're too big.
Do the two shoes start the same and you do something to one of the shoes?
Yes, you remove the gripper, and then you have the slider.
the sticky one. Got it. I would have presumed you to add something sticky to one of them.
And what positions do you each play on your... Like chewing gum, you nasty freaks.
I'm the third. Okay. Yeah, a very important position. Well, okay. Don't presume I know what you're
talking about. Thank you. Explain. I'm the Skip. The boss. The older, also known as the older sister.
That's correct. You tell, you tell the other, the other, the sweet
where and how to sweep?
That's absolutely correct.
By yelling at them.
Absolutely.
Okay, very good.
And the third is an important position I don't, I mean, I presume is it first and a second?
Yes.
The third in old-timey curling was called the vice skip.
So I like to call myself that sometimes.
Okay.
Guess what?
It's 2025.
Fair enough.
We now play the modern sport in curling.
In old-timey curling, people died.
They also use corn brewing.
which...
Corn brooms?
Yeah.
What are you talking about?
Like...
Like the corn cobs?
Like what you would sweep your porch with?
Like a corn...
Corn...
Does corn mean something else in British Corned?
I think it was made from the husks or something.
It's a corn broom.
Like a straw broom?
Yeah, correct.
Okay.
We call them corn brooms.
No, no, no.
I mean, look, I'm not an expert on broomology.
I'm sure there is such a thing as a...
of such a thing.
In the United States,
we prefer our corn
unswept.
It used to be played
with basically house brooms,
whatever you might,
whatever,
what,
you know about the asparagus farmer?
The people listening
won't know that one,
so forget that.
But,
so in old-timey times,
it would be played
with regular old house brooms,
but now there are special brooms
that are special made,
and you have a very,
special broom indeed with you,
Tarant. Why don't you raise it up
in a pose of victory
and show people
your broom?
I thought people were booing your broom already.
Judge Hodgman, they're horny.
They're horny for the special broom.
That's how it goes in no fun
city. You get horny for a curling broom.
People
might boo this broom, though.
because it's a controversial broom.
It sure is.
What makes it a controversial broom?
Well, basically, if you're very good at curling, you cannot use this broom because it makes you too good at curling and you can put the rock wherever you want if you sweep with it.
What about it?
May I hold your broom?
Absolutely.
Thank you.
It's very lightweight.
What makes it so handy at making things, whatever it is you were saying?
The fabric on it is like a special type of fabric
that essentially like carves into the ice
and you can direct the rock wherever you want
if you're very good and very strong and like very talented,
which we are not.
The broom is enhanced.
Yes.
Lauren, would you say that would the grippers ever use
such a broom in regular competition?
Oh, heck yeah.
We need every advantage we can get.
Oh, so you're not against.
No, I love the broom.
But it seems to me like, I mean, when you submitted this case, you called it a cheating broom.
It is.
If you're good, which we are not, yeah.
So, okay.
But, like, you aren't allowed to use it if you're good.
And because it's a cheating broom, you gave it a name.
You named it in honor of Beyonce, but not for Beyonce.
Correct.
What is the name of the broom?
J-sweep.
J-sweep.
As in J-Z.
Yes.
For example.
And Lauren Jay-Z did admit on the record
to the New York Times magazine
where the Judge Chan Hodgman column appears.
No.
No, no, no, no.
I see you Vancouver.
I see what excites you.
Curling Broome.
I traveled across a continent to be here.
Mentioned my column.
You're like, eh.
Lauren, Jay-Z did admit on the record to the New York Times magazine that he did indeed cheat on Beyonce during their marriage.
So it seems like the name is sort of appropriate.
Why are you against the name Jay Sweep for this cheating broom?
Yes, so I would love it to be on the record that I love my sister very much.
I'm so glad that she's doing this weird Canadian sport that not people are age, do not usually do.
Love it.
You're doing it too.
Yes, but I am weird.
That's okay.
Okay.
She's cool.
Who recruited whom into the curling lifestyle?
I recruited Taryn.
I've been watching for many years, like an old lady.
Oh, nice.
Yeah.
So the reason I am anti the name is simply that I can never remember what it is.
Because.
Jay Sweep.
Yes.
Sure.
Did you forget already?
What's the name?
Say its name.
Say its name.
You remembered.
I got it this time.
Okay.
Under pressure.
On a stage talking about it, so it's easier.
But when Taryn is like...
I feel like you're acting kind of shady and just calling it, baby.
Fair enough.
But when Taryn brings it out, I'm like, oh, it's your broom.
It's named after Beyonce.
It's beautiful.
It's Broomianca.
No, it is not.
It is some other name that I can't remember because who cares about J.Z?
It's Beyonce.
I mean...
Yeah, who cares about J.C.?
It's beautiful.
So your objections are you can't remember it.
Correct.
You think it's a bad name.
Correct.
You think that it dishonors Beyoncé because it honors her cheating husband.
Absolutely.
And it should be called brumiance.
Yes, or one of a few names that I've come up with.
What the record show that Lauren has produced a piece of paper.
May I just take a look at the evidence?
Please.
All right.
Judge Hodgman, can you confirm whether that's signed and dated?
I do confirm it.
Jesse Thorne, may I hand that to you for you to.
read in a moment. Yeah, all right, very good. Thank you. Have you heard some of the other names
that Lauren has suggested? I have not. They have been kept from me. In general, how do you feel,
do you feel precious about the name, J-sweep, or would you be open to a suggestion? I am open to it
if it's better. Right. Yeah, it would be. Now, I've only reviewed the names very quickly.
We're going to hear them in a moment, but does your older sister,
Taryn always try to push you around and rename things.
No.
Hang on a second.
Lauren, just in me this favor while Taryn tries to answer.
Stop staring at her with your arms crossed in a threatening way.
Yes, Your Honor.
No.
Lauren, look at me right here.
Look right over here.
Look over here.
Taryn.
Are you okay?
I will be, yes.
All right, very good.
Can you explain?
You're free to answer now.
You don't have to do that anymore.
That was weird.
I apologize.
She does not bully me or pressure me to name things I don't want.
She's very supportive of me.
We name a lot of things together, which is really nice.
It's nice.
What other things have you name?
together.
Yeah, what do you do on a sisterly naming date?
Like, it's like, hey, I haven't seen you in a couple.
I presume you don't cohabitate.
You have your own separate lives.
Not anymore.
Right, okay.
So do you ever call yourself something?
You want to go out today and name some stuff?
Get some brunch and name things?
Yeah, that sounds great.
Okay.
Like, what kind of things have you named in the past?
Together or separately?
Or what?
When we lived together, we named all of our kitchen appliances.
Here we go.
Different things.
Yeah.
One, our toaster was named Brother Caval for Battlestar Galactica.
Battle...
Wow.
No, no, no.
Do you know what?
It's okay if you don't want to applaud my column in the New York Times Magazine.
But when Vancouver doesn't applaud Battlestar Galactica, it's time for the robots to take over and destroy us.
This is B.S.G. Town.
Do you forget?
How soon they forget.
You named your toaster brother Cavill
like the character in Battlestar Galactica?
Yeah.
Oh, yeah, that's right, Jesse.
I forgot. Battlestar Galactica was filmed right here in Vancouver.
What other names did you give to your other appliances?
Our coffee grinder was Johnny Castle
from dirty dancing
because he's a grinder.
Lauren, do you remember any
that you're particularly fond of?
Yeah, our tea kettle.
We named Sandy Ryerson
from Glee, Stephen Tobolowski's character
from Glee.
I love Stephen Tobolowski.
He was on that show, Dicktown.
All right, all right.
And where are all of these kitchen appliances now?
probably the dump
this sounds like the saddest Pixar movie ever
they are at the recycling electronics
they all live together happily on a farm
near the asparagus fields
of British Columbia John when you got in from like
the immigration controls coming in in the Vancouver
airport yeah were you greeted with an enormous
wall-sized photo that set in
huge letters across the top,
welcome to Vancouver, British Columbia,
and then underneath it just had a bunch
of home appliances.
Yeah, I was. That was really weird.
Yeah, that was a trip.
Oh, how about that?
All right, so.
I just, I don't know what ceremonial purpose
they serve for your people,
but it's clearly something.
So,
and you agreed on these names
together, and no one was ever forcing
a name or whatever, and you never
had an issue with anything that Terran named
until this broom was named. Do you remember
his name? Yes, J-sweep.
See, you can remember. I was about to say J-Z.
Or J-Sweep.
Jay-sweep? Interesting.
Not on the list.
Well, let's go ahead down the list, Terran.
This is not my official ruling.
Keep an open mind. Let's
hear these ideas that Lauren has.
Alternate broom names.
One, broom yonse.
All right, we've heard it.
She doesn't cheat, but.
Two, brush a fierce.
Not sure I catch that reference, because I'm weird.
Three, stone loange.
That I get.
So longge.
Correct.
Stone launch.
Correct.
It's a broom.
And we use it to brush stones.
Well, you don't brush stones, you brush ice.
So the stone can slide.
over it. Do you really curl, dude?
Yes, but not well. Do you even curl?
Oh, I curl. Okay. Do you even curl, bro?
Number four, sir sweeps a lot.
I feel like that's been done to death a little.
Yeah. That's fair.
Five, broomie, which is that, it's spelled B-R-U-M-I. Is that after the poet Rumi?
Taryn can tell you who that's after.
It's one of Beyonce's children.
Ah.
Oh.
Okay. Honorable mention,
Broom Ivy.
Broom Ivy.
Mm-hmm.
The biggest response was Sir Sweeps a lot.
Because that, from the audience,
it was kind of a classic.
And it's also outside of the whole Beyonce genre.
No, it is not.
Her son is named Sir.
named after Seattle's own surmixelot?
That I do not.
Oh, okay.
Just an extrapolation.
Exactly.
Okay.
Is there something about the name Jay Sweep that offends you deeply or makes it hard for you to understand or remember the name?
I think it's not quite a joke.
It's not quite there.
It's not quite there.
And it doesn't offend me.
I did not sue Taryn.
She brought me to court.
I wouldn't, I would let her call it whatever she liked, but she brought me to the stage
and I need to defend my position, which is that I just don't remember it, because it's not,
it doesn't stick. It's not a sticky name.
It's not carefully crafted like stone longs.
It's a, it's a sliding name, not a sticky name.
Thank you.
All right, yes.
I understand.
Taryn, would you agree with me that none of Lauren's,
suggested names are as good as J-sweet?
Yeah.
Sorry, Lauren.
No, that's okay.
I like them.
I like them.
Don't get me wrong.
I don't think they're better necessarily either, but I will remember them because I wrote them.
Taryn, Lauren keeps claiming that she can't remember the name of your broom.
Yes.
Do you think this is genuine forgetfulness?
Truly, yes.
Is she forgetful?
in other ways? Should she be evaluated?
Not evaluated, but
there are words she just
can't remember sometimes.
Like what? Can you remember any of the
words she can't remember? I sure can.
There is a particular kitchen
utensil that is
sort of specific and weird
and she can never remember how to actually
pronounce the word.
And it's like a mixture of a spoon and a
spatula. I would call
it a spoonula.
I've never even heard of it.
It's a spoonula.
And what did you say, Lauren?
Spoonula.
Is this a Canadian thing that everyone has?
What other implements have you combined?
That was the most incredible, unanimous no.
I love that.
What other implements have been combined here in this nation?
That's a great question.
A fork and a little.
lint brush.
Toaster and a blender.
It's a to blend.
No, it's brother cavil.
Lauren, do you ever
have to use a broom as the skip?
Yes, so I use a broom to indicate.
I don't sweep with it.
That's for the lesser numbers on the team.
Whoa.
But I hold the broom
to show
where they should throw it.
It's an indicating brew.
It's a purely, purely ornamental, point in brew.
Very ornamental, yes.
Wait, so like the boss of the team's job
is to hold a broom and point at the place
the thing's supposed to go?
Absolutely.
I mean, it's drawn on the ice, right?
No.
It is drawn on the ice.
There's quite a lot of strategy.
They call it chess on ice.
Sure, they do.
They do.
They do.
Yeah.
When they say, when you say they,
you are referring to,
Oh, curling legend,
Curling legend Russ Howard, of course.
Curling legend, Russ Howard,
without any self-interest at all,
calls curling chess on ice.
But you do have to, when you point to it,
this is what I call my point-and-gabble.
Yes.
Like, it's not just that you want to get it
right in the house, necessarily.
You want to get as close to it,
but it might be that you want to knock
another person's stone out of the circle.
Or place a guard above the house.
Or place a guard above the house, Jesse.
like everyone knows.
Yeah.
So you would point like that,
here, why don't you show me how you do it?
I'd be happy to.
You could use a broom.
If we were going for a guard,
I would point above the circle like so,
and then I would indicate
the turn of the rock,
in turn or out turn.
Very nice.
Thank you.
May I have my gavel back?
See, that's the kind of respectful reaction
I've come to expect from you, Canada.
Do you know my gavel's name?
A whole gavel in its own right?
Was she nice to you?
He says you're fine.
Oh, good.
And what is the name of your point in broom?
So my broom does not have a name.
What?
My broom was inherited from my mom.
Or no, she bought it for me.
Sorry.
I forgot.
Our teammate.
Taryn, did you know that your mom was still alive?
News to me.
Our teammate has our mom's inherited broom.
my mom bought me my broom
and I just never named it
but it's not a working broom
it's ornamental
it doesn't need a name
do any of the other brooms
have names on your squad
Karen?
Our mother's
heritage broom
I gave it to
one of our teammates
the first or the second
you're the third
the second
the second okay
and she named it purple ivy
pink ivy
pink ivy it's pink
but it has a purple
no
Seems like no one can remember
All right, Taryn
What would you have me rule if I were to rule in your favor?
I would love for her to remember the Broom's name
And use it every once in a while
And Lauren, what would you have me rule if I'd rule in your favor?
I mean, I would love for Taryn to acknowledge
As all older siblings would like that I was right
My idea was better
Which, who knows if it was, but that's what I want
And to just be okay with me not remembering the broom.
I'll try, I'll do my best, but I don't know, I'm 41, the mind is going.
How dare you?
How dare you, child?
All right, I think I've heard everything I need to in order to make my decision.
I'm going to go into my secret chambers.
I'll be back in a moment with my verdict.
Please rise, as Judge John Hodgman exits the courtroom.
Judge Hodgman, we're team.
taking a quick break from the stage at the Hollywood theater.
And I am headed to the stages of theaters across this great nation.
By across this great nation, I mean in three places across this great nation.
Those places being, number one, New York City.
Number two, Los Angeles, specifically Pasadena.
Number three, Santa Cruz.
Why?
Yeah, and why?
Are you just going to different airports to check the pay phones, see if they had any quarters in them?
Those are the three homes of Bullseye with Jesse Thorne, which is,
celebrating its 25th anniversary this autumn.
I, of course, live here in L.A.
We produce the show here in L.A.
and L.A.ist in Pasadena as our home station,
will be performing at the Crawford there.
Santa Cruz is where the show started 25 years ago
when I was a student at UC Santa Cruz with my friends,
Jordan and Gene.
And New York City is the first place we ever did a live show.
And, in fact, we are performing at the first place
we ever did a live show, the People's Improv Theater,
in New York City. We have incredible lineups for all three shows, unbelievable lineups for all
three shows. Plus, we have a live streaming spectacular on October 9th that features 25
of my favorite people who I have email addresses for. It is 25 interviews in a row,
not old interviews, new interviews, 25 interviews in a row conducted by me over the course of
three hours on October 9th from 5 to 8 p.m. All of the
the information for all of that stuff is at maximum fun.org slash events. It is going to be an
extravaganza. And if you subscribe to Bullseye, you will get some of the classics from our 25-year
history over the course of this autumn. I'm so, so excited about it. John, in addition to all those
things, we also have a job opening. That's right, Jesse. We're looking for a new social media
strategist, someone to post stuff across all of our social media and interact and help our
audience connect with us. And we're really excited to be accepting applications now.
It's a half-time paid job. We'd love somebody with some expertise in social media management.
You can go to maximum fund.org slash jobs to find the job listing, maximum fund.org
slash jobs. It might be nice if you're in Los Angeles, but absolutely not necessary.
we're taking applications from around the country.
So maximum fun.org slash jobs is the place to go if you want to see that job listing.
And yeah, I think it's a, I think it's really cool fun gig.
So we're looking for somebody really awesome to do it.
Maximumfund.org slash jobs.
And while you're over there at maximum fund.org slash jobs, make sure I'll remind you to go over to maximum fun.org slash events.
Those big bullseye 25th anniversary shows are not to be missed.
They're going to be a lot of fun.
You know, from the Sound of Young America to Bullseye, Jesse Thorne interviewing people
has been a part of my weekly life, and I hope it's been a part of yours.
I wouldn't be here talking to you if Jesse hadn't interviewed me so long ago on Bullseye's
predecessor of the Sound of Young America.
And I'm so glad to be introduced to all of the people that Jesse has interviewed over
the years.
It's an incredible show, and it is worth celebrating, and even more so in person, maximum
fun.org slash events for all of the ticket links there.
Let's get back to the stage in Vancouver.
Taryn, how are you feeling about your chances right now?
I feel all right.
Why is that?
She didn't come up with very good names.
Yeah, I'm going to be frank.
These names really suck ass.
Wow.
Thank you.
Wow.
Lauren, how are you feeling?
Not as good, certainly.
I did think I...
Why is that? Because your name sucks.
I did think with...
the court's history of, you know, older siblings, telling younger siblings what to do, not
hugely favorable. But also, I can't remember. I don't know what to do about that.
Well, we'll see what Judge Hodgman has to say about all this in just a moment.
Please rise as Judge John Hodgman re-enters the courtroom and presents his verdict.
Lauren, I do feel for you. There are certain terms that I just cannot
remember, and it's not, there's no rhyme nor reason to why I can't remember the name for
one thing or another. I certainly can't remember the name of the thing you were talking about
before, the spoonacula. That's close. I hope never to see one. That's a combination of a spoon
and a specula. Frankly, I consider it a gift of my aging mind that I will never remember
what that thing is, so that when I see it, it'll just be like an episode of Westworld. That means
nothing to me.
It is not merely because I am old, indeed older than you, that I cannot place my mind
into recalling certain basic concepts or anything.
It's just like since I was a child, I've been able, unable to remember to this day,
what you call the, I keep wanting to say machine, but it's the vehicle.
that the letter carrier drives to drop off the mail.
Is it a postal bus?
It might be different in Canada.
It's something that I grew up with
and it was like a blue and white Jeep
with U.S. Postal Service on it,
and the steering wheel was on the opposite side
of what is typical in Canada and the United States
so that they could just reach over
and throw letters into mailboxes or whatever,
and I would see it around.
It goes, there goes the...
I can only ever say the words mail machine.
And I, to this moment, don't know what it's called, and I don't want to know ever.
That was my nickname in college.
My wife calls me, he calls me that to this day.
Excuse me, mail machine.
Can you come in here for a moment and bring the broom?
So I actually believe you when you say, for some reason, your brain cannot get purchase on the name of Taryn's broom.
Now, Taryn has the right to name her broom whatever she wants to name it.
It's her broom. It is like none other.
And you're the one who uses it.
You have a different broom.
That's your own.
You really don't have any right to say.
And I must say that your list of alternate broom names.
I'm not rude like my bailiff.
I'm just going to say none of them stood out as such a market improvement on that list of names that you suggested,
that I would overrule Terran's personal decision, except for one.
Because you're right.
Jay Sweep doesn't really track.
Doesn't really track.
Jay Sweep?
That's the name of the room now.
Sorry, sorry, Taryn.
Do you accept that?
I don't care.
That's how I'm ruling.
But I will also say that you have to give your broom a name,
your ornamental pointing, and you're going to love this, Lauren.
It's going to be called Stone Lounge.
I do love that, and I'll remember.
Because that makes sense, because you're showing people
where they should be launching the stone.
Perfect.
I know, it's terrible. It's terrible.
But it's curling. What are you going to do?
And your other team members can pick the names of their own room.
And Taryn, if you want to call it J-sweep, that's fine.
But I think J-sweep is a little bit.
It has a little more z-s.
Slightly more punchy.
It gets the Z in there.
Yeah.
Okay.
Well, anyway, that's how I rule.
I guess I technically rule in Lauren's favor.
This is the sound of a gavel.
Sorry, Taryn.
Judge John Hodgman rules that is all.
Taryn, Lauren, thank you for joining us on the Judge John Hodgman podcast.
A year or so ago, I uploaded a video.
demo for my recipe for tomato soup that you serve with grilled cheese sandwiches. At the end,
I cut the sandwiches in half for surfing, and it caused a minor commotion in the comments, such
as, this was the most amazing video until that shocking twist at the end. How does one even
cut a sandwich that way? You're supposed to cut grill cheese on the diagonal. My soul gassed
when I saw the horizontal cut. I pulled readers on the correct way to cut a sandwich, my way,
vertical, quadrants, or diagonal, and the overwhelming majority voted for diagonal. I have never been so
confused. By the way, one of my favorite comments was, can I vote for any way, but the way you cut it, Deb?
The next morning, I hid 620 DMs about the correct way to cut a sandwich in my inbox.
Somebody said, you hit a collective nerve we did not know we had, and do you eat your hamburger upside down?
It made it to NPR, the Washington Post, the Today Show. I don't know, maybe we needed to do
distraction from the news. For the next year, I was sent at least one sandwich-cutting
meme a day. People would highlight a passage in a novel that described cutting a sandwich
in half and send it to me. Apparently, Obama also feels that sandwiches should be cut on the
diagonal, but who asked him anyway? Anyway, the thing is, the smitten kitchen is a very
agreeable place. All opinions matter. I actually like it when you mess with my recipes and
report back about how it goes. I like it when you share your point of view. And yet on
sandwich gate, you are all completely, utterly wrong. Wrong, wrong, wrong. The correct way to
cut a sandwich is the shortest way across the bread, period. A longer cut. Your sandwich guts spill
out. Much ado has been made in my comments and emails about the fun of biting off the corner of
a triangulated sandwich cut, but the fun is short-lived. The corners are gone, and now you're holding
this like awkwardly, sandwich-shaped, trapezoid sandwich half, and I just,
just don't see the charm. So I believe the jury will find me correct, even though no jury so far
has. Thank you. Why are triangles better than rectangles for sandwich cuts? Well, the first one is a
visual thing. So a triangle is the shape that's going to give you the most view of the inside of a
sandwich. So when you have a square sandwich, a square piece of bread, cutting it from corner to
corner is the longest line you can cut, which means that when you open it up and look inside,
you're going to get the best view of the bite that is to come, the best view of the filling,
which is, you know, the point of a sandwich.
Moreover, when you're actually eating a triangle, there's a point of entry, a natural point
of entry on a triangle.
When you have a square cut, you end up with four 90-degree angles at the corners.
These are awkward to place into your mouth.
You've got to open up your mouth wide.
You've got to push your cheeks out to the sides to get the sandwich into your mouth,
whereas a triangle with its 45-degree corners
is they go into your mouth much more easily.
You can get a much bigger bite.
You don't have to open your mouth up as wide.
You don't have to choose where you're going to bite into that sandwich.
You don't end up with peanut butter and jelly all over your cheeks.
It's just a better shape in every way, shape, and form.
That's it for this episode of the Judge John Hodgman podcast.
Thank you to Reddit user Banjo Solo for naming the case in this episode.
make sure to follow us on Instagram at Judge John Hodgman.
We're on YouTube and TikTok at Judge John Hodgman Pod.
The Judge John Hodgman podcast was created by John Hodgman and Jesse Thorne.
This episode recorded by our friend Matthew Barnhart.
A.J. McKeehan is our podcast editor.
Daniel Spear is our video editor.
Our producer is Jennifer Marmer.
We'll talk to you next time on the Judge John Hodgman podcast.
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A worker-owned network.
of artist's owned shows
supported directly by you
