Judge John Hodgman - Paw and Order

Episode Date: June 2, 2016

Martha brings the case against her boyfriend, Chase. She says Chase is set on taking their cats outside on leashes, but she thinks they should stay indoors. Chase says the cats have expressed interest... in the outdoors and would benefit from a safe and supervised adventure. Plus the debut of our segment, "Jesse and Me Talk Good," with Merriam-Webster's Emily Brewster. Emily talks to Judge Hodgman and Bailiff Jesse aboutĀ Merriam-Webster's announcement that a hot dog IS a sandwich! Tickets for the Judge John Hodgman: Live Justice tour of the Northeast and London are on sale now! Check out the right hand side of MaximumFun.orgĀ for details.

Transcript
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Starting point is 00:00:00 Welcome to the Judge John Hodgman podcast. I'm bailiff Jesse Thorne. This week, paw and order. Martha brings the case against her boyfriend Chase. She says Chase is set on taking their cats outside on leashes, but she thinks they should stay indoors. Chase says the cats have expressed interest in the outdoors and would benefit from a safe and supervised adventure. Who's right? Who's wrong? Only one man can decide. Please rise as Judge John Hodgman enters the courtroom and presents the obscure cultural reference. Throw a stick and the servile dog wheezes and pants and stumbles to bring it to you. Do the same before a cat and he will eye you with
Starting point is 00:00:47 coolly polite and somewhat bored amusement. And just as inferior people prefer the inferior animal, which scampers excitedly because someone else wants something, so do superior people respect the superior animal, which lives its own life and knows that the puerile stick throwings of alien bipeds are none of its business and beneath its notice. Bailiff Jesse Thorne, please swear them in. 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.
Starting point is 00:01:25 I do. Do you swear to abide by Judge John Hodgman's ruling, despite the fact that as a cat owner, his brain is infected with a dangerous virus that leads him to take unreasonable risks, like a mouse that doesn't care about cats eating it? I do. I do. Very well. Judge Hodgman? Martha and Chase, you may be seated.
Starting point is 00:01:48 Jesse, I thought we were going to keep my toxoplasmosis out of this. Your toxoplasmosis is central to your ability to decide this case. I'm not even sure you shouldn't have recused yourself because of your almost certain toxoplasmosis. I do not deserve discrimination as a toxoplasmotic American. That's exactly the kind of immoderate thing that a person infected with toxoplasmosis, which is a thing that's inside of cats' leavings that infects the brains of mice and makes them easier to catch and eat, and also infects the brains of humanices and makes them easier to catch and eat and also infects
Starting point is 00:02:26 the brains of human beings to unknowable effect. Sorry, I lost track of that sentence. Yeah, I know. It causes us to speak in run-on sentences that go nowhere and to start podcasts. Semicolon. Martha and Chase.
Starting point is 00:02:43 For an immediate summary judgment in one of your toxoplasmotic addled brains favors can you name the person i was quoting i confess i don't know where this appeared this that sentence but it is a person who said it who is the person who said it this is an easy one for you guys because you don't even have to name the piece of culture just the person who said it. Who is the person who said it? This is an easy one for you guys because you don't even have to name the piece of culture. Just the person who said it. Now, Chase, you have been brought into this courtroom accused of cat abuse. So you have the right to guess first or make Martha guess first, thus gain information by her guess. That could be an advantage to you.
Starting point is 00:03:25 It would be. I will make her guess first. Yeah. Advantage Martha. Advantage Martha would be you guess first. Yeah. That's true. Go ahead.
Starting point is 00:03:35 Go ahead then. I will guess. I will give you the advantage, Martha. Was it Douglas Adams? Martha, the guess is Douglas Adams. Who do you think it is? Oh, I... And I'll give you a hint.
Starting point is 00:03:49 It's a who. It's a person. It's a who? Yeah, it's a person. It's a who. It's not, for example, that computer that plays Jeopardy. Watson. Of course, a guy who knows the name of the computer that plays Jeopardy
Starting point is 00:04:04 has to interject the name of the computer that plays Jeopardy has to interject the name of the computer that plays Jeopardy. Beep boop. Sorry. Yeah. That's your own Alan Turing test, Jesse. For know-it-all dudes. I'm just going to take a wild guess and say Winston Churchill. I don't know why.
Starting point is 00:04:23 Oh. Left field. Oh, my gosh. I think that's a pretty good guess, given that it's a quotation. He was famous for saying things. Yeah, that's my reasoning. That other people then quoted. Yeah, I would say not just saying things, but also for other people noting the things that he had said. Yeah, well, yeah. And he wrote a lot of things down, which people then read aloud.
Starting point is 00:04:46 True. But in this case, all guesses are wrong. Oh. The answer is, and I was going to do a whole, I had a whole thing planned, you guys, that was going to be so weird and probably you might've guessed it. And then I truly just did the laziest thing. I always try to avoid this. I just typed in quotes about cats, went to ye olde Goodreads quotes page and discovered this quote, which by the way,
Starting point is 00:05:21 when you learn who it is, it will not surprise you to learn that the quote is actually much longer than what I quoted. The quote goes on and on and on to a completely unsatisfying and evasive ending. And that quote is by H.P. Lovecraft, the famous author of horror and speculative fiction. I think that's why I said alien bipeds. That would have been the only clue. But there's another way you could have figured this out. And I'll tell you why. Because H.P. Lovecraft in here talks about how superior people like cats and inferior humans like dogs.
Starting point is 00:06:02 And you're like, which writer of speculative and horror fiction is a notorious racist? Oh, that's right. H.P. Lovecraft. Oh, yeah. You could have come around to it that way. But no, all guesses are wrong. And so we move on to the case here.
Starting point is 00:06:18 You know, I'll give you one more shot. Can either of you name what H.P. stands for? Oh. It's not Hewlett-Packard. That's your guess? Yeah, sure's not Hewlett Packard. That's your guess. That's my, sure. Yeah.
Starting point is 00:06:29 That's my guess. No, no. I'm telling you that's your guess. All right. That's my one guess. I don't have any. Martha.
Starting point is 00:06:33 I should know. Cause I have nerded out on HP Lovecraft before, but I can't think of it. I should. You know what it stands for? No. Harry Potter. Is that true? Yeah, that's true. Wow that true yeah that's true wow whoa it's not true
Starting point is 00:06:48 it's not true can we go back and just say it's true no well no i think it's howard phillips i don't want to look it up my understanding is that uh he doesn't actually sort of like harry s truman the s was just s the first two letters in his name are just HP and he's named after the sauce. Right. His actual middle name is White Power. All right, Martha and Chase, you guys are having a fight over a cat. Martha, you bring the case against Chase. What is Chase doing or planning to do that you cannot abide,
Starting point is 00:07:25 such that you require my intervention? It's actually two cats that he has decided he wants to take on adventures outside on leashes. But I maintain that they have a perfectly nice life in our apartment. And we have a large patio space for them that is actually pretty luxurious for a cat that they don't need the added dangers of being outside. It has been optimized for cats? Oh yeah. More so than probably is reasonable. How so? We have two cat trees for them. They have multiple things to climb, to sit on, tons of toys. All out on the patio? Yeah. Well, we have one cat tree on the
Starting point is 00:08:10 patio, one is inside, but we keep the doors open most of the time, so they run in and out. Where do you live? Los Gatos, California. Oh, okay. You can probably leave an upholstered cat tree outside for a long time without worry of rain. I mean, the good news is that you don't live in Los Peros, California.
Starting point is 00:08:27 Ah, all right. End of podcast. Well done, guys. That's all. That's all we needed. Thank you. I don't care who wins. Goodbye.
Starting point is 00:08:40 Thank you for catching that, Jesse. I can't believe I missed that one. That's why I need a bailiff like you, pal. Thanks, friend. I'm glad believe I missed that one. That's why I need a bailiff like you, pal. Thanks, friend. I'm glad to be here to ruin your show. I need another set of eyes, or ears as the case may be, on the possible puns that I'm missing. Los Gatos, California. And so you have kitted out, so to speak.
Starting point is 00:09:02 Oh, sound of me self-murdering you have kitted out the patio so these cats can go outside at all times yes that's about right it's a catio so yeah oh catio yes yeah i don't i deserve that please don't get catty with us you guys are you obviously and would you say that who is the architect of the catty oh you martha or chase um i'm the the prime architect i would we worked on it together but it was at my insistence martha is the architect i am the carpenter you both have brain controlling toxoplasmosis then oh for sure it's established all right but doesn't it work doesn't it work in women's favor, the symptoms? To the degree, so for those of you who don't follow what we were talking about earlier. And have never heard our show before. Very briefly, there is a weird microorganism called toxoplasmosis that has a very strange life cycle.
Starting point is 00:10:02 It wants to be inside cats. that has a very strange life cycle. It wants to be inside cats. Once it is inside cats, it reproduces by putting itself into the cat's feces, which then somehow attract mice, which get it into the mouse, which make the mouse more reckless,
Starting point is 00:10:22 which allow it to be caught by cats, and thus it gets back into the cat. And it can infect human brains, but with no effect that is scientifically proven upon the human brain, except with one major and meaningful exception, which is the development of the human fetus. That's why pregnant women tell me that they're not allowed to change the cat box. And yet there are some people who do believe that there are some symptoms there's some great proportion of humans who are infected with toxoplasmosis and there are some suggestions but i don't think i don't think the evidence is anything but anecdotal so far that for example uh it it makes women more flirtatious and also more likely to, uh, hoard cats. Oh.
Starting point is 00:11:06 Um, and then men, I don't know what it does for them other than maybe want to put cats on leashes. Isn't that right, Chase? Yep. I didn't want to do this until I got a cat. So it correlates. Yeah, right. You, you received some emanations from the universe saying, you know, it will be good.
Starting point is 00:11:20 Let's take these incredibly prim, smug, and beautiful animals and make them look dumb by putting them on a leash. Is there any more reason for doing it than that? I mean, I appreciate the desire to humiliate cats. It's something that I generally rule in favor of, but is there more to it than just that, Chase? Well, yeah. I think, one, it's a fun bonding thing for humans and their pets to just be together.
Starting point is 00:11:47 Did you say bonding or bondage? Bonding. Bondage would need two leashes. But I think it's kind of an enriching thing for them to get outside and get stimulated by seeing other things besides their little fenced-in catio. Based on what evidence do you believe this will be enriching and, in fact, that they need further enrichment? Are they writing you letters? Well, maybe not that they need because they express their needs
Starting point is 00:12:14 by meowing a lot and pointing at whatever they want. Is this that breed of cat that has human fingers? The human-fingered manx? They point with their little faces, their little triangle faces. So, yeah, they seem to want to go outside and see things, and they've escaped on occasion and then gotten stuck on the fence trying to come back in. So it seems like it's in their alley for what they want to do. So I'm just trying to facilitate that without them having to break out of the enclosure. So they're mounting escape attempts as it is?
Starting point is 00:12:51 Oh, yes, yes. How many times have they escaped the catio? Oh, multiple times, at least six or seven that I can recall. Over what period of time? This is about, we've been in this apartment for about a year, so it's been over a year. Would you describe your area as a dense urban area or a suburb, a desert suburb, or what? Mountain suburb, how about that? Mountain suburb, all right. So we do have an expert witness here today because while I am a cat behavior hobbyist. I am not a veterinarian or expert in this field, but I do know a veterinarian. Indeed, she was our veterinarian for our cat, Petey, who is no longer alive. I don't blame her for it. I think she's terrific. She's also the co-author of a book called Rabid, A Cultural History of the World's Most Diabolical Virus. And she's on
Starting point is 00:13:45 the line with us now. Monica Murphy, can you hear me? Hello. How are you? I'm good. How are you? Do you remember treating my cat Petey? Of course I do. Yeah. He lived a long time thanks to your care. And then the time came for me to have him professionally poisoned. As it does to us all. That's right. But thank you very much for your service. And you've heard, you've been listening along so far. Yes. And do you have any thoughts right off the bat before I start asking you questions
Starting point is 00:14:15 and directing the conversation? Well, right off the bat, I'm hearing about the escape attempts of these two cats whose names I don't think I've heard yet, by the way. No, cats don't deserve names. All right. All right, all right. I'll indulge this.
Starting point is 00:14:34 What are your cats' names? Mako and Logan. Mako and Logan. And are they both, what gender do they identify as? Mako's a little girl and Logan's a boy. Okay. And is Logan named after Wolverine? Yes.
Starting point is 00:14:50 Yeah. I figured. And he lived in Logan Square in Chicago. So that's my side of it. Yeah. And Mako is named for? The shark. I'm a fan of sharks.
Starting point is 00:15:01 You're a sharkologist? Sure. Yeah. Okay. Great. So there you go, Monica, I apologize. You've heard of Mako and Logan making escape attempts. Mako and Logan sound very fortunate indeed with their catio, but I was sorry to hear about the escape attempts that have already occurred since, to me, the main downside of any type of exposure to the outdoors is,
Starting point is 00:15:26 downside of any type of exposure to the outdoors is, in terms of the kitty's health, is that they do seem more likely to make escape attempts with increased access to the outdoors. And it's those unsupervised times outdoors where cats are most likely to run into actual dangers to their health and well-being. And the dangers out there in Los Gatos would include cars and maybe coyotes? I would expect there were some coyotes, maybe even cougars. Martha? Yeah, that's why it's named Los Gatos is the mountain lions. And we have heard coyotes too. So the large wildlife, even medium-sized wildlife like raccoons can do real damage to cats and are common in suburban areas and then the stray cats also um while usually the damage a stray cat can do to your you know tender house kitty is uh is limited you know sort of below the threshold of like
Starting point is 00:16:19 threatening it can cause big problems abscesseses, infections. And, you know, in general, we want to avoid those risks for our kitties. The risks of attacks by other animals, along with risks of vehicles and infectious diseases, will shorten the calf's lifespan so that the cats who have access to the outdoors tend to live only about a third as long as the cats who are indoor exclusive. Even if it's a catio that has been... Oh, no. No, the catio seems to offer the ideal solution to the cat's needs for outdoor type stimulation while still in the safe confines of the owner-controlled space. It's the unsupervised outdoor trips, which apparently the catio has on some level given rise to by sort of whetting the appetite of these kitties. Now, here in New York City, I seem to recall being cautioned many times by vets and other pet professionals that we shouldn't let our cats,
Starting point is 00:17:23 that cats should live indoors their entire lives. Is that advice that you have heard given? Absolutely. And if we want our cats to live healthy and live long, there's really, you know, no question. They should live indoors. And yet, isn't that not cruel to a cat to confine it to an indoor life? Does it not go against its hunter territory marking nature?
Starting point is 00:17:50 All animals need stimulation. I do think that New York pet owners especially seem to be very good at providing stimulation to the pets who are confined to often very tiny apartments. Sure. I mean, I know a lot of pet owners who give their pets their own Netflix account. That's right. That's right. There's a lot of creativity sort of coming up in these small spaces that we live in here in New York. What cat age would be appropriate for me to get my cat its own iPhone? I think here in Brooklyn, it's only around seven or eight. It's younger and younger, I think. Yeah. Okay. I interrupted you there for a pretty lame joke,
Starting point is 00:18:34 and I apologize, Dr. Murphy. You were going to say en las gatos? En las gatos, the opportunities sound even better for stimulating your cat without exposing it to all the risks of being outdoors. That catio is something New Yorkers only dream about for the most part. It sounds pretty great. And with the safety of a catio around your cat, a coyote becomes just another piece of stimulation, right? Another piece of enrichment rather than an actual risk to his health or well-being. So...
Starting point is 00:19:06 Well, you're talking about capturing a coyote and keeping it in a cage? Oh, no, I am not. To leave your cat? On the contrary. Our cats are in a cage. Oh, I see. And the wildlife sort of drift by, you know, making our cats' lives exciting without actually endangering our cats and loose gatos. Martha, do you give the cats access to the catio overnight?
Starting point is 00:19:27 We have. I've been kind of advocating more and more to bring them in. They kind of fight us on that. We'll wake up in the morning to them trying to pry open the bedroom window. They're trying to pry open the window? Yeah. Because a coyote got in there with them and it's trying to kill them? Oh, no. I mean, they're from the inside. They're trying to get back out. Oh, they're trying to get back out. Yeah, yeah.
Starting point is 00:19:46 Do they really want to be outside? Yeah, they spend most of their time out there. Why do they have access to a pry bar? Yeah, I know, right? Chase just lets them get away with anything. Came with the cats. Do you dispute, Martha, the number of escape attempts that Chase has estimated at six or seven?
Starting point is 00:20:02 No, but I think for each attempt we've made, we've fortified the cat. We're always, we try to be one step ahead of them, but then they make progress and they dig a little hole and then we block it. And I think we've been getting better. We just recently last week had them rebuild part of the wall on the side of our fence because they had
Starting point is 00:20:26 actually been pushing open the wooden bars and using it like a doggy door. It's almost as if they are sentient creatures that don't wish to be enslaved. Well, here's my other point on that. Every time they escape, they immediately are crying outside and scared and they've been attacked by other cats outside immediately they've gotten caught up on our neighbor's um porch roof thing crying and we've had to go rescue them so it's not they usually don't have fun yeah no cats cats want to get out every minute of the day until they're out there and they remember, oh, wait a minute, I forgot. I am a physical and emotional parasite that requires these humans to survive. Right.
Starting point is 00:21:08 Chase, I appreciate that you've established the danger of the catio. And here, I just noticed as I go through my docket here, entered into evidence is an image of the catio itself. And I see here a beautiful beast. This must be Logan. Yes. Yes. He looks like a cat that is the best at what he does, but what he does isn't very pretty. Comic book reference. Lounging atop his carpeted cat tree in the very beautifully trellised catio that is his domain and you can go to maximumfund.org to the judge john hodgman page and see this for yourself everyone
Starting point is 00:21:52 but i do see many many options for egress uh this is not a cat could climb out of this fairly easily if he or she wanted to so now that you've established the danger of the catio, how do you, how do you suspect, or how do you propose Chase that cat leash is going to solve the problem? Well, that's the thing. I don't actually know if it's going to solve the problem, but I'm willing to give it a try. What I'm hoping, and I'm not a cat behaviorologist, so maybe Monica can chime in and say I'm wrong. But what I'm kind of hypothesizing is that maybe if we give them some other options besides either chewing their way out or climbing out and pushing aside the chicken wire, then maybe they
Starting point is 00:22:37 would, you know, just come to us and we could just take them out of like little jaunts and then bring them back in and they would be satisfied. That's the hope. Dr. Monica Murphy, what do you think about on a gut level about cats on leashes? Do people bring them in to the veterinarian office? Do you have much experience with people waltzing their cats in on a leash? Every once in a while, a cat will come into the office on a leash, but usually they haven't succeeded in walking the cat to the office. Walking a cat when when it even sort of functions as walking, you know, as opposed to dragging or or just standing still with your cat in front of you on a leash. When the cats walk, you follow the cat where the cat wants to go. on a leash. When the cats walk, you follow the cat where the cat wants to go. I've never to date had the cat want to go to the veterinary office and arrive with the owner, you know, behind it
Starting point is 00:23:31 in any sort of, you know, what you might describe as walking the way the dogs do. And don't you think it is embarrassing to the cat? Many of us have seen, like, have caught a cat on a leash somewhere out, you know, in our travels, we've seen someone at one of the moments when the cat is actually upright on his feet and, you know, submitting to the harness, the owner holding the leash, you know, and, and it looks amazing. I mean, it looks like that's so fun. That cat's out on a leash. But it's best as sort of a still picture because the cat doesn't walk. And yeah, it perhaps compromises the dignity of the cat, but maybe particularly the owner. It compromises the dignity of the owner? Yes.
Starting point is 00:24:20 Because they're perverting nature. Indeed. Because they're aspiring to something that will never happen. Yeah. They're fooling themselves. Yeah. This cat, which is a stealthy, silent, and solitary predator, primarily nocturnal, is all of a sudden going to be trotting along. Right.
Starting point is 00:24:39 Next to its alpha, the thing it confuses for its pack leader, like a dum-dum, which is what a dog does. Right. It's a common fantasy, though. And there's this other kind of pet you can get that walks great on a leash. It's called an iguana. Are you sure, Chase, that this entire thing isn't just a complicated scheme to get your girlfriend to let you buy a parrot to carry everywhere on your shoulder? So it can tell me I'm right. Chase, what is your main motivation here?
Starting point is 00:25:15 Is it to please yourself by mastering a cat and getting it to do something that it does not want to do? and getting it to do something that it does not want to do? Is it to keep your cats safe by providing them extra stimulation? Or is it to just prove that you can do something that bothers Martha? It's a little bit of all of the above, but mostly I think it's actually, I kind of want to see what happens because I'm curious about this. I don't have any fantasies that this cat is going to walk with me like a dog. I know that's not going to happen. I'm just going to wind up following it around the courtyard,
Starting point is 00:25:53 following it around the apartment complex. But really, it's just I just want to see what happens. I want to see if this cat would actually be okay out on a leash. And by this cat, is there one particular cat that you feel is understimulated or you want to take them both out? So there's the one little one that has bonded with me and that's Mako. Yeah. So she seems to chew her way out more frequently than Logan, mostly because she's smaller and
Starting point is 00:26:17 she can slip through smaller holes, I think. Chase, have you considered maybe putting them both on a leash at the same time and then seeing if they'll pull you in a chariot of your own design? That seems like a nightmare just waiting to happen. What if you kept them in like a Carmen Miranda style hat? Oh, a cat hat? Yeah. I mean, you could put some fruit in there too, but.
Starting point is 00:26:38 Well, if there's anything cats love more than being on a leash, it's fresh fruit. You also want to take the cats to your office? No, no. I mean, you can dream about things, but I just don't think that that's possible. It says here Chase has repeatedly bought various harnesses and leashes and now is threatening to bring one of our cats to work and on errands. Is that a lie? That's in Martha's affidavit. Is that a lie? He has threatened these things affidavit is that a lie he has threatened these things it's it's something that i have threatened but only only in good fun uh just because you know when you're walking out the door the cat runs up to you and looks at you with those big manipulative
Starting point is 00:27:16 eyes and they just say you know take me with you but i just know that that can't be true i can't take them to the store i can't take them to work they don't want that they don't be true. I can't take them to the store. I can't take them to work. They don't want that. They don't want to go there. Can I say something? You may, please. I think the taking the cats on the leash and him now saying, oh, I just want to do it in the courtyard. I think for him in his mind, if he can get me to say yes to the courtyard, it's like first courtyard, then the world, you know, like cause he's talked about going on adventures. He sends me links to articles like woman quits job and goes on round the world boat ride with her cat, you know,
Starting point is 00:27:52 that kind of stuff. So I think once he gets the courtyard, the doors open. What is your job? Oh, um, I'm a software quality control engineer. So your job involves sitting at a desk at a computer or standing at a standing desk? Yeah. Do you enjoy it? I do very much. Do you fantasize about quitting your job and going around the world with your cat? No. And I think actually that's the, my main argument against doing all that is because that sounds like a lot of work. I really don't want to overburden myself with having to take this cat everywhere because it seems like just a really stressful hassle.
Starting point is 00:28:24 Well, why are you sending these articles to Martha? Because they got cats in them. I take it you guys don't have children? No, no, the cats are our children. I'm glad, Chase, that you're sending Martha these articles because it can be very difficult to find articles about cats on the Internet. I know. I know.
Starting point is 00:28:47 I know, she would be totally lost without you. She might not have found that one. Monica, what do you think about the safety, comparative safety of walking, bringing a cat into the courtyard or into the outside world on a harness to a place where it normally would never be compared to, a fairly well-secured catio. Have you treated any cats that have been injured while wearing a harness? I have not, not. And, and both, both seem like safe options unless they, you know, sort of give the cat an opportunity to escape. they, you know, sort of give the cat an opportunity to escape. And that's something I think that Chase and Martha will have to suss out themselves. The catio sounds like it needs some shoring up. And I have seen pets in harnesses that don't fit well and create a risk for escape. What kind of harness would you recommend?
Starting point is 00:29:44 One made specifically for cats. Right. Not just a dog collar. Or one of those backpacks that toddlers wear in airports. Yeah. None of those would be correct. Could you put a cat into a baby Bjorn? Would that be okay? No. Not okay. What about a cat in a stroller? Yeah, that's a good idea. They make strollers for cats. They do? Yes.
Starting point is 00:30:13 In your experience, because I know whenever I had to take Petey to the veterinarian, you or another one of your colleagues, or anywhere, and I would put him into the equivalent of a stroller for cats, a cat box, the cat did not like it at all. To what degree is putting a harness or even putting your cat in its own self-specialty designed cat stroller simply terrifying for the cat? I think that has to be judged on a cat by cat basis. Cat by cat basis. Yeah. Couldn't be more fair than that. Well, Dr. Monica Murphy, I know that you need to go, so I'll allow you to escape our cat, baby Bjorn, and go on your way. Thank you very much for joining us.
Starting point is 00:31:00 Oh, thank you. This has been fun. And once again, you are the co-author with your husband, Bill Wasik, of the book Rabid. And tell me about that book for one second. Rabid is a book that goes back to ancient times, looking at how rabies and animals and people have all sort of been in the mix together and the way rabies has affected our relationship with animals and sort of given rise to a lot of our best scary stories. And are you going to write a follow-up book on toxoplasmosis? Toxoplasmosis would be a natural follow-up to rabies, actually, but right now I'm interested in snakes.
Starting point is 00:31:40 All right. I will leave it on that remarkable tease. Thank you very much for joining us. And now I'm going to dig right back into the case. Thank you. So has anything that our expert witness said, Martha, changed your opinion about Chase's plan? Actually, no. Has it made you less concerned or are your concerns the same? I think my concerns are the same because I've read up on it and I feel like it's unnecessary to bring that extra risk. Maybe if the cats didn't have the catio, I'd understand that they need some more stimulation, but I feel like they have plenty, more than most indoor cats. And I just feel like it's an extra risk.
Starting point is 00:32:22 And I just feel like it's an extra risk. And what are you specifically afraid of that Chase will be going on an adventure in the courtyard and a coyote is just going to run through there and grab that cat and move on? That would be horrible. Yes. I mean, the other stray cats, I could I could see them getting scared and running up a tree and then we can't get them down and we have you know redwoods in our courtyard so that wouldn't be good you have thousand-year-old massive redwood trees yeah there's the small transplant ones but yeah i mean they're they're redwoods so yeah so if your cat went right up that thing i would have to live there forever i know right yeah so but that's the point of having the leash, right? That's why you hang on to the thing. Do you think Chase is at Butterfingers when it comes to hanging on to a cat harness?
Starting point is 00:33:09 It could happen. I could see the cats getting away from him. You also send along some evidence, Martha. It was an article in the New York Times by a woman who trained her cat to go out on a harness. I think here in Brooklyn, I think in Prospect Park. And she was so trained, or she consulted her own expert witness, whom I chose not to have on this program, because I didn't hear about him until a few minutes ago. A animal planet personality cat whisperer called Jackson Galaxy. Yeah, Jackson.
Starting point is 00:33:43 And we'll have a link at MaximumFun.org on the Judge John Hodgman page to this video, which recounts the author, Stephanie Clifford, trying to teach her cat to walk on a harness and being counseled by Jackson Galaxy. Suffice to say so far that Jackson Galaxy looks like the Guy Fieri of cat whisperers and says things like,
Starting point is 00:34:04 I am very into the Guy Fieri of cat whisperers and says things like, I am very into the concept of the raw cat. And Jackson Galaxy believes that cats really want to do get out there and explore, but it takes a long time based on this video that I watched that you sent, Martha. It takes a long time to train cats to feel comfortable on a harness and not just sit down and panic outside and freak out. Yeah. So I agree that if it were to happen, it would be many months of training. Do you think that Chase is capable of that sort of long disciplined training? Because Stephanie Clifford's cat, whose name I don't recall, but we'll just say that his name is Toxoplasmosis. She recounted months of short training sessions
Starting point is 00:34:53 with very careful, positive rewards and treats and not pushing too hard before Toxoplasmosis would go outside at all and feel comfortable even for just a few minutes. Do you think, Chase, that you are capable of engaging in that kind of disciplined training behavior? I believe if I make a hobby out of it, yes. So why do you want to make your hobby terrifying your cat? Well, it's not that I want to terrify the cat. It's just that I want to give her the cat. It's just that I want to give her the opportunity. It's just one of those things.
Starting point is 00:35:28 If it really seems super, super terrifying and she's really, really not into it, then I'll give up. It just sounds like Mako is the only one you're concerned about. You don't care about Logan at all. No, I really don't. I care about him. I love him. But he's not the one who follows me around and meows at me all day. Gotcha.
Starting point is 00:35:47 That's terrible. I agree. And I also feel like I've heard enough in order to make my decision. So I'm going to climb to the top of this carpeted judge tree I have in my chambers and curl up for a little while and give this some thought. And then I will return with my decision in a moment. Please rise as Judge John Hodgman exits the courtroom. Chase, how would you feel if you were outside walking down the beautiful wooded streets of Los Gatos, California, and you had a cat on a leash? How would I feel? Yeah, like let's say you saw a friend or a leash? How would I feel?
Starting point is 00:36:25 Yeah, like let's say you saw a friend or a cool kid from school. So I'm 14 again. All right. I would feel fine. I mean, we entrap these animals and, you know, put leashes on them. I don't really see the difference between cats and dogs that much. Martha, how would you feel if your live-in boyfriend with whom your social status is deeply intertwined were walking down the streets
Starting point is 00:36:53 of the small town in which you live with a cat on a leash and was known to all of the children of Los Gatos as the cat leash guy? Yeah. It's not my main concern uh more it's their safety but yeah oh i thought you meant that you just had other bigger concerns about james well i was gonna say i was it's not the like it's it would be one of his many quirks it's up there with the toe shoes. Oh, geez. Okay, I'm done. I'm done. No, no, no. I'm done. Throw that evidence out, please.
Starting point is 00:37:30 That was deeply prejudicial. Well, we'll see what Judge John Hodgman has to say about all of this when we come back in just a second. You're listening to Judge John Hodgman. I'm bailiff Jesse Thorne. Of course, the Judge John Hodgman podcast always brought to you by you, the members of MaximumFun.org. Thanks to everybody who's gone to MaximumFun.org slash join, and you can join them by going to MaximumFun.org slash join. The Judge John Hodgman Podcast is also brought to you this week by our pals over at Made In. Jesse, you've heard of Tom Colicchio, the famous chef, right? Yeah, from the restaurant Kraft.
Starting point is 00:38:26 And did you know that most of the dishes at that very same restaurant are made with made-in pots and pans? Really? What's an example? The braised short ribs. They're made-in, made-in. The Rohan duck. Made-in, made-in. Riders of Rohan.
Starting point is 00:38:36 Duck. What about the Heritage Pork Shop? You got it. Made-in, made-in. Made-in has been supplying top chefs and restaurants with high-end cookware for years. They make the stuff that chefs need. Their carbon steel cookware is the best of cast iron, the best of stainless clad. It gets super hot. It's rugged enough for grills or an open flame.
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Starting point is 00:39:38 That's M-A-D-E-I-N Cookware.com. The Judge John Hodgman podcast is also brought to you this week by the folks over there at Babbel. Did you know that learning, the experience of learning causes a sound to happen? Let's hear the sound. Yep. That's the sound of you learning a new language with Babbel. We're talking about quick 10 minute lessons crafted by over 200 language experts that can help you start speaking a new language in as little as one, two, three weeks. Let's hear that sound. Babbel's tips and tools are approachable, accessible, rooted in real-life situations, and delivered with conversation-based teaching. So you're ready to practice what you've learned in the real world, and you get to hear this sound.
Starting point is 00:40:24 It's not just like a game that pretends to teach you a language. It's also not a rigid, weird, hyperacademic chore. It is an actually productive app that actually teaches you while you are actually having a nice time. And you get to hear the sound. Here's a special limited time deal for our listeners right now. Get up to 60% off your Babbel subscription, but only for our listeners at babbel.com slash Hodgman. Get up to 60% off at babbel.com slash Hodgman spelled B-A-B-B-E-L dot com slash Hodgman. Rules and restrictions apply. Hodgeman. Rules and restrictions apply. Please rise as Judge John Hodgeman re-enters the courtroom.
Starting point is 00:41:17 You may be seated. Now, of course, during my deliberations, I require absolute solitude, and that is why my chambers are completely soundproof. I hear nothing of what you discuss when I'm outside of the courtroom. And certainly nothing that might prejudice me against one or the other litigants beyond what I've heard during the hearing itself. But I did have one point of curiosity that I feel I should have followed up with before, and I'm going to ask it now. Do either one of you, Martha or Chase, wear sneakers with toes in them ever? You mean like do we have toes on our feet inside of our sneakers? Because I think that's true for everyone, Judge. Excuse me.
Starting point is 00:41:55 Martha, would you answer my question? I do not wear shoes that have toes. You know what I'm talking about, right? Oh, I do. Have you ever seen them? All the time, yes. Do you know anyone I'm talking about, right? Oh, I do. Have you ever seen them? All the time. Yes. You know anyone who owns them and wears them? I do, sir. And who would that be? That would be Chase. Oh, Chase, you wear toe shoes on your paws? Yes, yes, I do. What do you get out of that? Comfort, judge. They're very, very comfortable. And you don't mind that you are embarrassing your beloved one every time you wear them? Not in the least.
Starting point is 00:42:31 I know that there are people who love those things, but I think it speaks a little bit to motive and to what degree you are willing to entertain loathsome eccentricity for your own comfort and amusement, via toe shoes or walking through Los Gatos with a gatos on a leash. It makes me wonder whether this cat-leash endeavor is not indeed the act of ownerly altruism that you make it out to be, and more an attention-getting personality affectation. You will say no, but I will forever wonder. Forever. And will it affect my judgment? You bet it will. Because you know that those cats don't belong on those leashes or harnesses or whatever they are you know on a basic level it is not a one-to-one correspondence as you say chase
Starting point is 00:43:34 it is not we put dogs on leashes thus we put cats on leashes you might as well put a goldfish on a leash. By that logic, they're different creatures. A dog is a beautiful, dumb, dumb, loyal pack animal that mistakes you for its leader and wants to run with you, wants to range over terrain with its friend who keeps him safe in numbers and gives him dried up pig snouts as a snack. A cat doesn't like you. No matter how much Mako is meowing at you and pointing with her little nose, she's tricking you. I've read an article. I don't remember where. I'm not going to search it up now. Essentially pointed out what we all know and our gut is true. Cats are not loyal members of your pack. They are smug parasites who have tricked you into taking them in and giving what they want.
Starting point is 00:44:34 And yes, it's transactional. They'll give you a little nuzzle. They're going to just as soon tear your eyes out with their claws and eat your sweet eye meat if they had to. And I say that as a cat fancier. No, I don't think cats would actually do that. I think that cats do bond with their humans in a way that is not merely parasitic. But it doesn't change the fact that behaviorally, it doesn't take a Jackson Galaxy to remind
Starting point is 00:45:04 you that cats are solitary hunters and the fact is that the behavior that you are trying to engender in them uh is unnatural uh completely unnatural because you think that you might be giving them the opportunity to explore and stimulate through hunting behavior. But imagine if you were a solitary hunter and there was some huge ape following you around all the time, talking on his phone, he would be like, please get out of here. I'm trying to eviscerate a bird up in here. to eviscerate a bird up in here. And what's more, I should point out that for all of Jackson Galaxy's advice on this video, and as assiduously as Ms. Clifford the journalist followed it,
Starting point is 00:45:57 after months of attempting to train the cat to walk around on the streets of New York, to walk around on the streets of New York, ultimately the effort failed. And the cat was simply too scared to do anything once it was not merely in an unfamiliar location surrounded by all sorts of extra stimulus that it had never seen before, but also it was tied up to something and could barely escape if it tried. But also it was tied up to something and could barely escape if it tried. The solution that Mr. Galaxy and Ms. Clifford attempted to present as a happy ending to this experiment is that she discovered that if she took her cat in a cat carrier to a relatively secluded part of the park and put the cat on a snug-fitting special cat harness, park and put the cat on a snug fitting special cat harness that she could get maybe a good 15-20 minutes of outdoor time with the cat before a dog or jogger passed or a leaf fell and the cat was
Starting point is 00:46:55 freaked out and wanted to go home. And that, I have to say, ended up being an okay solution for even me. Because the truth is, it is utterly unnatural to put a cat in a harness, but no more unnatural than to take a cat and imprison it in your home. When we keep animals as companions, we are naturally breaking the order of nature. And the truth is, it's just a measure of how far we are willing to push and pervert nature for our own pleasure and, one hopes, the pleasure and well-being of the animals that are in our care. I think it sounds to me like you have two two pretty happy cats who are going through their natural rebellious phase of trying to sneak out and get out. And I do believe that them getting out of that catio is not a good thing because it will end up in tragedy, meowing tragedy eventually. And that while the catio itself in theory is terrific you need to
Starting point is 00:48:07 really really really escape proof it if you want to have any peace of mind with regard to leaving the cats out there as much as possible and nighttime this isn't i'm not talking about chase for the moment here but for both of you nighttime nighttime, sorry, those cats got to come in. I live in Brooklyn, New York, and we have a little outdoor space with a sliding door on the ground floor of this apartment building we live in, in a very urban, dense area. the screen door was slid open by a raccoon and the raccoon walked into our living room, looked around and walked out. And then he poked his head back in and said in English, just so you know, if those cats can get out, I bet you something can get in. So bring them in at night. But none of that has any bearing,
Starting point is 00:49:06 ultimately, on Chase's desire to take Mako and travel the world with her as his new love and leave you and Logan behind. None of that has any bearing on his desire to take Mako outside on a leash or a harness. That will not solve the problem of their safety within the catio. That is a different issue that you have to resolve and resolve it you shall. And the real question is whether he should be allowed to do this at all. And my, I have to say that while it was your evidence that led me to this Jackson Galaxy video, Martha. And as hilarious as I found Mr. Galaxy to be, and maybe he's a listener to the podcast, I just, dude has an interesting facial hair array and a bunch of tattoos and wears a bandana over his head. And it was not what I was
Starting point is 00:49:57 thinking of when I thought of a cat behaviorist, but good for him. He's living his dream. He did manage to get this cat and this owner to a happy medium where they could enjoy the outdoors together in a controlled environment with a very careful cat harness that worked for them. And I think that it is worth exploring. anyway. I think that just as the cats won't stop poking their head out of the catio until they learn that the outside is not someplace they want to be, and they will eventually, I suspect. So Chase cannot be contained by the mental catio that you're trying to keep him on. The dude needs to put Mako in a harness and walk around the courtyard. It just needs to happen. He needs to get this out of his system. Whether this is coming from a place of altruism for the cat, a desire to start a new life with this cat without
Starting point is 00:50:57 you, or toxoplasmosis whispering to his very soul. I think that he needs to go through the experiment and should perhaps consult the video and the article that went along with it and do his very best to bring that cat out into the courtyard and the courtyard only, and then observe whether Mako truly wants to be with him all the time or is just an animal that goes by its own urgings that once it's outside of its comfort zone is going to freak out and scratch him. And also, I think that if he is going to do this, he deserves the full weight of public opinion, which is to say that while he is following this poor cat,
Starting point is 00:51:41 this poor terrified cat as it tries to hunt, Martha, you have to follow him and take many, many photographs and document this. Document this man walking a cat in your courtroom, wearing his toe shoes and saying, this is who I love. And we'll put that on our website and on all of our social medias. I don't think you can ask for greater justice than that. This is the sound of a gavel. Judge Sean Hodgman rules.
Starting point is 00:52:14 That is all. Please rise as Judge John Hodgman exits the courtroom. Chase, how do you feel about the case? I feel like I won. That's exactly what I was looking for. I want to at least try the experiment to I feel like I won. That's exactly what I was looking for. I want to at least try the experiment to see what the cat wants. You just want to do some experiments on your cats that you love? Exploratory cat surgery. Got it. Martha, how do you feel?
Starting point is 00:52:39 I respect his decision, but my anxiety level is very high already. But you're going to be there while he's doing this. I know. I know. Well, maybe. You know what? This is good. You're going to work through something.
Starting point is 00:52:54 Yeah, maybe. You know, if you're scared of it, maybe you need to do it. What happens if this goes too far? What if he wants to take the cat out of the courtyard and go on these adventures? He's going to have to petition me. Okay. Okay. So we only have an allowance for courtyard experimentation.
Starting point is 00:53:14 Yeah. I'm sorry if that wasn't clear. That's exactly what I'm saying. All right. And I concede to that. That makes sense. Let's be honest. One way or another, he's getting an iguana.
Starting point is 00:53:25 Hey, been there. I'm done another, he's getting an iguana. Hey, been there, I'm done. No more iguanas for me. Very wise you were to withhold that information, even when Jesse was prompting you with it. Until after the verdict had been laid down.
Starting point is 00:53:40 Martha, Chase, thank you for joining us on the Judge John Hodgman podcast. Thanks, guys. Thank you. Thank you very much. Hello, teachers and faculty. This is Janet Varney. I'm here to remind you that listening to my podcast, The JV Club with Janet Varney, is part of the curriculum for the school year.
Starting point is 00:54:04 Learning about the teenage years of such guests as Alison Brie, Vicki Peterson, John Hodgman, and so many more is a valuable and enriching experience. One you have no choice but to embrace because yes, listening is mandatory. The JV Club with Janet Varney is available every Thursday on Maximum Fun or wherever you get your podcasts. Thank you. And remember, no running in the halls. Trying to put the name of the podcast there? Yeah, I'm trying to spell it, but it's tricky. Let me give it a try. Okay. If you need a laugh and you're on the go, call S-T-O-P-P-P-A-D-I. It'll never fit.
Starting point is 00:54:52 No, it will. Let me try. If you need a laugh and you're on the go, try S-T-O-P-P-P-D-C-O-O. Ah, we are so close. Stop podcasting yourself. A podcast from MaximumFun.org. If you need a laugh and you're on the go. Well, Judge Hodgman, it's time for our brand new all grammar and language segment, which is called...
Starting point is 00:55:22 Jesse and Me Talk Good. Exactly. And I'm thrilled, Jesse, to report that me and you are joined by the Judge John Hodgman official lexographer and editorial staff member at the Merriam-Webster Dictionary and frequent guest on the Judge John Hodgman Show, Emily Brewster from Western Massachusetts. Hello, Emily. Hello. Now, did I get all of your qualifications correct, or how badly have I gone wrong so far? Well, I'm technically a lexicographer.
Starting point is 00:55:52 What did I say? Lexographer, I think. It's okay. It's not a common word. Judge Hodgman, a lexicographer is someone who studies early 90s Lexuses as they appear in hip hop lyrics. Oh, well, that would be you then, Jesse. I was referring to Jesse, Emily. But we also have the great lexicographer, Emily Brewster. And that is someone who studies words and writes about them using words, right?
Starting point is 00:56:18 I write dictionary definitions. And Emily, it's been a little while since you've been on the podcast. So just to remind you are my friend and neighbor out in my part-time hometown region of Western Massachusetts. We met via our first rendezvous at the Rendezvous Bar and Grill in Turner's Falls, Massachusetts, right around the corner from where we're performing at the Shea. We're performing at the Shea Theater this fall at Judge John Hodgman Live Justice. We're coming out to Western Mass. Will you be there, Emily?
Starting point is 00:56:52 I will be there. I'm very excited. Me too. Every time I say me now, I get nervous. Because Emily knows all about words. words. And in fact, my very favorite claim to fame of almost anyone I've ever met is Emily's in that she discovered a word that was not in the dictionary and put it in the dictionary. And that word was slash is A, the letter and word A. Correct, Emily? Well, I put in a new sense of the word. That's right. The word itself had been in many dictionaries for many, many years, but there was a missing sense of the word. And that missing sense was? The definition is
Starting point is 00:57:29 used as a function word before a proper noun to distinguish a referent from a former, usual, or hypothetical condition, as in a triumphant Ms. Jones greeted her supporters. So the ah there tells you that she's not always triumphant, that there was a change of state in her supporters. So the ah there tells you that she's not always triumphant, that this was a there was a change of state. That's fantastic. And a triumph for you. And let me just say now, though, a betrayed and furious Judge John Hodgman now faces his former friend, Emily Brewster. Now, this revolves around the big announcement that the Merriam-Webster dictionary made over social means over the Memorial Day weekend to say a hot dog is the dictionary definition of a sandwich or the dictionary definition of a sandwich should include a hot dog. I don't know how to put it, but you understand what I'm saying, right, Emily? You said a hot dog is a sandwich.
Starting point is 00:58:22 Yes, indeed indeed we did. And you talked about this already with summertime guest bailiff Monty Belmonte on his show, Monty in the Morning on WRSI, The River there in Northampton, Massachusetts. I have not listened to that segment. Jesse Thorne. Yes. You're my only friend. That's true. Because Emily and the Merriam-Webster dictionary betrayed me and went against settled law. And then Monty scooped this podcast and talked to Emily before I did. What a monster. But I love you both. And I'm willing to hear why you, aside from
Starting point is 00:59:01 personal vendetta, which I think must be obvious, what is the reasoning behind this subversion of Judge John Hodgman's settled law? Well, I have to say that when I first considered whether a hot dog was a sandwich, my gut instinct was the same as yours, that a hot dog is not, in fact, a sandwich. But as I examined what a sandwich truly is... That's okay. That's all we need. We got our quote. Great. Thank you very much. Thank you, Emily. Okay, good. Thanks we need. We got our quote. Thank you very much. Thank you, Emily. Okay, good.
Starting point is 00:59:26 Thanks, Emily. Shut your pie hole. Thank you. Go ahead. But when I examined the evidence and looked at how the word sandwich is defined and looked also at early uses of the word hot dog, it became just completely clear to me
Starting point is 00:59:42 that a hot dog does indeed qualify as a kind of sandwich. And let's look at the Merriam-Webster definition of sandwich, shall we? Sure, sure. I mean, look, you and I both agree that there is something puzzling about this question that it at least causes pause among right-thinking people before they leap to what I consider to be an incorrect conclusion that a hot dog is a sandwich. But you're only going from, you're starting with the premises that are given to you and specifically working within the context
Starting point is 01:00:16 of the Merriam-Webster dictionary. That is right. Now, Emily, did you write this article listing 10 sandwiches? I did. Boy, I didn't know it was going to be that bad. You single-handedly did this. Oh, boy. So in the article, you cite, obviously, the Merriam-Webster definition of sandwich, which I have found using the internet at merriam-webster.com. Was someone squatting on merriam-webster.com?
Starting point is 01:00:45 You had to put in that dash in there? Or hyphen? Would that be a hyphen or a dash? That'd be a hyphen. That would be a hyphen. I'm wrong again. Two pieces of bread with something such as meat, peanut butter, etc. between them. Obviously, that's not a hot dog.
Starting point is 01:01:00 Two or more cookies, crackers, or slices of cake. Whoa. With something between them. I'd never heard of that. Well, you've heard of a sandwich cookie. Yeah, no, I gotcha. Like an Oreo. Yes. I mean, that's a brand name we have to use because it's descriptive. So an Oreo is a sandwich. A sandwich cookie. I don't think it really qualifies as a sandwich. Well, according to your definition, it does. We have to conclude because a simple definition of sandwich, two or more cookies,
Starting point is 01:01:31 crackers, or slices of cake with something between them. Yes. And sometimes things are, the word sandwich is used to refer to such items. And that is why that definition is there. Right. Okay. So full definition of sandwich, this is the operable one, two or more slices of bread or a split roll having a filling in between, or one slice of bread covered with food that would be an open-faced sandwich. Correct. So Emily, do you understand why I came to the conclusion in my Judge John Hodgman column net in the New York Times Magazine and here on this podcast as to why a hot dog is a singular foodstuff deserving of its own sweet,is definition outside of the bounds of sandwich? I believe that your reasoning has to do with whether a hot dog can be appropriately
Starting point is 01:02:18 and kind of in a standard sense, cut in half and be eaten that way. That's basically, that was to me the test. And it was essentially, A, it's plain on its face that the hot dog, which is a hot dog, whether or not it's in bread, and you acknowledge this, that the hot dog has a culinarily distinct history from the sandwich as derived from the Earl of Sandwich, that inveterate gambler and hand eater, eater with hands. And that too, that there is something strange about a hot dog that makes everyone wonder what it is. Now, if you decide that a hot dog is a sandwich, then you can essentially say, what does it share with the concept of sandwichness and what does it not share? And the thing that it does not share to me is that anything that we call a sandwich may be reasonably cut in half and shared. That
Starting point is 01:03:11 is part of an essential sandwichness. And a hot dog, if you cut it in half, you look like a weirdo. That's what it comes down to for me. Well, I do see that point. I do not see it as an essential quality of a sandwich. I see it as a feature of many sandwiches, but not as an essential characteristic. I think of also a hot dog and a sloppy joe as also being kinds of sandwiches, and you certainly
Starting point is 01:03:35 cannot cut a sloppy joe in half. Yeah, I don't, you know, but I, by my own logic, I would have to say that a sloppy joe is not a sandwich. You can't cut a sloppy Joe in half? I think you could. Yeah, you totally can. I've cut many sloppy Joes in half and make them on toast.
Starting point is 01:03:52 And how did that go? Well, I mean, it's sloppy. Yeah. And you have to change your name to Joe. Yeah. But I had already changed my name to Joe to chew my favorite brand of bubblegum, Bazooka. So it was not a problem. But you had to have known, Emily, that maybe this was part of your design, your weird design,
Starting point is 01:04:14 that this was going to get a lot of attention and rile up a lot of people, including your friend. I didn't realize that it was going to be such a provocative piece. Really? No. This has been a big part of my life for a while, but set aside my reaction to it. Have you been getting a lot of response? I believe that we have been getting a lot of responses. I've honestly have been staying kind of outside of it, just going back to writing my usual
Starting point is 01:04:44 definitions and keeping my nose in my books and in the evidence that I see. Emily, hold on. What other major cultural matters of contention have you weighed in on in the dictionary and then claimed you didn't know were controversial? Like, does Merriam-Webster have a position on Yankees versus Red Sox, for example, that we should know about? Well, we are in western Massachusetts, so I'll just leave it at that. When you look up Han shot first in the dictionary, do you see a picture of Greedo shooting first just to confuse people?
Starting point is 01:05:26 I don't even know what that means. I know. I know. I feel so bad for even saying that. Good for you, Emily. Good for you. You know what? You know, if you the fact that you looked at the evidence that you had before you in your own dictionary, which is which is our dictionary of reference here on the Judge John Hodgman podcast and came to your own conclusion, put it out there and then walked away.
Starting point is 01:05:45 I really admire you just walking away from that explosion in slow motion without looking back. Yeah, just dropped a full-on truth bomb. Just pow, pow. And what did you talk about with Monty? Did you guys just have a long laugh at my expense? No, certainly not. He's on your side.
Starting point is 01:06:00 He's completely on your side. But I have to say that I actually came into the office today and did a little bit more research and looked at the historical evidence in our files and became even more certain of the position that I had taken. And that evidence is in the form of a number of examples from 1901 into the 1950s of the phrase hot dog sandwich being used. You and Dan Pashman of the Sporkful podcast should go to Rutz Hut together and laugh at my expense. I've heard that before. I'm just going to have to, I know that you're, I know that you're dedicated to your work and I know that you do your work good, which is the way I say you do it well.
Starting point is 01:06:48 good, which is the way I say you do it well. So I'm just going to say you live in a law-free zone up there where you can make your own rules, I guess, but I still appreciate you coming in and explaining this to me. Well, and I appreciate your passion and I respect your passion for the distinction between a hot dog and a sandwich. And that is the distinction that you are perfectly welcome to continue to make. Thank you. Emily, I respect your dispassion. Why, thank you. It truly is the stupidest and meaningless thing to fight about in the world. And so I often get embarrassed when I start talking about it.
Starting point is 01:07:22 But as you are the lexicographer of note, and I trust you will be coming back to talk to us more about words and grammar in future. That's my brief for future. And as Merriam-Webster is so great, I will now just dedicate my life to giving you the logical and historical evidence that might make you reconsider. Someday, perhaps we'll see eye to eye on this. By the way, is a taco a sandwich? No, a taco is not a sandwich. Oh, really? Because the Merriam-Webster definition of a taco is a Mexican food that consists of
Starting point is 01:07:55 folded and usually fried piece of thin bread called a tortilla that is filled with meat, cheese, lettuce, etc. Seems to be more or less identical to your split roll theory of sandwich. Judge Hodgman, are you building toward a world in which tacos and tortas are the exact same thing? I'm just saying that if you're going to call a hot dog a sandwich, you also have to define taco as sandwich. Don't you agree, Emily? I do not agree. I do not agree because it doesn't have the two or more slices of bread or the split roll.
Starting point is 01:08:22 There's usually two tortillas in a taco. Really? Yeah, they're just stacked on top of each other with the meat on top of the two tortillas. Jesse's from San Francisco. We don't make tacos that way out here. We're from Massachusetts, where a taco is simply an old El Paso 500-year-old corn shell
Starting point is 01:08:43 filled with weird meat. That's right. Evocative of cardboard more than anything else. But I'm telling you, Emily, take a look at your definition of taco and tell me, maybe not this time, but maybe next time, tell me how it differentiates meaningfully from your definition of sandwich. Because you say taco, a food that consists of a folded and usually fried piece of thin bread, bread folded. How is that different from split? It's food wrapped in bread,
Starting point is 01:09:13 according to you. Yes, that definition is taken from our learner's dictionary, which is for non-native English speakers. If you go to the full definition underneath that definition, you will see something that is more appropriate for native speakers of English. Well, we can take this up next time you're on the show, Emily. Thank you for joining us. Well, thank you for having me. It's a pleasure to be here. Oh, I can tell you're taking great pleasure in my, in my distress. Thank you, Emily. No, no. Looking forward to talking to you and seeing you soon at the Shea Theater this fall
Starting point is 01:09:50 at the Judge John Hodgman Live Justice Performance in Turner's Falls, Massachusetts. See all those dates, of course, at johnhodgman.com slash tour or on the maximumfund.org live events page. Oh, come on. What's wrong? Oh, Jesse, I'm trying to catch this point of red laser light
Starting point is 01:10:13 that's moving around my floor. I can't seem to get it. You've really grown reckless lately, Judge Hodgman. I can't quite put my finger on why that might be. Well, what happened? What are we talking about now? We were talking about how we're going on tour and everyone should get their tickets and come see. Can I just say how much I enjoy the way you pronounce the word tour? Really? Do I pronounce it in an unusual way?
Starting point is 01:10:39 It just sounds good. It's elegant. It's radio-licious. Oh, thank you. But it's elegant. It's radiolicious. Oh, thank you. But it's true. We are going on tour, Jesse Thorne and I, plus lots of special surprise guests and live litigants from each of the places we're going to. Places like Portland, Maine, Turner's Falls, Massachusetts, Boston, Massachusetts. That's two places.
Starting point is 01:10:58 And that's coast to coast of Massachusetts, Brooklyn, New York, Philadelphia, Washington, D.C. We are going to be dispensing live justice, live on stage, meeting and greeting afterward. If you listen to this podcast and enjoy it, wouldn't it be fun to see what the weirdos behind it look like? And besides that, we're coming to the United Kingdom. A place where we more plausibly fit in. Somewhat more plausibly. We're going to be at the London Podcast Festival with Judge John Hodgman
Starting point is 01:11:27 Bullseye with Jesse Thorne my interview show and of course our comedy game show International Waters you can find information for all of our dates including how to buy your tickets at MaximumFun.org or JohnHodgman.com
Starting point is 01:11:43 slash tour and if you live in one of those places and you have a case, submit it to us MaximumFun.org or JohnHodgman.com slash tour. And if you live in one of those places and you have a case, submit it to us. Go to MaximumFun.org slash JJHO and tell us about it. No case too big or small. And do let us know if you live in one of those places because we are always looking for exciting cases in the places that we visit. This week's case was named by Kimberly Mayhall. Our thanks to Kimberly. Thanks, Kimberly.
Starting point is 01:12:09 If you want to name a future case, follow us on social media, at Hodgman, at Jesse Thorne on Twitter, like Judge John Hodgman on Facebook, and join the MaximumFun.org Facebook group. There's always fun talk about every week's Judge John Hodgman in the Maximum Fund subreddit at MaximumFund.Reddit.com. Our producer is Jennifer Marmer. We'll talk to you next time on the Judge John Hodgman podcast. Court is out session.
Starting point is 01:12:42 MaximumFund.org. Comedy and culture. Artist owned. Listener supported.

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