The Flop House - Casters on Casters: John Hodgman, Dan McCoy, Jesse Thorn, and Stuart Wellington

Episode Date: April 20, 2026

It's MaxFunDrive. And here, for the first time, we give you an exclusive look (well, listen) at the craft of podcasting: presenting Casters on Casters. Stuart Wellington and Dan McCoy are joined by th...eir pals Jesse Thorn and John Hodgman of the Judge John Hodgman show, for a very fun, and funny, conversation about podcasting. In this very important podcasting event, ALL the tricks of the trade will be revealed. Plus, can podcasting make you...a better person? Yes. Yes it can. How? Listen to find out! If this glamorous, in-depth journey into what makes your favorite hosts tick inspires you, support them by joining as a member at maximumfun.org/join. Edited by Marissa Flaxbart and Produced by Jennifer Marmor for Maximum Fun. Happy MaxFunDrive! Right now is the best time to start a membership to support your favorite shows. Learn more and join at https://maximumfun.org/joinflop

Transcript
Discussion (0)
Starting point is 00:00:00 Hello, welcome to the Max Fun Drive. Happy first day. I'm here. I'm Dan McCoy, and I'm with Stuart Wellington. If you are a fan of the flop house, this is the best time for you to support your favorite show, us. And during this time, we're going to be putting out some bonus episodes. We're trying to put out some of our best episodes. In fact, we are releasing episodes where we are torturing each other with the worst movies we can make the other.
Starting point is 00:00:30 watch. It's going to be so much fun. And, you know, this is a little treat at the beginning of the drive, so we hope you enjoy it. Flaphouse listeners, of course, are the best listeners on the planet. Thank you for supporting us
Starting point is 00:00:46 and enjoy the show. And if you can, head over to maximum fun.org slash join to support the flop house. Welcome to Castors on Castors. Conversations about the art and craft of podcasting with the masters of the microphone, the titans of talking, the rulers of remote recordings. On today's show, John Hodgman and Jesse Thorne, the Judge John Hodgman's show,
Starting point is 00:01:18 and Dan McCoy and Stuart Wellington of The Flop House. This is Castors on Castors. So why don't we clap at the turn of the minute? Let's hold, Dan, hold. Let's do it at 10 seconds past the minute. Okay. Give everyone a chance to get their clapping hands limbered.
Starting point is 00:01:44 And let's make sure we leave that in because this is Castors on castors. All about podcastings. The tips, the tricks, the techniques. I'm John Hodgman. Here's your host, founder of Maximum Fun, co-host and co-creator of the Judge Sean Hodgman podcast, as well as co-host and co-host and co-creator. creator of Jordan Jesse Go, as well as creator and host of Bullseye, among many other endeavors.
Starting point is 00:02:09 To introduce our other guests, it's Jesse Thorne. Hi, John. Thank you for having me here on Casters on Casters. Glad to do it. I'm a caster. So I'm the perfect person to be on this show with you, a caster. And with us are two other casters. You truly sound like AI right now.
Starting point is 00:02:25 That was pretty amazing. Yeah, I could hear those sixth thing. I am so pumped to be here right now on Casters on Casters. Thank you for this opportunity. And from the Flop House podcast, Dan McCoy and Stuart Wellington. Hi, Dan and Stu. Hey. Casters does sound cooler than podcaster, but it still sounds very uncool.
Starting point is 00:02:49 Well, the idea is for it to sound like act. It's supposed to be like actors on actors. That's the idea. What our goal? So the Max Fund Drive is starting as this show drops. And so our goal for this is to give you guys a little peek behind the scenes about what we do, why we do it, how we do it. And we're doing it by convening a roundtable of probably the four greatest podcasters of all time. That'll be me, Stu, Dan, and John.
Starting point is 00:03:22 I'm sitting in for Adam Carolla. Yeah, exactly. The folks who are listening to this on the Flop House feed, of course, know who Dan and Stu are from the flop house. But for those who might be listening on the Judge John Hodgman feed, tell us what the flop house is all about. We used to say we watch a bad movie and then we talk about it. And then over the years, I became increasingly guilty about feeling like we were not only
Starting point is 00:03:50 one sort of parasitical making fun of things, but also like I didn't want people to get the idea that we prejudge because honestly, sometimes we. end up liking things we watch. So now we say it's a movie, a podcast, now we say it's a podcast where we watch something that was a critical or commercial flop and see what we think. And you heard Dan reset there, listener, which is a critical tool in podcasting when you find yourself sort of just saying, now hang on, I'm going to retake that. So you just heard Dan McCoy reset there, a critical tool in podcasting. When you lose your training, of thought. You get it back again. You give a clean edit to the editor. In our case, Judge
Starting point is 00:04:34 John Hodgman, it's AJ McKeon. Who does the editing over in your podcast? So our, our producer and editor is Alex Smith, who goes by, he is also an entertainer. He is also an entertainer in his own right, who goes by the name Howell Doughty. He's a long time friend, best man at my wedding, in fact. And yeah, he's great. Our producer, Jennifer Marmer, is actually on the line. She's hosting this stream yard recording we're using to record this. And I find her presence
Starting point is 00:05:05 very comforting, even though I can't see her, just to know that she's there. Yeah, it is nice. Nice to have Jen around always. Let me ask you guys a question. How do you pick a movie for the show?
Starting point is 00:05:17 We used to, in the early days, we would literally go to a video store. Yeah. Wow. Which is why we had kind of settled. What was the one on Flatbush Avenue, Dan? I mean, It was obviously long, long gone.
Starting point is 00:05:33 It was in Clinton Hill. I don't remember the name of it. I just remember like going in there and being an adult man renting Brats the movie and thinking, I'm being gone on a list. Yeah, yeah. The watch list is in effect. But then, you know, at this point, we are able to use both our media literacy and our, our pop culture kind of finger on the pulse to figure out what people are talking about.
Starting point is 00:06:06 And then we do it several months later. Yeah. And then there's also a little bit of crowdsourcing. You know, we'll have friends or friends who might work as critics or just listeners who will reach out to us and be like, you got to do this one. And then we check to see if it's as close to 90 minutes as possible. Yeah, that's the best. You know, this suggests a question to me. and maybe Jennifer Marmer has more of a hand in this,
Starting point is 00:06:32 but how do you know what a good conflict is to talk about on your show? How do you select that sort of thing? Yeah, great question, Dan. I'm John Hodgman from the Judge John Hodgman podcast, and Jesse Thorne came to me less than 18 years ago, but not very many years less, saying, would you ever do a judge show as a segment on Jordan Jesse Goh? And I said yes.
Starting point is 00:06:56 and we had so much fun doing it that we created this podcast together where real people essentially call in with real, usually domestic disputes about, I don't know, Jesse, what? Mostly people write in about dishes-related matters. A lot of dish-washing style conflicts in homes. It's true. And then, you know, probably one of our most iconic episodes was the Bat Brothers episode. two brothers in a house in Kansas, wasn't it, Jesse?
Starting point is 00:07:29 Yeah, it was in Kansas. In fact, it was not very far from where my grandparents grew up in Iola, Kansas. And they had a bat problem in the house, and one of them wanted to figure out a way to let the bats out of the house, and the other one just wanted to smash them with a dictionary that he kept by his bed. And the question was, which is what that way, John. They were getting into the bathroom. He kept the dictionary by the toilet. The bat room? Thank you. To me, the most distinctive part of the Bat Brothers and the part that I always emphasize in the telling and probably should not be emphasized is that they bought this house to save money. That in, to me, the bat's getting in is less remarkable than that if you live in semi-rural Kansas, you can buy a house to save money.
Starting point is 00:08:16 They bought this house for like $40,000 or something. At least that was true in 2011 or 2010 or so when we heard that case. That was one of our original cases. When you mentioned Bat brothers, I initially assumed you were talking about Mark McGuire and Jose Canseco, but those were the Bash Brothers. Yeah, that's the Bash Brothers. We, so basically people send in, people either fill out a form on the website or they send an email to Podgment at maximum fund.org. And John is actually the one who does the initial pass on that email inbox, right, John? Well, traditionally that that, That is true, although I will say that, you know, one of Jennifer Marmer's huge responsibilities in the one that she meets Abelie every week over and over again is finding and pre-interviewing
Starting point is 00:09:06 the litigants, the potential litigants, before they ever turn their microphones on so that we know that we're going to have a good and lively and fun conversation. And consequently, we've really never had a dud. But I would say that Jennifer, I've been meeting as Jennifer about this for a while. while because like I'm we're getting litigants through now over the past oh I would say six months or so that I don't ever remember laying eyes on the emails so she's finding folks and that I've never seen so we got to give her credit for that yeah she calls people and you know random probably talk yeah random telephone numbers she's down docks ruffling some feathers she goes in the bathroom she gets
Starting point is 00:09:47 the bat phone book and she she calls people and talks to them and you know we're looking for different things. One of the things is just like are they chill and fun? Are they comfortable talking to her just because sometimes people might be too nervous? And also like the nature of the dispute are there distinctive, interesting things about their dispute that might be fun to talk about. And, you know, other like more subtle things that listeners might not expect. I mean, the dispute has to be real. It has to be a real dispute between the people. Oh, yeah. But certain types of stakes freak listeners out. So we have to be careful to avoid those. So it is like a, it is a needle that has to be threaded by Jen and John. I don't really participate in this part of the show, which is to find people who actually care about the thing that is the dispute in question. Both of the parties are willing to come on and understand what they're getting themselves into. And also that that conflict is something that is manageable within the tone of the show, right?
Starting point is 00:11:01 Yeah, it is a cozy show. I'd be very perturbed by listening to it and people who are genuinely mad at one another. I sometimes like when I'm explaining it to a stranger, like the easy thing to say is, oh, it's like Judge Judy or something because formatically it is like Judge Judy. Right? Then I say, but it's usually between people that love each other. and want to resolve their conflict amicably. And a judge who's interested in not just shouting at the people,
Starting point is 00:11:28 but understanding them. I think that's unfair. So that brings up an interesting question. I've always wondered, do you model yourself after a specific TV judge, or is there a TV judge that you aspire to be like? Or a real-life judge that you've appeared before. Yes, thank you.
Starting point is 00:11:47 Well, my first and foremost inspiration is Judge Militius, Bullinger, Justice of the Peace in Cold Spring, New York, who married my wife and I. My wife is a holyly and my name. Oh, that's cute. I don't remember her at all. I'm really surprised I remember her name. She did a great job. We're legally married, so good job.
Starting point is 00:12:06 No complaints. But honestly, there's a bit where I always say, I think I've heard everything I need to make my decision. I'm going to, in my chambers, I'll be back in a moment with my verdict, which is a direct rip-off of Judge Wapner. I remember watching the people's court as a kid and loving him just going to like, yeah, I heard enough bye. I'm just like, whoop. We have a specific judge hero, right?
Starting point is 00:12:31 So like Judge Wapner, whatever, whatever, our specific judge hero is actually a judge John Hodgman listener who is a real judge, Raquel Montoya Lewis. She is a judge on the Washington State Supreme Court. And when she was appointed to the Washington State Supreme Court, and she is, you know, is among other things, the first native person on the Washington State Supreme Court, one of the first state Supreme Court justices who is a native person in the entire country. Judge Montoya Lewis sent us an email because we had stopped printing our settled law poster and said, I want one for my chambers. Can you make another one for it for me?
Starting point is 00:13:12 And we said, yes. At the very least, we can send you the file. You can go down to Kinko's. and we got to meet Judge Montoya Lewis when we did a show in Washington State. She came and actually guessed it on the show. And it was just, it's totally amazing to think of a real life. And she's incredibly principled and carrying justice who really gives a hoot about making the law work for human beings. And it is incredible to think that our weird, dumb show would be something that.
Starting point is 00:13:46 that a person who actually does this for a living treasures, right? Like, the idea that a real judge actually likes us is mind-bending. And also that she totally rules. It's not just that she does it for a living, but she went through years of presumably expensive schooling, made a lot of sacrifices, had to break a lot of barriers in the legal profession to get where she is as opposed to me,
Starting point is 00:14:11 which is, I'm just a white guy, I was like, yeah, I'm a judge now. One of the things when I listen to the flop house that I always appreciate is, you know, obviously Dan and Elliot have worked in the entertainment industry for a very long time. And Stu, you went to college with Dan. Credentials. They call them credentials. But like one of the things about the flop house is that it really seems to understand a fundamental. thing about filmmaking in particular, but the entertainment industry in general, which is that every film, like every notable film, is made by 200 or 300 hyper-competent people that, you know,
Starting point is 00:15:02 you can't be on a set. Like, the times that I've been on a set, the thing that awes me is how good at their job every single person is, because if anyone messes up, it messes everyone else up. right? And that there are all these super competent people working on a film and sometimes it comes out bad. And that's just the nature of it because there's so many moving parts. It's so hard to make it come out good. Like if it comes out good, that's just like an extraordinary confluence of skill, good luck, good ideas, whatever, whatever, whatever. And your show is pretty generous about that. Like I feel like it understands this truth that everybody who's worked in the entertainment industry has worked on a lot of bad things because sometimes it just doesn't work out.
Starting point is 00:15:50 Yeah, no one wants to do a bad job. And sometimes you just got to have work. Like these are people who work for a living. And I think that it's, it kind of frustrates me sometimes that I think people who have had no experience of it treated as if every decision is an artistic one. when a lot of the decisions are like, I haven't worked for a while, I need my health insurance or whatever. But I appreciate that you say that. Honestly, I do anything to be in a bad movie. Yeah.
Starting point is 00:16:20 Yeah. Anytime I hear people come up like, how could they do that? I remember thinking very vividly in like 2003 or something like that. There was this controversy in comedy nerd internet circles about, be hyper-principled David Cross being in an Alvin in the Chipmunks sequel. And it was like, if you were offered a part in the Alvin in the Chipmunks movie,
Starting point is 00:16:46 would you say no? Like, I would be like, I'll buy my own plane ticket. Like, that's great. Sure. What am I? I get to meet the Chipmunks? I would have myself surgically transformed
Starting point is 00:16:58 into a chipmunk tusk style. I'm like turning my hat backwards and bagging up my pants so that I can be a hip-hop chipmunk. I want to mention, by the way, it is the first day of the MaxFund Drive. So if you're a fan of the flop house or you're a fan of Judge John Hodgman, we are supported by your direct support. That is like what makes our work possible. So please go to Maximumfund.org slash join.
Starting point is 00:17:24 We want to have a big start to the MaxFund Drive. We've got so much stuff for the next two weeks planned. It's going to be such a great time. John and I are streaming every day. we're doing a live show at the end of the drive that is streaming free to everyone where we're going to settle disputes between Max Fun hosts. It's going to be jam-packed with great stuff. And we'll have regular episodes for you during this time as well.
Starting point is 00:17:46 But Maximumfund.org slash join is the place to go to become a member of Maximum Fun. And that is your direct support for our show. I think sometimes people are like, why am I supporting Maximum Fun when I want to support my favorite guys. I like that impression. Thank you. They do too. You're supporting, like, I really can't emphasize enough.
Starting point is 00:18:09 You are supporting us directly. Like, maximum fun supports our work. I'm not the owner of maximum fun anymore. I'm a member of the co-op, so I'm technically an owner, but I'm not the owner of maximum fund anymore. They support our work, but when you support, when you join, go to maximum fund. dot org slash join and join you are directly supporting the podcasts that you listen to so please go to maximum fund dot org slash join your podcasting can be a lonely job even if you're talking to your friends all the
Starting point is 00:18:42 time it's really true it's and you know having not not only having the organizational and logistical and producerial support that max fun offers there's it's just a bunch of nice people it's a collective You remember how the monkeys all lived in one house? You know what I mean? Well, that's like Maximum Fun. There's a fire pole at Maximum Fun HQ. I mean, I feel like I've always been drawn to communities and like being part of building a community, whether it's like by opening like neighborhood bars or in my like Warhammer hobby. But that was one of the things that I really, I was really blown away at how welcoming the maximum fun community was when we joined and how.
Starting point is 00:19:26 and how easy it was for us to integrate and get involved with people. And it's been really, it's just been really cool. And it was, it was also, it felt like a really easy way for me to get more direct feedback on the show about the show, which was really cool. And everybody was really, like, thoughtful and welcoming. It was, it's great. Wait, you feel good about getting feedback about the show? I mean, that's a thing. Like, when we started doing the show, it was so.
Starting point is 00:19:56 long ago and I feel like I you know I came from the Midwest and when I moved to New York I worked in a hobby store around teenage boys. So I feel like I had a relatively limited worldview. And one of the things about doing the show was that there was those moments where I realized we would get feedback from listeners that are not teenage boys or men just like me. And I was like, oh wow, like there's a whole world out there. And it. And everybody was so, like, kind of gracious and kind with their feedback. And it, I don't know, like, it helped me grow as a person. Well, that's, yeah. Yeah. I've met so many different types of people through doing the show in a way that, like, really, like, expands my worldview in a healthy way, I think. And also helped me learn how to, like, interact and be gracious.
Starting point is 00:20:56 with people just in terms of like, I'm a neurodivergent guy raised by a neurodivergent brother in part. You know, I've been like kind of a shy guy who is awkward around new people and whose warmth reveals itself slowly. And I think that learning how to like be out there in the world and interact with new people who may know me, I don't know them has been very wonderful and healthy for me. Actually, like that suggested a question. I don't know how much time we have, but I wanted to ask you guys your show involves. Well, we're out of time, Dan.
Starting point is 00:21:40 Thank you. This is one of those things that happens in podcasts where you just hit a hard post. No, what was your question? Yeah, I see I'm getting feedback from Jennifer here. She says, Dan is talking. Wrap it up. Yeah, she's just riding the cough button. time.
Starting point is 00:21:58 I love talking to our listeners. I would talk to a Max Fun listener any day of the week. I'm so glad when anyone talks to me about the show out in the real world. However, as I suggested, maybe I'm not like the most natural with strangers and you have a show built around interacting with new people every week. How does one do that? Explain. Well, I mean, I think that obviously we mentioned that Jennifer sort of does the cold calling first.
Starting point is 00:22:33 So, you know, we feel quite comfortable that the people we're going to meet are fun and interesting and enjoyable. But also we feel quite comfortable because they usually tend to be listeners to the show. And like your experience, I like the listeners to the show. Like, you know, as someone who has had my mug plastered on various TV. shows and small movies and so forth, I always enjoy when someone comes up and goes, loved you in that one scene and pitch perfect too, which happened, by the way, at the optometrist the other day. Oh, wow.
Starting point is 00:23:08 That was exciting, you know what I mean? But I don't want to sit and have a conversation with somebody. And I'm not making a promise to Max Fun listeners that I'm going to sit and have a conversation with you every time. But if when someone comes up and says like, I'm a Max Fund member, I'm like, oh, hey, thank you. I think we have something in common here and that we both support this enterprise that we believe in and also I admire your taste.
Starting point is 00:23:32 And I want to echo something that I think you said, Stu, which is that like meeting all these people both on the podcast and sort of in the world of the listenership has made me a much better person for sure. I mean, my knowledge of the broader way that people live is so much more enhanced. And my wife is a whole,
Starting point is 00:23:55 whole human being in our own right was like, you're a much better husband now than you were. Not that I was bad, but, you know, the listening and the understanding and the empathy that the litigants show each other and the listeners show to us have really, I mean, if you go back and listen to some of those early episodes, I'm really quite a judgy asshole. And I'm much less so now. And I was encouraging. Like, I thought that was the comedy premise of the show. Like, I want to be clear.
Starting point is 00:24:21 Like, as the guy who thought up, John is a judge. I thought it was funny for John to be a judgy asshole on the show and encouraged it for comedy. John's daily show persona was also a little more aggressive. So it made sense, you know, I think sort of he'd done that before where he was bedeviling people. I'll say something that's a real comfort to me is obviously, unlike you guys, I work in the office at Max Fun. Like I'm there close to every day, right? and I look around at the two dozen-ish people that work there, many of whom I hired, right, when I was still the owner of the company.
Starting point is 00:25:04 And when I was still 12 years old and they were babies. I look around at these people, I'm like, I'm so lucky to work with these, like, lovely, wonderful people who work here because they care about touching people's lives. Like, there's not a cynical, you know, let's exploit people person in the entire MaxFund office of dozens of people. Like, I get frustrated about things in my office because I work in an office and I'm a human being. But like, I also like find myself thinking, like, if I'm frustrated with something or something to have, whatever, just normal office stuff, I think like, oh, but how great is that person that I'm frustrated with? I love them all, you know. And so I know that is a great comfort to me that like that I have this, that I'm like
Starting point is 00:26:01 part of this group of people who are both the podcasters and the behind the scenes people who are so dedicated to making something special to touch people's lives, even if it's something dumb. Jesse, I'm getting word now from our producer, Jennifer Marmer, and an employee owner of Maximum Fun, that we need to wrap it up. soon, but she has some pickups for us. This is a little behind the scenes. Casters on Casters exclusive.
Starting point is 00:26:28 We're going to do some pickups, which is where we go back and we say something again, but better. Or maybe answer a question we didn't answer before. Now that our open bleeding hearts are on display for everyone, we're out of time. So I will one more time say, please join maximum fund. Maximumfund.org slash join. go to maximum fund.org and check out all the cool stuff that's happening over the next couple of weeks between April 20th and May 1st for the Maxfund Drive because we're all doing really cool stuff
Starting point is 00:27:01 every day and making special episodes and all kinds of cool stuff in gratitude to you for supporting us and if you're not yet a supporter or you want to increase your support go to maximum fund.org slash join. Dan and Stu thank you for talking with us. We really appreciate it. And the name of their podcast is what again? Don't remember. Right. The Flop House podcast, baby. The Flop House podcast.
Starting point is 00:27:27 Get it where you get your podcasts and follow Maximum Fun on YouTube and hit that subscribe and bell. And you'll be alerted to all of the fun stuff that we're doing during the MaxFund Drive as well. Maximumfund.org. Join. What a pleasure to hang out with my friends, our friends. And I want to thank you guys for kind of taking the reins and hosting this. And John and Jesse, what is your show? Again, don't remember.
Starting point is 00:27:54 Jesse and I co-created and co-host the Judge John Hodgman podcast available every Wednesday on Maximum Fun and full video episodes are available on YouTube at Judge John Hodgman Pod, where all of our live streaming will be happening as well. Hit that subscribe and like button. But most important, today is the first day of the Max Fun Drive. You've heard what it means to us as podcasters, what you mean to us as podcasters. If you're not already a member, I hope you will now go to maximum fund.org slash join right now and become a member, or if you're already a member and you're able to, you can boost or upgrade your membership. Every little bit helps to literally keep the lights on and support us and keep us going. If it weren't for you, we'd have to stop.
Starting point is 00:28:37 So thank you. Maximumfund.org slash join. Dan, it's two. Thanks for being our friend. We love you guys. Oh, thanks. We love you guys. Maximum Fun. A worker-owned network. artist own shows. Supported directly by you.

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