John Kellogg Hodgman (born June 3, 1971) is an American author, actor, and humorist. In addition to his published written works, such as his satirical trilogy The Areas of My Expertise, More Information Than You Require, and That Is All, he is known for his personification of a PC in contrast to Justin Long's personification of a Mac in Apple's "Get a Mac" advertising campaign, and for his work as a contributor on Comedy Central's The Daily Show with Jon Stewart.
His writings have been published in One Story (to which he contributed the debut story "Villanova"), The Paris Review, McSweeney's Quarterly Concern, Wired and The New York Times Magazine. He has also contributed to This American Life, CBC Radio One, and Wiretap. His first book and accompanying audio narration, The Areas of My Expertise, a satirical tongue-in-cheek almanac that contains almost no factual information, was published in 2005. His second book, More Information Than You Require, went on sale October 21, 2008. His third book, That Is All, went on sale November 1, 2011. Vacationland: True Stories from Painful Beaches, a collection of "real life wanderings" about Hodgman's life experiences (especially in Western Massachusetts and coastal Maine), was published on October 24, 2017.[1] Vacationland was a finalist for the 2018 Thurber Prize for American Humor.[2] His most recent book, Medallion Status, was released on October 17, 2019.
Hodgman was the headline speaker at the 2009 Radio and Television Correspondents' Association dinner in Washington, D.C.
Early life
Hodgman was born and raised in Brookline, Massachusetts, the son of Eileen (née Callahan), a nurse and educator, and John Francis Hodgman, the President and CEO of the Massachusetts Technology Development Corporation and a professor at Tufts University.[3][4][5] He attended the Heath School and Brookline High School, where he edited the underground magazine Samizdat, named for the grassroots dissident publishing movement produced under the Soviet Bloc.[6][7] During his last year of high school, he hosted the weekly Radio Consuelo show on freeform station WMFO in Medford.[8]
In 1994 Hodgman graduated from Yale University with a degree in literature, focusing on literary criticism.[9][10] Before gaining fame as a writer, Hodgman worked as a literary agent at Writers House in New York City, where he represented Darin Strauss, Deborah Digges, and actor Bruce Campbell, among others. Hodgman has used his experience as an agent in his column "Ask a Former Professional Literary Agent" at McSweeney's Internet Tendency.
Career
Hodgman appeared on The Daily Show on November 16, 2005, to promote his book, The Areas of My Expertise. Host Jon Stewart described the book as "very funny" and said that the section on hobo names in particular was written with "a certain kind of genius." Hodgman has returned to the Daily Show numerous times for "resident expert" interview segments,[11] and has been listed on the show's web site as a contributor.[12]
In 2005, Hodgman played a character named "The Deranged Millionaire" in They Might Be Giants's Venue Songs DVD/CD, narrating in between songs with dialog he co-wrote with the band. The Deranged Millionaire character also appeared on The Daily Show on April 2, 2014.[13] He also narrated a number of Venue Songs-themed setlists during the band's live shows in 2005, and has introduced the band while in the role of The Deranged Millionaire up to May 16, 2007. Hodgman appeared again with They Might Be Giants on The Late Late Show with Craig Ferguson, on December 11, 2009. Hodgman performed the spoken-word portions of the song "Why Does the Sun Shine?"
In February 2006, Hodgman appeared on Attack of the Show, a show that aired daily on G4, to share some insight with the host and promote his book The Areas of My Expertise. In this appearance, Hodgman recounted the sad tale of the lobster (which he said were actually a small, furry, extinct species, killed and replaced by the creatures we think of as lobsters today) and brought along Jonathan Coulton, a frequent Hodgman collaborator and musical director of the Little Gray Book lectures. Coulton performed a song called "Furry Old Lobster."[14] Also, on October 18, 2008, Hodgman appeared again on Attack of the Show to talk about his newest book, More Information Than You Require.
Hodgman appeared in the North American Get a Mac advertising campaign for Apple Inc., which ran from May 2006 through 2010. In the ads he plays the personification of a PC alongside his Mac counterpart, played by actor Justin Long. In reality, however, Hodgman himself became a Mac user in 1984.[15] On November 10, 2020, he made a surprise brief appearance at the 45:27 mark of Apple's virtual "One More Thing" event, where Apple unveiled its first Macs based on its own Apple silicon chips.[16]
In 2007, Hodgman appeared in the "Bowie" episode of the HBO television series Flight of the Conchords. He played the manager of a musical greeting card company who was considering using one of the band's songs for a greeting card.On October 1, 2008, Boing Boing's Xeni Jardin announced the official debut of the web series SPAMasterpiece Theater. Hodgman himself described it as "true tale[s] of romance, adventure, infamy, and low-cost prescription drugs, all culled from the reams of actual, unsolicited emails, received here by us and people like you – what we call SPAM."[17][18][19]
Hodgman appeared in the episode "No Exit" of Battlestar Galactica, appearing as the civilian neurosurgeon, Dr. Gerard. He had earlier visited the set in 2005 to write about the show for The New York Times Magazine.[20]
On June 19, 2009, Hodgman was the headline speaker at the 2009 Radio and Television Correspondents' Association dinner in Washington, D.C. Hodgman referred to this event as a "Nerd Prom." Many of his jokes were on the topic of President Barack Obama as the first nerd president, and he quizzed the President on his knowledge of Frank Herbert's novel Dune.[21]
Hodgman appeared in the last two episodes of the first season of Bored to Death, "The Case of the Stolen Sperm" and "Take a Dive," as a literary reviewer who wrote a bad review that offended the main character.[22] He returned in the second and third seasons.
Hodgman voice-acted on The Venture Bros. in the episode "Self-Medication" as Dale Hale, an ex-boy detective in therapy following the death of his father. He has since had multiple appearances in Season 5 as O.S.I. operative Snoopy, along with other roles.
Also, during the 61st Primetime Emmy Awards in September 2009, Hodgman provided color commentary with made-up trivia about the winners.[23] He reprised this role for the 62nd Primetime Emmy Awards in August 2010.
Because of his continuing support for QI, the BBC's intellectual comedy quiz shown on BBC America,[24] Hodgman was invited to appear on the show. He was the first “fifth panelist" on the program broadcast December 3, 2009 (the usual line-up being Stephen Fry as host, Alan Davies as regular panelist and three guests)—and won, continuing the tradition of a guest winning their "rookie" appearance on the show.[25]
In 2012, Hodgman guest-starred in an episode of Delocated called "Reunion Show," acting as the host of a fictional show-within-a-show. Also in 2012, he appeared as a psychiatrist in an episode of Community called "Curriculum Unavailable."
Hodgman made a guest appearance on the sitcom series Husbands in its second season.[26]
In 2013, Hodgman starred as "Special Agent Henry Topple" in Wired ' s first scripted web series Codefellas.[27][28][29]
Hodgman appeared as public radio personality August Clementine in the episode "Anniversaries" of Parks and Recreation, which aired in February 2014. Hodgman has a supporting role in the FX comedy Married, which premiered in July 2014. In December 2014, Hodgman appeared in three episodes of the Amazon Studios series Mozart in the Jungle.
In 2014–2015, Hodgman appeared for three episodes as a fictionalized version of psychiatrist and medical doctor Henry Cotton on the Cinemax series The Knick.[30]
In 2016, Hodgman played the role of Travis, a local television station manager, in four episodes of the second season of Amazon's Red Oaks series.[31]
In November 2017, Hodgman was named one of 'Portland Magazine's' "10 Most Intriguing Mainers."[32]
Netflix special
Netflix, the American streaming media website, aired the comedy special John Hodgman: Ragnarok on June 20, 2013, as a "Netflix Original".[33][34][35] The special featured material from Hodgman's most recent book, That Is All, and his December 21, 2012, show at The Bell House in New York.[33][36]
Judge John Hodgman podcast
In 2010, Hodgman began hosting a weekly, comedic court show podcast called Judge John Hodgman. The program features Hodgman acting as a judge (with Jesse Thorn as bailiff) adjudicating real-life disputes within a fictional courtroom setting. The cases answer questions like, "Should the kitchen sink's built-in dispenser be filled with dish soap or hand soap?" and "Can you stop family members from using your childhood nickname?"[37]
TV program Dicktown
Hodgman teamed with fellow humorist David Rees to create the adult animated show Dicktown, which premiered in 2020. As of 2024, the show is in its second season and airs on FXX and Hulu. The show is written, directed and executive produced by Hodgman and Rees; Matt Thompson also executive produces. Dicktown follows the story of detective John Hunchman and his sidekick David Purefoy (voiced by Hodgman and Rees respectively).
Filmography
Film
Television
Other media appearances
Video game appearances
- 2015: Minecraft: Story Mode as Soren the Architect
- A character in the browser-based multiplayer role-playing game Kingdom of Loathing bears the name 'Hodgman, The Hoboverlord' in his honor.
Podcasts and radio appearances
Hodgman has been a guest on radio programs including WBEZ's This American Life,[40][41] NPR's Wait, Wait, Don't Tell Me, WFMU's The Best Show on WFMU,[42] North Carolina Public Radio's The State of Things,[43] Oregon Public Broadcasting's Live Wire Radio, and BBC's The Museum of Curiosity.
Hodgman has appeared in two City Arts & Lectures events: in November 2008, Dave Eggers interviewed him; and in May 2013, he interviewed Adam Savage. Both interviews were held in front of a live theater audience and were also broadcast on NPR.
Hodgman has been featured on many podcasts. He made occasional appearances as "Judge John Hodgman" on Jordan, Jesse, Go!, which led to a stand-alone podcast.[44] He was a guest on This Week In Tech with Leo Laporte,[45] Stuff You Should Know, My Brother, My Brother and Me,[46] the Doughboys podcast with Mike Mitchell and Nick Wiger, Neil deGrasse Tyson's podcast StarTalk Radio,[47] Ken Reid's TV Guidance Counselor, and Boing Boing TV.[48] Alongside Jonathan Coulton, he was a guest on episodes of The Sound of Young America[49] and Merlin Mann's You Look Nice Today.
Online
- Husbands guest star, season two
- Patriot Act with Hasan Minhaj episode "Student Loans"
- Triangulation Episode 72 on October 3, 2012[50]
- the show with zefrank
- TED[51]
- Diggnation Episode 231[52]
- Today in the Past (podcast)[53]
- Two articles on the website Open Letters in the year 2000.[54][55] In them, he details a family trip to Ocean City, New Jersey shortly after his mother's death, and uses his experiences there as metaphors for life and death.
- Transcript of welcoming remarks at a literary reading shortly after the terrorist attacks of 9/11[56]
- Guest player on HarmonQuest season one as the sandwich sorcerer
- Get a Mac web ads, as PC.
- Judge John Hodgman (podcast)
- Get Your Pets: The daytime talk show during which Hodgman interviews cats, dogs, and other pets via Instagram live.[57]
Music
- Hodgman was featured on the track "Question and Answer Time" on MC Frontalot's 2010 album Zero Day.[58]
- Hodgman has appeared in two indie music videos directed by Tom Scharpling. The first was Ted Leo & The Pharmacists "Bottled In Cork," followed by The New Pornographers' "Moves."
- Hodgman appeared in the opening section of Aimee Mann's video for "Charmer" from the album of the same name, also written and directed by Scharpling.
- Hodgman featured on the track "Don't Worry It's Fine" on Jean Grae & Quelle Chris' 2018 album Everything's Fine.[59]
In print
As contributor: As author:
- Hodgman appears on the cover of the February 2007 edition of Wired Magazine, as a contributor to their "What we don't know about..." articles.
- Hodgman oversaw the "True Life Tales" section of the Sunday New York Times Magazine.[60] The section is currently on hiatus. He also writes the "Bonus Advice from Judge John Hodgman" section of "The Ethicist" column by Kwame Appiah in the magazine.[61]
- Hodgman has guest written for the "Sedaratives" section of The Believer. "Sedaratives" is an advice column created by Amy Sedaris.
- Hodgman wrote the Massachusetts[62] chapter in the anthology State by State: A Panoramic Portrait of America.
- Hodgman wrote the introduction to The Laugh-Out-Loud Cats Sell Out (2009), a collection of Adam Koford's Hobotopia comic strips.
- Hodgman founded The Little Gray Book Lectures in Williamsburg, Brooklyn. The lectures have been on hiatus "for the foreseeable future" as of August 2007.[63]
- The Areas of My Expertise (ISBN 0-525-94908-9, 2005)
- More Information Than You Require (ISBN 0-525-95034-6, October 2008)
- That Is All (ISBN 0-525-95244-6, November 2011)
- Vacationland: True Stories from Painful Beaches (ISBN 0-735-22480-3, October 2017)
- Medallion Status: True Stories from Secret Rooms (ISBN 0-525-56110-2, October 2019)
External links
References
- John Hodgman. Vacationland: True Stories from Painful Beaches Penguiin Random House, 29 May 2018^
- CURRENT THURBER PRIZE FINALISTS Thurber House, retrieved 2018-10-17^
- Genealogy Report: Descendants of Thomas Hodgman Genealogy.com, retrieved 22 February 2017^
- Eileen C. Hodgman, 58 Founder of Mentor Program The Boston Globe, 14 June 2000, retrieved 22 February 2017^
- John Hodgman Gordon School, Tufts University, retrieved July 6, 2015^
- Katie Johnston Chase. True to his nerd: John Shackleford-Hodgman finds a niche as 'Daily Show' resident expert, mendacious author, and dorky PC The Boston Globe, September 24, 2006, retrieved December 3, 2007^
- Jason Schwartz. The Schwartz Factor: John Hodgman Boston Magazine, 21 October 2008, retrieved 16 January 2026^
- John Hodgman, Radio Consuelo Transom.org, 14 January 2010, retrieved May 15, 2012^
- Rachel Dempsey. Yale alumni move up in the world of comedy Yale Daily News, 5 February 2007, retrieved 4 April 2011^
- Adam Rogers. Q&A: John Hodgman on Perfecting the Illusion of Expertise Wired, Condé Nast, 22 September 2008, retrieved 22 February 2017^
- Daily Show videos tagged John Hodgman Thedailyshow.com, retrieved 2011-04-04^
- Daily Show Bio of John Hodgman Comedy Central, retrieved 2015-04-25^
- April 2, 2014 – Samuel L. Jackson The Daily Show with John Stewart, Comedy Central, 2 April 2014, retrieved 22 February 2017^
- Furry Old Lobster Jonathan Coulton^
- TWiT Podcast Twit.tv, retrieved 2011-04-04^
- Apple Ends Today's Mac Event With Return of Totally Jealous PC Guy November 10, 2020^
- Boing Boing tv. John Hodgman in BBtv's SPAMasterpiece Theater (comedy) YouTube, October 2, 2008, retrieved September 10, 2016^
- Xeni Jardin. John Hodgman in BBtv's SPAMasterpiece Theater. Boing Boing Video, Boing Boing, October 1, 2008, retrieved September 10, 2016^
- John Martellaro. John Hodgman Hosts SPAMasterpiece Theater The Mac Observer, The Mac Observer, Inc., October 9, 2010, retrieved September 6, 2016^
- Q&A: John Hodgman on Perfecting the Illusion of Expertise Wired, September 22, 2008, retrieved 2008-10-08^
- Matt Blum. John Hodgman Brings the Geek to President Obama Wired, 22 June 2009, retrieved 22 February 2017^
- Bored to Death The Case of the Stolen Sperm IMDb^
- Mark Graham. John Hodgman's Top Five Emmy-Winner Riffs Vulture, New York Media LLC, 21 September 2009, retrieved 22 February 2017^
- Hodgman activates rage gland against BBC America for not picking up QI AOL TV, retrieved 2013-12-20^
- The British Comedy Guide: John Hodgman and QI Comedy.org.uk, retrieved 2011-04-04^
- WATCH: Episode 2 of 'Husbands' Out.com, September 4, 2012, retrieved September 12, 2012^
- Wired. Codefellas EP. 1: When Topple met Winters – WIRED – YouTube YouTube, June 21, 2013, retrieved 2013-06-23^
- Todd Spangler. Wired's 'Codefellas' Plays NSA Privacy Flap for Laughs – Variety Variety, June 21, 2013, retrieved 2013-06-23^
- Camilleri, Ricky. John Hodgman LIVE – HuffPost Live The Huffington Post, June 20, 2013, retrieved 2013-06-23^
- Olga Khazan. Pulling Teeth to Treat Mental Illness The Atlantic, 22 October 2014, retrieved 16 December 2015^
- Evan Romano. 'He's Got The Chance': John Hodgman on President-elect Donald Trump Brooklyn Magazine, November 18, 2016, retrieved January 12, 2018^
- John Hodgman "10 Most Intriguing Mainers" portlandmonthly.com, Portland Magazine, October 26, 2017^
- Terri Schwartz. John Hodgman on his Netflix comedy special 'Ragnarok' and what comes next Zap2it, June 11, 2013, retrieved 2013-06-19^
- Hodgman. JOHN HODGMAN: RAGNAROK ON NETFLIX Tumblr, 10 June 2013, retrieved 16 January 2026^
- Hodgman. John Hodgman Picks His 5 Favorite TV Thingies of the Year … From the Future Vulture, Vulture, June 14, 2013, retrieved 2026-01-16^
- Abernethy. Interview: John Hodgman Talks About John Hodgman Chicagoist, Chicagoist, June 12, 2013, retrieved 2013-06-19^
- NPR Staff. In the world of podcasts, Judge John Hodgman Rules All Things Considered from NPR, Nov 30, 2013, retrieved Feb 8, 2020^
- Jennifer Maas. Nebula's 'The Dinner Plan' Short Film from Director Patrick Willems Casts Griffin Newman, Miriam Shor, Zach Cherry and 4 More (EXCLUSIVE) Variety, October 28, 2024, retrieved 16 January 2026^
- Kylie Hemmert. DuckTales Renewed for Season 3 Ahead of Season 2 Premiere comingsoon.net, September 21, 2018, retrieved October 7, 2018^
- 226: Reruns This American Life, 6 December 2002, retrieved 22 February 2017^
- 243: Later That Same Day This American Life, 25 July 2003, retrieved 22 February 2017^
- The Best Show on WFMU Archives Wfmu.org, retrieved 2011-04-04^
- John Hodgman wunc.org, 26 October 2006, retrieved 2026-01-16^
- Judge John Hodgman: The Podcast Maximum Fun, November 2010, retrieved 2011-02-23^
- More TWiT Than You Require Twit.tv, retrieved 2011-04-04^
- Episode 222: The Rich Kids Camp My Brother, My Brother and Me, October 20, 2014, retrieved 2025-02-24^
- A Conversation with John Hodgman StarTalk Radio Show, retrieved 2011-03-15^
- Xeni Jardin. BoingBoing TV with John Hodgman Boingboing.net, 2008-09-08, retrieved 2011-04-04^
- The Sound of Young America: Podcast: Best Friends with John Hodgman and Jonathan Coulton Maximumfun.org, February 21, 2007, retrieved 2011-04-04^
- Leo Laporte. Triangulation 72 TWiT, 3 October 2012, retrieved 22 February 2017^
- Ted Hodgman. Aliens, love — where are they? TED, TED Conferences, LLC, 2008, retrieved 22 February 2017^
- Episode 231: Hi, I'm John Hodgman and I'm a Mac, Revision 3^
- Today in the Past^
- John Hodgman. On Memory and Chaos Open Letters, 20 August 2000^
- John Hodgman. On the Sligshot Open Letters, 16 October 2000^
- John Hodgman. Welcoming Remarks Made at a Literary Reading, 9/25/01 McSweeney's Internet Tendency, McSweeney’s Publishing LLC, 11 September 2016, retrieved 22 February 2017^
- Jake Kroeger. The Best Livestream Comedy Shows to Watch While Quarantining Vulture, 2020-04-27, retrieved 2020-05-09^
- Mike Schiller. Zero Day Pop Matters, 4 May 2010, retrieved 22 February 2017^
- Jean Grae, Quelle Chris. Everything's Fine Album Review Pitchfork, 4 April 2018, retrieved 2026-01-16^
- From the Editors The New York Times Magazine, 18 September 2005, retrieved 22 February 2017^
- Judge John Hodgman The New York Times, retrieved 2 August 2020^
- John Hodgman. Massachusetts: Bulwark against the Kingdom of the Anti Christ Boston.com, 2008-09-28, retrieved 2011-04-04^
- Little Gray Book Lectures, including archival material Littlegraybooks.com, retrieved 2011-04-04^