601 avsnitt • Längd: 75 min • Veckovis: Torsdag
An inside view of how Israel can warm your heart and make your blood boil. It’s a show by a journalist, a professor and an NGO professional who live in and love Israel even though it drives them crazy, and who each week discuss the latest in Israeli politics, culture, and society.
The podcast The Promised Podcast is created by TLV1 Studios. The podcast and the artwork on this page are embedded on this page using the public podcast feed (RSS).
Allison Kaplan Sommer, Miriam Herschlag and Noah Efron discuss two topics of incomparable importance and end with an anecdote about something in Israel that made them smile this week.
Hear the Extra-Special, Special Extra Segment on Patreon
—Why Does a Knitted Kippah Mean Keep-on Fighting?—
Religious-Zionists oppose the hostage and prisoner release and ceasefire agreement more than any other sector of society (more than secular Zionists, more than Haredim). Why?
—War Games—
There’s a strange and profound simpatico between sports clubs, athletes and fans, on the one hand, and the hostages and their families on the other.
—What We Knew and When Did We Know It—
For our most unreasonably generous Patreon supporters, in our extra-special, special extra discussion: Bringing home the bodies of the Bibases (and Oded Lifshitz).
All that and the 40th anniversary of the most popular protest song in Israel’s history. Plus, more music of our troubled times.
Sara Yael Hirschhorn, Gilad Halpern and Noah Efron discuss two topics of incomparable importance and end with an anecdote about something in Israel that made them smile this week.
Hear the Extra-Special, Special Extra Segment on Patreon
—Rite of Return—
How and why did the images of the gaunt, shrunken, clearly-tortured hostages change something and cast into doubt the future of the present ceasefire agreement?
—Our Side, Their Side, Genocide—
What should we make of Historian Benny Morris’s warning that, if Palestinians and Israelis do not find to see in each other humans deserving of life, liberty and dignity, a genocide is inevitable (though just who kills whom is still up in the air)?
—Arguing With Celebs on Twitter—
For our most unreasonably generous Patreon supporters, in our extra-special, special extra discussion: When you find yourself arguing with TV stars on Twitter.
All that and an appreciation of Liri Albag. Plus, a new war record by Maor Ashkenazi.
Allison Kaplan Sommer and Noah Efron discuss two topics of incomparable importance and end with an anecdote about something in Israel that made them smile this week.
Hear the Extra-Special, Special Extra Segment on Patreon
—Nobody Expects the Pax Trumpiana!—
What’s behind US President Donald Trump’s plan to move Gazans to Jordan and Egypt and turn Gaza into a place where maybe they’ll film the next season of White Lotus?
—Suitable for Framing?—
Why do Hamas men in black balaclavas and semi-automatic rifles give gift bags and souvenir swag to hostages they let go?
—Peter Beinart Questions Israel’s Right to Exist—
For our most unreasonably generous Patreon supporters, in our extra-special, special extra discussion: When Peter Beinart writes in the times that “States Don’t Have a Right to Exist. People Do,” he ain’t talking about Mississippi!
All that and an appreciation for Yisroel Rutnitsky, may his memory be for a blessing, and tales of returning hostages. Plus, a sad and soulful new album by Ravid Plotkik.
Allison Kaplan Sommer and Noah Efron discuss two topics of incomparable importance and end with an anecdote about something in Israel that made them smile this week.
Hear the Extra-Special, Special Extra Segment on Patreon
—A New Crisis, and this Time, It’s Constitutional—
What does it augur when the Justice Minister refuses to “recognize” the newly selected chief justice of the Supreme Court?
—Survivors—
Why did this year’s International Holocaust Remembrance Day become a referendum on October 7th?
—The Trump-Netanyahu Tete-A-Tete—
For our most unreasonably generous Patreon supporters, in our extra-special, special extra discussion: What should we think, ahead of the Trump-Netanyahu tete-a-tete next week?
All that and how living-and-dead have stopped being a simple binary. Plus, the music of Aviv Shriki.
Miriam Herschlag, Linda Gradstein and Noah Efron discuss two topics of incomparable importance and end with an anecdote about something in Israel that made them smile this week.
Hear the Extra-Special, Special Extra Segment on Patreon
—You Be the Judge—
Is the new “compromise” proposal for judicial reform any good, and is now the time to debates such matters?
—Word—
How have the hostages become the aperture through which we understand most everything that has happened here since October 7?
For our most unreasonably generous Patreon supporters, in our extra-special, special extra discussion: None of us have ever had a week like this last week.
All that a stab at making sense of this weird, wonderful, unnerving week of great joy and high anxiety.
Songs
Miriam Herschlag, Sara Hirshhorn and Noah Efron discuss two topics of incomparable importance and end with an anecdote about something in Israel that made them smile this week.
Hear the Extra-Special, Special Extra Segment on Patreon
—Ending this F*#!ing War—
What should we make of the hostage release and “permanent cessation of hostilities” agreement with Hamas, and why is the agreement only signed now (and not eight months ago or eight months from now) and does what it means politically?
—A Utopic Future, Right Before Our Eyes—
For our most unreasonably generous Patreon supporters, in our extra-special, special extra discussion: You may say I’m a dreamer, but I am not the only one.
Plus, a new record by Idan Amedi that started in a hospital bed, recovering from an explosion in Gaza that almost took Amedi’s life. And an appreciation of Avraham Luria, proprietor of Israel’s oldest and best costume emporium and a beloved figure in the world of Tel Aviv theater.
Songs
Linda Gradstein, Don Futterman and Noah Efron discuss two topics of incomparable importance and end with an anecdote about something in Israel that made them smile this week.
Hear the Extra-Special, Special Extra Segment on Patreon
—Thinkin’ Blinken—
What are we to make of Antony Blinken’s interview with the times, in which he said it was Hamas, not Prime Minister Netanyahu, who have scuttled the hostage negotiations until now?
—Making an Offense of Defense—
What are we to think about the Palestinian campaign to have low-level IDF soldiers arrested abroad for war crimes, as part of an effort to criminalize fighting in Israel’s army?
—The American Historical Association Censures Israel for “Scholasticide”—
For our most unreasonably generous Patreon supporters, in our extra-special, special extra discussion: What is “scholasticide,” and why has the American Historical Association censured Israel for doing it?
Plus, a kind word for Haredim and Jean Shepherd, with music by Bekka.
Linda Gradstein and Noah Efron discuss two topics of incomparable importance and end with an anecdote about something in Israel that made them smile this week.
Hear the Extra-Special, Special Extra Segment on Patreon
—Standard Deviation—
An expose in the New York Times shows that on October 7th the IDF took an extraordinary decision to double the number of civilians whose lives it was willing to risk in order to attack Hamas leaders and rank-and-file fighters. What should we make of that?
—Again, This Time With Less Feeling—
Anthropologist Amalia Sa’ar asserts that Israeli political discourse is filled-to-the-gills with a “narrative of trauma” that keeps us from being able to have rational political discourse and make rational political and military decisions. Is she right?
For our most unreasonably generous Patreon supporters, in our extra-special, special extra discussion: It’s January. What are our political political “resolutions” for the new year?
Plus, Yehudit Ravitz with a new record at 68.
Miriam Herschlag and Noah Efron are live from the astonishing, brilliant, taste-of-the-world-to-come Limmud Festival in Birmingham, England.
—What’s Changed, Here?—
How we in Israel, and the lives we lead, have changed since, and because of, October 7th.
—What’s Changed, Everywhere Else?—
How Jews around the world, and the lives they lead, have changed since, and because of, October 7th.
Plus, how a 56 year old Soviet song came to express our longing and fears today. Plus, International Dalek Remembrance Day.
Allison Kaplan Sommer, Noah Efron and scholar-extraordinaire Sara Hirschhorn discuss two topics of incomparable importance and end with an anecdote about something in Israel that made them smile this week.
Hear the Extra-Special, Special Extra Segment
—(Un)settling—
Why do Israeli Jews who think it might be a good idea to set up Jewish towns in Gaza, think what they think?
—Hostage (Dis)agreement—
Would an agreement that brings home some of the hostages might, in the end, be worse than no agreement at all?
—Safe, Save for the Bombs and Bullets—
For our most unreasonably generous Patreon supporters, in our extra-special, special extra discussion: Why do most Israelis think the safest place in the world for Jews is Israel when, statistically, that’s not even close to being true?
Plus, a remembrance of Corinne Allal, may her memory be for a blessing.
Allison Kaplan Sommer, Linda Gradstein and Noah Efron discuss two topics of incomparable importance and end with an anecdote about something in Israel that made them smile this week.
Hear the Extra-Special, Special Extra Segment on Patreon
—Gradually, then Suddenly, then OMG—
The shocking, sudden fall of strong-man ophthalmologist Bashar al-Assad from power in Syria left Jihadist Islamists poised to replace him. What does it all means for, well, us?
—Day in Court—
Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu takes the stand to testify on his own behalf in his four-years-and-running bribery, fraud and breach of trust trial. What does it all means for, well, us?
For our most unreasonably generous Patreon supporters, in our extra-special, special extra discussion: The renowned and storied DC Conservative Synagogue, Adis Israel, disinvites former Israeli Foreign Minister Yoav Gallant, after congregants complain about this community hosting an architect of Israel’s war in Gaza, and a man indicted by the ICC for war crimes. We ask, Quo Vadis, Adis?
Plus, a remembrance of the man who hanged Adolf Eichmann, and a tribute to the star quality of the impossibly-talented and enchanted daughter-of, Naomi Sommer!
Allison Kaplan Sommer, Don Futterman and Noah Efron discuss two topics of incomparable importance and end with an anecdote about something in Israel that made them smile this week.
Hear the Extra-Special, Special Extra Segment on Patreon
—Boogie Unbound—
Former IDF Chief of Staff and former Defense Minister Moshe “Boogie” Ya’alon’s flatly asserts that Prime Minister Netanyahu’s Gaza policy amounts to ethnic cleansing.
—Putting the Press in Suppression and Depression—
A Knesset declaratory motion resolves that the government will no longer advertise in Ha’aretz, after its publisher Amos Schoken presses the world to sanction and boycott Israel on account of its “war crimes.”
For our most unreasonably generous Patreon supporters, in our extra-special, special extra discussion: We talk about the social media post by once and future President Donald Trump calling for the return of all hostages by the time he enters the Oval Office.
Plus, Omer Neutra and an encouraging word about El Al.
Linda Gradstein, Don Futterman and Noah Efron discuss two topics of incomparable importance and end with an anecdote about something in Israel that made them smile this week.
—For the Time Being, Anyway—
The cease-fire agreement between Israel and Hezbollah: It ain’t victory and it sure ain’t peace.
—ICC You—
Why does the world court want to put our prime minister in the slammer?
Plus, An Ethiopian Room-of-Their-Own, before-and-after selfs, and an exploration of the age-old question, “When is a challah not a challah?”
Allison Kaplan Sommer, Noah Efron and Tova Cohen discuss two topics of incomparable importance and end with an anecdote about something in Israel that made them smile this week.
Hear the Extra-Special, Special Extra Segment on Patreon
—“Hope Is Patience With the Lamp Lit” (With Apologies to Tertullian)—
A voice in the wilderness. Should we listen?
—“Cabinet of Wonders”—
Is Donald Trump’s new cabinet more pro-Israel than most Israelis?
—Freshman Leninism at Berkeley—
For our most unreasonably generous Patreon supporters, in our extra-special, special extra discussion: We talk about the fufera that developed over a Berkeley course description. We ask, “WTF?”
Plus, Nir Oz votes to go home and Eden Hasson comes out.
Miriam Herschlag, Don Futterman and Noah Efron discuss two topics of incomparable importance and end with an anecdote about something in Israel that made them smile this week.
Hear the Extra-Special, Special Extra Segment on Patreon
—Jabalia, Again—
Israel conquers northern Gaza for a third deadly time.
—The “J” is Silent—
Is Amsterdam a harbinger?
For our most unreasonably generous Patreon supporters, in our extra-special, special extra discussion: We talk about the essay written by Rachel Goldberg-Polin that was recently published on the Times of Israel.
Plus, a tribute to Prof. Aharon She’ar Yashuv, the Orthodox Rabbi son of an Waffen SS officer father. And music for these troubled days.
Allison Kaplan Sommer, Don Futterman and Noah Efron discuss two topics of incomparable importance and end with an anecdote about something in Israel that made them smile this week.
Hear the Extra-Special, Special Extra Segment on Patreon
—Gallantry—
Is it o.k. to sack the guy in charge of your army, while generals in Iran are planning to attack?
—Trumpery—
Prime Minister Netayahu tweets to once-and-future US President Donald Trump that his “huge victory” in “history’s greatest comeback” is “a powerful recommitment to the great alliance between Israel and America.” But what will Trump’s win mean to the Middle East?
—12 Hours That Shook, Well, Us—
For our most unreasonably generous Patreon supporters, in our extra-special, special extra discussion: How did we handle the Gallantry & Trumpery one-two punch, and how do we now gather our broken selves and move forward?
All that and more music of our times.
Miriam Herschlag and Noah Efron discuss two topics of incomparable importance and end with an anecdote about something in Israel that made them smile this week.
Hear the Extra-Special, Special Extra Segment on Patreon
—Days of Repentance, This Time With Bombs—
What are we to make of Israel’s weekend attack on Iran?
—All We Know—
What Wikipedia has to say about Israel and Zionism is changing before our eyes, and not for the better.
For our most unreasonably generous Patreon supporters, in our extra-special, special extra discussion: Two of every three Israelis polled say they’re pulling for Trump to win. Is this true and, if so, why?
All of that and more music of our times.
Linda Gradstein and Noah Efron discuss one topic of incomparable importance and end with an anecdote about something in Israel that made them smile this week.
Hear the Extra-Special, Special Extra Segment on Patreon
Making Sense of Sinwar, asking four questions:
—Simchat Tora One Hebrew Calendar Year After Oct. 7th—
For our most unreasonably generous Patreon supporters, in our extra-special, special extra discussion: One Hebrew calendar year after Hamas’ attack on Israel, our religious communities have thought long and hard about the appropriate way to celebrate Simchat Tora.
Allison Kaplan Sommer, Noah Efron and Tova Cohen discuss two topics of incomparable importance and end with an anecdote about something in Israel that made them smile this week.
Hear the Extra-Special, Special Extra Segment on Patreon
—Best Laid Schemes (Lea’e Us Nought but Grief An’ Pain), With Apologies to Robert Burns (And to Mice)—
Bringing down the Azrieli Towers? Conquering Israel top-to-bottom by 2025? Minutes of Hamas meetings sets out the groups grim vision.
—What’s So Funny ’Bout Peace, Love and Understanding?—
Has “peace” left the building?
—Jed Bartlet Is in the Sukkah!—
For our most unreasonably generous Patreon supporters, in our extra-special, special extra discussion: Who, this year, would be our “Ushpizin” in our (notional or real) Sukkah.
All of that and Sukkot suddenly turning up everywhere.
Allison Kaplan Sommer, Don Futterman and Noah Efron discuss two topics of incomparable importance and end with an anecdote about something in Israel that made them smile this week.
Hear the Extra-Special, Special Extra Segment on Patreon
—Regional Inferno?—
Israel’s war with Gaza may soon become an all-out regional war. How do you say “Yikes!” in Farsi?
—Accounting of the Soul—
What should we have in mind, this Yom Kippur, when we thump our chests in repentance?
For our most unreasonably generous Patreon supporters, in our extra-special, special extra discussion: Our hot take on last night’s Supreme Court ruling regarding the legality of organized gender-separated public prayer in liberal Tel Aviv.
All of that and marking a year of the nightmare of October 7. Plus, music that moves us from the memorials.
A New Year and a year since. What are we remembering when we remember October 7?
Elul is here and people all over the country are keeping the before-the-high-holidays tradition of saying Selihot, asking for forgiveness and offering atonement. All this as rockets and planes fly, and bombs fall.
Allison Kaplan Sommer, Linda Gradstein and Noah Efron discuss two topics of incomparable importance and end with an anecdote about something in Israel that made them smile this week.
Hear the Extra-Special Special Extra Segment on Patreon
—Major Pager Rager—
A stunning attack-by-pager left dozens of Hezbollah militiamen dead and thousands maimed and wounded. What are we to make of a thing like that?
—Commemoration Vexation—
How do you memorialize October 7, when October 7 hasn’t ended yet?
—Testicles in the Twitterverse?—
For our most unreasonably generous Patreon supporters, in our extra-special, special extra discussion: Hezbollah pagers explode, social media memes erupt, but not all Israelis are laughing.
All this and the music from the remarkable new record רוח באה מדרום (Wind Comes from the South).
Allison Kaplan Sommer, Miriam Herschlag and Noah Efron discuss two topics of incomparable importance and end with an anecdote about something in Israel that made them smile this week.
Hear the Extra-Special, Special Extra Segment on Patreon
—Not Too Brotherly, Not Much Love—
How did the “Philadelphi Corridor” become a matter of life and death?
—Errors of Omission and Commission—
The government hasn’t investigated itself, so a bunch of citizens took it on itself. Is that a good thing?
—Much Ado About a Handful of Sand—
For our most unreasonably generous Patreon supporters, in our extra-special, special extra discussion: A 27-year-old Tel Aviv resident was arrested for allegedly tossing wet sand at National Security Minister Itamar Ben Gvir. Was the minister being purposely provocative for personal political gain?
Songs
For 331 days, Rachel Goldberg-Polin went everywhere, spoke to everyone and did everything to save her son, Hersh.
703 IDF soldiers have fallen since October 7th. Each was an entire world. This is a small bit of the story of one of them, Zachariah Haber.
Linda Gradstein, Allison Kaplan Sommer and Noah Efron discuss two topics of incomparable importance and end with an anecdote about something in Israel that made them smile this week.
Hear the Extra-Special, Special Extra Segment on Patreon
—Bennett, Done That—
Israel’s next prime minister will be … Naftali Bennett?
—Jewish Life During Wartime—
Why does war make more-secular Israelis more secular, and less-secular Israelis less secular?
For our most unreasonably generous Patreon supporters, in our extra-special, special extra discussion: What happens when every airline stops flying to Israel?
Plus, a reflection on how time itself has stopped working, and music by women we’ve loved for decades, speaking now to our present moment.
Miriam Herschlag, Allison Kaplan Sommer and Noah Efron discuss two topics of incomparable importance and end with an anecdote about something in Israel that made them smile this week.
Hear the Extra-Special, Special Extra Segment on Patreon
—TIME Is on His Side?—
Prime Minister Netanyahu gives his longest interview since October 7. What’s it tell us?
—Time Is on HIS Side?—
How is this man growing more popular at this time, after everything?
For our most unreasonably generous Patreon supporters, in our extra-special, special extra discussion: How we doin’ at this moment?
Plus, co-joined Kibbutzim, Tisha B’Av at Hostage Square, and the bipolar music of Tamir Grinberg.
Miriam Herschlag, Linda Gradstein and Noah Efron discuss two topics of incomparable importance and end with an anecdote about something in Israel that made them smile this week.
Hear the Extra-Special, Special Extra Segment on Patreon
—Dead to Rights?—
When, if ever, is it o.k. to assassinate deadly enemies?
—Now, in the Awful Quiet of the Moment—
Six-packs of water and go bags: Are we doing this imminent-attack-from-Iran thing right?
—Days of Wine and Jelly Beans?—
For our most unreasonably generous Patreon supporters, in our extra-special, special extra discussion: How are the 3 of us reacting to this tense moment?
Plus, the Olympics, John Lennon glasses and new music by artists from just outside of Gaza.
Allison Kaplan Sommer and Noah Efron discuss two topics of incomparable importance and end with an anecdote about something in Israel that made them smile this week.
Hear the Extra-Special, Special Extra Segment on Patreon
—Will Israel and Hezbollah (and Who Knows? Maybe Iran) Go to War?—
Will Hezbollah’s murder of twelve kids in Majdal Shams lead to all out war?
—Druze Clues—
What is it like to be Druze in Israel?
For our most unreasonably generous Patreon supporters, in our extra-special, special extra discussion: The folks at Marvel are turning Sabra into a Marrano?
Plus, the Olympics, science breakthroughs and music of our troubled times.
Allison Kaplan Sommer, Linda Gradstein and Noah Efron discuss two topics of incomparable importance and end with an anecdote about something in Israel that made them smile this week.
Hear the Extra-Special, Special Extra Segment on Patreon
—Move Over, Winston—
Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu speaks to congress, again. What did he say to the senators and congresspeople, and what didn’t he say?
—Kamala Harris and the Jewish Question—
Kamala Harris anagrams to “A rakish alarm.” Who is Kamala Harris, and if she becomes president, what will it mean for, well, us?
For our most unreasonably generous Patreon supporters, in our extra-special, special extra discussion: When Israeli-Americans say they’re voting for Trump because he’s good for Israel, what do they mean?
Plus, consecrating a Torah scroll for Hersh Goldberg-Polin, and trans-folk in Tel Aviv City Hall, and more music of these days.
Allison Kaplan Sommer and Noah Efron discuss two topics of incomparable importance and end with an anecdote about something in Israel that made them smile this week.
Hear the Extra-Special, Special Extra Segment on Patreon
—The Valley of the Shadow of Deif—
Can you do a cost-benefit analysis of assassinating a man personally responsible for thousands of Israeli deaths?
—Unboxing Gaza?—
What’s it like for Israelis to watch videos of Palestinian resilience?
—“Dos” and “Don’t-So-Much-Dos”—
For our most unreasonably generous Patreon supporters, in our extra-special, special extra discussion: Why did a short video about the “Dos” and “Don’t-So-Much-Dos” of workplace relations between secular and ultra-Orthodox colleagues tick off so many of us here in Israel?
Plus, the profound humanity of the people fighting to release the hostages, and music from Netta Barzilai’s first album, which is like a warm hug from an old friend.
Miriam Herschlag and Noah Efron discuss two topics of incomparable importance and end with an anecdote about something in Israel that made them smile this week.
Hear the Extra-Special, Special Extra Segment on Patreon
—God Will Avenge His Blood?—
The IDF has allowed, for the first time ever, military gravestones to add “הי״ד” — “God will avenge his blood” — after the name of a slain soldier. Vengeance carved in stone?
—Heroes of Israel—
There’s a new line of “Heroes of Israel” action figures: IDF soldiers for kids to play with. What exactly do they teach our kids?
—It’s Been Long Enough to Make a Baby—
For our most unreasonably generous Patreon supporters, in our extra-special, special extra discussion: Nine months of war (long enough to make a baby). Miriam and Noah talk about how they’re doing now.
Plus, a tribute to two people we remember from iconic photographs, and a new exhibit imagines a very different Zionism than the one we got. Plus more new tunes of our times.
In a very special, tribute-to-America episode, the sax-and-fiddle player (Alon Tal), the lead-singer-and-keyboardist (Bill Slott), and the bass-player (Noah Efron) of the fondly-remembered band, “Liquid Plumr” discuss two topics of incomparable importance and end with an anecdote about something in Israel that made them smile this week.
Hear the Extra-Special, Special Extra Segment on Patreon
—Bill in Them Hills—
What can we learn from Bill who spent three months in the West Bank trying to keep local Palestinians from being harassed by local Israelis? Sometimes, you just need to be there.
—The U.S. and Us—
How have America and Americans influenced Israeli culture and politics?
For our most unreasonably generous Patreon supporters, in our extra-special, special extra discussion: What is it like to have two countries?
Plus, music by three great Israeli singers, each born-in-the-U.S.A.
Linda Gradstein, Allison Kaplan Somer and Noah Efron discuss two topics of incomparable importance and end with an anecdote about something in Israel that made them smile this week.
Hear the Extra-Special, Special Extra Segment on Patreon
—Exemption Preemption—
A bombshell unanimous Supreme Court decision says that, until the Knesset passes a law that says otherwise, Haredi men of army age need to enlist, and those that don’t cannot get government stipends. Are we about to find Yeshiva boys in foxholes?
—New Day in Gaza?—
A new report is making the rounds in Jerusalem about how to end the war and coax Gazans to accept Israel, which, new report, may or may not be nuts.
For our most unreasonably generous Patreon supporters, in our extra-special, special extra discussion: AIPAC vs. the Squad’s Jamaal Bowman. Decision, AIPAC?
Plus, Hebrew Book Week 100 years on, and more music of our times.
Linda Gradstein, Don Futterman and Noah Efron discuss two topics of incomparable importance and end with an anecdote about something in Israel that made them smile this week.
Hear the Extra-Special, Special Extra Special on Patreon
—The Other War—
The war with Hezbollah up north seems to be getting hotter and more deadly with each passing day. Will missiles rain down on Tel Aviv? And when can the nearly 100,000 evacuees from their homes near the Lebanese Border expect to go back home?
—Spring of Despair—
New polls show despair and pessimism of a sort Israelis have never known before. What do we do when more than 2/3 of Israelis are not optimistic about our future?
For our most unreasonably generous Patreon supporters, in our extra-special, special extra discussion: Summer’s here and the time is right for what exactly?
Plus, Bnei Brak at 100, and more music of our times.
Linda Gradstein, Allison Kaplan Sommer and Noah Efron discuss two topics of incomparable importance and end with an anecdote about something in Israel that made them smile this week.
Hear the Extra-Special, Special Extra Segment on Patreon
—Home—
Four hostages were rescued from the depths of Gaza. We need a new word for absolute joy mixed with absolute worry mixed with absolute sadness.
—Gantz, But Not Forgotten—
Benny Gantz announces that he is leaving the government and its tiny “War Cabinet,” which brought relief, anxiety and ambivalence. With Gantz gone, where will the government go?
For our most unreasonably generous Patreon supporters, in our extra-special, special extra discussion: Shavuot in Israel, after eight months of war.
Plus, the LGBTQ “Vigil of Pride and Hope” in Tel Aviv, celebrating Shavuot, and more music of our times.
Linda Gradstein, Allison Kaplan Sommer and Noah Efron discuss two topics of incomparable importance and end with an anecdote about something in Israel that made them smile this week.
Hear the Extra-Special, Special Extra Segment on Patreon
—Prisoner's Dilemma—
A new Israeli proposal to bring home hostages puts the brakes on the war and signs some sort of pact with the Saudis. So why are religious-Zionists, most of all, opposing it?
—Same Same (But Different)—
New Supreme Court petitions might force the army to conscript Haredim. Has the war changed things enough that we can now solve the oldest, hardest problem of Israeli politics?
—Taking a Break By Going Abroad—
For our most unreasonably generous Patreon supporters, in our extra-special, special extra discussion: After eight months of war, what’s it like for an Israeli to get on a plane to somewhere, anywhere, else? What’s it like to come back?
Plus, an appreciation of David Levy, being Israeli in Japan, and a new old museum in Tel Aviv. And more music of our times.
Allison Kaplan Sommer, Miriam Herschlag and Noah Efron discuss two topics of incomparable importance and end with an anecdote about something in Israel that made them smile this week.
Hear the Extra-Special, Special Extra Segment on Patreon
—Golan Heights?—
We just witnessed the huge victory of IDF Reserve Major-General and former deputy chief-of-staff Yair Golan in the primary for Labor leadership (he got more than 95%). Will a new war-hero general at the head of the Labor Party bring back Rabin-era glory?
—History Lesson—
A viral lachrymose TV sketch comedy troupe portrays Jewish history as one damn-pogrom-after-another, up to and including October 7. Is Jewish history, up to and including now, just a trail of tears?
—What It’s Been Like to Be on an Ivy-League Campus This Past Year—
For our most unreasonably generous Patreon supporters, in our extra-special, special extra discussion: The executive director of Cornell’s Hillel, Rabbi Ari Weiss, tells us about what it has been like to be on an Ivy-League campus this past year, for students and Hillel directors alike.
Plus, losing our words, and more music of these troubled times.
Allison Kaplan Sommer, Don Futterman and Noah Efron discuss two topics of incomparable importance and end with an anecdote about something in Israel that made them smile this week.
Hear the Extra-Special, Special Extra Segment on Patreon
—Gantz and Gallant Game the Endgame—
Two of five of the members of Israel’s “War Cabinet” tell Prime Minister Netanyahu that he has to figure out what comes next in Gaza. Or else!
—Unwarranted—
The chief prosecutor of the International Criminal Court seeks warrants for the arrest of Prime Minister Netanyahu and Defense Minister Gallant, the first time warrants have been sought for democratically-elected politicians. So will the world start arresting Israeli politicians when they travel abroad?
For our most unreasonably generous Patreon supporters, in our extra-special, special extra discussion: When sorority sisters turn on sorority sisters, you know sh*t’s gotten real!
All that and a memorial appreciation of Yael Dayan and a good bye to the old TLV1 studios. Plus more music in the sad spirit of our times.
Allison Kaplan Sommer and Noah Efron discuss two topics of incomparable importance and end with an anecdote about something in Israel that made them smile this week.
Hear the Extra-Special, Special Extra Segment on Patreon
—Now, Rafah—
What are we to make of Israel’s rolling incursion into Rafah? Oy.
—On Film—
There’s a new hour-long movie about the rape and sexual assault of Israeli women on October 7 and since. Oy.
For our most unreasonably generous Patreon supporters, in our extra-special, special extra discussion: Eden Golan’s amazing adventure at the Eurovision song contest.
All this and more music of these troubled times.
Allison Kaplan Sommer, Miriam Herschlag and Noah Efron discuss two topics of incomparable importance and end with an anecdote about something in Israel that made them smile this week.
Hear the Extra-Special, Special Extra Segment on Patreon
—Days of Awe—
What do Yom Ha-Zikaron (Memorial Day) and Yom Ha-Atzmaut (Independence Day) mean in this annus horribilis? How can we celebrate, now?
—School Daze—
What should we make of the enraged protests raging on university campuses? Kids these days, am I right?
—Al Jazeera on the Chopping Block—
For our most unreasonably generous Patreon supporters, in our extra-special, special extra discussion: Israel blocks Al Jazeera for 45 days, on the grounds that the network is neither fair nor balanced. Dumb move?
Plus, a look back fifty years, a vegetable vending machine, and more music of these troubled times.
To mark Yom Ha-Shoah, Holocaust Remembrance Day, Noah describes the decades-long path Israelis followed to come to terms with the Holocaust, culminating in a record in 1988, fully 43 years after the camps were freed.
(Out of concern for the environment, this episode is reused and recycled, though not reduced.)
At Passover Seders all around the world, a place setting was laid before a chair left empty for one of the 133 hostages held in Gaza. We look back at the 200 days of anguish, hope, and despair that divide Simchat Torah on October 7 from this week’s holiday.
Linda Gradstein and Noah Efron discuss two topics of incomparable importance and end with an anecdote about something in Israel that made them smile this week.
—Going Too Farsi? (Or, the Persian Incursion)—
We — with the help of the US, UK, Jordan and other capable allies — buffly rebuffed the biggest missile and drone attack on Israel ever. But what does it tell us about the past and augur for the future?
—Passover, 5784—
How is this Passover different from all other Passovers?
Plus, a bereaved father on solidarity, flower-girls, fruit bats and more music of our times.
Marking six months since the massacres and the start of the war, Miriam Herschlag and Noah Efron discuss two topics of incomparable importance and end with an anecdote about something in Israel that made them smile this week.
Hear the Extra-Special, Special Extra Segment on Patreon
—Us, Here—
Whether and how we Israelis have changed, in light of all that has happened. Are we different than we were six months and one week ago?
—Us, There—
Whether and how we Jews around the world have changed, in light of all that has happened. Are we different than we were six months and one week ago?
—Iran’s Promised “Persian Incursion”—
For our most unreasonably generous Patreon supporters, in our extra-special, special extra discussion: Are we losing sleep over Iran’s promised “Persian Incursion”?
Plus, the presence of October 7 around the Seder table. And, more music of our times.
Allison Kaplan Sommer, Don Futterman and Noah Efron discuss two topics of incomparable importance and end with an anecdote about something in Israel that made them smile this week.
Hear the Extra-Special, Special Extra Segment on Patreon
—Families 2.0—
The organization of the families of the hostages has decided to change strategies, linking its campaign to bring the hostages home to the campaign for “elections now.” Is the fight to get the hostages home entering a new phase?
—Sidelocks & Sidearms—
A Supreme Court injunction cuts off, cold-turkey, funding for army-aged, ultra-Orthodox Yeshiva students who learn instead of serve. Couldn’t they have let the turkey get to room-temperature?
For our most unreasonably generous Patreon supporters, in our extra-special, special extra discussion: Should a photographer who watched and snapped his shutter while people were being killed, raped and kidnapped get a prize for a picture he took?
Plus a farewell to one of the country’s greatest novelists and activists. And, more music of our times.
Allison Kaplan Sommer, Noah Efron and newly-minted Doctor of Thinkology Gilad Halpern discuss two topics of incomparable importance and end with an anecdote about something in Israel that made them smile this week.
Hear the Extra-Special, Special Extra Segment on Patreon
—Abstention Dissension—
There seems to be a very fast decline in US-Israel relations, after the Americans abstain on a UN Security Council resolution that Israel expected them to veto. Are Israel and America, like Ross and Rachel, on a break?
—Standard Deviation—
An expert in urban warfare says Israel is more careful to protect the lives of civilians in Gaza than any other army in history. But even if that is true, does it matter?
—The Great Rupture in American Jewish Life—
For our most unreasonably generous Patreon supporters, in our extra-special, special extra discussion: Is Peter Beinart right that there is a “great rupture in American Jewish life”? If he is, should we worry?
Plus a farewell to a man who spent decades rebuilding violins that survived the Holocaust, often when the musicians who played them did not. Plus more music of our times.
Allison Kaplan Sommer, Noah Efron and ubermensch writer Bradley Burston discuss two topics of incomparable importance and end with an anecdote about something in Israel that made them smile this week.
Hear the Extra-Special, Special Extra Segment on Patreon
—Despite It All, Peace?—
Is all we are sayin’, just give peace a chance?
—Amalek—
Is it like reverse anti-Semitism?
For our most unreasonably generous Patreon supporters, in our extra-special, special extra discussion: Kafka said, “A book must be an ice-axe for the frozen sea within us.” This one is.
Order Bradley Burston’s new book, The End of Israel: Dispatches from a Path to Catastrophe, here!
Plus a glimpse into the worlds of ultra-Orthodox parents of kids who grew up ultra-Orthodox and were murdered at the druggy, dancy, free-lovey Nova festival. Plus more music of our times.
Miriam Herschlag, Allison Kaplan Sommer and Noah Efron discuss two topics of incomparable importance and end with an anecdote about something in Israel that made them smile this week.
Hear the Extra-Special, Special Extra Segment on Patreon
—אַ סוף צו אַ גאָלדען עלטער אין אַ גאלדענע מדינה—
This month’s Atlantic cover story argues that the “Golden Age” for American Jews has come to a close and, with it, maybe the “Golden Age” for America and the “Golden Age” for Jews. Is the US putting the “mean” back into “reversion to the mean”?
—Retracted—
A well-regarded literary journal retracts an essay by an Israeli on account of, well, what exactly? Is it a literary crime to be an Israeli in 2024?
For our most unreasonably generous Patreon supporters, in our extra-special, special extra discussion: This year’s Eurovision is gonna be a sh*tshow.
Plus poetry on the moon and more songs of these troubled days.
Allison Kaplan Sommer, Linda Gradstein and Noah Efron discuss two topics of incomparable importance and end with an anecdote about something in Israel that made them smile this week.
Hear the Extra-Special, Special Extra Segment on Patreon
—Jerusalem, Mon Amour?—
What’s it mean that Jerusalem just elected to its city council a straight-up majority of ultra-Orthodox men?
—Reckoning?—
Is it time for soul-searching and spiritual reckoning over the death and destruction in Gaza?
For our most unreasonably generous Patreon supporters, in our extra-special, special extra discussion: Five months since October 7, we are awfully tired.
All that and remembering Beige Shohat, plus more songs of these troubled days.
Miriam Herschlag, Allison Kaplan Sommer and Noah Efron discuss two topics of incomparable importance and end with an anecdote about something in Israel that made them smile this week.
Hear the Extra-Special, Special Extra Segment on Patreon
—Going Local—
They say that, in a democracy, even the most humble among us can be elected to public office. Now we know it’s true!
—Mayor for Life—
Few positions have more job security than mayor of a major city in Israel.
—Jon Stewart Goes Viral on the Gaza War—
For our most unreasonably generous Patreon supporters, in our extra-special, special extra discussion: Jon Stewart goes viral on the Gaza war.
All this and a memorial tribute to MK Charlie Biton, and more songs of our troubled times.
138 days in, The Promised Podcast looks back.
—Premonition—
—City of Slaughter—
—Sally—
—The Wheat Grows Again—
—The Battalion’s WhatsApp—
Allison Kaplan Sommer, Linda Gradstein and Noah Efron discuss two topics of incomparable importance and end with an anecdote about something in Israel that made them smile this week.
Hear the Extra-Special, Special Extra Segment on Patreon
—Elections Now?—
Billboards all over the country and full-page ads in the papers call for new elections now. Is this a good idea?
—The Draft on the Draft: Getting the Shaft?—
A crisis is a terrible thing to waste.
For our most unreasonably generous Patreon supporters, in our extra-special, special extra discussion: What is it about war that makes people want to pair off?
All that and risking the lives of dozens of young men to save the lives of two old men, plus more moving songs of these troubled days.
Miriam Herschlag and Noah Efron discuss two topics of incomparable importance and end with an anecdote about something in Israel that made them smile this week.
Hear the Extra-Special, Special Extra Segment on Patreon
—Negotiating With Terrorists—
Hamas finally sets out their demands in exchange for releasing the 136 living-and-dead Israeli hostages dragged to Gaza from their homes. Is there anywhere to go from here?
—Bar-Raving Time!—
Itamar Ben-Gvir is having a moment.
For our most unreasonably generous Patreon supporters, in our extra-special, special extra discussion: The New York Times brings together five historians to explain how Israelis and Palestinians got to where we got. How’d they do?
All that and more moving songs of these troubled days.
Allison Kaplan Sommer, Don Futterman and Noah Efron discuss two topics of incomparable importance and end with an anecdote about something in Israel that made them smile this week.
Hear the Extra-Special, Special Extra Segment on Patreon
—A Few Murderous Apples—
A dozen United Nations Relief and Works Agency (UNRWA) workers killed, raped and kidnapped on October 7, and one in four Gazan men who work for UNRWA have ties to Hamas. What can you say to that?
—Soldiers of the Dream—
Have the reserve soldiers in Gaza discovered the secret to making Israel a better, more decent place?
—What Those Dog-Tags Are All About—
For our most unreasonably generous Patreon supporters, in our extra-special, special extra discussion: What’s up with those dog-tags millions of Israelis wear these days?
All that and still more music of our time.
Allison Kaplan Sommer, Miriam Herschlag and Noah Efron discuss two topics of incomparable importance and end with an anecdote about something in Israel that made them smile this week.
Hear the Extra-Special, Special Extra Segment on Patreon
—General Malaise—
Former IDF Chief of Staff and member of Israel’s “War Cabinet” says the government is not telling us the truth or making the right decisions when it comes to the war. What now?
—In the Shadow of the Shoah—
Seventy-nine years after the Nazis surrendered, there’s more talk of the Holocaust than ever. How come?
—Sending Your Kid off to the Army When the Country’s At War—
For our most unreasonably generous Patreon supporters, in our extra-special, special extra discussion: What is it like to drop your kid off at an army induction camp?
All that and new, soulful music of our time.
Linda Gradstein, Allison Kaplan Sommer and Noah Efron discuss two topics of incomparable importance and end with an anecdote about something in Israel that made them smile this week.
Hear the Extra-Special, Special Extra Segment on Patreon
—Why Did the Army Fail Us?—
The first job of the army is to protect us at our borders.
—Why Do We Still Believe In the IDF?—
Even after everything went wrong, and so many people died, we still trust the IDF. Why?
For our most unreasonably generous Patreon supporters, in our extra-special, special extra discussion: What’s it like for us to try to get back to some sort of “normal”?
All that and a sad voice calling in the wilderness, plus new music for our times by some of the grand eminences of Israeli music.
Miriam Herschlag, Allison Kaplan Sommer and Noah Efron discuss two topics of incomparable importance and end with an anecdote about something in Israel that made them smile this week.
Hear the Extra-Special, Special Extra Segment on Patreon
—Phase III—
The last phase of the Israel-Hamas war is starting. Why don’t we feel relieved?
—South Africa v. Israel—
Eighty years after the Holocaust ended, Israel is on trial for genocide.
For our most unreasonably generous Patreon supporters, in our extra-special, special extra discussion: How do you podcast this war? (With Jen Richler, genius producer “Can We Talk?”)
All that and the music of Idan Amedi, who was injured badly this week as an IDF reservist in Gaza.
Allison Kaplan Sommer, Linda Gradstein and Noah Efron discuss two topics of incomparable importance and end with an anecdote about something in Israel that made them smile this week.
Hear the Extra-Special, Special Extra Segment on Patreon
—Basic—
Israel’s Supreme Court decides, by the thinnest of margins, to overturn an amendment to a “Basic Law” passed by the Knesset. Is that a good thing?
—October 90th—
Are we stuck reliving over and over the nightmare of October 7?
For our most unreasonably generous Patreon supporters, in our extra-special, special extra discussion: Will oxygen help wipe our trauma clean?
All that and new music for coping with grief and worry.
Allison Kaplan Sommer, Linda Gradstein and Noah Efron discuss two topics of incomparable importance and end with an anecdote about something in Israel that made them smile this week.
Hear the Extra-Special, Special Extra Segment on Patreon
—Back to the Basics of Bouncing Bibi?—
Do you oust the man who is leading you in war?
—“Under Renovation”—
Does Israel have any Left left at all?
—Watching the War in Cinematic 4K—
For our most unreasonably generous Patreon supporters, in our extra-special, special extra discussion: The IDF, the government, and the public broadcast corporation Kan are making polished high-def videos about the war. Is it bizarre, maybe counter-productive, to make “cinematic” videos about what is, after all, a terrible business?
All that and a heartfelt tribute to a heroin dealer and Eviatar Banai’s covers of classic songs for these days of violence and grief.
Allison Kaplan Sommer, Don Futterman and Noah Efron discuss three topics of incomparable importance and end with an anecdote about something in Israel that made them smile this week.
Hear the Extra-Special, Special Extra Segment on Patreon
—What They Think About Us—
More than half college-age American kids think Israel should be “ended and given to Hamas”? Really?
—What They Think About Them—
72% of Palestinians on the West Bank think Hamas’s decision to do what it did on October 7 “was the correct one”? Really?
—What We Think about Us & Them—
Four in five Israelis tell pollsters that the suffering of Gaza civilians shouldn’t change how Israel fights the war? Really?
For our most unreasonably generous Patreon supporters, in our extra-special, special extra discussion: Don Futterman reads part of his new novel, Adam Unrehearsed! It’s like hearing Crime & Punishment read by Dostoyevsky, or the Bible read by God!
All that and songs of these times, mostly sung together.
William Blake once counselled “to see a world in a grain of sand.” In this very special podcast episode, Noah tries to see our troubled world right now, in a Whatsapp thread or a TikTok “For You.”
—The Battalion WhatsApp—
—Dog of War—
—Post Hoc, Ergo TikTok—
Star journalist Linda Gradstein and Noah Efron discuss two topics of incomparable importance and end with an anecdote about something in Israel that made them smile this week.
Hear the Extra-Special, Special Extra Segment on Patreon
—Kids Out—
Every day for a week hostages got out of Gaza until, all of a sudden, they didn’t.
—Kids In—
When your kid calls to say he loves you.
—The Jew-Hate on Other Campuses—
For our most unreasonably generous Patreon supporters, in our extra-special, special extra discussion: We’ve heard all about how scary and contentious Ivy League schools have become. But what’s it like at all the other places? Prof. Noah Stoffman shares what it’s like on the campus of a world-class public campus: Indiana University.
All that and wheat, oranges and Torah scrolls.
Miriam Herschlag, Gilad Halpern and Noah Efron discuss two topics of incomparable importance and end with an anecdote about something in Israel that made them smile this week.
Hear the Extra-Special, Special Extra Segment on Patreon
—Women & the War—
Gender’s gotten weird (even weirder than usual) in this war. Miriam Schler, Executive Director of the Tel Aviv Sexual Assault Crisis Center, joins us to make sense of it.
—That Thing About the Muses—
So many paintings, songs, poems, sculptures, site exhibits, and plays have been made since October 7. But why?
—The Rape and Other Sexual Violence That Took Place on October 7—
For our most unreasonably generous Patreon supporters, in our extra-special, special extra discussion: We talk about rape and other sexual violence on October 7 with Miriam Schler, Executive Director of the Tel Aviv Sexual Assault Crisis Center.
All that and weddings, weddings, weddings.
Noah takes a break from scrolling and refreshing, to consider the songs of this war (which has produced more music than all of Israel’s past wars rolled into one), and what they say about the country and how it has changed over the years, and for the better.
Miriam and Noah talk about the deal struck between Israel and Hamas, via the Qataris and the Americans, that would return 50 hostages, mostly kids and their mothers, in exchange for 150 Palestinian prisoners and a four day cease fire, the execution of which deal was already delayed on its first day. Miriam talks about evil and Viktor Frankl while Noah, as far as we can tell, lay in a fetal position, moaning on the floor of the studio.
Allison Kaplan Sommer, Don Futterman and Noah Efron discuss two topics of incomparable importance and end with an anecdote about something in Israel that made them smile this week.
Hear the Extra-Special, Special Extra Segment on Patreon
—Trolley Problems—
If the two goals of the war – crushing Hamas and returning the captives home – turn out to be at odds, what should Israel do?
—Ceasefire—
What is the answer to the question, “Why not stop the war right now?”
—What the Large Demonstration in DC Looked Like From Tel Aviv—
For our most unreasonably generous Patreon supporters, in our extra-special, special extra discussion: 300,000 Americans, mostly Jews, demonstrate at the Mall in DC in support of Israel and against anti-Semitism. What was it like seeing that from Tel Aviv?
All that and a temporary, new high-rise kibbutz in Tel Aviv, and a tribute in memoriam to Vivian Silver, z”l. Also, buy Don’s book, and if you already did, buy another two copies!
Allison Kaplan Sommer, Linda Gradstein and Noah Efron discuss two topics of incomparable importance and end with an anecdote about something in Israel that made them smile this week.
Hear the Extra-Special, Special Extra Segment on Patreon
—Our Tragedy & Theirs—
Should our papers, shows and sites be showing and telling us more about the suffering of Gazans, when we have so much pain of our own to come to grips with?
—Bearing Arms—
More people have applied for a gun license in the past month than in the prior decade. Should we be worried?
—Is Noah About to Get His First Tattoo?—
For our most unreasonably generous Patreon supporters, in our extra-special, special extra discussion: Israelis go in droves to tattoo parlors to ink memento of the October 7 massacres. What’s that all about?
All that and good coming from bad, and more new music written in the aftermath of the massacres. Also, last chance to pre-order Don’s book!
Allison Kaplan Sommer, Don Futterman and Noah Efron discuss two topics of incomparable importance and end with an anecdote about something in Israel that made them smile this week.
Hear the Extra-Special, Special Extra Segment on Patreon
—Lessons—
What can Israelis learn from October 7 about the prospect of peace with Palestinians?
—Netanyahu, Now—
Can we still rally around our Prime Minister, even now?
—We Try to Answer the Question, “How Are You?”—
For our most unreasonably generous Patreon supporters, in our extra-special, special extra discussion: A few weeks in, our nerves are frayed. We each try to answer the vexed question, “How are you?”
All that and a mother lobbying God with dough to get her girl out of Gaza and new music about our lives after October 7. Also, pre-order Don’s book!
Allison Kaplan Sommer, Miriam Herschlag and Noah Efron discuss two topics of incomparable importance and end with an anecdote about something in Israel that made them smile this week.
Hear the Extra-Special, Special Extra Segment on Patreon
—Waiting—
The span of time we have now waited for Israel to counter-attack Hamas is now longer than the entire Yom Kippur War. How much longer can we stay in this strange and terrible in-between period without going crazy?
—Captives—
Is our hostage crisis driving us towards our government (as such things often do), or away from it?
—How the Government Deserted An 85 Year Old Hostage For A Second Time—
For our most unreasonably generous Patreon supporters, in our extra-special, special extra discussion: An 85 year old hostage is releases, and she says in a press conference that after beating her when she was just captured, Hamas treated her well. What do you do with that?
All that and an ultra-Orthodox wedding planned by a couple of married-to-each-other lesbians, plus music from the big telethon raising money for the victims of the Hamas attack.
Allison Kaplan Sommer, Linda Gradstein and Noah Efron discuss two topics of incomparable importance and end with an anecdote about something in Israel that made them smile this week.
Hear the Extra-Special, Special Extra Segment on Patreon
—Unity, Sure, but Not National Unity—
One leader of Israel’s opposition joined Netanyahu in a “War Cabinet.” The other leader of the opposition did not. Who made the right call?
—Left Behind—
Why are some of Israel’s leading leftists surprised that murdering babies, old-folks and everything in between does not discredit Hamas in the eyes of some of America’s and Europe’s leading leftists?
—Is Joe Biden the Zionist Leader Israel Needs?—
For our most unreasonably generous Patreon supporters, in our extra-special, special extra discussion: Is US President Joe Biden the leader Israelis yearn for?
All that and the music made this week in hope of finding consolation.
Peace, co-existence and social-justice activist Sally Abed tells Noah what these last, terrible days of grief, anger and fear have been like for her, as an Israeli Arab. This is not for everyone, not at this moment, and if it is not for you, at this moment, don’t listen to it. For some people, it is maybe just what they want to hear, at this moment.
Allison, Miriam and Noah talk about the only thing that could possibly be on our minds at this moment of tragedy, mourning and anxiety.
Hear the Extra-Special, Special Extra Segment on Patreon
—Citizens Stepped in Where Government Failed—
For our most unreasonably generous Patreon supporters, in our extra-special, special extra discussion: For the first 24 hours of tragedy, journalists did what our government failed to do.
All that and songs of consolation.
Allison Kaplan Sommer, Miriam Herschlag and Noah Efron discuss two topics of incomparable importance and end with an anecdote about something in Israel that made them smile this week.
Hear the Extra-Special, Special Extra Segment on Patreon
—Partition Plans?—
On Yom Kippur, Tel Aviv became a battlefield in a religious war. What happened?
—That War—
Exactly fifty years ago, Israel was attacked from the south and the north, and 19 days of bloody fighting ensued. What is the legacy of that terrible war?
For our most unreasonably generous Patreon supporters, in our extra-special, special extra discussion: Our peak Sukkah experiences. Come for the booths, stay for Miriam’s joke about the KGB!
All that and the music of the supremely talented Ariel Herzog, Shauli Eckel and Seballal!
Noah tells the story of one song that is also, in a way, the story of Israel itself.
In this very special episode of sustainably recycled stuff devoted to Yom Kippur, the Day of Atonement, hear about the evolution of the great piyyut and prayer, u’netanah tokef, and hear how members of the crew make sense of the strange and beautiful holiday from their strange and beautiful perspectives.
Jeremy Benstein, “The Bikes and Vibes of Yom Kippur in the first modern, Jewish city”
Miriam Herschlag, “Sins for the Internet Age”
Noah, “And to think that I saw it on Yom Kippur”
All that and indie songs of Yom Kippur!
In this very special holiday Turducken of a podcast, we’ve stuffed into our own carcass an interview that Allison did for the Haaretz Weekly podcast with Noah and his comrade-in-politics Inbal Orpaz on why they are running for city council and what they stand for.
The tryptophan alone is reason enough to listen!
After a momentous week, after many momentous months, the Promised Podcast wishes you and yours a new year of every good thing!
Maybe no one is a better symbol of how Israel is changing (and did more to cause this change) than Rabbi Adin Steinsaltz, who died at 83 in 2020.
Allison Kaplan Sommer, Don Futterman and Noah Efron discuss two topics of incomparable importance and end with an anecdote about something in Israel that made them smile this week.
Hear the Extra-Special, Special Extra Segment on Patreon
—It Ain’t the Economy, Stupid!—
Israel may be the most expensive country in the world, and that fact has zero-zilch-nada impact on politics here. How come?
—Elul, 5783—
Elul is a month of soul-searching. What could we have done better, politically speaking?
—Yair Netanyahu Pays the Price—
For our most unreasonably generous Patreon supporters, in our extra-special, special extra discussion: The court orders first son Yair Netanyahu to pay 130,000 NIS in damages to a woman he defamed on Twitter. Should people have to pay cash money for their scumbaggery on social?
All that and songs of Elul, to put us in the mood!
Linda Gradstein, Noah Efron, and scholar-public intellectual-podcaster Masua Sagiv discuss two topics of incomparable importance and end with an anecdote about something in Israel that made them smile this week.
Hear the Extra-Special, Special Extra Segment on Patreon
—Extremism in the Name of Moderation—
Extremism in the name of moderation is no vice?
—Won’t Anyone Think of the Children?!?—
What’s it like to be a kid living through the tumult and angst of Israel in 2023?
—Does the Road to Coexistence Run Through “Silicon Wadi”?—
For our most unreasonably generous Patreon supporters, in our extra-special, special extra discussion: Does one road to coexistence pass through “Silicon Wadi”?
All that and meat from a machine, Netta Barzilai’s Ha-Tikva, and some great new music by wunderkind Itamar Ramati!
Linda Gradstein and Noah Efron discuss two topics of incomparable importance and end with an anecdote about something in Israel that made them smile this week.
Hear the Extra-Special, Special Extra Segment on Patreon
—Out of Dodge?—
A recent poll shows that almost one in three Israelis are thinking about leaving the country. But are all these folks really about to leave?
—General Malaise—
What happens when the army gets political?
—What to Do With Someone Like Yair Netanyahu?—
For our most unreasonably generous Patreon supporters, in our extra-special, special extra discussion: Is Yair Netanyahu a trollish Dr. Hyde to his father’s sometimes more refined Dr. Jekyll?
All that and a tenth-anniversary tribute to TLV1 and the odd, amazing music of Itay Blau, only some of which was recorded live in a cave.
Allison Kaplan Sommer and Noah Efron discuss two topics of incomparable importance and end with an anecdote about something in Israel that made them smile this week.
Hear the Extra-Special, Special Extra Segment on Patreon
—Shikma—
Does it matter that the first-among-equals leader of Israel’s biggest-ever protest movement is a woman (and a renowned particle physicist and a mother of five)?
—Gal, or, Toward a Grand Unified Theory of Gal Gadot—
Why is Gal Gadot, among Israelis, the most beloved Israeli since maybe Moshe Dayan? It needs to be explained, once and for all.
—Thoughts on Disrupting Politicians’ Vacations—
For our most unreasonably generous Patreon supporters, in our extra-special, special extra discussion: Protesters disrupt politicians’ vacations, scaring their kids and vowing there’ll be no R&R for the people behind the judicial reform. Is that cricket?
All that and a slam poetry tribute to all things parve, and some great new music by Oren Lotenberg!
Allison Kaplan Sommer and Noah Efron discuss two topics of incomparable importance and end with an anecdote about something in Israel that made them smile this week.
Hear the Extra-Special, Special Extra Segment on Patreon
—National Unity?—
Does the idea of tossing out of the government the far-right parties, and swapping in the center-left, makes a lick of sense? Is this even possible anymore?
—Save Us from Ourselves, Joe Biden !?!—
Is Israel’s left sending to DC a droid with the message: “Help us, Joe Biden. You’re our only hope”?
For our most unreasonably generous Patreon supporters, in our extra-special, special extra discussion: What happened to all the news?
All that and a tribute to one of Israel’s great feminist pioneers, Esther Ellam, who died this week. Plus, the punky pop (or is it poppy punk) of Yishai Berger!
Linda Gradstein, Allison Kaplan Sommer, and Noah Efron discuss two topics of incomparable importance and end with an anecdote about something in Israel that made them smile this week.
Hear the Extra-Special, Special Extra Segment on Patreon
—What Happened?—
The government passed the law that limits the court’s ability to limit the Ministers and cabinet. So why did the two sides fail to reach compromise, even though all sides said that’s what they wanted?
—What Happens Now?—
Now that the law limiting the court’s ability to limit the Ministers and cabinet passed, where do we go from here?
—What Does Tisha B’Av Mean to Us, Especially After this Week—
For our most unreasonably generous Patreon supporters, in our extra-special, special extra discussion: Has Tisha B’Av taken on new meanings in these schismatic times?
All that and the 101st birthday of Tirza Hodes, who helped invent Israeli folk dance, and the music of the Yama Ensemble!
Sally Abed, Allison Kaplan Sommer, and Noah Efron discuss three topics of incomparable importance and end with an anecdote about something in Israel that made them smile this week.
Hear the Extra-Special, Special Extra Segment on Patreon
—Fortress of Democracy?—
Does anyone really think it would be a good idea for Israel’s Supreme Court to fire Benjamin Netanyahu?
—Jenin, Again—
Two weeks ago, thirteen people died in an IDF operation in Jenin that, today, is all but forgotten.
—And No Religion, Too!—
A major documentary seeks to understand the soul of secular Israelis.
—Our Summer Eats, Drinks, and Favorite Places that Help Ease the Heat—
For our most unreasonably generous Patreon supporters, in our extra-special, special extra discussion: What do we drink, what do we eat, and where do we go to mark the advent of “high summer”?
All that and Elisha Shelem, demonstrations everywhere, and the music of cellist Ayala Ziv!
Miriam Herschlag, Don Futterman and Noah Efron discuss three topics of incomparable importance and end with an anecdote about something in Israel that made them smile this week.
Hear the Extra-Special, Special Extra Segment on Patreon
—Phase Change?—
As summer heats up, there’s an escalation of the protests and counter-protests. Looks like it’s going to be a scorching summer.
—Israel’s “Constitutional Moment”?—
Is it time for Israel finally to write a founding document, a constitution, 75 years after the country was created?
—Tradition, Tradition … Tradition!—
Are more and more Israelis religion-fluid and Yiddishkeit-queer? A new report says it is so.
—Should We Keep Our Purchases Out of Our Protests?—
For our most unreasonably generous Patreon supporters, in our extra-special, special extra discussion: Do we want our shopping malls to have political opinions, or are we better off keeping our buyin’ separate from our decryin’?
All that and Yitzhak Rabin on the eve of the Yom Kippur War, a newscaster newscasting with advanced ALS, and the amazing music of 21 year old indie phenom, Alma Gov!
As the massive protests enter their seventh month, the Promised Podcast looks at the place of protest in Israeli society. (This episode contains time-tested content from the vault, so you know it’s good!)
In the waning days of Pride Month, the Promised Podcast ransacks its archives for memorable LGBTQ+ moments and music!
Prodigal Wunderkind Ohad Zeltzer-Zubida, Allison Kaplan Sommer and Noah Efron discuss two topics of incomparable importance and end with an anecdote about something in Israel that made them smile this week.
Hear the Extra-Special, Special Extra Segment on Patreon
—What’s More Reasonable Than Reasonableness?—
Prime Minister Netanyahu decided to move forward the judicial reform by passing a law limiting when and how judges can rule based on what seems “reasonable” to them. What, in Israel, has ever been reasonable?
—No More Heroes Anymore?—
Now that the writer-prophets, the Ozes and the Yehoshuas, are no longer with us, are we sailing on a ship without a moral compass?
For our most unreasonably generous Patreon supporters, in our extra-special, special extra discussion: It’s like the whole country is in a weird and dark mood. How does Ohad see things as an outsider looking in?
All that and the weird interconnectedness of everything Israeli, a top drawer research organization finding Tel Aviv-Jaffa to be the happiest city on earth, and the music of rising young star Inbal Bibi!
Sally Abed, Allison Kaplan Sommer and Noah Efron discuss two topics of incomparable importance and end with an anecdote about something in Israel that made them smile this week.
Hear the Extra-Special, Special Extra Segment on Patreon
—Selectile Dysfunction—
There was a weird Knesset vote this week that elected a representative from the opposition to the Judicial Selection Committee but no representative from the coalition, and still somehow led to a breakdown of talks at the President’s Residence. So what the hell happened and what does it mean?
—101 and Counting—
More than 100 Palestinian citizens of Israel murdered by Palestinian citizens of Israel so far this year (and the year is not yet half over). What’s happening?
—A True Display of Mixed Israeli Society—
For our most unreasonably generous Patreon supporters, in our extra-special, special extra discussion: Three stars of the team that came in third last week in the Under-20 World Cup Football (Soccer) are Palestinians. Is that a fact that means something that matters?
All that and the first Tel Aviv Pride Parade twenty-five years ago, a trip to Sinai and the changing face of Rocky Horror!
Ace reporter Linda Gradstein, Allison Kaplan Sommer and Noah Efron discuss two topics of incomparable importance and end with an anecdote about something in Israel that made them smile this week.
Hear the Extra-Special, Special Extra Segment on Patreon
—On Foreign Shores?—
Israeli ministers and MKs are drowned when they try to speak overseas, by Israeli protestors. Is that cool?
—The Past is Never Dead. It’s Not Even Past—
Three-quarters of a century ago, sixteen Jewish soldiers were killed when their boat was destroyed by Jewish soldiers in a Jewish State that was 37 days old. Why does this story still matter so much to so many, 75 years later?
—How Bad Is Inflation, Actually?—
For our most unreasonably generous Patreon supporters, in our extra-special, special extra discussion: Inflation can topple governments. But do we even notice it, really?
All that and 50 years since The Voice of Peace first broadcast “from somewhere in the Mediterranean”, a renowned actress jumping off a Tel Aviv bridge to save a life and the official LGBTQ anthems of years gone by!
Ace reporter Linda Gradstein, Allison Kaplan Sommer and Noah Efron discuss two topics of incomparable importance and end with an anecdote about something in Israel that made them smile this week.
Hear the Extra-Special, Special Extra Segment on Patreon
—Food Fight!—
Can the government’s war on Coca Cola be resolved by diplomatic means?
—Can You Dig It?—
Is the best thing Israeli archeologists can do, doing nothing?
—Our Love for Yulia the Monk Seal—
For our most unreasonably generous Patreon supporters, in our extra-special, special extra discussion: Why do we love Yulia the monk seal so damn much?
All that and the return of Yulia the monk seal, a reflection upon the death of the great centenarian Rabbi Gershon Edelstein and the music of The Golem of Prague!
Ace reporter Linda Gradstein, Allison Kaplan Sommer and Noah Efron discuss three topics of incomparable importance and end with an anecdote about something in Israel that made them smile this week.
Hear the Extra-Special, Special Extra Segment on Patreon
—Spending, Rending, Upending—
Opponents say the two-year budget Netanyahu’s government just passed is “a looting of the public coffers.” Do they have a point?
—Demonstration Stagnation?—
Are the protests petering out?
—Gimme Gimme Shuk Treatment—
Does the shuk really need a boutique and a swinging hot spot?
For our most unreasonably generous Patreon supporters, in our extra-special, special extra discussion: We love the shuk!
All that and the centennial of the “Battalion of the Defenders of the Language,” a Noa Kirel update and the charming music of Maor Shooshan.
Allison Kaplan Sommer, Don Futterman and Noah Efron discuss two topics of incomparable importance and end with an anecdote about something in Israel that made them smile this week.
Hear the Extra-Special, Special Extra Segment on Patreon
—Gaza Nova—
What the hell just happened between us and Gaza?
—Taxation, Like Charity, Begins at Home—
Redistribution of income seems like a good idea until it’s your income being redistributed.
—It’s Jerusalem Day! Yay or Oy?—
For our most unreasonably generous Patreon supporters, in our extra-special, special extra discussion: It’s Jerusalem Day! So why do we feel so glum?
All that and the sad passing of Yael Greenberg, the kabbalistic numerology of the Eurovision, and the molting seal who won our hearts! Plus the talent and cool of Orca!
In honor of this year’s Eurovision Song Contest, the crew shares thoughts and memories about one of the most important events of year!
Music
Lesser-known, but still great, songs from the Eurovision
Ace reporter Linda Gradstein and Noah Efron discuss two topics of incomparable importance and end with an anecdote about something in Israel that made them smile this week.
Hear the Extra-Special, Special Extra Segment on Patreon
—Million Person Protest—
More than 200,000 gather in Jerusalem to demonstrate their support of Netanyahu’s judicial reforms. What do we learn from this?
—Declaration Contemplation—
People want to make Israel’s Declaration of Independence into a basic law and the foundation of a constitution. But is that really a good idea?
—Independence Day’s International Bible Contest—
For our most unreasonably generous Patreon supporters, in our extra-special, special extra discussion: What does it say about Israel that the beating heart of its Independence Day celebrations is an international Bible contest for teens?
All that and the International Bible Contest and the music of Yaara Top!
The crew tell share stuff in celebration of Israel’s 75th Independence Day! Plus, one great song from each decade!
Songs from Paskol Shelishi, New songs inspired by Survivors
First Decade: He’amini Yom Yavo, Yaffa Yarkoni (1948)
Second Decade: Kol ha-Shavua Lach, Ha-halonot ha-gevohim (1967)
Third Decade: YoYa, Kaveret (1973)
Fourth Decade: Mihakim Lamashiach, Shalom Hanoch (1985)
Fifth Decade: Zan Nadir, Corrine Alal (1992)
Sixth Decade: Bo’ee, Idan Raichel Project (2002)
Seventh Decade: Malkat ha-Shoshanim, Eden Ben Zakken (2015)
Eight Decade: She-Rak Tehayekh, Yuval Dayan (2021)
Sally Abed, Miriam Herschlag and Noah Efron discuss three topics of incomparable importance and end with an anecdote about something in Israel that made them smile this week.
Hear the Extra-Special, Special Extra Segment on Patreon
—Politics of Memory—
Is it possible to keep politics outside the gates of our cemeteries?
—Kids & Vids—
Seven Ashkenazi teens at a religious high school for girls make a video full of stereotypes about Sefaradim. Sure, it’s icky, but what’s it mean?
—Definitely Not Live—
There’s a new duet by two of Israel’s most revered, tragic, Yemenite singers, who have been dead for decades. What happens to culture, once AI can vanquish death?
—For Some, Like Sally, It’s Going to Be a Complicated Week—
For our most unreasonably generous Patreon supporters, in our extra-special, special extra discussion: What is it like to be Sally, during this fraught eight-day-week from Holocaust Memorial Day, to Memorial Day for Israel’s Fallen, to Independence Day?
All that and a farewell to Meir Shalev, Easter in the Galilee and the remarkable music of young Israeli artists inspired by the stories of aging Holocaust survivors.
Miriam Herschlag, Don Futterman and Noah Efron discuss two topics of incomparable importance and end with an anecdote about something in Israel that made them smile this week.
Hear the Extra-Special, Special Extra Segment on Patreon—Riff-Raff Rift—
Everyone’s worried about “The rift splitting the nation.” Is is real? And, if so, what’s it all about?
—Not the New Jew We Wanted?—
Did 56 years of occupying the West Bank change the nature of the Jewish religion fundamentally (and not for the better)?
For our most unreasonably generous Patreon supporters, in our extra-special, special extra discussion: No reason to stay sober on Mimouna!
All that and the Dee family, and the hip-hop of Ariela Baruh!
A medley of favorite old stories and discussions about Passover by the people of the Promised Podcast. (After all, we read the same goddam Haggadah every year, and I don’t hear anyone complaining about that!)
Linda Gradstein and Noah Efron discuss two topics of incomparable importance and end with an anecdote about something in Israel that made them smile this week.
Hear the Extra-Special, Special Extra Segment on Patreon
—The Hell?—
After 85 fever-dream days, what the hell just happened?
—Has Bibi Lost It?—
Is it time to administer Trump’s old “Person-Woman-Man-Camera-TV” test to Benjamin Netanyahu?
For our most unreasonably generous Patreon supporters, in our extra-special, special extra discussion: Did Joe Biden just bitch-slap Benjamin Netanyahu?
All that and an appreciation of Yiddish poet Riva Basman Ben-Hayyim, may her memory be for a blessing, and the music of Dror Paz!
Allison Kaplan Sommer, Noah Efron and very special guest Mijal Bitton discuss two topics of incomparable importance and end with an anecdote about something in Israel that made them smile this week.
Hear the Extra-Special, Special Extra Segment on Patreon
—The Best Laid Plans—
President Herzog’s compromise plan for judicial reform failed straight out of the gate. But why?
—Ne’emanut Now—
Mijal explains her notion of “Ne’emanut” and how maybe there’s more to morality than being principled.
—How Are Israel’s Judicial Reforms Affecting Those On the Outside?—
For our most unreasonably generous Patreon supporters, in our extra-special, special extra discussion: How does the fight over the courts here affect Jews in other places who care about Israel?
All that and the protest song just voted “the best song in Israel’s history,” plus the music of Benaia Barabi!
Allison Kaplan Sommer and Noah Efron discuss two topics of incomparable importance and end with an anecdote about something in Israel that made them smile this week.
Hear the Extra-Special, Special Extra Segment on Patreon
—Insubordi-Nation—
There’s a growing number of elite reservists who are refusing to serve in the IDF because of the judicial reform. Is staying home from an army a fair response?
—Secular Uprising?—
Haaretz’s Anshel Pfeffer argues that the energy behind the protests comes mostly from secular folks who are fed up, once and for all, with religious folks. In the end, does it always comes down to religion?
For our most unreasonably generous Patreon supporters, in our extra-special, special extra discussion: Was Israel’s next Eurovision song written by ChatGPT?
All that and Chaim Topol, may his memory be for a blessing, and the music of Rotem Cohen!
In this very special episode, recorded on a “National Day of Resistance Against Dictatorship,” Noah tries your patience trying to figure out what the hell this conflict is about.
Allison Kaplan Sommer and Noah Efron discuss two topics of incomparable importance and end with an anecdote about something in Israel that made them smile this week.
Hear the Extra-Special, Special Extra Segment on Patreon
—In Flames—
We just witnessed the rampage on Huwara that many here are calling a pogrom. A pogrom in 2023?
—Flagging Spirits (or, Vexing Vexillology)—
Israeli flags are weirdly prominent in the protests against the judicial reform. What’s with the flags?
—Piece of Pottery Possibly Proves Purim—
For our most unreasonably generous Patreon supporters, in our extra-special, special extra discussion: One of the president’s senior staff finds an ancient pottery shard with the name of the father of King Achashverosh, from the Purim Megillah, which somehow makes Noah feel nervous, but why, exactly?!?
All that and Rena Gluck and the birth of modern dance in Israel, Sara Netanyahu besieged in a salon, and the music of J.Lamotta!
In this first-in-all-of-human-history, cross-over edition of TLV1’s Tel Aviv Review and TLV1’s The Promised Podcast, we discuss the open letter of more than 160 renowned historians of Jews, Judaism and/or Israel (“Israel on the Edge of an Abyss”), which opens, “We, historians of the Jewish people and of the State of Israel, accuse the sixth government of Benjamin Netanyahu of endangering the very existence of the State of Israel and the Israeli nation.” Joining us is the author of the letter, the brilliant historian Orit Rozin.
Miriam Herschlag and Noah Efron discuss two topics of incomparable importance and end with an anecdote about something in Israel that made them smile this week.
Hear the Extra-Special, Special Extra Segment on Patreon
—Uncivil Disobedience?—
Strikes, blocking roads, doxing, boycotts, intimidating demonstrations right outside the doors of legislators and ministers – Where’s the line that divides legitimate protest from the other kind?
—Barak and a Hard Place—
Why is former Chief Justice of the Supreme Court, Aharon Barak, the most revered and reviled man in Israel?
—The Great Zionist That Denounced Zionism—
For our most unreasonably generous Patreon supporters, in our extra-special, special extra discussion: What are you supposed to feel when a person who inspired you to become a Zionist renounces and denounces Zionism?
All that and the return of Guns N’ Roses, the very public coming-out of a religious journalist, and the music of Akiva!
Allison Kaplan Sommer, Sally Abed and Noah Efron discuss two topics of incomparable importance and end with an anecdote about something in Israel that made them smile this week.
Hear the Extra-Special, Special Extra Segment on Patreon
—Presidential Importunity—
President Herzog addressed the nation, looking like he’d just seen a ghost. Many say it was the most important speech of Herzog’s life, but was it the speech we need to hear and will it do a damn thing?
—A Protest of All its Protestors!—
In demonstrations demanding democracy, why does one hear so few Palestinian voices?
For our most unreasonably generous Patreon supporters, in our extra-special, special extra discussion: Kafka would say, Lighten up, dudes!
All that and the music of sing-songwriter-Mensch Bradley Burston!
Allison Kaplan Sommer, Don Futterman and Noah Efron discuss two topics of incomparable importance and end with an anecdote about something in Israel that made them smile this week.
Hear the Extra-Special, Special Extra Segment on Patreon
—The Invisible Hand that Rocks the Cradle—
Newly proposed reform of the schools would give principals the power to fire bad teachers and give extra pay to the good ones, bringing free-market principles to grade-school principals. Do we really need another major reform right now?
—SS, Mein Kind—
It seems like Nazis are so much on the minds of so many who are fighting Netanyahu’s judicial reforms. Are we a Godwin-forsaken country?
—An Open Letter to Israel’s Friends in North America—
For our most unreasonably generous Patreon supporters, in our extra-special, special extra discussion: When American-immigrant-Israeli “Dream Team” issues a Cri de Coeur you pay attention!
All that and Kiss’s Gene Simmons singing the praises of Hebrew and the music of Avi Aburomi!
Allison Kaplan Sommer and Noah Efron discuss two topics of incomparable importance and end with an anecdote about something in Israel that made them smile this week.
Hear the Extra-Special, Special Extra Segment on Patreon
—When Cannons Roar—
There were 32 attacks on Israeli Jews – some deadly – in January. How does the violence affect the protests over Netanyahu’s reforms that have roiled the country?
—Keeping the Faith—
Is religious-left and oxymoron?
For our most unreasonably generous Patreon supporters, in our extra-special, special extra discussion: Israel Bar Association head, and leader of the protest movement, Avi Himi is caught diddling his fiddle on a video call with a young lawyer eager for his recommendation for a seat at the bench. Oy. What happens now?
All that and the twentieth anniversary of the Columbia space shuttle disaster, young professors cruising bars for the sake of politics, and a mother-daughter dance at Suzanne Dallal! Plus, the hippest of hip hop by Talis, on the release of his first album!
Allison Kaplan Sommer and Noah Efron discuss two topics of incomparable importance and end with an anecdote about something in Israel that made them smile this week.
Hear the Extra-Special, Special Extra Segment on Patreon
—A Tale of Four Cities—
Fifteen times as many people are turning out for anti-government demonstrations in Tel Aviv as are coming to demonstrations in Jerusalem. But are the small demonstrations in the capital more important than the big demonstrations on the coast?
—U & Us—
University students hold every imaginable political belief. So is it right for university administrators and faculty to encourage their students to protest the new government?
For our most unreasonably generous Patreon supporters, in our extra-special, special extra discussion: Successful Israeli businessman Ohad Torpor says Jews are so successful at business because they love learning, hate being told what to think, are into family, and are improvisational. Where does pride end and self-congratulatory fantasy start?
All that and, to mark International Holocaust Day, a discussion with Daniel Lipson, a librarian at the National Library who has worked for years to identify the books in the library’s collections that were stolen by the Nazi’s during the war, and recovered later and shipped to Israel.
Plus, the music of Subliminal and Ha-Tzel, who just reunited fourteen years after they stopped making music together.
Miriam Herschlag and Noah Efron discuss two topics of incomparable importance and end with an anecdote about something in Israel that made them smile this week.
Hear the Extra-Special, Special Extra Segment on Patreon
—Estoppel Anagrams to “Lost Peeps”—
The Supreme Court bars Shas head Aryeh Deri from being a minister, and half the country thinks justice has been done and half the country thinks the results of Novembers democratic elections have been undone.
—WWYS, or What Would Yossi Say?—
Journalist, scholar, podcaster, public intellectual Yossi Klein Halevi published an essay on the Times of Israel arguing that we’re riven between those who long for a “State of Judaism”, and those who long for a “State of Jews.” How did we get here? Yossi Klein Halevi, who joined us for the discussion, has an answer!
—Ha’Trempistim – The Hitchhikers—
For our most unreasonably generous Patreon supporters, in our extra-special, special extra discussion: A documentary web series shows Israelis at our pushy, boundary-less best.
All that and the first 7Eleven in a Jewish State in 5,000 years, a new Hebrew word from beyond the grave, and the music of Daria Vered!
Noah Efron and prodigal son Ohad Zeltzer-Zubida discuss two topics of incomparable importance and end with an anecdote about something in Israel that made them smile this week.
Hear the Extra-Special, Special Extra Segment on Patreon
—Courting Disaster?—
The “Judicial Reform” has so many people so very worried. Is it needed reform or coup d’état?
—Our Bialik—
People still call Hayim Nahman Bialik Israel’s “National Poet.” What could that possibly mean in 2023, on the 150th anniversary of Bialik’s birth?
—The Ultimate Guide to All That Tel Aviv Has to Offer—
For our most unreasonably generous Patreon supporters, in our extra-special, special extra discussion: Ohad spills about the coolest eating and drinking spots in Tel Aviv-Jaffa.
All that and Pooh in the Promised Land, the Museum of Illusions, and Bialik’s words set to hip new music.
Linda Gradstein and Noah Efron discuss two topics of incomparable importance and end with an anecdote about something in Israel that made them smile this week.
Hear the Extra-Special, Special Extra Segment on Patreon—This Time Feels Different—
When historians look back, will they say the elections of 2022 were when Israel changed forever (and not necessarily for the better)?
—You’re Not the Judge of Me!—
If two people fighting who owes who what, and they both want to be tried by a rabbi instead of a judge, is that cool?
—Why Do Israeli College Kids Speak So Pretty and Write So Poorly?—
For our most unreasonably generous Patreon supporters, in our extra-special, special extra discussion: Why do Israeli college kids speak so pretty and write so poorly?
All that and the election of Israel’s first Gay Knesset Speaker, along with various and sundry wonders experienced on busses and in movie theaters. Plus, the spectacular music of The Revivo Project!
Allison Kaplan Sommer, Don Futterman and Noah Efron discuss two topics of incomparable importance and end with an anecdote about something in Israel that made them smile this week.
Hear the Extra-Special, Special Extra Segment on Patreon
—The Paper It’s Written On?—
What good are the new “coalition agreements” Benjamin Netanyahu just signed, if the guy is already saying he ain’t gonna honor at least some of them? Netanyahu promised, he just did not promise to keep his promise.
—Getting the Book of Books on the Books—
There’s a new proposed “Basic Law: Torah Study” that gives learning Talmud in a Yeshiva the same weight and status as commanding a tank in the IDF. Is it finally time to make the Torah nice and legal?
—Getting up Early and Staying Up Late to Serve the Jewish People in Toronto—
For our most unreasonably generous Patreon supporters, in our extra-special, special extra discussion: While you’re living your life, Tamar Sommer is getting up early and staying up late to serve the Jewish People in Toronto. We hear what its like up there in the frozen North.
All that and the old-new hotel Einstein slept in in Tel Aviv, beached plastic plates in Ashkelon, and the category-defying music of Uri Brauner Kinrot, on his own and with friends.
Ever since the elections produced what the elections produced, including a new Minister in charge of the police who used to have hanging on his wall, as a tribute, a picture of a man who murdered 29 Palestinian worshippers in the Tomb of the Patriarch, we’ve been wondering what our Sally Abed makes of all this. This week, finally, we had a chance to ask.
Hear the Extra-Special, Special Extra Segment on Patreon
—Same Old, Same Old?—
What’s Sally think?
—Yet Another New Left?—
Has the time come for a new left – of, by and for Jews & Palestinians together – that leaves Zionism checked at the door?
—What’s J Street’s Convention Like for Someone Not So American, Not So Jewish?—
For our most unreasonably generous Patreon supporters, in our extra-special, special extra discussion: What was it like at the J Street Progressive, American, Jewish lobby convention for Sally, who is plenty progressive, but not so much American and not so much Jewish?
That and the world’s biggest Lego Hanukah menorah, the Bureau for the Search for Relatives, and the music of Osher Bachta!
Allison Kaplan Sommer, Don Futterman and Noah Efron discuss two topics of incomparable importance and end with an anecdote about something in Israel that made them smile this week.
Hear the Extra-Special, Special Extra Segment on Patreon
—The Other Two-State Solution?—
More and more progressive Israeli Jews dream of separation from the more religious, more right wing Jews. What’s up with that?
—J Street 2.0—
J Street unveiled a new vision at its recent conference. Is this J Street 2.0?
For our most unreasonably generous Patreon supporters, in our extra-special, special extra discussion: Kfar Saba celebrates 120, and Don tells us what’s to love about his home town, as it reaches its biblical allotment of years.
All that and a farewell to the great guitarist and song-writer, Yitzhak Klepter, who passed away this week. May his memory be for a blessing.
Noah Efron and Times of Israel Ops & Blogs impresario Miriam Herschlag discuss two topics of incomparable importance and end with an anecdote about something in Israel that made them smile this week.
Hear the Extra-Special, Special Extra Segment on Patreon
—Rock of Our Salvation?—
Why do so many people think that giving the head of a homophobic party control over school enrichment programs might be the worst thing Benjamin Netanyahu has ever done?
—The Jewish War—
Israel’s new government to American Jews: F*ck you?
—That Kid Who Yelled That Thing at That Protester—
For our most unreasonably generous Patreon supporters, in our extra-special, special extra discussion: That kid who yelled that thing at that protester, and whether he ought to spend a week in jail for it.
All that and the outpouring of love in Israel for Morocco’s great World Cup team, good and bad neighborhoods, the Palestinian head of one of the country’s most important environmental organizations, and how cassette tapes changed Israeli music forever. All that and music by Jenny Penkin!
Noah Efron and journalist-extraordinaire Linda Gradstein discuss two topics of incomparable importance and end with an anecdote about something in Israel that made them smile this week.
Hear the Extra-Special, Special Extra Segment on Patreon
—Can’t Spell “Minister Ben Gvir” Without “Bite Me”—
Minister Ben Gvir?!?
—This Time, It’s Personal—
Anything wrong with tidying up a ‘Basic Law’ so Aryeh Deri can become a minister just four years after admitting to tax evasion?
—Good Wine Can’t Possibly Be Bad for Me!—
For our most unreasonably generous Patreon supporters, in our extra-special, special extra discussion: With such good Israeli wine, why ever get sober?
All that and a remembrance of Amnon De Hartog, plus Tom Schneid, the “first queer rapper” since the Torah was given at Sinai!
Noah Efron and Professor, Environmental Activist and outgoing Member of Knesset Alon Tal discuss two topics of incomparable importance and end with an anecdote about something in Israel that made them smile this week.
Hear the Extra-Special, Special Extra Segment on Patreon
—Is a Dream a Lie?—
Did Israel’s outgoing government prove that right-center-left-Arab-Jewish politics is possible? Or did it prove that it’s impossible?
—White Knight?—
Should Benny Gantz break his promise, join Netanyahu’s government, and save us from the Kahanists and the homophobes?
For our most unreasonably generous Patreon supporters, in our extra-special, special extra discussion: Good COP bad COP?
All that and a website that handicaps the World Cup according to how good each country has been to the Jews. Plus, the R&B and hip hop of Ariella Baruh!
Don Futterman, Noah Efron and journalist-extraordinaire Linda Gradstein discuss two topics of incomparable importance and end with an anecdote about something in Israel that made them smile this week.
Hear the Extra-Special, Special Extra Segment on Patreon
—Yes, Virginia, There is an Override Clause—
All the parties in Netanyahu’s presumptive coalition agree to pass a law letting the Knesset to overrule the Supreme Court’s striking down laws passed by the Knesset. What happens now?
—Ungrandfathering the Grandchild Clause—
Why do the religious parties all want to change the Law of Return so it applies to fewer people?
For our most unreasonably generous Patreon supporters, in our extra-special, special extra discussion: Places we like to eat and drink.
All that and Huberman’s Stradivarius, Mossi Raz’s mission and Rosa and the Salmons!
Miriam Herschlag, Don Futterman and Noah Efron discuss two topics of incomparable importance and end with an anecdote about something in Israel that made them smile this week.
Hear the Extra-Special, Special Extra Segment on Patreon
Earth’s Promise שבועת האדמה Donation: https://bit.ly/Earthsgive Website: https://www.earthspromise.org.il/ Facebook Page: https://www.facebook.com/earthspromise
—Murder on the Election Express—
Who’s to blame for the loss of the center left?
—Not That Kind of a Jewish State—
Are the very religious parties that will make up half of Netanyahu’s coalition hoping to turn Israel into a Halakhic State?
—Keep Your Politics to Your… Students?—
For our most unreasonably generous Patreon supporters, in our extra-special, special extra discussion: A college president we’ve got affection for gets himself into hot water by trashing the newly elected government in a letter he sent to all the students at his school. Should academics stay silent when they think the country is going in a dangerous direction?
All that and Tula Ben Ari!
As the very last votes are still being counted, Miriam, Don and Noah try to make sense of the election results that will bring Benjamin Netanyahu back to the Prime Minister’s office, and what they say about the heart and soul of the country, and what they do to our own hearts and souls.
Hear the Extra-Special, Special Extra Segment on Patreon
—As the Dust Settles—
What just happened?
For our most unreasonably generous Patreon supporters, in our extra-special, special extra discussion: After the votes are counted, Haaretz prints an editorial enlisting us in the “Battle for Israel.” But is that really what it’s come to?
All this and songs for pondering elections!
Sally Abed, Don Futterman and Noah Efron discuss two topics of incomparable importance and end with an anecdote about something in Israel that made them smile this week.
Hear the Extra-Special, Special Extra Segment on Patreon
—It Just Doesn’t Matter?—
Why do some people wake up on election morning with the feeling that it just doesn’t matter who they vote for, or if they vote at all?
—So Goes the Nation!—
We got no secrets. Here’s how we’re voting.
—״Blood: A Strong Occupation for Israel״—
For our most unreasonably generous Patreon supporters, in our extra-special, special extra discussion: The anti-Occupation NGO Breaking the Silence runs a faux election campaign for a faux party whose faux slogan is, “A Strong Occupation for Israel.” What do you do with that?
All this and Moom Nadir, good ol’ punk!
Allison Kaplan Sommer, Don Futterman and Noah Efron discuss two topics of incomparable importance and end with an anecdote about something in Israel that made them smile this week.
Hear the Extra-Special, Special Extra Segment on Patreon
—The Stakes—
Just what happens if Benjamin Netanyahu is elected Prime Minister?
—A Line in the Sea—
Israel negotiates an historic treaty with Lebanon, but Prime Minister Yair Lapid doesn’t bring it to the Knesset to ratify, on the grounds that, if he did, it wouldn’t. Did he make the right call?
For our most unreasonably generous Patreon supporters, in our extra-special, special extra discussion: Like with last week’s tweet by Kanye, we wonder why didn’t Donald’s tweet bug Israeli Jews.
All this and Odeya, a 21 year old cooler-than-cool rising star!
Allison Kaplan Sommer, Don Futterman and Noah Efron discuss three topics of incomparable importance and end with an anecdote about something in Israel that made them smile this week.
Hear the Extra-Special, Special Extra Segment on Patreon
—Ad Hominem, Ad Absurdum, Ad Victorium & Ad Nauseum—
We watched hundreds of election ads, so you don’t have to. What do they tell us about that the parties are trying to tell voters?
—Thesis – Antithesis – Screw You!—
Maybe nothing makes people as mad as beloved celebrity changing political camps. How come?
—After the Holidays—
For a month, during the holidays, it’s almost impossible to do anything. Then the world comes crashing back.
For our most unreasonably generous Patreon supporters, in our extra-special, special extra discussion: Why didn’t Kanye’s tweet bug Israeli Jews (who, one imagines, Kanye’s also gone to Death Con 3 on).
All this and Meshi Kleinstein, the daughter of two of the most popular singers in Israel’s history, now singing on her own (and also with her folks)!
Allison Kaplan Sommer and Noah Efron discuss two topics of incomparable importance and end with an anecdote about something in Israel that made them smile this week.
Hear the Extra-Special, Special Extra Segment on Patreon—Yair in Dag Hammarskjöld Square—
A month before elections, caretaker Prime Minister Yair Lapid tells the UN he supports the creation of a Palestinian state. How come?
—We Are All Grammy Hall—
Global thought leaders think Israel is the 2nd most religious country on earth? Why on earth do they think that?!?
—The Weird Magic of Yom Kippur—
For our most unreasonably generous Patreon supporters, in our extra-special, special extra discussion: Allison and Noah talk about the weird magic of Yom Kippur on Israeli streets.
All this and a preview of the throaty shoo bop goodness of Ella Raphael’s soon-to-be-released first record!
In this very special, carbon-neutral episode, we look back on people who lately left us, leaving a huge mark on our lives and world.
In Memoriam Clips
All songs by jazz genius, Yakir Arbib!
Songs
Allison Kaplan Sommer, Don Futterman and Noah Efron discuss three topics of incomparable importance and end with an anecdote about something in Israel that made them smile this week.
—Cutting to the Core—
Benjamin Netanyahu promises ultra-Orthodox politicians, in exchange for their support, to fully-fund Haredi schools no matter what they do and do not teach. Is that unhinged and irresponsible?
—A Woman’s Place—
It’s the patriarchy, Stupid!
—Curses & Blessings—
Reflections on the year that was.
All this and songs to take us from the end of the month of Elul through the Days of Awe!
Allison Kaplan Sommer, Miriam Herschlag and Noah Efron discuss three topics of incomparable importance and end with an anecdote about something in Israel that made them smile this week.
Hear the Extra-Special, Special Extra Segment on Patreon
—What Gantz Wantz—
A little from Column A, a little from Column B: What does the “National Unity Party” candidate list tell us about what the party stands for?
—What Did You Learn in School Today?—
Is it wrong for a high school principal to let ultra-nationalist MK Itamar Ben Gvir give a speech to her kids?
—Enflamed Youth—
The head of Israel’s hottest new political party is a TikTok celeb too young to be elected to the Knesset. What gives?
—The Nature Hikes in Israel That Left Their Marks On Our Souls—
For our most unreasonably generous Patreon supporters, in our extra-special, special extra discussion: In honor of Israel’s most legendary hiker, Shuka Ravek, who died this week at 91, we talk about nature hikes we’ve taken over the years that have left their marks on our psyches and our souls.
All this and Gugi!
In this very-special episode from Limmud Oz in Melbourne, Australia, Noah puzzles out – What? – why he and Susan uprooted their family tree from rich American soil, replanting it in the alluvium of Israel, and how that’s worked out for them and their kids, who are now the age their parents were when they first came to the country. Not a story for everyone, but maybe one that will interest a few. With huge thanks for the amazing folks at Limmud Oz!
In this 100% reused-reduced-recycled episode, Noah bloviates about Tel Aviv-Jaffa, the city we love so well!
The Pussycat Club
Coffee Lab
Tal Tenne Czaczkes
Tel Aviv’s City Council Debates Things that Matter
Bartleby in Tel Aviv
The Boteach Sex Store
The Bus on Ben Yehuda
Theodor Herzl’s Funeral Pal
The Hotel Where Eichmann Slept
Up in the Old Palatin Hotel
(Plus music of the city, by the city, for the city!)
Allison Kaplan Sommer, Gilad Halpern and Noah Efron discuss three topics of incomparable importance and end with an anecdote about something in Israel that made them smile this week.
Hear the Extra-Special, Special Extra Segment on Patreon—Back to the Future—
Did the Meretz party primaries just send the party back to the future?
—Homo Sionisticus Religiosus—
What, if anything, do the primaries in the Religious Zionism party say about, well, religious Zionism?
—Primary Directive—
Do party primaries pick better Knesset candidates than the more autocratic alternatives?
—How Does American College Life Differ From Israeli University Life?—
For our most unreasonably generous Patreon supporters, in our extra-special, special extra discussion: With Gilad’s triumphant return from teaching media and journalism at San Diego State University, we talk about how American college life differ from Israeli university life, and what it is like, in this day an age, to be an Israeli transplant on an American campus.
All this and Folly Tree!
Allison Kaplan Sommer, Miriam Herschlag and Noah Efron discuss three topics of incomparable importance and end with an anecdote about something in Israel that made them smile this week.
Hear the Extra-Special, Special Extra Segment on Patreon—In Labor—
After its recent primaries, does Labor still look like a party that could ever rule Israel again?
—Likud: The Screwed, Renewed and Netanyahu’ed—
After its recent primaries, has the Likud become a party “of Netanyahu, by Netanyahu and for Netanyahu”?
—Fifty Holocausts—
Palestinian President Mahmoud Abbas says, in Berlin, dumb*ssedly, that Israel has perpetrated “fifty Holocausts.” What, if anything, do we learn from that about the man and the government he represents?
—The Head-Scratching Over How to Translate ממלכתיות—
For our most unreasonably generous Patreon supporters, in our extra-special, special extra discussion: The new centrist party with former IDF chiefs-of-staff Benny Gantz and Gadi Eisenkot picks a name that just can’t be translated into English. What the hell does this word that David Ben Gurion made up – mamlakhtiut – mean, and how the hell do we translate it to English?
All this and a full-of-love-and-admiration good-bye to Tzvika Pick!
Allison Kaplan Sommer, Sally Abed and Noah Efron discuss two topics of incomparable importance and end with an anecdote about something in Israel that made them smile this week.
Hear the Extra-Special, Special Extra Segment on Patreon
—My War & Yours (& Ours)—
Can a Palestinian Israeli (like Sally) and a Jewish, Zionist Israeli (like Noah) find even a common language and common facts to talk about last week’s rockets-and-bombs in and out of Gaza?
—My Atrocity & Yours (& Ours)—
Newly unsealed documents shed some brutal light on an atrocity done in 1956. What should they mean to us today?
—Is Israel’s Left Paying Too Much Attention to Esoteric Things (Like Climate Change)?—
For our most unreasonably generous Patreon supporters, in our extra-special, special extra discussion: A candidate for the head of the liberal-left Meretz party says we should stop paying attention to esoteric things like climate change, and instead focus on what really matters: peace and democracy. What’s wrong with that?
All this and Banot ha-Tom!
Allison Kaplan Sommer, Noah Efron and star journalist Linda Gradstein discuss three topics of incomparable importance and end with an anecdote about something in Israel that made them smile this week.
Hear the Extra-Special, Special Extra Segment on Patreon
—Smells Like Zionist Spirit—
Two small right-wing parties join to form “The Zionist Spirit”. What’s that all about?
—Gimme Shelter—
A judge orders a woman into protective custody when her ex and his family threatens her life. That can’t be right, can it?
—Carry that Weight—
A study says that IDF inductees weigh 10 kg more these days, on average, than they did 40 years ago.
—PM Lapid’s Vacation Lands Him in Hot Water—
For our most unreasonably generous Patreon supporters, in our extra-special, special extra discussion: Israel’s (very) secular PM is raked over the coals when it comes out that he planned to be enjoying a vacation on Tisha B’Av, for religious folks a traditional day of fasting and mourning. Is it the job of Israel’s Prime Minister to respect religious traditions that don’t hold much meaning for him?
All this and Avital, on the release of her new record!
Allison Kaplan Sommer, Don Futterman and Noah Efron discuss two topics of incomparable importance and end with an anecdote about something in Israel that made them smile this week.
Hear the Extra-Special, Special Extra Segment on Patreon
—One Man’s Extremist—
Prime Minister Yair Lapid says he’ll form a government “without extremists.” What could possibly be wrong with that?
—If I Can’t Dance—
Is there a “joy disparity” between Israel’s happy-go-luck right and its bummed-out left, our pusses perennially soured?
—Who Thought That Breaking Shariah Law Was a Good Idea?—
For our most unreasonably generous Patreon supporters, in our extra-special, special extra discussion: A generally-considered-top-drawer-television-correspondent and Foreign Desk editor for prestigious Channel 13 nightly news, Gil Tamari, sneaks into Mecca for a “scoop” during the Haj, breaking Shariah Law, Saudi Law and the canons of human decency. What gives?
All this and the lovely Anat Moshkovski, in celebration of the birth of baby Adi!
Allison Kaplan Sommer, Don Futterman and Noah Efron discuss three topics of incomparable importance and end with an anecdote about something in Israel that made them smile this week.
Hear the Extra-Special, Special Extra Segment on Patreon
—Ben-Gvir, Bistu Schein?—
The popularity of a one time acolyte of Rabbi Meir Kahane is growing leaps and bounds. Why?
—Energy Drain—
Why are the leaders of Israel’s liberal-left Meretz party, dropping out like flies?
—From Zion Will Come Our Salvation—
Will video marriage in Utah solve Israel’s wedding woes?
For our most unreasonably generous Patreon supporters, in our extra-special, special extra discussion: A popular young Israeli singer does not shake President Joe Biden’s outstretched hand because she observes the prohibition against Negiah, unmarried women and men touching each other, and Israeli social media explodes. Why was this a thing?
All this and Kob, as his great, new record, Kavanot Tovot, drops!
Miriam Herschlag, Don Futterman and Noah Efron discuss three topics of incomparable importance and end with an anecdote about something in Israel that made them smile this week.
Hear the Extra-Special, Special Extra Segment on Patreon
—Biden’ Time—
What is US President Joe Biden’s visit to Israel much ado about, nothin’ or sumpin’?
—New Blue, or the Great White Hope—
What do you get when a centrist party and a right wing party merge?
—Judaica mens in corpore Judaico—
Isn’t it weird that there are Jewish Olympics, by Jews, of Jews and for Jews?
—Why Haven’t Death and Bereavement Notices Changed in 100 Years?—
For our most unreasonably generous Patreon supporters, in our extra-special, special extra discussion: Death and bereavement notices – the little signs that get printed up and hung around the neighborhood when someone dies, and on the door of the people sitting shiva – haven’t changed a bit in a hundred years. Why? What accounts for the remarkable stability of this small-but-really-important cultural artifact?
All this and Nunu!
Allison Kaplan Sommer, Miriam Herschlag and Noah Efron discuss two topics of incomparable importance and end with an anecdote about something in Israel that made them smile this week.
Hear the Extra-Special, Special Extra Segment on Patreon
—The Torch Has Been Passed—
Yair Lapid, once a weight-lifting, party-going, celebrity hunk, is sworn in as Israel’s 14th Prime Minister. What a long strange trip it’s been.
—There Will Be Blood—
Why is menstruation trending in Israel?
For our most unreasonably generous Patreon supporters, in our extra-special, special extra discussion: Haredi thugs break up a Bat Mitzvah and two Bar Mitzvah’s at the Wall in the most awful way. How do we cope with a thing like that?
All this and Amir Lev!
Sally, Miriam, Ohad, Don and Noah tell stories of people who made and make our lives worth living. Plus, duets and collaborations by singers we love. (If the stories sound familiar, it is because, as renowned folklorist Joseph Campbell said, there are tales that live deep in our collective unconscious, that all of us know without being told. That, and because we’ve played them on the podcast in the past.)
All this and duets and collaborations by singers we love!
Allison Kaplan Sommer, Don Futterman and Noah Efron discuss two topics of incomparable importance and end with an anecdote about something in Israel that made them smile this week.
Hear the Extra-Special, Special Extra Segment on Patreon
—Going to the Polls!—
Prime Minister Bennett decides to throw in the towel and take the country to new elections. What does it say about what was, what is, and what will be?
—Not Going to the Poles!—
Foreign Minister (and soon-to-be replacement Prime Minister) Yair Lapid decides to cancel all high-school trips to concentration camps in Poland. Would we be better off rethinking entirely the way we think about Holocaust education?
—Where Do These Elections Find Us?—
For our most unreasonably generous Patreon supporters, in our extra-special, special extra discussion: Does the prospect of new elections inspire anxiety, hope, or maybe just boredom?
All this and Idan Rafael Haviv!
Allison Kaplan Sommer, Noah Efron and prodigal son Ohad Zeltzer-Zubida discuss two topics of incomparable importance and end with an anecdote about something in Israel that made them smile this week.
Hear the Extra-Special, Special Extra Segment on Patreon
—Dead Man Governing?—
Is it time for Naftali Bennett to say when?
—“I Am Not Mentally Ill!”—
Why is ex-Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu suing ex-Prime Minister Ehud Olmert, and what’s it say about Israeli politics?
For our most unreasonably generous Patreon supporters, in our extra-special, special extra discussion: We were gonna talk about Iranian death squads in Istanbul, but we ended up talking about a more pressing issue: Falafel – Good or Icky?
All this and Maor Cohen!
Allison Kaplan Sommer, Noah Efron and prodigal son Ohad Zeltzer-Zubida discuss three topics of incomparable importance and end with an anecdote about something in Israel that made them smile this week.
Hear the Extra-Special, Special Extra Segment on Patreon—Temporary Regulations Make Temporary Governments—
Israel’s government fails to renew temporary provisional regulations first put into place in 1967 by then Minister of Defense Moshe Dayan, and renewed 18 times since then, regulations that allow Israeli law to apply to Israeli citizens living in the West Bank which, by Israeli and International law both, is not part of Israel proper. What now?
—Can’t Spell “Heteronormativity” Without TV—
Israel’s biggest reality show just married off two hunky, dreamy gay guys? Is one small step towards heteronormativity a giant leap for LGBTQ folks?
For our most unreasonably generous Patreon supporters, in our extra-special, special extra discussion: As Ohad buys pencils and notebooks to get ready to go to PhD school in America, is BDS on his mind?
All this and Shim, in honor the release of her new EP, and in honor of the show in honor of the release of her new EP at Levontin 7, on June 22, at 10
On the week of a tense Jerusalem Day, Allison Kaplan Sommer and Noah Efron talk about the capital city and end with an anecdote about something in Israel that made them smile this week.
Hear the Extra-Special, Special Extra Segment on Patreon
—Al-Quds—
An EU-funded, UN-midwifed Palestinian Authority plan sets out how Jerusalem will be developed as the capital of Palestine by 2030. Some Israelis decry this as a stratagem to undermine Israeli sovereignty over a united Jerusalem, which it sort-of is, but is that necessarily a bad thing?
—Ir ha-Kodesh—
Ask someone in Tel Aviv what they think about Jerusalem, and they’ll probably tell you that they don’t think about Jerusalem.
For our most unreasonably generous Patreon supporters, in our extra-special, special extra discussion: What are a few of the most charming unsung (or undersung) spots to see in Jerusalem?
All this and hip-hop by Jerusalem favorite son, Guy Mar!
On Don’s birthday and the day before Miriam’s, Don Futterman, Miriam Herschlag and Noah Efron discuss three topics of incomparable importance and end with an anecdote about something in Israel that made them smile this week.
Hear the Extra-Special, Special Extra Segment on Patreon
—The MK Formerly Known as Ex-Member of the Coalition Ghaida Rinawie Zoabi—
Mertz MK Ghaida Rinawie Zoabi quits the coalition, sending Israeli politics into turmoil, only to rejoin three days later. What the hell was that about?
—Thank You for Your Service—
After days of vicious debate, Israel’s coalition and opposition agree to pay college tuition for discharged combat soldiers. Is that really a good idea?
—Denied of the Valkeries—
Wagner died 140 years ago. Is it time to put to rest our Gevalt-by-Association, and let his music boom from Tel Aviv stages?
For our most unreasonably generous Patreon supporters, in our extra-special, special extra discussion: Don just dropped an amazing podcastilogical monologue about growing up his father’s son, and we hear all about it, not just from the author, but also from the auteur!
All this and a new debut record by Joav Ben-Moshe!
Miriam Herschlag, Don Futterman and Noah Efron discuss three topics of incomparable importance and end with an anecdote about something in Israel that made them smile this week.
Hear the Extra-Special, Special Extra Segment on Patreon
—Nakba—
Nakba Day memorializes as a tragedy the day when a Jewish State was reborn after two thousand tumultuous, stateless years. What can an Israeli Jew say to that?
—How We Stopped Worrying and Learned to Love the Microchip—
An old joke says: The food at that restaurant is terrible and the portions are too small! The Bank of Israel says: High-tech is tearing Israel apart, and we need more of it. Which one is funnier?
—The Netanyahus—
A Pulitzer Prize presents for a packs-a-punch parable about the parent of a past premier.
For our most unreasonably generous Patreon supporters, in our extra-special, special extra discussion: We talk about Lag B’Omer’s past, and whether and how the holiday is changing in front of our eyes.
All this and new songs by Tzuf/Zohar/Inbal!
Allison Kaplan Sommer, Linda Gradstein and Noah Efron discuss three topics of incomparable importance and end with an anecdote about something in Israel that made them smile this week.
Listen to the Extra-Special, Special Extra Segment on Patreon
—Shireen Abu Akleh, Z”L—
After Shireen Abu Akleh, a Palestinian Al-Jazeera reporter, was shot and killed in cross-fire outside Jenin, everyone was sure they knew who pulled the trigger.
—A Bitter Cabbage Pill to Swallow—
Can a government without a majority do its job?
—Plus Climat Change, Plus C’EST la Même Chose—
Is a bad climate bill worse than no bill at all?
For our most unreasonably generous Patreon supporters, in our extra-special, special extra discussion: Linda and Allison talk about the sorts of relationships that evolve between Israeli and Palestinian journalists, and how they experience Shireen Abu Akleh’s killing as the death of a colleague.
All this and songs about cats, by Keren & Tammuz!
Allison, Don, Ohad, Amit, Linda, Jeremy & Noah talk about what Yom Ha’atzmaut, Israeli Independence Day, means to them, on the eve of Israel’s 74th.
All that and old Songs of Independence, made new again!
Sally Abed, Allison Kaplan Sommer and Noah Efron discuss three topics of incomparable importance and end with an anecdote about something in Israel that made them smile this week.
Hear the Extra-Special, Special Extra Segment on Patreon
—Violence Season—
Is it inevitable that seasons of calm are replaced by seasons of violence, just as winter gives way to spring?
—Shmandemic—
Israel’s government ends the mask mandate and says: Lighten up, happy days are here again. Did the almost 4,000 people a day still getting COVID miss the memo?
—Then, Now—
Can we, and should we, have a Holocaust Day that is not just Jewish but also Israeli?
—What’s Our Take Away From PM Bennett’s High Take-Away Expenditures?—
For our most unreasonably generous Patreon supporters, in our extra-special, special extra discussion: After Prime Minister Naftali Bennett is lavishly lambasted, lamented and lampooned after it came out that his family spends 800 shekels a day on take-out, he tweets that he’ll pay for the damn take-out with his high-tech millions. What should our take-away be?
All this and music for Yom ha-Shoah and every other day of the year
In this very-special episode, Noah tells the story of a kibbutz that surrendered to the Egyptian army in 1948, and the wounds that have never really healed.
Don Futterman, Noah Efron and superstar reporter Linda Gradstein discuss three topics of incomparable importance and end with an anecdote about something in Israel that made them smile this week.
Hear the Extra-Special, Special Extra on Patreon
—Wages of Sin—
Are the crimes of terrorists visited on their loved ones?
—Rest in Peace?—
Should dead people be dug up and downsized into ossuaries a year after they’re buried? Some rabbis, scholars and environmental activists say, absolutely!
—As If We Left Egypt—
What does it mean to “see ourselves as if we ourselves left Egypt,” in this moment of viruses and violences, of refugees and unrest.
For our most unreasonably generous Patreon supporters, in our extra-special, special extra discussion: Nineteen celebrated progressive American Rabbis act to keep donations from American Jews from reaching far-right-wing Israeli groups like the anti-gay, anti-miscegenation, Jewish supremacist organization Lahava. That’s a good thing, right?
All this and rocking Passover-ish pop!
Allison Kaplan Sommer, Noah Efron and environmentalist & Judaicist extraordinaire Jeremy Benstein discuss three two topics of incomparable importance and end with an anecdote about something in Israel that made them smile this week.
Hear the Extra-Special, Special Extra Segment on Patreon
—Wave?—
Three terror attacks on civilians in three city centers in eight days, leaving eleven dead. Is Israel facing a new round of violence?
—A Half-Baked Coalition Going Sour?—
The chairwoman of the coalition bolted to the opposition, leaving the future of Israel’s government uncertain. Israel may go to elections over what now?
—“Anti-zionism” as a “Core Value”?—
For our most unreasonably generous Patreon supporters, in our extra-special, special extra discussion: A shul in Chicago votes that “anti-Zionism” is a “core value.” Should we care?
All this and your first exposure to a tremendous new musical talent, Aviv Peck!
Allison Kaplan Sommer, Don Futterman and Noah Efron discuss three topics of incomparable importance and end with an anecdote about something in Israel that made them smile this week.
Listen to the Extra-Special, Special Extra Segment on Patreon
—Half a Dozen Foreign Ministers—
Not long ago, who could even imagine that the foreign ministers of Bahrain, the UAE, Morocco, Egypt, the US and Israel would all gather in the Negev desert to talk about creating a middle-eastern “mini-NATO” alliance?
—Jewish Character?—
Why worry about the “Jewish character” of Israel at all?
—A Peep at the Past—
Israel’s greatest cult movie, Metzitzim (Peeping Toms) turns 50 this month. Why has so bleak and disagreeable a film been so popular for so long?
For our most unreasonably generous Patreon supporters, in our extra-special, special extra discussion: MK Alon Tal tells the AIPAC Israel lobby that the time has come to stop supporting American legislators who think the last American election was stolen from Donald Trump. Does he have a point?
All this and the R&B and rock’n’roll of The Bench!
After an encomium to the late Rabbi Chaim Kanievsky, Allison, Noah and Voice of America radio superstar Linda Gradstein discuss three topics of incomparable importance and end with an anecdote about something in Israel that made them smile this week.
Hear the Extra-Special, Special Extra Segment on Patreon
—Presidential Address—
Volodymyr Zelenskyy tells Israelis that it’s time to step up and help Ukrainians, like Ukrainians helped Jews during the Holocaust. What should we do with an appeal like that?
—Laws of the Land—
Israel’s new government just finished its first legislative session. How’d they do?
—Times Will Tell—
An Israeli journalist starts a year-long project of monitoring how the New York Times reports on Israel, finding so far that the paper is biased against us. What should we make of this sort of watchdogging-the-watchdog?
—Restaurant Reviewing in the Age of an Israeli Culinary Revolution—
For our most unreasonably generous Patreon supporters, in our extra-special, special extra discussion, Linda Gradstein takes us behind the curtain, into the world of restaurant reviewing in the age of an Israeli culinary revolution.
All this and the ultra-orthodox Indie great, Yonatan Razel!
Miriam Herschlag, Don Futterman and Noah Efron discuss three topics of incomparable importance and end with an anecdote about something in Israel that made them smile this week.
Listen to the Extra-Special, Special Extra Segment on Patreon
—No Place for Politics—
Yad Vashem won’t host a speech by Volodymyr on the grounds that there’s no place for politics when it comes to the Holocaust. But that can’t be right, can it?
—Was Pegasus Just Horsefeathers?—
Eight weeks after it was called “maybe the most important story in Israel’s history,” reports that police used spy software to surveil all sorts of innocent people has disappeared from our minds and our newsfeeds. What happened?
—Amalek—
Has the time come to retire the notion of Amalek, absolute and evil anti-semites who appear in each generation in a different guise?
For our most unreasonably generous Patreon supporters, in our extra-special, special extra discussion, we talk about how we learned to stop worrying and love Purim.
All this and Hila Cohen Elazar, celebrating her new record!
Sally Abed, Miriam Herschlag and Noah Efron discuss three topics of incomparable importance and end with an anecdote about something in Israel that made them smile this week.
Hear the Extra-Special, Special Extra Segment on Patreon
—Showing Up—
Should Israel take as many refugees from Ukraine as want to come?
—Another Milestone—
Sexual assault charges are dropped against a leading light of the gay community because what he did “does not cross the threshold of criminality.”
—Making Shabbat—
Should government money go to making Shabbat more “relevant” to secular folks?
For our most unreasonably generous Patreon supporters, in our extra-special, special extra discussion, we ask Sally, who just moved to Haifa, why she loves the place.
All this and the remarkable debut record of Revaya Raisch!
Allison Kaplan Sommer, Noah Efron and URJ VP and Renaissance Rabbi Josh Weinberg discuss three topics of incomparable importance and end with an anecdote about something in Israel that made them smile this week.
Listen to the Extra-Special, Special Extra Segment on Patreon
—Laying Low—
Israel’s leaders are heartsick about Ukraine and still nervously worried about Putin, and it shows in their muddled response to the war. Should we be doing something more and different for Ukraine?
—If It Displease the Court—
If your parents came from Morocco, is it harder to get the courts to listen?
—30 Years Gone—
Menachem Begin was beloved and reviled in his lifetime. As we mark the 30th anniversary of his death, what is the legacy of this remarkable man?
For our most unreasonably generous Patreon supporters, in our extra-special, special extra discussion, we discuss the recent meeting between the leaders of American Reform and Conservative Judaism and Israel’s Prime Minister for the first time in six years. Here’s the straight dope.
All this and the first, young sounds of Nitzan!
Allison Kaplan Sommer, Noah Efron and linguist, Jewish scholar and environmental activist Jeremy Benstein discuss two topics of incomparable importance and end with an anecdote about something in Israel that made them smile this week.
Listen to the Extra-Special, Special Extra Segment on Patreon
—Left and Gone—
Is there something about the way we see the world that drives Israel’s leftists away from the country?
—The Hills Are Alive With the Sounds of Lawsuits—
Animals and plants are people, too, right?
—Talented-Talk-of-the-Town-TikTok-Talmudist Miriam Anzovin—
For our most unreasonably generous Patreon supporters, in our extra-special, special extra discussion, we discuss how the talented-talk-of-the-town-TikTok-Talmudist Miriam Anzovin is vexing and delighting folks in Israel.
All this and the lovely music of Or Edry, to celebrate her lovely, new record, 20 Tza’adim!
Allison Kaplan Sommer, Don Futterman and Noah Efron discuss three topics of incomparable importance and end with an anecdote about something in Israel that made them smile this week.
Hear the Extra-Special, Special Extra Segment on Patreon
—Macaroni Acrimony—
Each day brings new, anguished protests over rising prices. Does the government have an answer?
—Eternity No More—
Are ultra-Orthodox soldiers less judicious and humane than all the others?
—Oh, the Humanities!—
Starting next year, Israel is cancelling make-or-break matriculation exams in the humanities. Is this dumbing down or rising up?
—Don’t Let the Door Hit You on the Way Out!—
For our most unreasonably generous Patreon supporters, in our extra-special, special extra discussion, we discuss the message sent by British Jewry to right-wing MK Bezalel Smotrich saying, “Don’t let the door hit you on the way out!”
All this and pop Wunderkind Noa Kirel on the occasion of her discharge from the IDF!
Allison Kaplan Sommer, Miriam Herschlag and Noah Efron discuss two topics of incomparable importance and end with an anecdote about something in Israel that made them smile this week.
Listen to the Extra-Special, Special Extra Segment on Patreon
—Damn that Winged Horse!—
Reports that the police used Pegasus to spy on journalists, politicians, bureaucrats, and protestors sent us through all of Kubler-Ross’s stages: Shock, Outrage, Fear, Depression, Gallows humor, More depression, Cynical tweeting and, finally, pricing old Nokia flip-phones on Ebay.
—Brush Up Your Streicher!—
Do Israeli high schools teach too much about the Holocaust, and in the wrong way?
For our most unreasonably generous Patreon supporters, in our extra-special, special extra discussion, we ask, should the fact that the “Tinder Swindler” is Israeli worry us?
All this and Wunderkind Ollie Danon!
Allison Kaplan Sommer, Don Futterman and Noah Efron discuss three topics of incomparable importance and end with an anecdote about something in Israel that made them smile this week.
Hear the Extra-Special, Special Extra Segment on Patreon—That Word Again!—
Amnesty International accuses us of being murderous racists committing crimes against humanity but, then, what’s a little constructive criticism between friends?
—Turpitude Now, Turpitude Tomorrow, Turpitude Forever—
Should politicians displaying “moral turpitude” be banned from holding office for life? Are there crimes for which penance can never be paid?
—I’ll Remember Yours, If You Remember Mine—
Should our collective memory be fixed through collective bargaining?
For our most unreasonably generous Patreon supporters, in our extra-special, special extra discussion, we discuss Whoopi’s oopsie daisy.
The Four Finalists to Represent Israel in the Eurovision!
Allison Kaplan Sommer, Noah Efron and returning prodigal son, Ohad Zeltzer-Zubida discuss three two topics of incomparable importance and end with an anecdote about something in Israel that made them smile this week.
Hear the Extra-Special, Special Extra Segment on Patreon—Tantura—
“I was a murderer. I did not take prisoners,” says a man who, in 1948, was a soldier for Israel in Tantura.
—Lessons Learned and Unlearned—
Eight years ago, a teacher lost his job for being too out-there leftist in class. Now a mini-series is bringing it all back. What is it about this story that we can’t let go of?
—Is It Cool for a Non-Jew to Play a Jewess?—
For our most unreasonably generous Patreon supporters, in our extra-special, special extra discussion, we wonder whether it is cool to cast, um, Gentiles like Helen Mirren to play, um, Jewesses like Golda Meir.
All this and the Avrom Sutzkever and the power-pop of The Puddles (Ha-Shluliyot)
Allison Kaplan Sommer, Noah Efron and returning prodigal son, Ohad Zeltzer-Zubida discuss three topics of incomparable importance and end with an anecdote about something in Israel that made them smile this week.
Hear the Extra-Special, Special Extra Segment on Patreon
—Can’t Spell ‘Plea Bargain’ Without ‘Rage’ and ‘Pain’—
Why are so many people so mad about a possible plea bargain that would keep former prime minister Benjamin Netanyahu out of both jail and the Knesset?
—The Ideology of No Ideology—
Israel’s new pandemic policy seems to be, Do what you think is best, and good luck to you! Is Israel having the most free-marketty, Adam-Smithian, pull-yourself-up-by-your-bootstraps moment in our almost 74 year history?
—Stay a While—
Are some Israeli politicians right to worry that if Israelis can enter the U.S. without a visa, some of them will never come back?
—Our Fave Israeli Social Media Accounts—
For our most unreasonably generous Patreon supporters, in our extra-special, special extra discussion, we share some of our favorite, most fun and delightful, Israeli social media accounts.
All this and virtuoso jazz vocalist Noam Vazana singing new songs in Ladino.
Allison Kaplan Sommer, Don Futterman and Noah Efron discuss three topics of incomparable importance and end with an anecdote about something in Israel that made them smile this week.
—Memorial Matters—
There never was, and will never be, anyone like Yoram Taharlev, May his Memory Be for a Blessing.
—In the Heights—
Prime Minister Naftali Bennett exults that “This is the moment of the Golan Heights.” But should it be?
—We’ve Only Just Begun—
Yair Lapid and his Yesh Atid party celebrate ten years in politics, longer than any centrist party ever survived the rough-and-tumble of Israeli politics. What is the secret of their success?
All this and new versions of a few of Yoram Taharlev’s most beloved songs, off the just-finished project, Ya‘aleh ve-Yavo: A Tribute to the Songs of Yoram Taharlev.
Allison Kaplan Sommer, Don Futterman and Noah Efron discuss three topics of incomparable importance and end with an anecdote about something in Israel that made them smile this week.
Listen to the Extra-Special, Special Extra Segment on Patreon—From Ramallah to Rosh Ha-‘Ayin—
Palestinian President Mahmoud Abbas and Israeli Defense Minister Benny Gantz meet in Gantz’s living room. Cause for hope?
—Be-Waldered—
Revered kids-book writer Rabbi Chaim Walder kills himself after it comes out that he sexually abused dozens of women and girls over decades, and ultra-Orthodox leaders don’t know what to do and say.
—Dunno Much About Art, But I Know What I Hate—
The mayor of Ramat Gan successfully campaigns to get his municipal art museum to take down a painting he finds offensive. What can we learn from this about who ought to decide what we see in the museums our taxes pay for?
For our most unreasonably generous Patreon supporters, in our extra-special, special extra discussion, we talk about the official handling of the pandemic at this omicromical moment, which handling seems like an odd mixture of panic and passivity so great, it almost borders on apathy. It feels like we’re in a roller coaster car, having just slowly been hoisted to the top of the first steep decline, and we’re about to lose our lunch.
All this and the sultry music of Ziv!
Allison Kaplan Sommer, Noah Efron and Sally Abed discuss three topics of incomparable importance and end with an anecdote about something in Israel that made them smile this week.
Hear the Extra-Special, Special Extra Segment on Patreon
Link to Give to Standing Together
—This Would Not Have Happened a Year Ago—
United Arab List head, Dr. Mansour Abbas, says that Israel always has been, and always will be a Jewish State, it’s time for everyone to accept that. How big a deal is that?
—Sara—
Did we have Sara all wrong, all along?
—This Is Reality, Itamar!—
Politicians, professors and pundits are all turning up on Reality TV. Is gravitas dead?
For our most unreasonably generous Patreon supporters, in our extra-special, special extra discussion, we talk about how this New Year’s finds us: Down in the Duldrummy dumps? Ready to break out? Dazed and confused? Guardedly optimistic? Weirdly sober? It’s kind of a window into our souls!
All this and the music of Gedy Ronen!
Allison Kaplan Sommer, Noah Efron and and returning prodigal son, Ohad Zeltzer-Zubida discuss three topics of incomparable importance and end with an anecdote about something in Israel that made them smile this week.
Listen to the Extra-Special, Special Extra Segment on Patreon
—“A Mandate” Anagrams to “A Tad Mean”—
Israel’s Corona Czar says the time has come to consider a “vaccine mandate.” Is this why the word “omicron” anagrams to “moronic”?
—Whose Violence is it, Anyway?—
Why do folks on the left and the right see such very different things when they look at violence on the roads and in the fields of the West Bank?
—Et Tu, Walden? (Or, Autarky Malarkey!)—
Would we all be better off if more of us lived off the grid, Henry David Thoreau style?
—Reacting to the Latest Scandal-de-Jour—
For our most unreasonably generous Patreon supporters, in our extra-special, special extra discussion, we discuss the scandal-de-jour, in which former director of the Mossad, and a presumptive heir to Benjamin Netanyahu, Yossi Cohen, is found to have braggadociously shared state secrets with his flight-attendant consort and her cuckold (and kinda pissed) husband. We’ll try to sortout what to make of this sordid affair.
All this and songs by Solomon Ibn Gvirol, to celebrate his 1,000th birthday! (Because, you only turn 1,000 once!)
Allison Kaplan Sommer, Don Futterman and Noah Efron discuss three topics of incomparable importance and end with an anecdote about something in Israel that made them smile this week.
Listen to the Extra-Special, Special Extra Segment on Patreon
—F*ck’m!—
Former US President Donald Trump says that former Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu never wanted to make peace, and doesn’t know the meaning of loyalty. But aren’t the two men BFFs?
—Unit 8200, Down on Route 60—
The IDF pledges to move its crack intelligence units from the center of the country two hours south, and lots of career soldiers weigh leaving the army for the private sector. What should the generals do?
—Torched—
Every year, twelve exemplary Israelis are chosen to light torches at the main Independence Day Celebrations, because they represent the best of us. The call for nominations just went out, and the Promised Podcast answers that call, picking our own dazzling dozen.
For our most unreasonably generous Patreon supporters, in our extra-special, special extra discussion, we try to understand the newest Government corona edict, which says that you can only shop in malls if you’ve been double vaxxed and boosted, or had COVID in the past six months, save for grocery stores, pharmacies and clinics in malls, and everyone entering the mall will get either a green wristband indicating double vax and booster or a red wristband indicating anything less than that, which edict has mall proprietors apoplectic and preparing a petition to the supreme court arguing that making people wear their vax status on their wrist in malls is a violation of their privacy. Oy!
All that and the amazing live-from-the-streets music of Coral Bismuth*!
Allison Kaplan Sommer, Don Futterman and Noah Efron discuss three topics of incomparable importance and end with an anecdote about something in Israel that made them smile this week.
Listen to the Extra-Special, Special Extra Segment on Patreon
—Leading the Witness—
Police investigators strong-arm Benjamin Netanyahu’s one-time spokesman and media consultant to testify against his former boss, saying that if he doesn’t they’ll destroy his family and his life. Is the whole trial tainted?
—We Beat the Syrian Army, Surely We can Beat Climate Change—
The IDF gears up to take the lead in Israel’s response to climate change. Is that a good thing?
—Holding the Line—
By changing regulations, the government plans to make it harder for ultra-Orthodox leaders to make sure their followers use only “kosher phones.” Are Haredi rabbis and politicians right to be upset?
For our most unreasonably generous Patreon supporters, in our extra-special, special extra discussion, we try to understand President Yitzhak Herzog’s new campaign to be nice on the internet, so as to “shine our inner light” on others. Is this anything more than presidential pablum?
All that and Ella Shik Blum!
Allison Kaplan Sommer, Noah Efron and journalist-extraordinaire Dina Kraft discuss three topics of incomparable importance and end with an anecdote about something in Israel that made them smile this week.
Listen to the Extra-Special, Special Extra Segment on Patreon
—Hanukkah with Zealots, Oh My!—
President Yitzhak Herzog lights candles with settlers in Hebron, causing protestors on the left to cry, “He’s not my president.”
—Whose Country Is It Anyway?—
By closing its borders, is Israel turning diaspora Jews into “second-class Jews”?
—(Some) People’s Army—
Is the IDF still a “People’s army”?
—Here’s Why Ultra-Orthodox Aliyah to Israel Is Breaking Records—
For our most unreasonably generous Patreon supporters, in our extra-special, special extra discussion, we talk about a socko new essay in Haaretz by FoPP Judy Maltz, entitled, “Ultra-Orthodox Aliyah to Israel is Breaking Records. Here’s Why.”
All that and Kiki Malinky!
Allison Kaplan Sommer, Miriam Herschlag and Noah Efron discuss three topics of incomparable importance and end with an anecdote about something in Israel that made them smile this week.
—No Prize—
Israel’s Education Minister decides not to give the country’s biggest prize to a genius computer theorist because he petitioned the EU to boycott an Israeli university in the territories.
—If I Forget Thee, O Jerusalem, Let My Office Chair Creak—
If Jerusalem is Israel’s capital, does that mean that all the government needs to be there?
—Israel’s Next Top Model—
New models say in 2050, one in four Israelis will be ultra-Orthodox, but does that maybe tell us more about the models than it does about the ultra-Orthodox?
—The Rise of “Holocaust Distortion”—
For our most unreasonably generous Patreon supporters, in our extra-special, special extra discussion, we talk about a disturbing new essay by Allison about COVID and the rise of “Holocaust distortion.”
All that and the enchanting harp of Renana Ne’eman!
Sally Abed and Noah Efron discuss three two topics of incomparable importance and end with an anecdote about something in Israel that made them smile this week.
Listen to the Extra-Special, Special Extra Segment on Patreon
—Limited—
Benjamin Netanyahu says Israel’s new proposed term-limit law is the sort of law you’d see in Iran, Syria and North Korea. Does he have a point?
—Tradition, Tradition!—
Can “traditionalism” (mesoratiut) reshape Israeli politics as we know it?
—Israelis and Israeliness Abroad—
For our most unreasonably generous Patreon supporters, in our extra-special, special extra discussion, we talk about what it’s like, when we travel, to be Israelis abroad.
All that and a boy named Neta Weiner!
Allison Kaplan Sommer, Don Futterman and Noah Efron discuss three topics of incomparable importance and end with an anecdote about something in Israel that made them smile this week.
Hear the Extra-Special, Special Extra Segment on Patreon
—What Now?—
Now that Israel has a budget (after several years of not having a budget), is it smooth sailing from now on?
—Some of the Best Standards are Double Standards—
A supermarket chain charges ultra-Orthodox shoppers a lot less than the rest of us. Is this discrimination, or just market forces doing what they do?
—The Strange Death & Curious Rebirth of the Israeli Left?—Who killed Israel’s Left?
—The Airport Gates Are (Wide) Open—
For our most unreasonably generous Patreon supporters, in our extra-special, special extra discussion, after a week of vigorous reporting by Allison about how reopening the airport to tourists has been pretty worryingly botched, we talk about how we feel about the gates of the country finally being thrown wide to let in curious well-wishers with handsome disposable incomes, from all around the world.
All that and Cohen!
Allison Kaplan Sommer and Noah Efron discuss three two topics of incomparable importance and end with an anecdote about something in Israel that made them smile this week.
Listen to the Extra-Special, Special Extra Segment on Patreon
—You Say “Corruption” Like It Was a Bad Thing!—
Should coalition members get to earmark millions for their favorite causes?
—Death, Taxes & Traffic—
The Knesset’s new “pigovian” congestion tax will make half a million people pay handsomely every time they drive into Tel Aviv. Isn’t it time that someone made Allison pay?
—A Likud So Powerful That Even It Can’t Form a Government?—
For our most unreasonably generous Patreon supporters, in our extra-special, special extra discussion, we try to make sense of a new poll finding that if elections were held today, the Likud would grow stronger – to 36 seats – but that neither today’s coalition nor today’s opposition would be able to form a government. What’s it augur?
All that and the enchanting sounds of Tandu*!
*With eternal gratitude to Reena Berenberg!
Allison Kaplan Sommer, Don Futterman and Noah Efron discuss three topics of incomparable importance and end with an anecdote about something in Israel that made them smile this week.
Listen to the Extra-Special, Special Extra Segment on Patreon
—Burdens of Proof—
Defense Minister Benny Gantz says we can trust him that he wouldn’t outlaw Palestinian human rights organizations without a really good reason.
—A Great Deal of New Green—
A 100 point action plan to slow climate change? Is that maybe too many points?
—Breathing Easy—
When a COVID patient needs a new lung, should the vaxxed have priority over the unvaxxed?
—“Whose Promised Land? A Journey Into a Divided Israel”—
The new New York Times Bureau Chief in Jerusalem takes a ten-day tour of Israel, and finds that it’s filled with bitter, disaffected malcontents. Did he maybe miss something?
All that and drummer-singer-songwriter Noa Segal!
Allison Kaplan Sommer, Miriam Herschlag and Noah Efron discuss three topics of incomparable importance and end with an anecdote about something in Israel that made them smile this week.
Listen to the Extra-Special, Special Extra Segment on Patreon
—Nullifying Netanyahu?—
Former Speaker of the Knesset Yuli Edelstein challenges Benjamin Netanyahu for leadership of the Likud. Are Netanyahu’s days numbered?
—Him Too?—
“He suddenly pinned me to the door and tried to kiss me.” What do we make of Shimon Peres, now that we know?
—Rabin’s Square is Closed for Renovation—
Rabin Square is about to be closed for years of renovation. Is that a blow to civic culture, and maybe even democracy?
—The Israeli Foods We’re Nostalgic For—
For our most unreasonably generous Patreon supporters, in our extra-special, special extra discussion, with the start of Krembo season (the happiest season of the year), we talk about the Israeli foods we’re nostalgic for.
All that and OBD!
Allison Kaplan Sommer, Miriam Herschlag and Noah Efron discuss three topics of incomparable importance and end with an anecdote about something in Israel that made them smile this week.
Listen to the Extra-Special, Special Extra Segment on Patreon
—Vax & Figures—
What’s the link between who Israelis vote for and whether, when, and how we get vaxxed and boostered?
—The Cost of Freedom—
Gilad Shalit was freed from Hamas captivity in Gaza exactly ten years ago. Was the deal that brought him home a good one?
—Once They Wrote Love Songs for Tel Aviv—
Has Tel Aviv jumped the shark?
—What to Make of L’Affaire de Rooney?—
For our most unreasonably generous Patreon supporters, in our extra-special, special extra discussion, we wonder what we ought to make of l’Affaire de Rooney?
All that and new music of Israel’s most outre rapper, Hadar Farjun!
Allison Kaplan Sommer, Don Futterman and Noah Efron discuss three topics of incomparable importance and end with an anecdote about something in Israel that made them smile this week.
Listen to the Extra-Special, Special Extra Segment on Patreon
—Coffee or Conflict: How Do Israelis Start Our Days?—
Was PM Bennett right when he said at the UN that “Israelis don’t wake up in the morning thinking about conflict”?
—Smile!—
Cameras in classroom, oh my!
—Stone of Hearts—
Would it really be so bad if not every building in Jerusalem was faced with the same tawny stone?
—Opposing the Occupation Yet Choosing to Join the IDF and Serve in the Territories—
For our most unreasonably generous Patreon supporters, in our extra-special, special extra discussion, we mull over a personal essay in Haaretz called, “I Oppose the Occupation. This Is Why I Chose to Serve as an IDF Soldier in the Occupied West Bank.”
All that and music by The Bench, in honor of their new, debut record, Jasimo!
Allison Kaplan Sommer, Sally Abed and Noah Efron discuss three two topics of incomparable importance and end with an anecdote about something in Israel that made them smile this week.
—Iran, One Month from the Bomb—
Experts say Iran can have an atomic bomb by Hanukkah. What, if anything, can Israel do about it?
—Who is Sex For?— Is it unseemly for 60 year olds to let the rest of us know they still have sex?
—Our Favorite Tel Aviv Coffee Shops and Bars—
For our most unreasonably generous Patreon supporters, in our extra-special, special extra discussion, we discuss our favorite coffee shops and bars in the city.
Sarit Hadad, in honor of coming out in song!
There is an ancient tradition on Sukkot, which is to say now, called Ushpizin, an aramaic word that means “Guests”, and at its simplest, it means that one invites guests of all sorts, including anyone around who needs a meal, to eat with you in your Sukkah. But already in the 16th century, and maybe long before that, Kabbalists and mystics had symbolicized the thing, saying that when you sit in your Sukkah the Shekhinah , the divine presence, draws righteous heroes from history into your sukkah.
Join us for a podcastilogical Ushpizin, constructed of 100% reused, renewed and recycled old episodes (because that’s how much we care!)
Wild brilliance by one of our great composers, Aviya Kopelman, the youngest ever person to win the Prime Minister Prize for composition!
Allison Kaplan Sommer, Sally Abed and Noah Efron discuss three topics of incomparable importance and end with an anecdote about something in Israel that made them smile this week.
Listen to the Extra-Special, Special Extra Segment on Patreon
—A Year of Abraham Accords—
A year ago this week, ambassadors from the UAE and Bahrain celebrated with then-President Donald Trump and then-Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu, the launch of the Abraham Accords. With Trump and Netanyahu booted out of office in the interim, what should we make of the accords now?
—Escape—
After a week glued-to-the-screen, following a manhunt after six escaped Palestinian prisoners, we ask: What just happened?
—White-ish Feminism—
Some Israeli feminists say they’ve had enough of “White(ish) Feminism.” Do they have a point?
For our most unreasonably generous Patreon supporters, in our extra-special, special extra discussion, we discuss what this days-of-awe-holiday-season means to us, each from our own perspective.
All that and Sima Noon!
Allison Kaplan Sommer, Don Futterman and Noah Efron discuss three topics of incomparable importance and end with an anecdote about something in Israel that made them smile this week.
Listen to the Extra-Special, Special Extra Segment on Patreon
—Body Politics—
A 21-year-old sergeant in the Border Police dies after being shot in the head through a hole in the wall that separates Israel from Gaza, and the tragedy instantly becomes a political talking point leading to demands that the Prime Minister resign. Why are IDF casualties suddenly being politicized?
—A Problematical, Dogmatical, Fanatical, Climatical Sabbatical?—
The Bible says that every seventh year, Jews are prohibited from planting in the Holy Land. Does that mean that, in 2021, Tel Aviv must stop planting shade trees, because the Bible told them so?
—The Goy and the Jewish Question—
Does Israel have a “Goy” problem?
—“I Know Israel Has Let You Down. We are Doing Teshuvah, Repentance.”—
For our most unreasonably generous Patreon supporters, in our extra-special, special extra discussion, we talk about a controversial High-Holidays-Days-of-Awe essay in the Times of Israel and on the JTA wire by Minister of Diaspora Affairs Nahman Shai headlined “I Know Israel Has Let You Down. We are Doing Teshuvah, Repentance.” But are we?
All that and new music one of Israel’s newest stars, Nofar Salman!
Allison Kaplan Sommer, Don Futterman and Noah Efron discuss three topics of incomparable importance and end with an anecdote about something in Israel that made them smile this week.
Listen to the Extra-Special, Special Extra Segment on Patreon
—The Year That Was—
The Talmud says that on Rosh Hashanah God judges the deeds of all creatures over the prior year. We figured, we’d get a jump on the job, giving God a hand, and figure out what we did right and what we did wrong over the past year.
—The Defense Minister & the President—
Defense Minister Benny Gantz and Palestinian President Mahmoud Abbas meet on the down-low to talk about anything but peace. What’s it augur?
—Afghanistan and the Jewish Question—
Do Israelis have anything to learn from the heartbreak in Afghanistan? (Because, you know, it’s always, at least a little, about us.)
—Is Canceling This Year’s High Holiday a Retreat From All That Has Preserved Judaism Forever?—
For our most unreasonably generous Patreon supporters, in our extra-special, special extra discussion, we talk about the brouhaha over an essay in Tablet in which Liel Leibovitz takes American rabbis to task for being overly COVID cautious. Liebowitz writes that “Jews celebrated Shabbat in silence under the Inquisition, lighting candles in darkened basements even though the flickers of holy light could attract the penalty of death. Jews baked matzo in the ghettos and observed Yom Kippur in the camps.” To cancel the high holidays now, he suggests, is a craven retreat from all that has preserved Judaism forever. Might he have a point?
All that and music of inspiration and atonement for the new year!
Sally Abed, Don Futterman and Noah Efron discuss three topics of incomparable importance and end with an anecdote about something in Israel that made them smile this week.
Listen to the Extra-Special, Special Extra Segment on Patreon
—What We Learned While Skipping School—
Kids are finally returning to desks-and-whiteboards after missing almost all of last year. What did we learn from the pandemic about how to make schools better?
—73 Days In—
The Knesset goes into a “summer recess” after the most tumultuous session anyone can remember. How’s the new government doing, 73 days in?
—Wigging Out—
We watched a movie about an ultra-Orthodox woman ambivalating over whether to stop wearing a wig, as women of her station are expected to wear, and came to opposite conclusions about what it all means.
—3 Beautiful Audio Essays by the Lovely & Incomparably Beautiful Miriam Herschlag—
For our most unreasonably generous Patreon supporters, in our extra-special, special extra discussion, an encore presentation of three (count ‘em!) lovely, incomparably beautiful little audio essays by the lovely and incomparably beautiful Miriam Herschlag.
All that and the uncategorizable music of musician, painter, sculptor and performance artist Ayelet Avni!
Forty years passed before the first song was written in Israel about the Holocaust. For a long generation, Holocaust survivors, and their kids, were mostly quiet about the events that, more than any other, shaped their lives. Then that all changed.
Sally Abed, Noah Efron and Tel Aviv Review host Gilad Halpern discuss three topics of incomparable importance and end with an anecdote about something in Israel that made them smile this week.
Listen to the Extra-Special, Special Extra Segment on Patreon
—Noodge—
Should the government tax us into acting right?
—Pedagogies of Prejudice & Prejudices of Pedagogy—
Can you teach co-existence? Decency? Some social scientists say “no.”
—By the Grace of Heaven—
A movie about ultra-Orthodox Bnei Brak during the pandemic upends everything we thought we knew. But is it the whole picture?
—What’s the Point of All Our Yammering About Israel in English?—
For our most unreasonably generous Patreon supporters, in our extra-special, special extra discussion, Sally, Gilad and Noah (each hosts of labor-of-love, English-language podcasts about Israeli politics and culture) talk about why we bother, which is to say, what we hope to accomplish by yammering into microphones in English about Israel. What’s the point?
All that and the jazz genius of Faraj Suleiman!
Times of Israel Ops & Blogs editor Miriam Herschlag, Ohad Zeltzer-Zubida and Noah Efron discuss three topics of incomparable importance and end with an anecdote about something in Israel that made them smile this week.
Hear the Extra-Special, Special Extra Segment on Patreon
—If It Please the Court—
Is it time for Israeli courts to stop allowing improperly gotten evidence? A newly proposed law would outlaw “the fruit of the poisonous tree.”
—Gold—
What do the Olympics tell folks here about what it means to be an Israeli?
—Under Another Sun—
What does an award-winning documentary about growing up on a kibbutz tell us about what it means to be an Israeli?
—Your Only Choice Is Zionism Or Anti-Zionism. Which One Do You Choose?—
For our most unreasonably generous Patreon supporters, in our extra-special, special extra discussion, we discuss an essay in Tablet by Liel Liebovitz called, “Us & Them: Your only two choices are Zionism and Anti-Zionism, Pick Wisely”, asking: Are those really our only two choices? Can’t we be Yiddishists? Can’t we be Vegans or Kantians or Olivia Rodrigo fans?
All that and Yoni Poliker!
Times of Israel Ops & Blogs editor Miriam Herschlag, Ohad Zeltzer-Zubida and Noah Efron discuss three topics of incomparable importance and end with an anecdote about something in Israel that made them smile this week.
Listen to the Extra-Special, Special Extra Segment on Patreon
—Growing Pains—
Israel’s new government says, let “the market” decide who grows what where. Is it time to let the “Invisible Hand” till our soil?
—Keeping Kosher—
Israel’s new government says, let a thousand hekhshers (Kosher certifications) bloom. Who stands to gain and who stands to lose?
—Thought for Food—
Tel Aviv’s beautiful new “Culinary Institute of Israel” is attacked for cultural appropriation and “food-washing”. Is it possible to make a meal without a side of politics?
—Why Is Vaccinating Kids at School Controversial?—
For our most unreasonably generous Patreon supporters, in our extra-special, special extra discussion, we discuss why Israel’s Education Ministry refuses to vax kids in school. Do they have a point?
All that and the genius originality of Bar Tzabari.
Times of Israel Ops & Blogs editor Miriam Herschlag, Ohad Zeltzer-Zubida and Noah Efron discuss three topics of incomparable importance and end with an anecdote about something in Israel that made them smile this week.
Listen to the Extra-Special, Special Extra Segment on Patreon
—Keeping Tabs—
An Israeli company leases super spy software to allies who use it to surveil journalists and activists. Has Realpolitik gotten too real?
—Apartheid & Our Trip Ahead—
One in four American Jews think Israel is an apartheid state, and one in five that it’s committing genocide. What family doesn’t have its ups and downs?
—Ben! Jerry! How Could You, Bros?!?—
Ben & Jerry’s freezes out settlers, and things get hot.
—Making Sense of the Brouhaha Over Remarks by Foreign Minister Yair Lapid—
For our most unreasonably generous Patreon supporters, in our extra-special, special extra discussion, we try to make sense of the brouhaha over remarks by Foreign Minister Yair Lapid at the “Global Forum For Combating Antisemitism”, suggesting that anti-Semitism is racism is homophobia is xenophobia is sexism. What’s so controversial about that?
All that and the music of Shay Hamber, who we fell in love with when she was 13, nine years ago, on a kids’ reality music show, and who we’re falling in love with all over again today, on an adults’ reality music show!
Allison Kaplan Sommer, Don Futterman and Noah Efron discuss three topics of incomparable importance and end with an anecdote about something in Israel that made them smile this week.
Hear the Extra-Special, Special Extra Segment on Patreon
—Face the Nation-State—
Israel’s Supreme Court votes 10 to 1 to let the controversial “Nation-State Law” stay on the books. Could both the 10 and the 1 be right at the same time?
—Sins of the Fathers—
Toddler’s whose fathers study full-time in Yeshivas just lost their day-care subsidies. Should tots suffer because dads don’t work?
—Is a Dream a Lie if It Don’t Come True, or Is It Somethin’ Worse—
Ten years ago this week, Israel was rocked by the biggest protests in the country’s history. Did they make any difference?
—The State of Asylum Seekers, Refugees and Migrant Workers in Israel—
For our most unreasonably generous Patreon supporters, in our extra-special, special extra discussion, we talk with Julie Fisher, the founder and director of the Consortium for Israel & the Asylum Seekers, about the state of asylum seekers, refugees and migrant workers in the age of Corona, in Tel Aviv, and Israel in general.
All that and the strange and uncategorizable charm of Onili!
Allison Kaplan Sommer, Ohad Zeltzer-Zubida and Noah Efron discuss three topics of incomparable importance and end with an anecdote about something in Israel that made them smile this week.
—Unsettling—
Settlers peaceably evacuate a wildcat West-Bank outpost in a compromise that may lead, someday, to their return. What does the compromise say about Israel’s new government?
—All President and Accounted For—
Reuven Rivlin was Israel’s president for seven stormy years. What is his legacy?
—Bi-Sockuals—
A shocking and controversial ruling about Hebrew grammar by the Academy for the Hebrew Language. But are they the boss of us?
All that and the uncategorizable genius of Masok!
Allison Kaplan Sommer, Noah Efron, and Times of Israel Ops & Blogs editor Miriam Herschlag discuss three topics of incomparable importance and end with an anecdote about something in Israel that made them smile this week.
Listen to the Extra-Special, Special Extra Segment on Patreon
https://www.patreon.com/posts/53164847
—Mistakes Were Made, Uncle Sam—
Can Israel’s new government “reset” relations with the U.S.?
—My Grandfather, the Zionist—
A grandson looks at his Zionist late-grandfather and wonders how he missed all that is wrong about Israel. But is the grandson missing something, too?
—Dudu, I Have a Feeling We’re Not in Kfar Saba Anymore—
An Israeli goes to explore the strange worlds of American Jews, like Alice in Wonderland, Gulliver in Lilliput, and Dorothy in Oz. But does he learn say more about Israel than it does about the United States?
For our most unreasonably generous Patreon supporters, in our extra-special, special extra discussion, we grapple with a challenging recent article in Tablet Magazine by luminaries Natan Sharansky and Gil Troy, called “The Un-Jews: The Jewish Attempt to Cancel Israel and Jewish Peoplehood.”
All that and new music by Dudu Aharon, one of the best things ever to come from Kiryat Ekron!
Allison Kaplan Sommer, Don Futterman and Noah Efron discuss three topics of incomparable importance and end with an anecdote about something in Israel that made them smile this week.
Listen to the Extra-Special, Special Extra Segment on Patreon
https://www.patreon.com/posts/52877485
—My Way or Norway?—
The “Norwegian Law” lets ministers resign from the Knesset and get replaced by party cronies. Is that corrupt cronyism, or just good government?
—Deunification by Reunification—
Only a week passed before Israel’s new government came up against a controversy that threatens to blow it apart, over whether Palestinians who marry Israeli citizens should automatically get citizenship. What should MKs do when politics demands something their conscience cannot allow?
—A Brook of One’s Own?—
The Parks Authority wants to set aside times when brooks, streams, rivers and lakes are open only to women bathers, or only to men bathers. But is that cool?
For our most unreasonably generous Patreon supporters, in our extra-special, special extra discussion, we gulp and ask, how freaked-the-f*ck out should we be over rising COVID numbers, including among fully vaccinated folks.
All that and new music by Itai Toren, the 22 year old son of one of Israel’s best rocker-songwriters!
Allison Kaplan Sommer, Sally Abed and Noah Efron discuss three topics of incomparable importance and end with an anecdote about something in Israel that made them smile this week.
Listen to the Extra-Special, Special Extra Segment on https://www.patreon.com/posts/52610627
—“A Coalition Exposition”—
Eight documents tell us tons about what Israel’s new government plans to do, and plans not to do, and also about the exquisite tensions knitted into the fabric of this right-center-left/Jewish-Arab/religious-secular/straight-and-queer/feminist-and-not-so-feminist coalition.
—Bye Bye Bibi Bye Bye—
Benjamin Netanyahu dominated Israeli politics for a dozen years. What legacy did he leave?
—The Bare Necessities of the Naked Truth—
Why are so many Israelis squeamish about nudity?
For our most unreasonably generous Patreon supporters, in our extra-special, special extra discussion, we place bets on how long Israel’s new government is gonna last.
Plus, a celebration of Alon Tal, on his journey from the Promised Podcast to the Knesset!
All that and the fresh-from-the-barricades music of the Barak Cohen Band!
Allison Kaplan Sommer, Ohad Zeltzer-Zubida and Noah Efron discuss three topics of incomparable importance and end with an anecdote about something in Israel that made them smile this week.
Listen to the Extra-Special, Special Extra Segment on Patreon
https://www.patreon.com/promisedpodcast
—“Who Are You, Naftali Bennett?”—
Is Israel’s incipient prime minister, Naftali Bennett, the hard-line ideologue that most people take him to be?
—No Place Like Home?—
Must the Prime Minister’s family live in the official Prime Minister’s residence, even if they’d rather stay in their villa in Ra’anana, not far from Allison?
—Who Let the Dogs In?—
What explains Israel’s canine-mania?
—So We Dropped-in on the New Clubhouse App, And…—
For our most unreasonably generous Patreon supporters, in our extra-special, special extra discussion, after we spent hours on the drop-in audio social media app “Clubhouse,” listening to Palestinians and Israelis try to talk, we try to get out of fetal position long enough to describe what we heard.
All that and the moving new record from 75-year-old Shalom Hanoch!
Allison Kaplan Sommer, Don Futterman and Noah Efron discuss three topics of incomparable importance and end with an anecdote about something in Israel that made them smile this week.
Listen to the Extra-Special, Special Extra Segment on Patreon
—“I Have Been Able to Form a Government!”—
Just before the deadline passes, Israel has maybe the oddest government in the country’s history, including a coalition of 8 very different parties, some from the pretty far right, some from the pretty far left, including one an Islamist party. What’s it mean and what’s it augur?
—President & Accounted For—
Yitzhak “Bugzhi” Herzog, one-time leader of the labor party, and son of Israel’s sixth President, Chaim Herzog, was just overwhelmingly elected by the Knesset this week to serve as Israel’s eleventh President. Herzog is a consummate insider, the elite son of an elite son of an elite son, and his opponent was a poor immigrant from Morocco who suffered inspeakably over the course of her life, and rose to be one of the country’s most revered figures. Is Herzog the right person at the right time for this job?
—Ripping Point?—
Why so many young Jewish-American progressives are saying (sadly) they’re done suffering for the sins of a Jewish state that makes no sense to them anymore.
—“Israel’s Problems Are Not Like America’s”—
For our most unreasonably generous Patreon supporters, in our extra-special, special extra discussion, we talk about a new, viral article in the Atlantic by one of our faves, Matti Friedman, called “Israel’s Problems are Not Like America’s.” Do Americans (and especially American Jews) have an Ari Ben-Canaan problem? (And who the hell is Ari Ben-Canaan, anyway?)
All that and fun with The White Trash!
Allison Kaplan Sommer, Sally Abed and Noah Efron discuss three topics of incomparable importance and end with an anecdote about something in Israel that made them smile this week.
Hear the Extra-Special, Special Extra Segment on Patreon
—Still Crazy, After All These Tears—
A cease fire has taken affect, dust has settled, dead have been buried, and rubble has begun to be cleared. But what, if anything, has changed?
—Who’s Afraid of Fifth Elections?—
So maybe 5th elections are a good idea!
—Dissenting Court or Courting Dissent?—
Did the Supreme Court just save Israeli democracy (or destroy it)?
For our most unreasonably generous Patreon supporters, in our extra-special, special extra discussion, we check in with one another and ask how we are doing, personally, as the violence recedes, as the corona virus seems to be forgotten, and the movie theaters are reopening.
All that and the grunge garage band rock of The Grasshoppers (Ha-Hargolim)!
Allison Kaplan Sommer, Ohad Zeltzer-Zubida and Noah Efron discuss three topics of incomparable importance and end with an anecdote about something in Israel that made them smile this week.
Hear the Extra-Special, Special Extra Segment on Patreon
—The Problem of Power—
Trevor Noah and John Oliver say that death counts alone are enough to see that Israel is wrong, and fighting an “unfair fight.” What do you do with a claim like that?
—Paradigm Lost?—
Before the fighting, Right, Left, and Center politicians negotiated a coalition to replace Netanyahu, with the support of an Islamist party. Once the fighting broke out, the coalition fell apart before it ever took hold. Does this prove what many say, that an Arab-Jewish political alliance cannot survive an Arab-Jewish war?
—Subterfuge—
Is it kosher for the IDF Spokesman to lie to reporters, if it helps the IDF do its job?
—Thrown Out for Throwing Rocks—
For our most unreasonably generous Patreon supporters, in our extra-special, special extra discussion, we talk about a petition demanding to sack a high-school principal caught on film throwing a rock in a riot. The man – Sagi Rosenbaum is his name – says he sees he made a terrible mistake – is that enough to let him keep his job?
All that and the powerful rap of 22-year old Jerusalemite Adi Agai!
Allison Kaplan Sommer, Don Futterman, Sally Abed and Noah Efron discuss two topics of incomparable importance and end with an anecdote about something in Israel that made them smile this week.
Hear the Extra-Special, Special Extra Segment on Patreon
—“F*cked Up, Horrible Chickens”—
Rockets and missiles from the south and mob violence most everywhere else: Why did Israel just dissolve into bloodshed?
—“If I Forget Thee, O’ Jerusalem Day”—
How do you celebrate the “reunification” of Jerusalem (and how don’t you)?
—Will Social Media Be the Death of Me?—
For our most unreasonably generous Patreon supporters, in our extra-special, special extra discussion, we talk about the roles played by Twitter, Facebook, Tiktok and Instoosh in our Hobbesian war-of-all-against-all moment.
All that and the music of Trace Kotik, in celebration of his brand-new debut record, Everything Has Been Done by Now, So Now, Everything is Possible…!
Allison Kaplan Sommer, Ohad Zeltzer-Zubida, Sally Abed (for a bit) and Noah Efron discuss three topics of incomparable importance and end with an anecdote about something in Israel that made them smile this week.
Hear the Extra-Special, Special Extra Segment on Patreon
—(Qui Est-Ce Que) J’Accuse?—
Forty-five people are crushed to death by a crowd at an all-night revelry at Mount Meron. Who or what is to blame?
—All in the Family—
Is “family-uber-alles” the only thing that cuts across lines of religion, language, ethnicity, sexual orientation and all other things that divide one Israeli from the next?
—Ethnic What?—
On last week’s podcast, Sally called Israeli policy in Jaffa “ethnic cleansing.” This week she tell more about what she means, and why she thinks the label fits.
For our most unreasonably generous Patreon supporters, in our extra-special, special extra discussion, we talk about the labyrinthine procedures one needs to follow these days traveling back and forth between Israel and the US, after Allison and Noah just ran that gauntlet.
All that and the music of Stephane Legar, in honor of his new single, Na’im Meod!
Sally Abed, Ohad Zeltzer-Zubida and Noah Efron discuss three topics of incomparable importance and end with an anecdote about something in Israel that made them smile this week.
Hear the Extra-Special, Special Extra Segment on Patreon
—Our Bennett-factor—
The liberal, center-left newspaper Haaretz endorses Naftali Bennett, a privatize-anything-that-moves and annex-anything-God-promised-to-us-in-the-Bible right wing ideologue, as our next prime minister. What gives?
—Jaffa, Lit—
Jaffa explodes in violence and protest. What and who are to blame?
—Hebrew & Me—
Maybe the most intimate question we know: What does Hebrew mean to us?
—The Demonstrations and Violence in Jaffa: A First-Hand Look—
For our most unreasonably generous Patreon supporters, in our extra-special, special extra discussion, we hear from Sally, who was arrested at one of the Jaffa demonstrations last week, what the demonstrations was like, what the arrest was like, and whether doing hard time really hardens a woman, like in the movies. Also, how bad is prison hooch, really?
All that and the great debut EP of the one-and-only Romi Mor!
Don Futterman, Noah Efron and Times of Israel Ops & Blogs Editor Miriam Herschlag discuss three topics of incomparable importance and end with an anecdote about something in Israel that made them smile this week.
Listen to the Extra-Special, Special Extra Segment on Patreon
—“Unity is the Thing We Seek”—
Opposition leader Yair Lapid says he wants a right-left-and-center “National Unity Government.” The fact that it won’t be able to do anything about the occupation is a feature, he says, not a bug. Does he have a point?
—How Do You Solve a Problem Like Ben Gvir?—
Kahanist MK Itamar Ben Gvir represents an outlook that most Israelis find loathsome. Is it better to fight him, or just ignore him?
—Hip Like Us—
Does what we Israelis wear tell us something about who we are?
For our most unreasonably generous Patreon supporters, in our extra-special, special extra discussion, we talk about this strange pandemical moment, after the mask mandate was rescinded this week, when things seem to be opening up both higgledy and piggledy, which moment feels both like a resurrection – We hath risen! — and also maybe like a prologue to a setback down the road. It’s weird, so we talk about it.
All that and the great first record of Minus Efes!
In celebration of Yom Ha-Atzma‘ut, Israeli Independence Day, stories about what the day means to us, from our family to yours!
Plus, classic songs from the old Israeli songbook, performed by a new generation.
Allison Kaplan Sommer, Noah Efron and Times of Israel Ops & Blogs Editor Miriam Herschlag discuss three topics of incomparable importance and end with an anecdote about something in Israel that made them smile this week.
Hear the Extra-Special, Special Extra Segment on Patreon
—What Now?—
The President just asked the Prime Minister (who is standing trial for corruption) to form Israel’s next government. Should he have? What the hell happens next?
—Make My Standard a Double!—
Is it hypocritical of PM Netanyahu and his supporters to form a coalition with the support of the Islamist Ra’am Party?
—My President?—
By June, Israel will have to elect a new president. Who should she be?
For our most unreasonably generous Patreon supporters, in our extra-special, special extra discussion, we talk about the parole of Rushdi Hamdan Abu Mukh, after serving 35 years of a sentence for the 1984 murder of 19-year old IDF corporal Moshe Tamam. Videos show Abu Mukh being cheered and hoisted on shoulders when he returned to his hometown of Baka al Garbia, causing Tamam’s family to call for Abu Mukh to be stripped of his Israeli citizenship. What should we make of this sad, sad thing?
All that and Bilgo!
Allison Kaplan Sommer, Don Futterman and Noah Efron discuss three topics of incomparable importance and end with an anecdote about something in Israel that made them smile this week.
Hear the Extra-Special, Special Extra Segment on Patreon
—Way Out—
Israel’s political stalemate can maybe be solved by a law disqualifying PM Netanyahu (and anyone else standing trial for felonies) from heading a new government. But is it kosher to pass a law meant to end one specific person’s political career?
—Robot Soldiers—
New autonomous weapons patrolling the border with Gaza keeps militants from crossing into Israel without endangering the lives of Israeli soldiers. Is that great news or awful news, or maybe somehow both?
—What is a Museum of the Jewish People a Museum Of?—
$100 million and hundreds of thousands of hours went into reimagining the Diaspora Museum as “Anu: The Museum of the Jewish People.” What’s the new place have to tell us about Jews?
For our most unreasonably generous Patreon supporters, in our extra-special, special extra discussion, after the city-by-city election results show that Tel Aviv elected a completely secular, left-wing coalition and that Jerusalem elected a completely religious, mostly ultra-Orthodox right-wing coalition, we wonder if we’re living in a bubble that keeps us from understanding what people think and feel 45 minutes up the road from us.
All that and Groove Salad (being Boaz Giller and Liat Haber)!
Allison Kaplan Sommer, Don Futterman, Sally Abed and Noah Efron talk about Israel’s elections this week:
What should we make of the surprising success and kingmaker role of the Islamicist Ra’am party?
The Kahanists in the Knesset? The better-than-anyone-predicted showing of Benny Gantz and the Blue & White party? The relative failure of the right-winger who wanted to replace Netanyahu, Gideon Sa’ar and Naftali Bennett? The relative success of the Labor Party and liberal-left Meretz? The stalwart centrist Yair Lapid? What’s it all say about the state of our collective soul? What’s it all augur for the future?
For our most unreasonably generous Patreon supporters, in our extra-special, special extra discussion, we – in a fit of self-disclosure – spill about who we voted for, and why.
All that and two of Israel’s greatest young opera singers, Shani Oshri & Noam Lowenstein, singing roots music in Ladino (see their beautiful online show next Monday)!
Allison Kaplan Sommer, Noah Efron and Ohad Zeltzer-Zubida discuss three topics of incomparable importance and end with an anecdote about something in Israel that made them smile this week.
Listen to the Extra-Special, Special Extra Segment on Patreon
—A Pre-Election Reflection—
This election campaign was maybe the weirdest in Israel’s history. What the hell just happened?
—Red Ties, Blue Ties—
Netanyahu has one. Saar has one. Bennett has one. Lapid has one. Lieberman has one. And Gantz has one. How to all the American political consultants running our election campaigns affect Israeli politics?
—On the Road and Off the Derekh—
If you’re born a religious Zionist in Israel, there’s a one in three chance you’ll be secular when you grow up. Is that a fact that matters??
For our most unreasonably generous Patreon supporters, in our extra-special, special extra discussion, we discuss the many (and growing) calls for Meretz and Blue&White to withdraw from the election, essentially self-immolating on the Mr.-Spockian grounds that “logic clearly dictates that the needs of the many outweigh the needs of the few.” Should two center-left parties euthanize themselves, for the sake of the rest of us?
All that and Mayco, celebrating the release of her socko first EP!
Allison Kaplan Sommer, Don Futterman and Noah Efron discuss three topics of incomparable importance and end with an anecdote about something in Israel that made them smile this week.
Hear the Extra-Special, Special Extra Segment on Patreon
—Lion in Winter—
The number of Israelis who think Benjamin Netanyahu is most fit to be Prime Minister has tumbled over the past few weeks. Why and what’s it mean about the upcoming elections?
—Us & Them—
A study finds Israeli teens don’t trust teens who are different than they are. Why? What can be done?
—Raffish Women—
Is there maybe a special, nuclear-grade misogyny reserved for tough, brash, in-your-face, Mizrahi women, who are among our most successful (and most disparaged) leaders today?
—Whoa, This Is Terrible! (Or, Yay This Is Great?)—
For our most unreasonably generous Patreon supporters, in our extra-special, special extra segment, we talk about some spectacular new investigative reporting by Allison and Judy Maltz: “How Christian Evangelical Money and Biblical Prophecy Are Driving Immigration to Israel.”
All that and the inspiring Shai Meshulam Project!
Allison Kaplan Sommer, Noah Efron and Ohad Zeltzer-Zubida discuss three topics of incomparable importance and end with an anecdote about something in Israel that made them smile this week.
Hear the Extra-Special, Special Extra Segment on Patreon
—Right Thinking Men—
Gideon is on the outs with Bibi, Naftali says he won’t hang with Yair, Avigdor says Arye, Moshe & Yaakov can f*ck off, Bibi says Bezalel’s great, but Itamar is only o.k. The dynamics of the leaders of Israel’s right-wing parties have the subtle complexity of a middle school pool party. What does this augur for Israel’s future?
—Courting Change—
The Supreme Courts decides that the state must recognize as Jews (for the arcane purposes of the Law of Return) folks converted by Reform and Conservative rabbis in Israel, and it’s like the whole country just stepped on the 3rd rail. Why is this controversial and what’s it all mean?
—The People of the Dynamic Meeting Space—
Is there a place for books in Israeli libraries in 2021?
For our most unreasonably generous Patreon supporters, in our extra-special, special extra segment, we take out our “Green Passports” and discuss what life is like for those of us who have two shots plus a week.
All that and Yael Mess, who you’re gonna be hearing a lot of pretty soon!
Allison Kaplan Sommer, Don Futterman and Noah Efron discuss three topics of incomparable importance and end with an anecdote about something in Israel that made them smile this week.
Hear the Extra-Special, Special Extra Segment on Patreon
—Idol in the Sanctuary—
Are ultra-Orthodox attacks on Labor Party candidate, Reform Rabbi Gilad Kariv, legitimate political scrabbling, or some weird sort of herem, or religious excommunication?
—Blue is the New Red?—
Has Israel’s right just embraced the labor movement?
—Woke—
What is so infuriating about political correctness?
For our most unreasonably generous Patreon supporters, in our extra-special, special extra discussion, we talk about the fufera over a six-second gag on last week’s episode of Saturday Night Live implying that Israel’s vaccine policy may give preference to Jews. Oy!
All that and a celebration of Borito, on the occasion of their first record!
Allison Kaplan Sommer, Ohad Zeltzer-Zubida, Sally Abed and Noah Efron discuss three topics of incomparable importance and end with an anecdote about something in Israel that made them smile this week.
Hear the Extra-Special, Special Extra Segment on Patreon
—Likud, 2021: What’s Left of the Right?—
Some longtime Likudniks lament that the party ain’t what it used to be. If that’s true, then what is it now?
—Carrots & Sticks—
Is there a fair way to cajole people to vaccinate? Fining ’em? Keeping ’em from working? Banning them from basketball arenas? Public shaming?
—Green, Yes. New, Sure. But Is It a Deal?—
Is this the time for a “New Green Deal for Israel”?
—The Weirdest Political Ads of the Week (Part 2)—
For our most unreasonably generous Patreon supporters, in our extra-special, special extra discussion, we once again discuss new and notable election videos that told us something we didn’t know about the parties and candidates running in next month’s elections.
All that and Irit Dekel!
Allison Kaplan Sommer, Don Futterman and Noah Efron discuss three topics of incomparable importance and end with an anecdote about something in Israel that made them smile this week.
Hear the Extra-Special, Special Extra Segment on Patreon
—Lapidary Matters—
So maybe Yair Lapid is more than a pretty-boy empty suit?
—Day in Court—
The International Criminal Court says that Palestine is a state and Israelis must stand trial for war crimes. “Pure anti-semitism,” as PM Netanyahu says? Or something else?
—The Revolution Is in the Mail—
New political magazines, printed on paper and sent in the mail, hope to foment revolution in Israeli politics. Do they have a chance of influencing people, in an age of Twitter?
—The Weirdest Political Ads of the Week (Part 1)—
For our most unreasonably generous Patreon supporters, in our extra-special, special extra discussion, we watch some of the weirdest political ads of the week, and try to understand what they’re trying to tell us.
All that and the beautiful disrespectful covers of old songs by one of Israel’s greatest songwriters, Yankele Rotblit!
Allison Kaplan Sommer, Noah Efron and Standing Together’s Sally Abed discuss three topics of incomparable importance and end with an anecdote about something in Israel that made them smile this week.
Hear the Extra-Special, Special Extra Segment on Patreon
—Failure to Launch—
Why did so many men starting so many center-left parties end up with electile disfunction?
—Anyone But Them—
The biggest issue in Israel’s March elections won’t be COVID, won’t be an economy in free fall, and won’t be Iran going nuclear. Nah, the biggest issue is ultra-Orthodox Jews. Why oh why?
—But They Have Lady Pacman, Don’t They?—
Ten parties will probably be elected to the next Knesset. One will be headed by a woman. Why?
—Why Do So Many Israeli Journalists Find Their Way Into Israeli Politics?—
For our most unreasonably generous Patreon supporters, in our extra-special, special extra discussion, we talk about a question Allison raised beautifully in a socko essay in Haaretz: Why do so many Israeli journalists find their way into Israeli politics?
All that and the neo-new wave of Or Litman!
Allison Kaplan Sommer, Ohad Zeltzer-Zubida and Noah Efron discuss three topics of incomparable importance and end with an anecdote about something in Israel that made them smile this week.
Hear the Extra-Special, Special Extra Segment on Patreon
—New Labor, Again?—
Did we eulogize the Labor Party too soon?
—Acting Big?—
PM Netanyahu unveils a plan to give most Israelis a pile of free cash, just weeks before elections. Is that necessarily a bad thing?
—How Will We Come Out of This?—
With one in three Israelis vaccinated, maybe it’s time to figure out what life will be like when this is all over.
—Is One Day Commemorating the Holocaust Just Not Enough?—
For our most unreasonably generous Patreon supporters, in our extra-special, special extra discussion, after marking this week’s “International Day of Commemoration in Memory of the Victims of the Holocaust,” we wonder what it means to have two Holocaust days, one for the world (and not for us), and one for us (and not for the world). Would we be better off if the two were combined?
All that and the music of Yakir Hillel!
Allison Kaplan Sommer, Ohad Zeltzer-Zubida and Noah Efron discuss three topics of incomparable importance and end with an anecdote about something in Israel that made them smile this week.
Hear the Extra-Special, Special Extra Segment on Patreon
—Helsinki, Helsinki—
Israel’s top bioethics board says that PM Netanyahu’s deal to give Pfizer data on everyone who got the vaccinated is illegal, because it amounts to a massive human experiment that was never approved by, well, Israel’s top bioethics board. Should the deal be vacated?
—Jenin, Jenin—
A judge orders confiscation of the 2002 movie “Jenin, Jenin” – a record of Palestinian accounts of the IDFs 2002 incursion into that city – while still letting the movie stream on Youtube. Is there any sense to that verdict?
—What’s in a Name?—
What do the names Israelis give our babies say about our society and our souls?
—I Got My COVID Vaccine and I Feel Miserable About It—
For our most unreasonably generous Patreon supporters, in our extra-special, special extra discussion, following a terrific, viral essay by Allison in Haaretz headlined, “I Just Got My COVID-19 Vaccination – Here’s Why I Feel Miserable About It,” we discuss how we’re feeling about getting vaccinated (or not getting vaccinated yet), which turns out to be surprisingly complicated. Their guilt, jubilation, worry, relief, and so many other feelings.
All that and the music of the odd and fascinating EOK Project!
Allison Kaplan Sommer, Don Futterman and Noah Efron discuss three topics of incomparable importance and end with an anecdote about something in Israel that made them smile this week.
Listen to the Extra-Special, Special Extra Segment on Patreon
—Bezalel and Naftali Love You Very Much—
Is there no room anymore for “religious Zionist” parties in the Knesset?
—Lift My Eyes Unto the Hills—
Idealists? Dropouts? True-Believers? Anarchists? Pioneers? Thugs?: What should we make of “Hilltop Youth”?
—The Medium Is the Message?—
Why will Israelis never ever delete Whatsapp from our phones, no matter how much private information they fork over to Facebook?
—The Man of Grand Generosity Who Also Made Israel Less Democratic, Less Welcoming and Less Decent—
For our most unreasonably generous Patreon supporters, in our extra-special, special extra discussion, we try to figure out what (and how) to think about Sheldon Adelson, a man of grand generosity who also used his vast wealth to make two countries we love less democratic, less welcoming, and less decent. (With appreciation to Seffi Kogan and Allie Lipner Rosenblum.)
All that and the ayahuasca-inspired musical and emotional genius of Gon Ben Ari and the Zulat Choir!
Allison Kaplan Sommer, Ohad Zeltzer-Zubida and Noah Efron discuss three topics of incomparable importance and end with an anecdote about something in Israel that made them smile this week.
Hear the Extra-Special, Special Extra Segment on Patreon
—Party Time!—
Five new center-left parties launched last week, and there are more on the way this week. Why are lefty parties sprouting like mushrooms after a spring rain?
—Going for Netanyahu in Droves?—
Prime Minister Netanyahu hints that he’s eager for an Islamicist party to join his coalition after the elections. Is this a turning-point in the history of Israeli politics?
—In Living Color—
An amateur historian and artist colorizes dozens of photos taken by a Wehrmacht officer of Jews in the Warsaw Ghetto, in order to show a brighter side of day-to-day life in the shadow of the Holocaust. Is that what we want? What we need?
—Should Burg Receive the Gift of No Longer Being Chosen?—
For our most unreasonably generous Patreon supporters, in our extra-special, special extra discussion, we discuss former Speaker-of-the-Knesset Avrum Burg’s petition of the Supreme Court to remove from official documents any mention that his “nationality” is Jewish. This, in protest of the Nation-State Law. Should Burg receive the gift of no longer being Chosen?
All that and the new wave drive of Tal Label!
Allison Kaplan Sommer, Don Futterman and Noah Efron discuss three topics of incomparable importance and end with an anecdote about something in Israel that made them smile this week.
—DNR for Labor?—
Is pulling the plug on Israel’s Labor Party the only decent thing to do?
—In Seeking Peace, Might Less Be More?—
Would Israelis and Palestinians be better off, if Americans stopped trying to broker grand peace accords?
—What’s So Wrong with Law & Liberty—
A group of conservative lawyers in Israel, following the lead of America’s Federalist Society, play the long-game to change Israel’s courts beyond recognition. Is that a bad thing?
For our most unreasonably generous Patreon supporters, in our extra-special, special extra discussion, we help the Academy for the Hebrew Language pick the “Word of the Year”!
All that and the extraordinary genius of Nissim Black!
Allison Kaplan Sommer, Ohad Zeltzer-Zubida and Noah Efron discuss three topics of incomparable importance and end with an anecdote about something in Israel that made them smile this week.
Listen to the Extra-Special, Special Extra Segment
—Elections, Infections & Abjections—
Is the collapse of Israel’s government a good thing, in a They Shoot Horses, Don’t They? Sort of way?
—Vaccination Lamentation—
Why are so many of Israel’s anti-vaxxers leftists?
New Jewess
Is Gal Gadot the “New Jewess”?
For our most unreasonably generous Patreon supporters, in our extra-special, special extra discussion, we discuss a new survey of “Urban Freedom” by the separation-of-church-and-state-advocacy group Yisrael Hofshit, about which Allison wrote in Haaretz.
Kama Vardi, in celebration of her new album, Moonticket!
Allison Kaplan Sommer, Don Futterman and Noah Efron discuss three topics of incomparable importance and end with an anecdote about something in Israel that made them smile this week.
Listen To the Extra-Special, Special Extra Patreon Segment
—Casablanca Dreamin’—
Might peace between Morocco and Israel be kinda a game changer?
—Netanyahu’s Man in the Islamic Movement—
Is Prime Minister Netanyahu’s newest BFF a representative of the Islamic Movement?
—Checkin’ Facts—
Real-time, live, fact-checking Netanyahu seems like a good idea, but is it?
For our most unreasonably generous Patreon supporters, in our extra-special, special extra discussion, we ask, do politicians who bolt from one party and join another, in order to stay in the Knesset, really deserve to be mocked and scorned?
All that and the music of Yagel Harush & Ensemble Shir Yedidut.
Times of Israel Ops & Blogs editor Miriam Herschlag, Allison Kaplan Sommer and Noah Efron discuss three topics of incomparable importance and end with an anecdote about something in Israel that made them smile this week.
Donate to the Tel Aviv Crisis Center’s crowdsource campaign
Listen To the Extra-Special, Special Extra Segment on Patreon
—“Such Stuff as Dreams Are Made On”—
Gideon Sa’ar, an acolyte-turned-enemy of Prime Minister Netanyahu starts a new right-wing and promises to pry Netanyahu from the office he’s held for eleven long years straight. Is this the beginning of the end for Bibi?
—My Kidn is for Yidn—
Former MK Moshe Feiglin just donated a kidney, and wanted to designate that it go to a Jew. What’s wrong with that?
—Ain’t No Vision Like Eurovision—
Help pick Israel’s song in the Rotterdam Eurovision next May!
—What (if Anything) Does Hanukkah Mean to Us?—
For our most unreasonably generous Patreon supporters, in our extra-special, special extra discussion, we ask, what (if anything) this holiday of lights, Hanukkah, means to us?
All that and Israeli tributes to John Lennon, marking 40 long years without him.
Allison Kaplan Sommer, Don Futterman and Noah Efron discuss three topics of incomparable importance and end with an anecdote about something in Israel that made them smile this week.
Listen to the extra segment on Patreon
—An Irony Wrapped in a Prevarication Inside a Mendacity—
Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu wants new elections but votes against them; Alternate Prime Minister Benny Gantz does not want new elections but votes for them. Is Israel heading back to the polls?
—Remember that Name, Fakhrizadeh—
Why does the assassination of the head of Iran’s nuclear weapons program seem like one thing in Jerusalem and something very different in Washington? (We are joined by special guest star, Tamara Cofman-Wittes of the socko Rational Security podcast)
—Arks & Sciences—
What are we to make of an archaeologist’s claim that King David was little more than the mediocre chieftain of a mediocre tribe?
—Celebrating Danny Sanderson’s 70th Birthday—
For our most unreasonably generous Patreon supporters, in our extra-special, special extra discussion, in honor of the 70th birthday of the great songwriter-rock-star-mensch Danny Sanderson, we play a few of our favorite songs from his astonishing, 50-year career.
All that and the our own celebration of uber-mensch, rock-star Danny Sanderson’s 70th birthday!
Host of TLV1’s Tel Aviv Review, Gilad Halpern, Allison Kaplan Sommer and Noah Efron discuss three topics of incomparable importance and end with an anecdote about something in Israel that made them smile this week.
—Sub-Committee?—
Minister of Defense and Alternate Prime Minister Benny Gantz’s sets up a to investigate corruption in the purchase of German submarines and ships, that may implicate the Prime Minister. But should ministries be used to harass political rivals?
—The Spy Who Came in from the Cold—
American-spy-for-Israel Jonathan Pollard is free after 35 years and moving to Israel. What sort of welcome should he get?
—#IDF—
The IDF sweats to seem cool on social media. But should an army be cool?
—Is Eytan Stibbe an Actual Astronaut?—
For our most unreasonably generous Patreon supporters, in our extra-special, special extra discussion, we discuss the hubbub around Eytan Stibbe, that promises to develop into a fuferra and, after that — who knows? — even a fracas. Eytan Stibbe is a fighter pilot turned venture capitalist in the fast-paced and glamorous world of international arms sales. In exchange for a seven-figure donation, he’s slated to spend ten days on the International Space Station next October, and he’s being celebrated as the second Israeli in space, after Ilan Ramon, may his memory be for a blessing. But wags say, he ain’t no hero of mine.
All that and the offbeat charm of Kochevet Al!
Times of Israel Ops & Blogs Editor Miriam Herschlag, Don Futterman and Noah Efron discuss three topics of incomparable importance and end with an anecdote about something in Israel that made them smile this week.
Listen to this week's Extra Segment on Patreon
—The Vaxx—
When Pfizer announced last week that its vaccine looks good, PM Netanyahu got on the horn and negotiated a deal to buy a mess of vaccine at high-end boutique prices, even though six months ago, Israel entered a much cheaper deal for vaccines by Moderna. Was the PM showboating, politicking, or looking out for the health of his citizens?
—The Facts—
A crowdsourced campaign puts the faces and names of rapists and abusers on billboards and bus-side ads, in order to shame them. Cathartic, yes? But does it make our lives better or worse?
—The Tax—
When you buy stuff from overseas on the internet, you don’t pay tax, but when you go into a store in Tel Aviv, you do. Does that make any sense at all?
—Will the Slurpee® Succeed on Soil Sanctified by Solomon?—
For our most unreasonably generous Patreon supporters, in our extra-special, special extra discussion, we talk about plans to bring 250 branches of convenience store 7-Eleven to Israel in the next two years. Will the Slurpee® succeed on soil sanctified by Solomon? Should it succeed? Also, in Israel, do they give away the free Slurpees on July 11, like they do in America (July 11 being 7-11 in America), or will it be on November 7 (November 7 being 7-11 in Israel)? So many important questions!
All that and the challenging genius of Kalkar.
Times of Israel Ops & Blogs Editor Miriam Herschlag, Wunderkind Ohad Zeltzer-Zubida and Noah Efron discuss three topics of incomparable importance and end with an anecdote about something in Israel that made them smile this week.
—What Was That?—
Trump will soon be the 45th ex-President of the United States. Did his turbulent four years in office change Israel in ways that will last?
—New Left?—
Aging lions of the old Left say the only way the Left will survive is if it leaves Zionism out of party politics. Do they have a point?
—The Yair Netanyahu Show—
The Twitter-pugilist son of the prime minister, Yair Netanyahu, starts a podcast interviewing right-wing populist leaders and pretenders around the world, trying to create an international coalition of My-Country-First nationalists. We listened and survived to tell the tale!
All that and songs from poems by Natan Zach, the great poet who died this week, and about whom we are tumultuously ambivalent.
Allison Kaplan Sommer, Don Futterman and Noah Efron discuss three topics of incomparable importance and end with an anecdote about something in Israel that made them smile this week.
—9,499 Kilometers—
Washington lies 9,499 kilometers from Jerusalem, and yet the politics of the one affects the politics of the other. What, if anything, can we learn from the mess of American politics about the mess of Israeli politics?
—Pharisees, Sadducees, Essenes, Zealots & Trump Jews—
Haaretz’s Anshel Pfeffer writes that Jews in Paris, Brasilia and Jerusalem splitting into two tribes: Trump Jews & Anti-Trump Jews. Does he have a point?
—“Your Rabin, Not Mine”—
An Minister in Israel says Rabin’s legacy means nothing to her. Is that cool?
—“I’ve Never Felt More American and Never Felt Less American”—
For our most unreasonably generous Patreon supporters, in our extra-special, special extra discussion, we talk about how we experienced the elections, in our different ways. Hint: At least one of us never felt more American and never felt less American, than he did at 3:30 am, Israel time, after the polls closed, pressing refresh over and over again like a rat pressing a pellet bar in a skinner box.
All that and the happy harmony of Moonshine!
Times of Israel Ops & Blogs Editor Miriam Herschlag, Wunderkind Ohad Zeltzer-Zubida, All-star Haaretz writer Allison Kaplan-Sommer, NGO-maven-and-story-teller Don Futterman, Dan-David-Prize Czar Charlotte Halle, and ne’er-do-well Noah Efron tell stories of life and love in this place they call home, all previously aired, for quality control purposes. (That’s how much we care about your listening experience!)
Times of Israel Ops & Blogs Editor Miriam Herschlag, Wunderkind Ohad Zeltzer-Zubida and Noah Efron discuss three topics of incomparable importance and end with an anecdote about something in Israel that made them smile this week.
—How Do You Solve a Problem Like Rav Kanievsky?—
Tens of thousands of ultra-Orthodox kids are going each day to schools that are required by law to be closed, in maybe the biggest act of civil disobedience in Israel’s history. What’s the government to do?
—Skin in the Game?—
Race, ethnicity, peoplehood, nationality, religion: How do these things fit together in today’s Israel?
—Anything But Apathy—
Can a $678 embroidered hoodie with dropped shoulders and panelled long sleeves help bring peace to Israelis and Palestinians?
—Is There Something Unique About Antisemitism on Social Media?—
For our most unreasonably generous Patreon supporters, in our extra-special, special extra discussion, we talk about an essay in the forward by Joel Swanson called, “Facebook has banned Holocaust denial. But what about other genocides?”, and ask more generally, is there something unique and sui generis about antisemitism on social media.
All that and songs from Shlomi Shabat and family and friends!
Times of Israel Ops & Blogs Editor Miriam Herschlag, Don Futterman and Noah Efron discuss three topics of incomparable importance and end with an anecdote about something in Israel that made them smile this week.
—Exit Strategy—
The government approves a plan to get out of Covid lockdown in nine easy stages. But will it work?
—I Am Breathing on You—
Novelist and editor Ruth Almog worries that Israelis are getting coarser, after a peeved, maskless woman breathes on her. Have we lost our civility?
—Every Day—
A big front-page ad compares abuse of animals to Treblinka. Is that o.k.?
—Ought a Jewess Like Gal Gadot Be Allowed to Play Cleopatra?—
For our most unreasonably generous Patreon supporters, in our extra-special, special extra discussion, we discuss the fufura (though some think it’s a mere brouhaha) on social media over whether a Jewess like Gal Gadot ought to be allowed to play Cleopatra on screen? All the Ancient Macedonian-Greek-Egyptian actresses in Hollywood are enraged at Gadot’s cultural appropriation, and we’ll try to figure out what to make of the fracas (though some think it’s a mere ruckus).
All that and songs by Vxodoo Daddy and Evja!
Times of Israel Ops & Blogs Editor Miriam Herschlag, wunderkind critic Ohad Zeltzer-Zubida and Noah Efron discuss three topics of incomparable importance and end with an anecdote about something in Israel that made them smile this week.
—The People Doth Protest Too Much!—
In confining demonstrations to 1,000 meters from each protestor’s home, did the government just do permanent damage to Israeli democracy?
—Distant, Yes, But Is It Learning?—
A study shows distance-learning is a complete failure for Israel’s kids. Now what?
—Poets & Politicians—
Can poetry change politics?
For our most unreasonably generous Patreon supporters, in our extra-special, special extra discussion, we consider whether Minister of Environmental Protection Gila Gamliel ought to be fired, after she got Covid after breaking the rules and going to shul on Yom Kippur hundreds of kilometers from her home, and then tried to cover it up.
All that and songs from the brand new EP by Jazz and Sabbo!
Allison Kaplan Sommer, Don Futterman and Noah Efron discuss three topics of incomparable importance and end with an anecdote about something in Israel that made them smile this week.
—Who Shall Live—
As Israel’s hospitals are overwhelmed with Covid patients, how do doctors decide who gets a ventilator and who doesn’t?
—AOC, AOC, Won’t You Fight for Me?—
Is AOC not that into us?
—Make Me a Match—
Why is matchmaking becoming a thing for (secular) Israelis?
—Our First Lousy, Temporary Homes in Israel—
For our most unreasonably generous Patreon supporters, in our extra-special, special extra discussion, ahead of Sukkot, the only holiday of the Jewish year that valorizes lousy, temporary housing, we reminisce about some of our first lousy, temporary homes here in Israel.
All that and the happy music of Amir ve Ben!
Allison Kaplan Sommer, Don Futterman and Noah Efron discuss three topics of incomparable importance and end with an anecdote about something in Israel that made them smile this week.
—The Other Deal of the Century—
Should Prime Minister Netanyahu get amnesty from prosecution for corruption in exchange for resigning?
—RBG for She and We—
Israel’s Former Minister of Justice, Ayelet Shaked, says she reveres RBG’s freedom-fighting feminism, but would never have appointed her to the bench here. A contradiction?
—Atone Again, Naturally—
About which public figures have we “spoken slander and evil speech, accused falsely and deceitfully, mocked” and worse? Who deserves our apologies for the sins of podcastery and assholery?
—Michael Sfard Argues That in Israel, an RBG Could Never Make It To the Supreme Court. Is He Right?—
For our most unreasonably generous Patreon supporters, in our extra-special, special extra discussion, we discuss an essay in Haaretz by the great civil rights lawyer Michael Sfard, arguing that in Israel, an RBG (or anyone who starts their career at an NGO) could never make it to the Supreme Court. We try to figure if he’s right.
All that and four awesome songs for the Days of Awe!
Allison Kaplan Sommer, Noah Efron and Ohad Zeltzer-Zubida discuss three topics of incomparable importance and end with an anecdote about something in Israel that made them smile this week.
--It Never Bahrains, But It Pours!--
Did this week’s historic signing of historic agreements at the historic White house set us upon new historic path?
--An Exceptional Lockdown--
Do praying and protesting trump a lockdown?
--The Jews Gotta Go?--
Should Israel’s public TV network use public money and public airwaves to present to the public something that lots of people in one part of the public find profoundly offensive?
--A Poetry Reading to Commemorate the 20th Anniversary of the Death of Yehuda Amichai--
For our most unreasonably generous Patreon supporters, in our extra-special, special extra discussion, to mark the twentieth anniversary of the death of the great poet, Yehuda Amichai, we each read aloud an Amichai poem we love.
All that and songs by Isaac DaBom!
Allison Kaplan Sommer, Don Futterman and Noah Efron discuss three topics of incomparable importance and end with an anecdote about something in Israel that made them smile this week.
Click here to listen to this week's extra-special, special extra patron-only segment
--But What Future?--
What does the Greek-tragic struggle over leadership of the Yesh Atid (“There is a Future”) party say about the future of our politics?
--Disobedient, Sure! But Is It Civil?--
A former Israeli Foreign Minister calls for “civil disobedience” against the government’s coronavirus rules and regulations. Has he crossed a line?
--Bestirred--
What events and people mattered most in Israel over the Jewish year now drawing to a close?
--The Arrest of Shoshke Englemayer, The Alter Ego of Artist Ze’ev Englemayer--
For our most unreasonably generous Patreon supporters, in our extra-special, special extra discussion, we discuss the arrest last week at the Balfour protests of Shoshke Engelmayer, an alter ego of artist Ze’ev Englemayer, who is a an utterly naked, Outré, bevulva-ed, bare-breasted, lipsticked, bespectacled blond. Shoshke was arrested, absurdly, for ‘sexual harassment’, but we’ll try to understand who she is and what, by her very way of being in the world, she says to us and about us.
All that and songs by the happy, hip-hop collective, Shazamat!
Allison Kaplan Sommer, Noah Efron and wunderkind critic Ohad Zeltzer-Zubida discuss three topics of incomparable importance and end with an anecdote about something in Israel that made them smile this week.
--And the Bush Was Not Consumed: On the Surprising Longevity of the Balfour Protests--
The protests in front of Prime Minister Netanyahu’s home have lasted almost twice as long as “Occupy Wall Street” and the demonstrations at Tiananmen Square. How come?
--Surfing the Waves (of Corona)--
Naftali Bennett may be Israel’s next prime minister, threatening Benjamin Netanyahu from the right. Why was he become so popular, during a pandemic?
--N, Na, Nah, Nah-to-Uman--
Israel’s coronavirus czar begs Ukraine’s president to ban ultra-Orthodox Israelis from visiting the grave of their patron-saint Rabbi on the Jewish New Year, for fear that they’ll spread the virus. Is that a step too far?
--Israel is Breaking Records. Infection Records. Should We Worry?--
For our most unreasonably generous Patreon supporters, in our extra-special, special extra discussion, we discuss how Israel’s infection numbers break records day after day, and yet most of us are pretty ho-hum about it. Why aren’t we more freaked out?
All that and the collective genius of Foto Màriana.
Twenty two years ago, a week after Israel celebrated its fiftieth anniversary, a 26 year-old former drag-queen and trans woman won the world’s biggest song contest, The Eurovision. She also forever changed the way we Israelis see ourselves.
In this very special edition of The Promised Podcast, Noah tells her story, and explains why he thinks that in this moment of anxiety and dreadful Nation-State laws, Dana International represents the humane and decent Zionism so many of us long for.
Times of Israel Ops & Blogs Editor Miriam Herschlag goes to the demonstrations shaking Jerusalem and the country at their foundations, with her daughter as a guide.
Patreon Segment: Skiing the Slopes of the United Arab Emirates
For our most unreasonably generous Patreon supporters, in our extra-special, special extra discussion, Allison, Ohad and Noah ponder the shocking, stunning, amazing breakthrough with the United Arab Emirates and dream about the wages of peace: swoop-swooping down the powdered ski slope of the Mall of the Emirates.
Music
Maybe no one is a better symbol of how Israel is changing (and did more to cause this change) than Rabbi Adin Steinsaltz, who died this week at 83.
Music
From deep in summer doldrums, Noah tells the story of one song that is also, in a way, the story of Israel itself.
Allison Kaplan Sommer, Noah Efron and Don Futterman discuss three topics of incomparable importance and end with an anecdote about something in Israel that made them smile this week.
Listen to this week's Patreon segment
--First and a Half Israel--
Are the people demonstrating each night in front of the Prime Minister’s home a new political class, changing all we thought we knew about Israeli politics?
--Ron, Pretender to the Throne?--
Is Israel’s next prime minister a dyspeptic 76-year-old named Ron?
--What Is a Museum of the Land of Israel a Museum Of?--
Q: What do you call a museum that has stamps, fire trucks, ancient pottery, and modern art? A: A gorgeous, enchanting mess (or, The Museum of the the Land of Israel).
--Was Israel the Canary in the Coalmine of Cancel Culture?--
For our most unreasonably generous Patreon supporters, in our extra-special, special extra discussion, we talk about Matti Friedman’s socko new essay in Tablet, “Israel Was Ground Zero for the New Woke Religion: How coverage of the Jewish state became a signifier of the ideological activism that now permeates Western culture.” Was Israel the canary in the coalmine of cancel culture?
All that and the garageband wonder of The Genders, in a country that doesn’t really have garages.
Allison Kaplan Sommer, Noah Efron and wunderkind critic Ohad Zeltzer-Zubida discuss two topics of incomparable importance and end with an anecdote about something in Israel that made them smile this week.
--Reflections on the Revolution in Jerusalem--
Israelis’ trust in their leaders has dropped by half in just one month, and each night brings new scenes of police water-cannoning protestors outside PM Netanyahu’s house. What happens next?
--Diss Engagement--
Fifteen years ago, Israeli soldiers and police dragged Jewish settlers kicking-and-crying from their homes in Gaza. What was the legacy of this “withdrawal to end all withdrawals”?
--Is It Ethical to Scold People for Not Wearing a Mask?--
For our most unreasonably generous Patreon supporters, in our extra-special, special extra discussion, we take on a question sent in this week to Haaretz’s moral “Dear Abby”: Is It Ethical to Scold People for Not Wearing a Mask on the Street? The old riddle goes, Q: Why do Israelis not have sex in public? A: Because who needs mobs of people crowding in to tell you what you’re doing wrong. What’s true for coitus is no doubt true for matters pandemical, but should it be?
All that and the keytar genius of Bemet (aka, Hod Moshonov, one of Forbes “30 Under 30”)!
Allison Kaplan Sommer, Don Futterman and Noah Efron discuss discuss three topics of incomparable importance and end with an anecdote about something in Israel that made them smile this week.
--And It’s One, Two, Three, What Are We Fightin’ For? (with apologies to both Country Joe and the Fish)--
Huge, angry demonstrations demand that Netanyahu do something about Israel’s economic crisis. But what?
--Judging Judges: A Judgmental Judgment--
What’s wrong with judging judges?
--And a River Runs Through It--
A kibbutz bars folks from a nearby town from picnicking on the banks of a river that winds through its grounds. Is that o.k.?
--Is There Any Way to Get Away With a Little Getaway?--
For our most unreasonably generous Patreon supporters, in our extra-special, special extra discussion: Summer is here, and we all deserve a vacation. Hotels at the Dead Sea are sold out, and little getaway love-nest cabins up north are getting booked up fast. But is a corona vacation a vacation at all? We share our plans for the summer (concluding that, getaway or no getaway, there’s no way to get away).
All that and Avoda Zmanit!
Tel Aviv Review impresario Gilad Halpern, Allison Kaplan Sommer and Noah Efron discuss discuss three topics of incomparable importance and end with an anecdote about something in Israel that made them smile this week.
--From COVID Heroes to COVID Zeros--
How’d Israel go from being COVID heroes to COVID zeros?
--Tamar in Tehran--
A twenty-something, computer-hacker genius, Mossad spy goes native in Iran: that’s the plot of Israel’s newest mega-hit TV series. But what’s it tell us about how Israelis see Persian politics and culture?
--Be Still, Beinart--
Journalist and public intellectual Peter Beinart says goodbye to the “Two State Solution” for Israel and Palestine. Is he the harbinger, as he writes, of “a new phase of Jewish history”?
For our most unreasonably generous Patreon supporters, in our extra-special, special extra segment, we make the very most out of having Gilad on the show, and ask him about his doctoral research into the history behind The Palestine Post, an English-language daily established in 1932, which later in 1950 became The Jerusalem Post.
All that and Lihi Admon (ve-Levavot ha-Kusamak)
Journalist and soon-to-be features editor for the Committee to Protect Journalists, Naomi Zeveloff, wunderkind critic Ohad Zeltzer-Zubida and Noah Efron discuss three topics of incomparable importance and end with an anecdote about something in Israel that made them smile this week.
--Does Size Matter?--
Would a small, “symbolic” annexation of lands in the West Bank sidestep the worst consequences of the bigger annexation authorized by the Trump peace plan?
--Twilight of the Idols, or, How to Philosophize with a Hammer--
As statues of Columbus get toppled in America, and statues of Leopold II get ripped down in Belgium, are there memorial in Israel we’d be better or mothballing or melting down?
--Gun, Grenade, Mic & Turntable--
Why ’o why does an Army need a radio station?
All that and Roey Rieck and some of Israel’s best indie musicians, in a pandemic project called “Ha-Gal ha-Sheni,” “The Second Wave”!
Allison Kaplan Sommer, Noah Efron and wunderkind critic Ohad Zeltzer-Zubida discuss three topics of incomparable importance and end with an anecdote about something in Israel that made them smile this week.
--You’re Gay, You Wanna Revolution?--
A new documentary aims to explain the surprising success of the LGBTQA community in Israel. Why are so many LGBTQA folks hating on it?
--You Stay to Start a Revolution!--
On a hill in the foothills of Samaria, live eight young, Israeli settler women, aged 13 to 19, alone, without running water and electricity.
--You Pray, You Wanna Revolution--
Israel’s ultra-Orthodox have a plan, inspired by the pandemic, to make weddings smaller, cheaper and more sustainable. Should the rest of us do the same thing?
--Is Roger Waters Giving BDS a Bad Name?--
For our most unreasonably generous Patreon supporters, in our extra-special, special extra segment, we discuss the bat-s#!t, anti-semitic meltdown of musician Roger Waters, in an interview with a Hamas-linked news agency. Is he giving BDS a bad name?
All that and Russia, Hebrew, Arabic, English hip hop by Shi 360!
Allison Kaplan Sommer, Don Futterman and Noah Efron discuss three topics of incomparable importance and end with an anecdote about something in Israel that made them smile this week.
--“The Revolt of Diaspora Jews”?--
Are we seeing a “revolt” of Jews in England, America and elsewhere in the diaspora against Netanyahu’s planned annexation of territory in the West Bank?
--Rest in Peace?--
It’s like a koan: Is a cemetery that stopped being a cemetery more than a hundred years ago still a cemetery? (Answer: When your backhoe turns up 19th century graves, it is.)
--Defending the Haganah--
For 28 years, the “Haganah” fought underground to protect Jews in Palestine and to end British rule, and ever since, the organization and its fighters have been lionized in Israel as heroes. Has the time come to focus on the darkest of their deeds?
For our most unreasonably generous Patreon supporters, in our extra-special, special extra segment, we pick up the gauntlet-upon-guantlet laid down first by Tablet Magazine when it interviewed proudly racist and anti-semitic scholar Kevin MacDonald, and then by Haaretz opinion editor Esther Solomon, when she responded that “it is not courage, it is self-abasement, for any jewish publication to call up an anti-Semitic white supremacist and be grateful for their time”. Like most Jews, talking about Nazis is our comfort zone, and that’s what we do.
All that and the enchanting music of Dandan!
Allison Kaplan Sommer, Noah Efron and wunderkind critic Ohad Zeltzer-Zubida discuss three topics of incomparable importance and end with an anecdote about something in Israel that made them smile this week.
--Unsettled!--
Settler leaders oppose Israel’s annexation of any towns in the West Bank? Is this bizarro world? Are dogs cats? Is up down?
--Through American Eyes--
Why was Bernie Sanders the main speaker at this week’s big anti-annexation demonstration in Rabin Square?
--Virtually Palestine--
What do we have to learn from virtual visits to virtual Palestine on our smartphones?
--The Knesset Committee on the Status of Women and Gender Equality: It’s a Man’s World--
For our most unreasonably generous Patreon supporters, in our extra-special, special extra segment, we discuss this week’s dumbass appointment of a male MK named Oded Forer to head the Knesset Committee on the Status of Women and Gender Equality. Another glass ceiling shattered? Another frontier tamed for the be-penised and betesticled among us? In short: Men, Is there nothing we can’t do?
All that and songs by 33 young, brilliant musicians from the Rimon School of Music!
Allison Kaplan Sommer, Don Futterman and Noah Efron discuss three topics of incomparable importance and end with an anecdote about something in Israel that made them smile this week.
--God & Country--
Are the ultra-Orthodox the big winners in Israel’s new government? Does that make the rest of us losers?
--18 Years of Death, Misery and Despair: There’s an App for that Now!--
A new app/site lets Israelis who fought in Israel’s long miserable war in Lebanon return virtually to the outposts where they froze and watched their friends die. But why?
--Thrice the Advice!--
If you’re an Israeli abroad, is it your responsibility to present the country in a good light?
For our most unreasonably generous Patreon supporters, in our extra-special, special extra segment, we talk about what the corona-mess feels like now, as we leave lockdown and watch the numbers creep back up. (Hint: Yikes!)
All that and bright songs by Sun Tailor!
Allison Kaplan Sommer, Noah Efron and wunderkind critic Ohad Zeltzer-Zubida discuss three topics of incomparable importance and end with an anecdote about something in Israel that made them smile this week.
--J’Accuse?, Non, J’Accuse!--
As his corruption trial begin, PM Netanyahu’s supporters take to the streets to say their leader is a latter day Dreyfus, persecuted by a cabal of leftist judges and journalists. What should we make of that?
--Exiled to Providence--
Are leftists leaving Israel as “political exiles”?
--What is the Good Book Good For?--
As we celebrate Shavuot, a festival marking the giving of the Torah at Sinai, we can’t help but wonder: What are we supposed to do with that book, anyway?
--Was Israel’s Response to COVID-19 Wrongity-Wrong-Wrong?--
For our most unreasonably generous Patreon supporters, in our extra-special, special extra segment, we discuss an essay in Ha’aretz arguing that everything we’d done up to now to respond to coronavirus was wrongity-wrong-wrong. Has the time come to second-guess all we’ve done for the past months?
All that and songs by Asaf Avidan, with and without the Mojos!
Allison Kaplan Sommer, Don Futterman and Noah Efron discuss three topics of incomparable importance and end with an anecdote about something in Israel that made them smile this week.
--The Vision of No Vision--
Prime Minister Netanyahu and Alternate Prime Minister Gantz set out their visions for the future in the first meeting of Israel’s new government, which are narrow and dryly technocratic. But is that really a bad thing in tumultuous times?
--Leftism and Other Risk Factors--
Why are left-leaning Israelis suffering more from the pandemic than right-leaning Israelis?
--Golda’s Israel, and Ours--
Does a new documentary about Golda Meir, Israel’s 4th Prime Minister, teach us something crucial about the country today?
--“Anti-Semitism” or “Anti semitism”?--
For our most unreasonably generous Patreon supporters, in our extra-special, special extra segment, we talk about uber-historian Deborah Lipstadt’s quixotic campaign to change the way the word anti-seminitism is spelled, striking the hyphen, and demoting the first S, about which Allison just wrote in an essay puckishly headlined, “Anti-antisemitism? A Battle Rages Over the Jewish Hyphen.”
All that and songs by Kosta Kaplan, off his debut record!
Allison Kaplan Sommer, Noah Efron and wunderkind critic Ohad Zeltzer-Zubida discuss three topics of incomparable importance and end with an anecdote about something in Israel that made them smile this week.
--Big Government-- Israel’s new government is the largest in history, with 36 ministers. But can we expect big things from it?
--Court TV?-- When Supreme Court hearings are broadcast on TV, does it humanize the justices, or just make them look small?
--God TV?-- An Evangelical cable TV channel cheeses people off when it tries to convince Israeli Jews to accept Jesus in our hearts. But isn’t that the sort of things we want to have in a “marketplace of ideas”?
--Worrying About Our Loved Ones-- For our most unreasonably generous Patreon supporters, in our extra-special, special extra segment, we talk about (following a great article by Allison in Haaretz) what it is like to worry about loved ones living in the US, where the corona-news is so scary, at the moment when here in Israel things seem so much better.
All that and songs by Frube, four talented kids from Sde Boker!
Allison Kaplan Sommer, Don Futterman and Noah Efron discuss three topics of incomparable importance and end with an anecdote about something in Israel that made them smile this week.
Non-Judgmental
The Supreme Court rules that Benjamin Netanyahu is allowed to form the next government, and serve at its head, even though he goes to trial in two weeks for bribery, fraud, and breach of trust. Why? What’s it mean for our future?
Newton’s Third Law of the Coronavirus?
Is Israel going from being super cautious about coronavirus to not being cautious enough? Are we running amok to normality?
Solidarities
Israelis raise money to support a British woman suing Israeli young men who assaulted her in Cyprus. Why?
For our most unreasonably generous Patreon supporters, in our extra-special, special extra segment, we talk about what it feels like, at this moment, to be going through the quick exit from quarantine that we are all going through here.
All that and songs by Galli Allon!
Allison Kaplan Sommer, Noah Efron and Wunderkind critic Ohad Zeltzer-Zubida discuss three topics of incomparable importance and end with an anecdote about something in Israel that made them smile this week.
--Gradually, and then Suddenly --
Who killed Israel’s Labor Party?
--Art or Death --
Should the government support the arts like it supports the hospitals and the army, because art is an existential need no less important than health and defense?
--Pandemic & Patriarchy --
Is the pandemic the best thing ever for patriarchy? Has the time come for “feminist civil disobedience”?
--What’s It Like Celebrating Memorial Day and Independence Day Under Corona-Lockdown --
For our most unreasonably generous Patreon supporters, in our extra-special, special extra segment, we talk about what it was like to celebrate memorial day and independence day, under corona-lockdown. Hint: kind of delightful, and weirder than weird!
All this and Adi Shaham!
Allison Kaplan Sommer, Don Futterman and Noah Efron discuss three topics of incomparable importance and end with an anecdote about something in Israel that made them smile this week.
--The Coalition Proposition: A Road to Perdition?--
Is the coalition agreement that PM Netanyahu and Lieutenant-General Benny Gantz just signed the end of democracy as we know it, the salvation of Israel, or maybe, just maybe, something in between?
--Timor Mortis-est?--
Is it true what the director of Israel’s Ministry of Health just said, that Israelis have less of a stomach for COVID-19 deaths than folks in other countries, and that that’s a problem?
--What is Israeli?--
Israel’s celebrating our 72nd birthday, and still we’ve gotta aske: What is Israeli?
--Preparing for Civil Unrest?--
For our most unreasonably generous Patreon supporters, in our extra-special, special extra segment, we talk about a just-leaked National Security Council report setting out a strategy for dealing with civil insurrection (!), as might break out in response to the coronavirus restrictions. Are corona-frustrations mounting here, like they seem to be in America?
All that and songs by Romy Hanoch (the brilliant daughter of Shalom Hanoch, the godfather of Israeli rock’n’roll).
Allison Kaplan Sommer, Noah Efron and Wunderkind critic Ohad Zeltzer-Zubida discuss three topics of incomparable importance and end with an anecdote about something in Israel that made them smile this week.
--No Go Tiations--
Why, O Why, can’t Israel form a friggin’ government?
--Six Physicists, Two Computer Scientists, an Engineer, an Economist and a Psychologist--
Coronavirus doesn’t distinguish by sex, religion or profession. But should that be true, too, of the committee tasked with devising our “exit strategy”?
--Zionormativity (and the Queering of Yiddish)--
Do Israel and Zionism need to be “queered,” now more than ever?
--After We’re Told That We Can Go Out, Do We Just Abide and Go Out?--
For our most unreasonably generous Patreon supporters, in our extra-special, special extra segment, we talk about whether, when the government says it’s o.k. to go out to restaurants and send our kids to school, and take in a movie at the multiplex, we’re going to feel comfortable doing it.
All this and the smoky and ethereal moodiness of Bela Tar!
Allison Kaplan Sommer, Don Futterman and Noah Efron discuss three topics of incomparable importance and end with an anecdote about something in Israel that made them smile this week.
--Not With a Bang, but With a Tweet--
Labor head Amir Peretz tweets that he’s merging his party into Blue & White, killing off once and for all the party of David Ben Gurion, Golda Meir and Yitzhak Rabin. Should we mourn the loss?
--What’s Wrong with Bnei Brak?!?--
Why are most Israeli COVID-19 victims Ultra-Orthodox? Are all the others here who are outraged at Haredim justified in their anger?
--The Dialectics of Dayenu--
Does the Passover Seder song, Dayenu, explain the difference between Israel’s right and left?
--How Is the Coronavirus Leaving Its Imprint on Our Passover?--
For our most unreasonably generous Patreon supporters, in our extra-special, special extra segment, we talk about how the coronavirus is leaving its imprint on Passover, from how to prepare for it, to how we celebrate, to the new meaning it’s come to hold for us.
All that and songs by Israel’s greatest polymath musician, Eli Dray.
Allison Kaplan Sommer, Noah Efron and Wunderkind critic Ohad Zeltzer-Zubida discuss two topics of incomparable importance and end with an anecdote about something in Israel that made them smile this week.
--What Gantz Wants, or Is Gantz a Shvantz?--
Benny Gantz promised one thing -- ONE THING! -- in the last election campaign: that he would never, ever join a government under Prime Minister Netanyahu. So why’d he change his mind, at the cost of losing his allies, angering his voters, and leaving the center-left in splinters?
--Econoclasm--
Israel’s most venerable political scientist says that the coronavirus will kill off the country’s neo-liberal economic policy and nudge us towards social democracy. Does he have a point?
--Our Favorite Funny, Creative Posts & Tweets at this Moment of Crisis--
For our most unreasonably generous Patreon supporters, in our extra-special, special extra segment, we talk about our favorite posts and tweets, as this moment of crisis releases a flood of humor, creativity and heart.
All that and the rhythm and blues of Roee Lavan!
Allison Kaplan Sommer, Noah Efron and Wunderkind critic Ohad Zeltzer-Zubida discuss two topics of incomparable importance and end with an anecdote about something in Israel that made them smile this week.
--Chair Today, Gone Tomorrow--
While we were washing our hands and not touching our face, did Israeli democracy just almost shatter into pieces?
--Too Loyal Opposition?--
Most politicians, journalists, professors and other professional gadflies are acting like an “Amen corner” as Prime Minister Netanyahu steers the country through the crisis. Has the time come to be more critical?
--The Nice Side of Forced Isolation--
For our most unreasonably generous Patreon supporters, in our extra-special, special extra segment, we talk about some of the surprising nice things to come out of our forced incarceration under scary circumstances. The worst of times, like these, always seems to bring out the best in people, and we’re seeing it.
And the lovely harmonies of Yonina!
Allison Kaplan Sommer, Don Futterman and Noah Efron discuss three topics of incomparable importance and end with an anecdote about something in Israel that made them smile this week.
Listen to this week's extra segment
--An Astonishing Thing Happened This Week (When We Were Mostly Paying Attention to Other Things)--
Blue-&-White leader Benny Gantz is given the “mandate” to form Israel’s government. Now what?
--Keeping Tabs--
At 1 a.m., Netanyahu’s cabinet decides to grant the Shin Bet, Israel’s secret service, the power to track COVID-19 sufferers and, along the way, the rest of us, too. Do desperate times demand such desperate measures, or is this a step (way) too far?
--“Torah Protects and Saves”?!?--
A revered 92 year old rabbi to keep ultra-Orthodox schools open, in defiance of the Prime Minister and Health Minister, because studying Torah is our best protection from the coronavirus. Now what?
--Corona: Up Close and Personal (Part 2)--
For our most unreasonably generous Patreon supporters, in our extra-special, special extra segment, we (once again) discuss how the coronavirus is affecting us personally, changing our lives, and inhabiting our dreams and nightmares, as the country slouches towards total lock-down.
All that and the long-awaited come-back of Vered Klepter!
Allison Kaplan Sommer, Noah Efron and Wunderkind critic Ohad Zeltzer-Zubida discuss two topics of incomparable importance and end with an anecdote about something in Israel that made them smile this week.
--My Corona!--
Nowhere in the world responded quicker and more forcefully to the coronavirus than Israel. What’s that tell us about Israel’s political culture?
--Minority is the New Majority?--
Is Benny Gantz right to try to form a “minority government” coalition that would be eleven (count ’em!) votes smaller than the opposition?
--Corona: Up Close and Personal--
For our most unreasonably generous Patreon supporters, in our extra-special, special extra segment, we discuss how the coronavirus is affecting us personally: How it has changed our day-to-day lives, and what anxieties it is dredging up.
All that and the ingenious indie of Feldy!
Allison Kaplan Sommer, Don Futterman and Noah Efron discuss two topics of incomparable importance and end with an anecdote about something in Israel that made them smile this week.
--What the Hell Just Happened?--
What, if anything, can we learn from this week’s elections about the hearts and minds, hopes and dreams, of Israeli voters?
--What the Hell Happens Next?--
Has the time come for Israel’s center-left to accept that Benjamin Netanyahu is going to continue as Israel’s Prime Minister, even as he’s tried for bribery, fraud and corruption?
--Still More About the Elections--
For our most unreasonably generous Patreon supporters, in our extra-special, special extra segment, we talk still more about the elections, and the important things that happened at the edges of the very biggest stories, things like the great successes of the Joint List and of Shas, and other crucial marginalia.
All this and the crazy-brilliant singing of our 19-year-old, Ethiopian-Israeli representative to the 2020 Eurovision Contest, Eden Alene!
Allison Kaplan Sommer, Noah Efron and award-winning roving freelance journalist Naomi Zeveloff discuss three topics of incomparable importance and end with an anecdote about something in Israel that made them smile this week.
--Crickets--
Just days before we vote, the last thing most Israelis want to hear about are the elections? Why?
--Tibi in TLV--
Tens of thousands of Jewish Israelis tell pollsters that they’ll vote, for the first time, for the mostly Arab-Israeli Joint List. Why?
--Regular Yossls--
Ultra-Orthodox politicians say secular and modern-Orthodox folks should vote for them, because they’re the only ones really fighting for what everyone wants: good health care, good transportation, an end to poverty, and such. Can ultra-Orthodox politicians break through to the mainstream?
--What Does the U.S. Peace Proposal Mean for Israeli Settlers and Palestinians in the West Bank?--
For our most unreasonably generous Patreon supporters, in our extra-special, special extra segment, Naomi Zeveloff tells us more about her poignant, remarkable trip (reported on NPR) to the neighboring Palestinian and Jewish west bank villages of Atara and Ateret, and what they tell us about the Trump peace plan, and about our inter-tangled lives here in the Holy Land.
All this and the brilliant retro-soul of Uzi Navon & Acquaintances!
Allison Kaplan Sommer, Don Futterman and Noah Efron discuss three topics of incomparable importance and end with an anecdote about something in Israel that made them smile this week.
--Gantze Mensch?--
Is Benny Gantz’s message to Israeli voters basically what Julia Roberts said to Hugh Grant in Notting Hill: “I’m just a brigadier-general, standing in front of an electorate, asking them to love him?”
--Veni, Bibi, Vichi!--
PM Netanyahu surprises everyone by going positive, asserting that (A) Happy days are here again, and (B) The skies above are clear again. Has the time come to sing a song of cheer again?
--Won’t You Be My Neighbor?--
Should the government pay mayors to build housing for the ultra-Orthodox, even if their constituents ain’t so wild about the idea?
--The Best and Worst Election Ads, Tweets, Posts and Videos--
For our most unreasonably generous Patreon supporters, in our extra-special, special extra segment, we discuss the best and worst in a new crop of election ads, tweets, posts and videos.
All this and the clever musicality of Shirey Mirpeset!
Allison Kaplan Sommer, Noah Efron and Wunderkind critic Ohad Zeltzer-Zubida discuss three topics of incomparable importance and end with an anecdote about something in Israel that made them smile this week.
--Self-Determination Abnegation?--
PM Netanyahu tells US President Trump of his “Deal of the Century” that, “It’s a great plan for Israel. It’s a great plan for peace. You have been the greatest friend that Israel has ever had in the White House.” Does his enthusiasm signal a reversal of decades of Israeli insistence that only Israel and the Palestinians can resolve the Israeli-Palestinian conflict?
--Yazbak Where She Belongs?--
The Central Election Committee votes to bar from running for the Knesset 34 year old Palestinian-Israeli firebrand lawmaker Hiba Yazbak (and the Supreme Court overturns the decision). Does the fact that she’s a woman figure among the other reasons why MK Yazbak was banned?
--A Party of One’s Own--
Does Israel need a women’s party?
--Will the Democratic Candidates Boycott AIPAC?--
For our most unreasonably generous Patreon supporters, in our extra-special, special extra segment, we discuss Allison’s perceptive essay in Haaretz about the campaign in the US by a progressive alliance of the groups If Not Now, MoveOn, Indivisible and the Working Families Party to pressure democratic presidential hopefuls to boycott the Gala Annual convention of AIPAC, the American Israel Public Affairs Committee. What do we learn from the campaign about Democrats, AIPAC, If Not Now, and the politics of Israel among progressives in the 2020 elections.
All this and the cool of Omer Moskovich!
--Music--
Omer Moskovich (You can buy tix for the May 9 celebration of the release of her new record here!)
Allison Kaplan Sommer, Noah Efron and Wunderkind critic Ohad Zeltzer-Zubida discuss three topics of incomparable importance and end with an anecdote about something in Israel that made them smile this week.
--Godlessness: The Theory--
The doyen of Israeli sociology and a major public intellectual J’Accuses the left of swapping out good, Enlightenment values for mamby-pamby postmodern relativism, thereby allowing the rabbis to take over the country. Does she have a point?
--Godlessness: The Practice--
Avigdor Lieberman and his right-wing Yisrael Beiteinu party say that only they will keep Israel “liberal” by beating back the rabbis. Were we wrong to think that the right, by nature, admires religion?
--Meanwhile, at the Movies…--
Should settler filmmakers get tax shekels to make settler films about settler experiences on settlements?
--Is Birthright to Thank for the Increase in Jewish American Babies?--
For our most unreasonably generous Patreon supporters, in our extra-special, special extra segment discuss an essay by Brandeis Professor Leonard Saxe, suggesting that the birthright program has “helped bring about a 25% rise in the US Jewish population.” What is it – if anything -- about two weeks in Israel that could possibly account for the increased commitment to American Judaism?
All this and the soul of Ayala Ingedashet!
--Music--
Ayala Ingedashet
Allison Kaplan Sommer, Don Futterman and Noah Efron discuss three topics of incomparable importance and end with an anecdote about something in Israel that made them smile this week.
Check out this week's extra segment!
--A Pax on Both Your Houses--
We’ve read US President Trump’s Deal-of-the-Century peace plan, and our considered reaction is, “WTF?!?”
--Not Immune--
Prime Minister Netanyahu withdraws his request for immunity, and is formally charged with bribery, fraud and breach of trust. Now what?
--Homeward Bound--
Did Vladimir Putin just make Bibi Netanyahu his bitch?
--“I moved to Israel with hopes of peace. Trump’s plan is the nail in that coffin.”--
For our most unreasonably generous Patreon supporters, in our extra-special, special extra segment, we discuss an essay in The Forward by our friend and colleague Dahlia Scheindlin, headlined, “I moved to Israel with hopes of peace. Trump’s plan is the nail in that coffin.” What do you say to a friend in such despair?
All this and the music of anna RF!
--Music--
anna RF
Allison Kaplan Sommer, Noah Efron and Wunderkind critic Ohad Zeltzer-Zubida discuss three topics of incomparable importance and end with an anecdote about something in Israel that made them smile this week.
Want to hear the extra segment?
--Lax Americana?--
A former US Ambassador to Israel, Martin Indyk, argues it’s time for America to throw in the towel on peace to the Mid-East. As the towel-throwees, what should Israelis think?
--It’s the Class Struggle, Stupid!--
The editor-in-chief of Ha’aretz runs the numbers and discovers that, for all the talk about identity politics, all you need to understand how Israelis vote and why is your old tattered, dog-eared copy of Das Kapital. Does he have a point?
--Pulpitical is the New Political--
A rabbi of towering reputation writes that its time to get religion out of politics. Does he have a point?
--Should Israel Reschedule Its Holocaust Day?--
For our most unreasonably generous Patreon supporters, in our extra-special, special extra segment, we discuss a plea in Haaretz to move our own Holocaust Day from the week before Independence Day, to January 27, to coincide with world-wide holocaust day. Would it be better to observe this awesome and hallowed day shoulder-to-shoulder with everyone else on the planet?
All this and hip-hoppy reggae of Tomer Yosef!
--Music--
Tomer Yosef (yes, that Tomer Yosef, from Balkan Beat Box), in honor of his lovely new single, Dvash u-Tapuah
Allison Kaplan Sommer, Don Futterman and Noah Efron discuss three topics of incomparable importance and end with an anecdote about something in Israel that made them smile this week.
--United and It Feels So Good--
47 years ago, the founders of Meretz split from the Labor Party because that party was too soft on the Rabbis, too shaky on settlements, and too feeble on human rights. Labor said good riddance, because Meretz was a bunch of condescending, elitist Ashkenazim. Now the two parties have reunited for the upcoming elections. Can it work?
--Déjà Whew!--
The right-of-the-Likud parties just joined together, save the very-far-right, neo-Kahanist “Jewish Might” party. What’s going on out there, beyond the far reaches of the Likud?
--Watching Big Brother--
Is reality television just political activism by other means?
--Has The Green Party Gone Up In Smoke?--
For our most unreasonably generous Patreon supporters, in our extra-special, special extra segment, we discuss what happened to the Green Party, which was elected to the Knesset in September, but now – just a few months later -- finds itself not even running in the March elections. It was Kermit the Frog who said, “It’s not easy being green,” and we delve to the murky depths of that amphibian wisdom.
All this and the enchanting Daniel Rubin!
--Music--
Daniel Rubin, in honor of her socko show this week at Levontin
Allison Kaplan Sommer, Noah Efron and Wunderkind critic Ohad Zeltzer-Zubida discuss three topics of incomparable importance and end with an anecdote about something in Israel that made them smile this week.
Listen to this week's extra segment
--What’s the Matter with Kiryat Malachi?--
A sociologist says Israeli “liberals” are the least tolerant group in the country, and folks call for his head on a pike.
--Write Makes Right?--
Do we need more (or less) “activist journalism” that doesn’t just describe the world, but tries to change it?
--There Will Be Blood--
In Israel, your HMO will check whether you are “ritually pure” if you want it.
--Israelis' Very Real Fears Following the Killing of Qasem Soleimani--
For our most unreasonably generous Patreon supporters, in our extra-special, special extra segment, we discuss how we were affected here by the news of the killing of Qasem Soleimani. It was weird to have this huge thing happen in our neighborhood, that could vastly affect our lives (in ways we cannot possibly foresee), and yet it's sort of not about us, at all.
All this and the lovely sounds of Gahliliot, Fireflies!
--Music--
Gahliliot, Fireflies
Allison Kaplan Sommer, Noah Efron and Wunderkind critic Ohad Zeltzer-Zubida discuss three topics of incomparable importance and end with an anecdote about something in Israel that made them smile this week.
--Hang Together or Hang Separately?--
Must all the parties on Israel’s left merge before the next election?
--A Different Solidarity--
Palestinian President Mahmoud Abbas’s decides to republish a memoir that made him cry, by an Iraqi-Israeli author about being forced out of Iraq and coming to Israel. This fragile, odd act raises the question: Is there another sort of politics that might lead to peace that we haven’t let ourselves see.
--Pipe Dreams--
Environmental activists say the government is a bunch of lying liars who lie to serve rich corporate overlords. Isn’t this just Trumpism, by another name?
--Why Aren't Israeli Leaders Talking About America's Anti-Semitism Crisis?--
For our most unreasonably generous Patreon supporters, in our extra-special, special extra segment, we discuss, after Allison wrote about it profoundly in Haaretz, why Israeli leaders aren't talking about America's anti-semitism crisis?
All this and Mizrahi, Kabbalistic world music of Yakir Hillel, on the banjo!
--Music--
Yakir Hillel
Allison Kaplan Sommer, Don Futterman and Noah Efron discuss three topics of incomparable importance and end with an anecdote about something in Israel that made them smile this week.
--(Jewish) Might Makes Right?--
A once-mild religious Zionist party joins forces with a far-far-right religious party. What’s this say about the soul and politics of religious Zionism today?
--The Reparation, Palliation and Adjuration Rumination--
For decades, once hapless immigrants to Israel from Yemen, Iraq and other Mid-eastern countries have said that, 70 years ago, their babies were taken and never returned. Some say that, until there is hard-and-fast evidence, these claims must be treated with suspicion. But shouldn’t we switch the default to trusting the victims?
--The Decade Surveyed--
What were the most important people, events and trends of Israel’s momentous, trying, eventful past decade?
--“They’re Not After Me, They’re After You!”--
For our most unreasonably generous Patreon supporters, in our extra-special, special extra segment, we discuss a meme pressed into service recently by PM Netanyahu, before that by US President Donald Trump and before that Indian PM Narendra Modi, saying, in each case, “They’re not after me, they’re after you! I’m just standing in the way.” What makes this sad bit of populism so easily transferable between three such different societies, in this sad epoch of populism?
All this and the music of Noa Shapira!
--Music--
Noa Shapira
Allison Kaplan Sommer, Don Futterman and Noah Efron discuss three topics of incomparable importance and end with an anecdote about something in Israel that made them smile this week.
--Primary Importance?--
Netanyahu is almost sure to win next week’s Likud leadership primary, and yet it still feels like maybe end of one era and the beginning of another. What’s happening in the Likud?
--Dour of Pisa--
Israeli 15 year olds do third-worldishly lousy on an huge international standardized test. What accounts for the mediocrity in math, science and reading? Is Israel destined to become the “Dumbed Down Nation”?
--Boys, Girls and Boys-and-Girls--
Tel Aviv parents go ballistic when they learn their high-school kids are gender-segregated for a one-off meeting with visiting religious kids. Are they right to be so upset?
--The Rise of Holocaust-Themed Swag--
For our most unreasonably generous Patreon supporters, in our extra-special, special extra segment, we discuss recent revelations that you can buy an Auschwitz-themed dish towel or Christmas tree ornament on Amazon. What are we to make of that?
All this and the Emo rap of “Damsel is Depressed”!
--Music--
Damsel is Depressed
Allison Kaplan Sommer, Noah Efron and Wunderkind critic Ohad Zeltzer-Zubida discuss three topics of incomparable importance and end with an anecdote about something in Israel that made them smile this week.
Looking to support the podcast and hear the extra segment?
--Déjà Vu All Over Again?--
What are Israel’s third-time-this-year Knesset elections about, anyway? Did we learn anything from our failed first two elections?
--Rashamon of Rashomons--
Is the love-him-or-hate-him acrimony over Prime Minister Netanyahu really a struggle between “First Israel” (well-heeled, secular Ashkenazim) and “Second Israel” (pretty much everyone else)?
--Fearless--
Do native born Israelis just not “get” anti-semitism?
--Donald Trump's Very Strange Jewish Week--
For our most unreasonably generous Patreon supporters, in our extra-special, special extra segment, we discuss Donald Trump's very strange Jewish week, during which he gave a speech to a Jewish group saying that, caring about money as Jews do, they could never vote for a candidate who will raise their taxes, and during which he issued a decree seeking to redefine Judaism as a protected class, which led many Jews to argue, with confused consternation, that only Jews get to define Jews, buster!
All this and the big band funk of Rosh Groove!
--Music--
Rosh Groove
Allison Kaplan Sommer, Don Futterman and Noah Efron discuss three topics of incomparable importance and end with an anecdote about something in Israel that made them smile this week.
--Mano a Mano?--
Is the solution to Israel’s electoral crisis, a winner-take-all, Mano-a-Mano personal run-off between PM Netanyahu and Lt. General Gantz?
--Teacher, Is the Prime Minister a Crook?--
A kindergarten teacher posts a viral video of her taking down a classroom photo of PM Netanyahu because in her classroom, men charged with bribery, fraud and breach of trust are not honored. How are teachers and principals supposed to deal with the sad spectacle of a you-love-him-or-hate-him Prime Minister under multiple indictments?
--Next Station-Stop Is…--
What’s in a name (of a train stop)?
--1 Ultra-Orthodox Man + 2 Ultra-Orthodox Men = 6 Ultra Orthodox Men?--
For our most unreasonably generous Patreon supporters, in our extra-special, special extra segment, we discuss revelations that the IDF inflated, by a factor of two or more, the figures it reported on the number of ultra-Orthodox men who have served in the army for the past seven years. Mistake? Scandal? What should we make of it?
All this and the new wave blues of Zozo Ginzburg!
--Music--
Zozo (Zohar) Ginzburg, AKA Trust a Lady, in eager anticipation of her upcoming show at Levontin 7, next Tuesday, December 10th at 22:30:
Allison Kaplan Sommer, Don Futterman, and Noah Efron discuss two topics of incomparable importance and end with an anecdote about something in Israel that made them smile this week.
--Et Tu, Gideon?--
“The Likud is a family, and you do not betray your family.” So tweets the party spokesperson to a member who dared to say that Prime Minister Netanyahu should resign. Loyalty is a personal virtue; but is it also a political virtue?
--Quid Pro Squat?--
Alan Dershowitz and other legal scholars say the Israeli Attorney General is wrong to criminalize the complicated relationships between politicians and journalists, and should not indict Prime Minister Netanyahu for trying to charm and cajole journalists into giving him better coverage (and also, to make-it-worth-their-while). Might they have a point?
For our most unreasonably generous Patreon supporters, in our extra-special, special extra segment, we talk about what we’re thankful for (as we record on American Thanksgiving, with our turkeys stuffed and waiting to go into our ovens).
All this and the music of Tohar Shefi!
--Music--
Tohar Shefi
Allison Kaplan Sommer, Noah Efron and Wunderkind writer, critic & activist Ohad Zeltzer-Zubida discuss three topics of incomparable importance and end with an anecdote about something in Israel that made them smile this week.
--Going, Going, Gantz!--
Blue-and-White head Benny Gantz failed to form the “secular, Liberal, national-unity government” he sought. Did we dodge a bullet?
--Politics by Other Means--
We hate to even ask, but: Is it possible that Israel’s recent skirmish with the rocket-firing Islamic Jihad in Gaza was timed for PM Netanyahu’s political purposes?
--Fear and Firer--
Controversy ignites over a benefit concert for an ultra-Orthodox-run NGO that helps people navigate Israel’s health care system. What should we make of it?
--Are Settlements More a Moral Problem Rather Than a Legal One?--
For our most unreasonably generous Patreon supporters, in our extra-special, special extra segment, we will discuss an essay in the Forward by Peter Beinart headlined, “Settlements Is Not That They Are Illegal. It’s That They Are Immoral.” This apropos the sound-and-fury-and-signifying-nothing statement by US Secretary of State Mike Pompeo that, following Ronald Reagan, the Trump administration does not hold that civilian settlements in the occupied territories contravene international law.
--Music--
Jasmin Moallem
Recording live at the spectacular Z3 Conference in Palo Alto (home of Theranos Technologies), Allison Kaplan Sommer, Don Futterman and Noah Efron explore the theme of the conference, One People, Two Centers, Three Opinions.
--One People?--
Some of our smartest cogitators – Rabbis, scholars, writers, organizers and activists – draft a “Declaration of Our Common Destiny”: a sort of constitution of the Jewish People, by the Jewish People, and for the Jewish People. Is this a good thing?
--Two Centers?--
For long generations, American Jews have tried to leave their mark on the Jews of Israel, and the Jews of Israel have tried to leave their mark on American Jewry. What’s all that effort add up to? Have we, in fact, influenced one another much at all and, if so, how?
--Three Opinions?--
The divide between Jewish Zionists and Jewish anti-Zionists pits children against their folks, students against their teachers. What should we make of it?
--Music--
16 Poly
Allison Kaplan Sommer, Noah Efron and Wunderkind writer, critic & activist Ohad Zeltzer-Zubida discuss three topics of incomparable importance and end with an anecdote about something in Israel that made them smile this week.
Z3 Conference Tickets to Live TPP Show (use promo code TLV1xZ3)
--Gantz is the New Rabin?--
Is Benny Gantz the new Yitzhak Rabin?
--Workers of the World, Privatize!--
A union head pushing to privatize the government-owned company he works for? Should labor be clamoring for their shops to be bought by capitalists who grease the sprockets of their profit-making machines with the blood of the workers?
--The Letter--
A letter by a kid murdered in Auschwitz goes up for auction in Israel, and anguish ensues. Who, if anyone, has the right to own (and sell) Holocaustiana?
For our most unreasonably generous Patreon supporters, in our extra-special, special extra segment, we discuss l'Affaire Kedar, after Bar Ilan professor Mordechai Kedar fulminated at a demonstration in support of PM Netanyahu that Yitzhak Rabin was not assassinated by the guy we think assassinated him, Yigal Amir, but was instead assassinated by a security thug working for the Elders of Israeli Leftism. Should Kedar be sanctioned by his university?
--Music--
Ofek Adanek
Allison Kaplan Sommer, Don Futterman and Noah Efron discuss three topics of incomparable importance and end with an anecdote about something in Israel that made them smile this week.
Z3 Conference Tickets to Live TPP Show (use promo code TLV1xZ3)
--There’s No Government Like No Government--
In Israel, could it be that not having a government is better than having one?
--The Opposite of What We Think?--
A leftist, civil rights activist says that no Prime Minister in Israel’s history has ever done as much as Benjamin Netanyahu has to improve the practical circumstances of Palestinian Israelis
--The Awful Awesomeness of Tel Aviv--
Does Tel Aviv suck the oxygen away from other Israeli cities that could be great?
--You Get a Free College Degree, and You Get a Free College Degree--
For our most unreasonably generous Patreon supporters, in our extra-special, special extra segment, we discuss a modest proposal by Liel Leibovitz in Tablet magazine, that Jewish philanthropists, as the next Birthright program, should cover the tab of American Jewish kids who want to go to college in Israel. But only, we assume, if they’ll share their drugs with our kids.
--Music--
Amit Sagie
Allison Kaplan Sommer, Don Futterman and Noah Efron discuss three topics of incomparable importance and end with an anecdote about something in Israel that made them smile this week.
Z3 Conference Tickets to Live TPP Show (use promo code TLV1xZ3)
--All About the Benjamins--
Benny Gantz promised voters he’d never serve with Benjamin Netanyahu, if the Prime Minister is indicted. To keep from having to go to the polls again, should Gantz break his promise?
--Jewmanities--
What are humanities for, in a Jewish state?
--Gene Blues--
Rabbis are sending folks to do DNA tests to see if they’re Jewish. Really? I mean, really?
--Fighting Anti-Semitism With a Little Jewish Joy--
For our most unreasonably generous Patreon supporters, in our extra-special, special extra segment, we discuss an essay in The Forward by uber-historian Deborah Lipstadt called, “The Best Way to Fight Anti-Semitism? Jewish Joy.” Lipstadt worries that fear of violent persecution has captured the American Jewish soul, but are things really as bad as all that?
All this and the music of Mika Hary, just before the release of her first album.
--Music--
Mika Hary, who you can expect to hear a lot of soon
Writer and activist Ohad Zeltzer-Zubida, roving journalist Naomi Zeveloff and Noah Efron discuss three topics of incomparable importance and end with an anecdote about something in Israel that made them smile this week.
Z3 Conference Tickets to Live TPP Show (use promo code TLV1xZ3)
--Earth--
Haaretz calls on Israelis to boycott streams, forests, and ancient ruins on the West Bank. But should places of religious and historical meaning for Jews be off-limits?
--Water--
An ambitious and controversial plan would build massive desalination plants in Israel and the West Bank, and gigantic solar arrays in Jordan, and swap water for electricity, all improve our lots and promote peace. But opponents say the project wreaks of “normalization.”
--Between Heaven and Earth--
If we could invite anyone to our Sukkah, who would we have?
--Israel’s Political Mythology--
For our most unreasonably generous Patreon supporters, in our extra-special, special extra segment, we discuss an essay in First Things by Ari Lamm (called Israel’s Political Mythology) suggesting that Israeli politics only really makes sense in light of Jewish texts and traditions. We respectfully disagree.
--Music--
Poems of Zelda, set to music (All songs of the spectacular new album: אי המערבולת: שרות זלדה)
Allison Kaplan Sommer, Noah Efron and activist, intellectual and educator Jeremy Benstein, author of the new book, Hebrew Roots, Jewish Routes: A Tribal Language in a Global World, discuss three topics of incomparable importance and end with an anecdote about something in Israel that made them smile this week.
Looking for the extra segment?
--Triaphobia--
Will a third Knesset election be the disaster everyone says it will be, or should we just chill out and repeat to ourselves, “Third time's a charm!”, “Third time's a charm!,” “Third time's a charm!”?
--The Language of a Common Dream--
The Hebrew language once brought Jews around the world together. Is it now tearing them apart?
--The “Oy” in “Joyocaust”--
A “Joy-o-caust”?!? What’s Transparent telling us about how to be Jewish?
For our most generous Patreon patrons, in our extra-special, special extra segment, following a little brouhaha in the papers and on social media about whether Rabbis ought to preach politics on Yom Kippur, we’ll talk about the sermons that we’ve heard, this year and in the past, that moved us, and why.
All this and the wonderful Yuval Mendelson (sometimes with The Lobsters, sometimes not so much).
--Music--
Allison Kaplan Sommer, Don Futterman and Noah Efron discuss three topics of incomparable importance and end with an anecdote about something in Israel that made them smile this week.
--The President--
Has Israeli President Reuven Rivlin finally solved the ancient riddle: When is a Prime Minister not a Prime Minister?
--The Prime Minister--
Why o’ why won’t anyone negotiate with poor Prime Minister Netanyahu?
--The General--
Lt. General Benny Gantz got more votes than anyone else in last month’s elections. So why is he playing rope-a-dope, instead of coming out punching?
--Can Benny Gantz Heal the Rift Between U.S. Jews and Israel?--
For our most generous Patreon patrons, in our extra-special, special extra segment, we discuss a recent essay in the NY Times by Daniel Gordis, headlined: “Benny Gantz Can’t Heal the Rift between US Jews and Israel.” Its thesis is that American Jews are from progressive Mars and Israeli Jews are from rough-and-tumble, ethno-nationalist Venus. Does he have a point?
All this and music of Renewal and Repentance, for the Days of Awe.
--Music--
Wracked with anxiety and anticipation about what new government will take shape after the elections, Noah seeks solace with the boys of Liquid Plumr, the youthful Shuafat-refugee-camp garage band that was his transition from youth to an adult life in Israel.
The boys discuss Zionism, Israel in the 80s, relations between Israeli and American Jews, and how the lives of their youngsters on both sides of the ocean differ from their own.
And, they sing a bit.
--Six American Kids Move to Jerusalem to Form a Band--
What happened when six American kids on the cusp of adulthood rent a big house on the edge of the Shuafat refugee camp and formed a band?
--The Lives We Did and Did Not Live--
Six guys were inseparable as kids; half lived their life out in Israel, half in America. Now they compare notes about how the place they chose for home, affected their lives.
--What Was Young Benny Gantz Really Like?--
For our most extremely generous Patreon supporters, we talk with Prof. Alon Tal, the founder of Israel’s environmental movement and a Blue-and-White Knesset candidate, about what a young Benny Gantz was like as his paratroop commander.
All this and the music of Liquid Plumr.
--Music--
Liquid Plumr!
Allison Kaplan Sommer, Don Futterman and Noah Efron discuss three topics of incomparable importance and end with an anecdote about something in Israel that made them smile this week.
Looking for the extra segment?
--What Just Happened?--
Tuesday’s elections feel like they changed everything and nothing at all. What can we make of their odd, inconclusive results?
--What Next?--
Building Israel’s new coalition will be like one of those old puzzlers about missionaries taking cannibals and goats on boats across the Amazon. Is there any way forward?
--What Will History Say?--
How will history remember the September, 2019 elections?
--How We Spent Elections Day--
For our most extremely generous Patreon supporters, we talk about how we spent election day, an odd mix of a laid-back, beach-holiday day, and an anxiety filled freak-out about our country and our future, our daughters and our ducats.
All this and the future of Israeli hip hop, Nenzo!
--Music--
Nenzo!
Allison Kaplan Sommer, Don Futterman and Noah Efron discuss three topics of incomparable importance and end with an anecdote about something in Israel that made them smile this week.
--Smile!--
Some Israelis think that PM Netanyahu’s plan to have cameras in polling places will destroy democracy, while others think it will save it. Why the Rashamon?
--What, Me Vote?--
Seven in ten Israelis vote. What’s with the other three?
--Politics of Pieties and Pieties of Politics--
Angry ultra-Orthodox feminists say that progressive, secular do-gooders fighting for their rights are messing up their game and setting back their cause. Do they have a point?
--Is Trauma a Key to Understanding Israeli Politics?--
For our most extremely generous Patreon supporters, we discuss journalist Matti Friedman’s socko, controversial pre-election column in the Times, The One Thing No Israeli Wants to Discuss. Is trauma a key to understanding Israeli politics?
All this and the happy hipness of Beatnik!
--Music--
Beatnik (ביטניק), in celebration of their new record, Seret Ahavah
A weeks and a bit before elections, Don Futterman, Noah Efron and Haaretz uber-reporter Judy Maltz, in an act of political empathy and imagination, ask for each of the parties to the Left of the Likud, why might someone vote for them.
Looking for the extra segment?
--Why Vote for the Joint List?--
Has the Joint List just violated Israel’s longest standing taboo, the one that says Jewish Israelis and Palestinian Israelis can never be true political allies?
--Why Vote for the Democratic Union?--
Is the “Democratic Union” Israel’s only party with the guts to say, with Chicken Little, that the sky is falling?
--Why Vote for Labor-Gesher?--
Labor-Gesher says, “Imagine a world where the party that founded the country was not arrogantly Ashkenazi-centric, and where a Labor Party actually cared about workers.” Will that get them votes?
--Why Vote for Blue-&-White?--
Blue-&-White says, “We deserve a government that is parve, lackluster, colorless, ho-hum, devoid of both bells and whistles.” Why will more than a million Israelis vote for them?
--What’s Killing Israel’s Lone Soldiers?--
For our most extremely generous Patreon supporters, we discuss Judy Maltz’s remarkable reporting of the alienation and spiritual ennui of “lone soldiers,” kids who go into the army as if it’s a cool, gap-year program.
And, introducing, the future of Israeli singer-songwriting, Soundflower (aka, Lior Doron)!
Music
Soundflower, AKA Lior Doron (Look for her on Soundcloud)
Two weeks and a bit before elections, Allison Kaplan Sommer, Don Futterman and Noah Efron, in an act of political empathy and imagination, try to figure who votes for each of Israel’s right-wing parties, and why. (Next week, we do the same thing for the parties on the left.)
Looking for the extra segment?
Who the Hell Would Vote for Shas?!?
Why will hundreds of thousands of Israelis vote for the ultra-Orthodox, Sefaradi Shas Party?
Who the Hell Would Vote for Shaked?!?
Who votes for the to-the-right-of-the-Likud Yemina Party, and why?
Who the Hell Would Vote for the Likud?!?
Why will more than a million Israelis vote for Netanyahu and the Likud? (Hint: there are lots of good reasons.)
Who the Hell Would Vote for Lieberman?!?
Why will hundreds of thousands of Israelis vote for the squat, severe, plain-spoken Moldovan-born Avigdor Lieberman?
Is Stav Shaffir Right? Is Israel's Left an Ally of America's Left?
For our most extremely generous Patreon supporters, we discuss an odd essay in the Forward by the woman destined to lead Israel’s Left, Stav Shaffir, about why BDS sorts are anti-progressive, and how Israel’s left is a crucial ally of America’s left. What, exactly, is she trying to say and do?
Plus, the sui-generis music of “Let’s Mars”!
Music
Let’s Mars, from their new, debut record, Always 15 Minutes Late
Haaretz-writer and media-whiz Ohad Zeltzer-Zubida, Allison Kaplan Sommer, and Noah Efron discuss three topics of incomparable importance and end with an anecdote about something in Israel that made them smile this week.
Looking for the extra segment?
Is Netanyahu Done?
Hemingway said, folks go bankrupt gradually, then all at once. Has PM Netanyahu lost his political power in the same way?
Brits, Canucks, Aussies, Kiwis, Saffers, Rhodies, Paddies, Scots & Yanks
There's a new group aiming to politically empower English-speaking Israelis, on the theory that we’ve got a thing or two to teach everyone else. Do Israel’s Brits, Yanks and Aussies offer a way out of the country’s political mess?
Boys on TV
What are we to make of the heart-rending Israeli HBO series about the 2014 murders of Jewish kids by Palestinians and a Muslim kid by Jews, that forces us to doubt a lot of what we thought about ourselves? Does HBOs “Our Boys” challenge everything we thought we knew about ourselves?
Our Favorite Getaway Spots in Israel
For our most extremely generous Patreon supporters, in our extra-special, special extra segment, we jammer about some of our favorite vacation spots in Israel.
All this and the uncategorizable vocal genius of Faye Shapiro!
Music
Faye Shapiro, in honor of her brand new, first album, Elef Nishikot
Israel Studies scholar and professor Sara Sara Hirschhorn, activist, Haaretz-writer and media-whiz Ohad Zeltzer-Zubida, and Noah Efron discuss three topics of incomparable importance and end with an anecdote about something in Israel that made them smile this week.
Looking for the extra segment?
Carmen and the Devil
Is Israel’s Labor Party, once the epicenter of toxic Ashkenazihood, the new Shas?
Two Tales of Settlements
Were we wrong all along about Israel’s settler movement?
Do the Ends Justify the Mean?
Is being a kind-of-a-dick to the Prime Minister’s kid justified, because the Prime Minister is kind-of-a-dick to the rest of us?
For our most extremely generous Patreon supporters, we discuss whether or not the time has come to burn our syllabi, rip up our lecture notes, and change the way Israeli universities work from the bottom up.
All this and the hippest-hoppest rap of Numi!
Music
Numi (Numi being Noam Cohen)
Roving Mid-East Reporter Naomi Zeveloff, Tel Aviv Review host Gilad Halpern and Noah Efron discuss three topics of incomparable importance and end with an anecdote about something in Israel that made them smile this week.
Looking for the extra segment?
The Elephant Has Left the Building
One thing not being debated ahead of Israel’s elections is the Palestinian-Israeli conflict. The elephant in the room seems to have left the building. Why?
The Autocrat Whisperer
Does Prime Minister Netanyahu want voters to see him as an “autocrat whisperer”?
Bussed Are the Right, for Theirs Are the Beaches and Cinemas
There is a revolution underway, bringing public transportation to Israeli cities on the Sabbath for the first time ever. Why is the Likud leading the charge?
The Great Renaissance of English Language Media in Israel
For our most extremely generous Patreon supporters, we discuss with author Gilad Halpern his latest Tel Aviv Review of Books essay arguing that, as international media collapsed around us, English language media in Israel had a great renaissance. What accounts for this surprising development?
All this and the Ethiopian-Mizrahi pop of Moti Taka.
Music
Moti Taka
Don Futterman, Noah Efron and Human-Rights Attorney, Emily Schaeffer Omer-Man discuss three topics of incomparable importance and end with an anecdote about something in Israel that made them smile this week.
Looking for the extra segment?
Left Behind?
Are two parties on Israel’s left better than one?
Right Fever
Is one party to the right of the Likud better than two?
Free to Be You and Me
A Jerusalem court finds that a man can be sued for failing to tell his fiancé-cum-wife that he prefers sex with men. Where does a right to privacy end, and an obligation of honesty begin?
The Case That's Testing Israel's Courts
For our most extremely generous Patreon supporters, we discuss with star Human Rights attorney Emily Schaeffer Omer-Man, the Ministry of Interior’s efforts to deport Omar Shakir, Human Rights Watch Director for Israel and Palestine, on the grounds that, by supporting BDS, he is working for Israel’s destruction. The case reached the Supreme Court this week, sort of.
All this and the uncategorizable music of Banot ha-Tom!
Music
Banot ha-Tom
Don Futterman, Noah Efron and journalist and host of the spectacular “The Branch” podcast about Jewish-Palestinian Coexistence, Dina Kraft discuss three topics of incomparable importance and end with an anecdote about something in Israel that made them smile this week.
Looking for the extra segment?
Labor Unions and Disunions
The Labor Party says “Yes” to merging with a party on the center-right, and “No” to merging with parties on the Left. A brilliant stratagem or a strategic blunder?
The Ambassador from Soda Stream
Israel’s Foreign Ministry retools its diplomats to promote Israeli companies, not policies. Is diplomacy dead?
Let Television be Television
Israel’s national-treasure folk-singer, Chava Alberstein, retools a beloved protest song as an ad for cable and internet service. Is this the end of culture as we know it, or have we maybe lost a little perspective?
Can Stories of “Co-existence” Teach Us Something New?
For our most extremely generous Patreon supporters, we discuss what Dina Kraft has learned from podcasting stories of coexistence, and what she (and we) think of the common-on-the-left-but-still-annoying-as-Hell assertion that there is something unproductive and even untoward about all the efforts to promote "co-existence" because these efforts imply that if we just learned to know and love each other, intractable political problems would suddenly become tractable.
Music
Danny Gilboa
Don Futterman, Noah Efron, and the scholar-host of the brilliant feminist Yiddish podcast Vaybertaytsch, Sandy Fox discuss three topics of incomparable importance and end with an anecdote about something in Israel that made them smile this week.
Looking for the extra segment?
Everyone from Benny Gantz to Ayman Odeh
Is a true Jewish-Arab partnership possible on the Israeli Left?
Goodbye to All That!
Forty Jewish-American Rabbis, professors and activists say it’s time to say goodbye to Zionism once and for all. Do they have a point?
Where We Live, There Is Our Country!
For 68 years, there were Bundists in Israel – socialist, internationalist Yiddishists. Finally, only now, their Tel Aviv headquarters is shuttering. But what is their legacy?
For our most extremely generous Patreon supporters, we discuss what Sandy Fox discovered over long years of scholarly archival study about the golden age of American Jewish summer camp, the results of which research will soon turn up in an as-yet-to-be-named book in a bookstore near you!
All this and the New Wave Klezmer of Oy Division!
Music
The New-Wave Klezmer of Oy Division:
Allison Kaplan Sommer, Don Futterman, and Noah Efron discuss three topics of incomparable importance and end with an anecdote about something in Israel that made them smile this week.
Looking for the extra segment?
You Don’t Have to Be Religious to Be Religious, but It Helps
Can Israel’s religious right be led by a very secular, very feminist woman?
Eilat: Hot, Fraught & Overwrought
What, if anything, ought to be done about the woes of southern resort city Eilat?
Je m’accuse
A week after we buried another Ethiopian kid killed by a police officer, the eleventh in two decades, what accounts for our omnipresent racism? As Tolstoy never said, “Every racist society is racist in its own way.” What is our way of being racist?
For our most extremely generous Patreon supporters, we discuss in our extra-special, special extra segment the brief but vicious twitter war between Prime Minister Netanyahu and former Prime Minister Ehud Barak over Barak’s perhaps remunerative relationship with billionaire sexual predator Jeffrey Epstein. Should consorting with mega-rich scumbags be an election issue for the leader of the new Democratic Israel party?
All this and the soulful folk (or is it folky soul) of TamaRadah!
Music
TamaRadah:
Allison Kaplan Sommer, Don Futterman, and Noah Efron discuss three topics of incomparable importance and end with an anecdote about something in Israel that made them smile this week.
Looking for the extra segment?
Parties Like It’s 1999
Israel’s Left recombobulates itself by returning to yesterday’s leaders, all of whom are men. What explains this sudden lurch to the Father-Knows-Best ghosts-of-politics past?
Is a Dream a Lie if it don’t Come True?
Ten years have passed since PM Benjamin Netanyahu endorsed a Palestinian state in his famous “Bar Ilan Speech.” Did that speech have an enduring impact on Israeli politics, or was it just a thing that happened long ago and then dissipated into the fetid vapors of time?
Protean Protein
Is a key to Middle East peace … hummus?
For our most extremely generous Patreon supporters, we discuss in our extra-special, special extra segment the Supreme Court’s response to a suit brought against an ultra-orthodox radio station by the Reform Movement’s Israel Religious Action Center and the religious feminist group Kolech, hoping to assess against the station for refusing to air women’s voices from 2009 to 2011, a fine so great that the broadcast towers would fall silent forever. The court said, basically, do a brother a solid and let the station survive, and we’ll try to figure out whether a brother who shuts up a sister even deserves a solid.
All this and the power punk joy of Tabarnak and Yishai Berger!
MusicTabarnak, in honor of Yishai Berger’s terrific set at Levontin 7 last week:
Allison Kaplan Sommer, Don Futterman, and Noah Efron discuss three topics of incomparable importance and end with an anecdote about something in Israel that made them smile this week.
Looking for the extra segment?
Black & Blue & White
The Blue & White party are facing a dilemma: Should they attack the ultra-Orthodox, whom they may want as coalition partners after the election? What should Blue & White say about the men in black?
Huddled Masses Yearning for GDP?
The Trump administration unveils its long awaited plan to enrich the Palestinian economy. Is it a Marshall Plan for our generation, or a Marie Antoinette-ish bit of Let-them-eat-cake-ism?
Last Picture Show?
Tel Aviv will soon have only one movie theater, down from more than 50. Why are pictures leaving the city and what, if anything, can be done about it?
For our most extremely generous Patreon supporters, we discuss in our extra-special, special extra segment American congressional Representative Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez’s description of the dismal places where the Trump administration is warehousing undocumented immigrant kids under lock and key as “concentration camps”, and the angry and anguished responses it provoked (and the angry and anguished responses that the angry and anguished responses provoked, and so on and so forth, ad infinitum).
All this and the hip hop electronica of Ido Maimon and his many talented friends!
Music
Ido Maimon:
Allison Kaplan Sommer, Don Futterman and Noah Efron discuss three topics of incomparable importance and end with an anecdote about something in Israel that made them smile this week.
Looking for the extra segment?
The Center Will Hold?
Avigdor Lieberman – head of the secular, right-wing Yisraeli Beiteinu Party – made a bombshell announcement that, after our do-over elections, he will force the Likud and Blue-and-White parties to form a centrist, secular “National Unity Government.” Has Israel’s next government just been formed?
Hard Night for Sara
Sara Netanyahu pleads guilty to ordering expensive take-out food to the Prime Minister’s residence, ending an ugly four year investigation and trial. What should we make of this whole pathetic affair?
A Contrarian Century
Ha’aretz celebrates a century of cheesing people off. What impact does this indispensable, infuriating newspaper have on Israeli politics?
The Mainstreaming of the LGBTQ Movement in Israel
For our most extremely generous Patreon supporters, we discuss in our extra-special, special extra segment the quick spread of LGBTQ parades, events and public presence from Israel’s big cities to, well, most everywhere. What accounts for mainstreaming of the LGBTQ movement, and what does it augur?
All this and the newlywed poppiness of Ben Zini ve-Taylor.
Music
Ben Zini ve-Taylor:
Allison Kaplan Sommer, Noah Efron and journalist and educator Ittay Flescher discuss three topics of incomparable importance and end with an anecdote about something in Israel that made them smile this week.
Labor Savers
Young Turks, Old Guard, and Stern Generals battle for control of Israel’s Labor Party. Who has the best chance of saving from extinction the party of David Ben Gurion, Golda Meir and Yitzhak Rabin?
Good Checkpoints Make Good Neighbors?
New tricked-out hi-tech checkpoints that dramatically reduce the time it takes for Palestinians laborers to enter Israel, and make the process less frustrating and degrading: This sounds like good news, but it is?
Nothing to be Proud Of?
Israel’s first openly gay minister is jeered and hounded from Jerusalem’s Gay Pride parade, because of his poor record on LGBTQ issues, and his support of the Occupation. But should anyone be Queer-Non-Grata at the Pride Parade?
Why All the Fuss Around David Friedman's Times Interview?
For our most extremely generous Patreon supporters, we discuss in our extra-special, special extra segment discuss American Ambassador to Israel David Friedman’s assertion to the Times that, among other things, “Under certain circumstances, I think Israel has the right to retain some, but unlikely all, of the West Bank.” Surely it was an interview full of sound and fury. Was it also an interview signifying nothing?
All this and the indie, new wave pleasures of Yesh Lah Haver!
Music
Yesh Lah Haver:
Allison Kaplan Sommer, Don Futterman and Noah Efron discuss three topics of incomparable importance and end with an anecdote about something in Israel that made them smile this week.
Looking for the extra-special, special extra segment?
The Small Matter of the Bill
New elections may cost Israel as much as 5 billion shekels. Should politicians take into account the small matter of the bill?
Friedman is the New Jabotinsky
The “First Conference on Israeli Conservatism” fills a huge conference center, mostly with kippah-capped men. What accounts for the new affinity between Reagan-Thatcher politics and economics and Israeli Modern Orthodoxy?
Heschel is the New Herzl
Should Reform, conservative and reconstructionist Jews in Israel take to the streets to fight for political causes that have nothing to do with religious pluralism like, say, social and economic justice?
Why Has TAU Declined to Denude the University of All Its Sackleriana?
For our most extremely generous Patreon supporters, we discuss in our extra-special, special extra segment the urgent request sent by Physicians for Human Rights, Israel, to Tel Aviv University, asking to remove the name “Sackler” from the Sackler Faculty of Medicine, on the grounds that the famous family of Jewish philanthropists’ own Purdue Pharma, the makers of Oxycontin, a drug that has ravaged so much of the US (which request the university refused because, you know, money is useful to buy things).
Music
New singles by Adiel Tiri:
Don Futterman, Noah Efron, and Times of Israel Ops-&-Blogs editor Miriam Herschlag discuss three topics of incomparable importance and end with an anecdote about something in Israel that made them smile this week.
Over Again
What just happened? Why is Israel going to new elections, just a month and a half after the last elections?
Center-Left 2.0
Israel’s Center-Left just staged one of the most successful and powerful demonstrations in recent memory. Did it set the anti-Netanyahu forces on a new path? If so, where will that path lead?
Skin in the Game
Woman in Jerusalem take off their tops to send ultra-Orthodox protesters scurrying away. Is that a good thing?
For our most extremely generous Patreon supporters, we discuss in our extra-special, special extra segment the recent poll showing that three in four American Jews feels less safe than they did two years ago. What, if anything, should Israel do about this?
Music
Daniel Sun Krief, off her much-anticipate, soon-to-be-released album “Tori Lomar”:
Allison Kaplan Sommer, Noah Efron, and Don Futterman discuss three topics of incomparable importance and end with an anecdote about something in Israel that made them smile this week.
Looking for the extra-special, special extra segment?
Sa’ar in a Storm
What does once-and-future Likud leader, Gideon Sa’ar, PM Netanyahu’s nemesis on the premises, promise for Israeli politics?
Pains in the Glass
An ultra-Orthodox boycott threatens to close down a glass factory that keeps its furnaces glowing on Shabbat. Politics in the marketplace ain’t a bad thing in general, but what about when lots of jobs are on the line?
A (2nd Century) Star is Born!
Bar Kokhba led a tragic and disastrous revolution against the Romans in the 2nd century. Why is he a Zionist hero today?
Trumpville? Trumptown? Trump City?
For our most extremely generous Patreon supporters, we discuss in our extra-special, special extra segment the Golan settlement slated to be named after Donald Trump – Trumpville? Trumptown? Trump City? Trump Valley? Trump Heights? Trumpboro? Trumpopolis? – and what we make of having a town renamed after the American president.
Music
Jonamoon, after their triumphant appearance at the Jacob’s Ladder Folk Festival:
Allison Kaplan Sommer, Noah Efron, and Don Futterman discuss three topics of incomparable importance and end with an anecdote about something in Israel that made them smile this week.
Looking for the extra segment?
“Natural Partners”
How are pork-loving former Soviets and God-fearing ultra-Orthodox Jews “natural partners” in a Netanyahu government?
Credit where Credit is Due
Starting now, every Israeli will have an official credit rating. Is this a way to catch deadbeats or a way for the rich to f*ck the poor?
Raising the Aufruf?
Shtisel is coming back for a third season! Why do we love those zany ultra-Orthodox so damn much? And will Keeva ever find true love?!?
For our most extremely generous Patreon supporters, we discuss in our extra-special, special extra segment a much-maligned Eurovision promotion video produced by the national broadcast corporation that includes the line, “most of us are Jews, but only some of us are greedy / and you might notice people here are very very needy.” Are we doing the work of the anti-Semites for them?
Music
Israeli Eurovision Classics, Performed Unclassically:
Allison Kaplan Sommer, Noah Efron, and Don Futterman discuss three topics of incomparable importance and end with an anecdote about something in Israel that made them smile this week.
Looking for the extra segment?
Your Services are No Longer Needed
More than 40% of Knesset representatives are new to the job, and turnover among legislators is at an all-time high. Why? What does this augur for Israeli politics?
For a Song
New regulations will prevent Israeli mayors from paying more than 20,000 bucks to pop stars to perform at gala Independence Day celebrations. A blessed return to sanity, or government sticking its nose where it doesn’t belong?
What’s a Good Book Good For?
Secular Israelis used to love the Independence Day Bible Contest, and religious ones hated it. Now religious Israelis dominate the Bible Contest, and secular ones ignore it. What does the odd career of the Annual Bible Contest tell us about the changing nature of the Israeli soul?
This War Stuff Takes a Real Toll on Us
For our most extremely generous Patreon supporters, we discuss in our extra-special, special extra segment what the hell just happened between us and Hamas in Gaza, and why it leaves us dazed, confused and sad.
Music
All this and the IsraEthiopian genius of Ground Heights:
Allison Kaplan Sommer, Noah Efron, and Don Futterman discuss three topics of incomparable importance and end with an anecdote about something in Israel that made them smile this week.
Looking for the extra segment?
The Holocaust Will Not Be Tweeted
Dramatizing the Holocaust on Instagram so phone-addicted kids will pay attention? Seriously?
Sins of the Fathers' Grocer
When a supermarket chain uses a made-up story about Ashkenazi wholesalers exploiting and insulting Mizrahi shoppers four decades ago, is that a bigger insult to Ashkenazim or Mizrahim?
Lights Unto the Nation
What do the people chosen to light torches at the national Independence Day say about the state of our national soul?
For our most extravagantly generous Patreon patrons, in our extra-special, special extra segment, we discuss the caricature in the New York Times of a big-nosed dachshund Netanyahu with a Jewish star on his collar, leading a blind, yarmulka-ed Trump. Wha?!?
Music
Songs of Remembrance, for Yom Ha-Shoah:
Noah Efron, Don Futterman and Times of Israel Ops & Blogs editor Miriam Herschlag discuss three topics of incomparable importance and end with an anecdote about something in Israel that made them smile this week.
Looking for the extra segment?
The Solidarity Singularity
Has the time come for Israel’s Jewish (and Zionist) left to join forces with Israel’s Arab (and anti-Zionist) left? If so, how?
Scholars’ Dolour
The Association for Israel Studies is in a tizzy about an academic journal issue that some think crosses the line from scholarship to propaganda. Is “pro-Israel scholarship” an oxymoron?
What, We Worry?
Israelis worry less about global threats – from climate change to cyberattack and beyond – than anyone else in the world. How come?
For our most extremely generous Patreon supporters, we discuss in our extra-special, special extra segment a new web series about the differences between left-wingers and right-wingers. It’s all in good fun, but is it also saying something serious about the state of our politics and our collective soul?
Music
All this and the impressive, transgressive, expressive hip-hop collective, Hulon Imperia:
Allison Kaplan Sommer, Noah Efron and Don Futterman discuss three topics of incomparable importance and end with an anecdote about something in Israel that made them smile this week.
The Kids are All Right
It’s accepted wisdom that Israeli young people are more right-wing than their older sisters and brothers, parents and grandparents. But are they really? And if they are, why?
What We Learned at the Polls
Peter Beinart writes that the lesson of the last election is that the time has come to make Israelis suffer for our sins. That so?
“And You Shall Tell Your Child”
On Passover, we’re supposed to tell our kids the story of the Exodus and what it means to us today. But what does it mean to us today?
Enjoying Others' Misfortune Cookie
For our most extremely generous Patreon supporters, we discuss in our extra-special, special extra segment the dark pleasures of political schadenfreude. Why was the best thing about our recent elections the misfortunes they brought to some of our most stalwart politicians?
Music
The very happy sounds of Miki G & Tzemer:
For our most extremely generous Patreon supporters, we discuss in our extra-special, special extra segment a remarkable new Brookings Institute Policy Brief called “Is Israel in Democratic Decline?” by Tamara Cofman Wittes and Yael Mizrahi-Arnaud.
In a moment of I-happen-to-have-Marshall-Mcluhan-right-here, Mizrahi-Arnaud joins us to say, “You understand nothing of our work, how you ever got a podcast is beyond me!”
Allison Kaplan Sommer, Noah Efron and Don Futterman discuss three topics of incomparable importance and end with an anecdote about something in Israel that made them smile this week.
What Just Happened?!?
The votes are counted. What the hell just happened?
The Via Media
Given the alternative, is a coalition of the center and the Likud really such a bad idea after all?
Getting Out of Bed in the Morning
The Likud has led Israel for 30 of the past 42 years, and more are ahead. What reason does an Israeli leftist have to get out of bed?
Is Israel Experiencing a Decline in the Quality of Its Democracy?
For our most extremely generous Patreon supporters, we discuss in our extra-special, special extra segment a remarkable new Brookings Institute Policy Brief called “Is Israel in Democratic Decline?” by Tamara Cofman Wittes and Yael Mizrahi-Arnaud. In a moment of I-happen-to-have-Marshall-Mcluhan-right-here, Mizrahi-Arnaud joins us to say, “You understand nothing of our work, how you ever got a podcast is beyond me!”
Music
The viral positivity of Tazazo:
Allison Kaplan Sommer, Noah Efron and Don Futterman discuss three topics of incomparable importance and end with an anecdote about something in Israel that made them smile this week.
The War that Wasn’t
We almost stumbled into war with Gaza last week, just ahead of crucial elections. Why didn’t we?
Election Reflection
After three intensive months of campaign, we look back and wonder, what the f*ck was that?
Shame!
Why does Israel’s Right hold the patent on pride, and our Left on shame?
The Israeli Campaign Ads We Loved, Hated, or Were Mystified By
For our most extremely generous Patreon supporters, we discuss in our extra-special, special extra segment the election ads that captured our attention over the past weeks, and why we loved, hated, or were mystified by them.
Music
Ron Cohen:
Allison Kaplan Sommer, Noah Efron and Don Futterman discuss three topics of incomparable importance and end with an anecdote about something in Israel that made them smile this week.
Looking for the extra segment?
Heights and Rights
U.S. President Donald Trump declares that the Golan belongs to Israel, after three decades of Israel trying to negotiate it back into Syrian hands. Will history remember this as something that matters, like PM Netanyahu says, or is it destined to be a forgotten footnote?
Scorched by the Bern
Bernie Sanders speaks out against “apartheid-like conditions in Palestine.” Just after we got used to millennial democrats harshly criticizing Israel, do we need also to get used to nearly octogenarian democrats harshly criticizing Israel?
The Feynman-Levy Conjecture
A feminist, social-democratic party with no position on the Israeli-Palestinian conflict may emerge from upcoming elections as king-makers. Is that a good thing?
Can AIPAC Save America From Itself?
For our most extremely generous Patreon supporters, we discuss in our extra-special, special extra segment the big AIPAC cotillion, paying special attention to three remarkable essays about it, one in the Times, one in the Forward, and the third in Haaretz (by our own Allison Kaplan-Sommer).
Music
Post-punk, power pop by The Driers:
Allison Kaplan Sommer, Noah Efron and Wunderkind Haaretz book reviewer (and so much more) Ohad Zeltzer-Zubida discuss three topics of incomparable importance and end with an anecdote about something in Israel that made them smile this week.
Leftier than Thou
Instead of attacking Netanyahu, the Labor Party decides to attack his centrist opponent, Benny Gantz, as knock-off Netanyahu and right-wing stooges. Has the center-left gone Hobbesian?
Not Not-Religious
A scholar argues that religion has osmotically entered so much of Israeli society, that it is no longer secular. Are we entering a “post-secular” age?
Diverticality
A proposed Jerusalem Cable Car will allow tourists and residents to go from Jewish West Jerusalem to the Wailing Wall without seeing a Moslem or Christian, except from an air conditioned cabin many meters above. Can transportation technology be politics by other means?
For our most extremely generous Patreon supporters, we discuss in our extra-special, special extra segment a new election ad that has new-right minister of Justice Ayelet Shaked misting herself with perfume labeled “fascism.” Provocative, yes, but to what end?
Music
The great Brazilian-Israeli drummer, composer and singer, Joca Perpignan:
Allison Kaplan Sommer, Noah Efron and Times of Israel Ops & Blogs Editor Miriam Herschlag discuss three topics of incomparable importance and end with an anecdote about something in Israel that made them smile this week.
Looking for the extra segment?
Banned on the Run
Should parties that spew rage and hate be banned from running in democratic elections? Here in Israel, the question ain’t academic.
The Feiglin Effect
The hottest thing in these elections is a radically libertarian, pro-weed-legalization, separation of Church and State party that also wants to annex the occupied territories tomorrow. WTF?
Feel the Burn
Midburn is Israel’s Burning Man, and its growing by leaps and bounds. Why is it so popular?
For our most extremely generous Patreon supporters, we discuss in our extra-special, special extra segment Allison’s picque that no one in Israel seems to care one way or another about Ilhan Omar and the soul of America’s Democratic Party. But should the question of whether or not a newly elected congresswoman’s criticism of Israel are tinged with anti-Semitism matter in the cafes of Tel Aviv?
Music
Yuval Dayan, who won our hearts on the first season of the Voice, and whom we’ve loved ever since:
Allison Kaplan Sommer, Noah Efron and Don Futterman discuss three topics of incomparable importance and end with an anecdote about something in Israel that made them smile this week.
The Bombshell was a Dud
A week after the Attorney General announced he’d be indicted for bribery and breach of trust, PM Netanyahu is more popular than before. Why?
أعتقد أن الأطفال هم مستقبلنا (I Believe Our Children are the Future)
More and more Israelis are sending their kids to Arabic-Hebrew bilingual schools. Are parents pursuing peace with their tots?
Long Ago, in the Cowshed
An American-Israeli posts on Facebook that Benny Gantz, who is challenging Netanyahu for Israelis premiership, exposed himself to her 42 years ago, when they were both in high school. Now what?
For our most generous Patreon supporters, we discuss in our extra-special, special extra segment a recent essay in Haaretz by Anschel Pfeffer, on-the-nosedly headlined, “After Replacing Netanyahu, Gantz's Party Will Self-destruct. And That's OK.” But is it really OK?
Music
By child reality star turned teenage internet star turned just normal-old-23-year-old-pop-star, Shira Margalit!
Noah Efron, Don Futterman, and Time of Israel Ops & Blogs editor Miriam Herschlag discuss three topics of incomparable importance and end with an anecdote about something in Israel that made them smile this week.
The Coalition Prohibition Supposition
No Palestinian-Israeli party has ever joined the country’s ruling coalition. Has the time come to break that taboo?
Judaeo-Scriptio Continua
Israel’s “New Right” Party launches a campaign proposing that Judaism, Israeli identity and right-wing politics fit together hand-in-glove. Is it gonna get them votes?
Moving Advice
Your friend asks for help moving into a new apartment in a West-Bank settlement. Should you do it?
For our most extremely generous Patreon supporters, we discuss in our extra-special, special extra segment a remarkable essay in Tablet Magazine by former editor at Wired and the Times and plutonium-grade mensch Mark Horowitz called, “Michael Sfard Can’t Win,” about how very nearly impossible it is to say anything about Israel and be heard.
Music
Shira Gavrielov (and her Dad, Miki, and friends):
Allison Kaplan Sommer, Noah Efron, and Don Futterman discuss three topics of incomparable importance and end with an anecdote about something in Israel that made them smile this week.
They’d Like to Teach the World to Sing
Can a single political party long endure with some members who are Two-State Solution types and others who are Never-Palestinian-State sorts, and some members who see the ultra-Orthodox as partners and others who see them as anathema? The new centrist mega-party “Blue & White” does just that: Is it a civil war in the making?
The Prime Minister Israel Never Had
Tzipi Livni was almost Prime Minister and, as Foreign Minister, she almost signed a peace accord with the Palestinians. Why, then, do only one in a hundred Israelis support her, bringing her brilliant career to an ignoble end?
You’ll Weld ‘til we Tell You to Stop Welding
Are market forces making it impossible for welders, metalsmiths, carpenters, upholsterers, cobblers, tailors, and mechanics to do what they do in Tel Aviv? Is every meter of real estate in the city destined to be fancy housing for rich folks?
For our most intemperately generous Patreon supporters, we will discuss in our extra-special, special extra segment the Forward’s primer, “How To Speak About The Israel Lobby In A Non-Anti-Semitic Way,” the latest salvo in Opinion Editor Batya Ungar-Sargon’s copiously ambitious program to renovate the whole damn American Left, as a first step towards renovating American Jewish politics.
Music
Afor Gashum, who's celebrating 30 years of their hugely influential samizdat 1989 cassette, February.
Allison Kaplan Sommer, Noah Efron, and writer, TV host, and activist Ohad Zeltzer-Zubida discuss three topics of incomparable importance and end with an anecdote about something in Israel that made them smile this week.
Primary Dolours
According to polls, fifteen political parties have a decent shot of being elected to the Knesset. Only three of those – Meretz, Labor, and Likud – hold open primaries where eligible dues-paying party members vote to determine the party list. Effusive reporters described these primaries as a “celebration of democracy.” Others, like former Labor PM Ehud Barak, expressed their antipathy for the process. Are primaries good or bad for Israeli democracy? If not through primaries, then how ought Knesset candidates be chosen?
Belabored
Last Friday, in one outlier poll, the Labor Party fell below the election threshold needed to be seated in the Knesset. This means that, if the elections were held last week, and if that poll were right, the Labor Party would not be represented in the Knesset for the first time in Israel’s 71 year history. Should we be concerned about the travails – and the incipient disappearance – of the Labor Party? If so, what, if anything, should we do about it?
Bereaved = Beloved?
Of all those being wooed in this election season, perhaps no one has been wooed with more verve than Miriam Peretz, an Israel Prize Life Achievement Award recipient whose two boys were killed as active combat soldiers. But she would be the first to say that the admiration with which she is held draws its force mostly from the death of her kids. Do these extravagant efforts to recruit Peretz to Knesset politics (which apparently failed), reflect a “culture of bereavement” here that is gendered, and sees in bereaved mothers, above all, a symbol of the uprightness of much of who we are and what we do?
Music
The power and glory of AvevA
Allison Kaplan Sommer, Noah Efron, and Times of Israel Ops & Blogs editor Miriam Herschlag discuss three topics of incomparable importance and end with an anecdote about something in Israel that made them smile this week.
Looking for the extra segment?
Likud Renewed, Dude!
The Likud primaries are here! We wonder what composite portrait they paint of the heart, soul and physiognomy of the party.
Being Black
The rage and heartache of Ethiopian-Israelis came front and center as they protest police brutality and so much else. How are we – three white folks – ought to understand their pain and rage?
Our World According to Conan
How do we make sense of Conan O’Brien's attempt to make sense of Israel?
We discuss the huge, building-sized billboards of PM Netanyahu shaking hands with US President Donald Trump under the slogan, “Netanyahu: In a League of his Own.” Why? Why? WHY?
Music
Half Ayala Ingedashet and half Orit Tashoma (on the occasion of the big demonstration):
Allison Kaplan Sommer, Noah Efron, and Don Futterman discuss three topics of incomparable importance and end with an anecdote about something in Israel that made them smile this week.
Become a patron and gain access to our weekly extra special, special extra segments.
Bullshit Solutions to Bullshit Problems?
Is the election campaign about anything that matters (or anything at all)?
The Change We Seek
MK Dov Khenin resigned on the grounds that there are better ways to bring political change than the Knesset. Is he on to something?
Some Jews are Arabs, Too
An appeal has been brought before the Supreme Court to overturn the Nation-State Law on the grounds that downgrading Arabic also discriminates against Mizrahi Jews. Is this the winning argument against the bill?
Rosanne Barr and Shmueli Boteach barnstorm Israel to make the point that Israel rocks and anti-semites suck. But to what end?
Music
Benaia Barabi
Allison Kaplan Sommer, Noah Efron, and Don Futterman discuss three topics of incomparable importance and end with an anecdote about something in Israel that made them smile this week.
No ‘Israeli-Palestinian Conflict’?
Journalist and best-selling author Matti Friedman argues in the New York Times that if you think of the conflict between Israelis and Palestinians “as a problem that can be solved by an agreement between them,” then you don’t understand it.
1,364 Dead Terrorists
Former IDF Chief of Staff and present candidate for Prime Minister Benny Gans boasts in his campaign videos of killing 1,364 terrorists and destroying whole city blocks in the Gaza war in 2014. Do body-counts have a place in political campaigns?
Morriskeit
Historian Benny Morris, on his retirement from teaching, predicts that in a generation’s time, Jews will become a persecuted minority in Palestine, because Palestinians will never accept a Jewish state on this embattled land. Morris is a scholar’s scholar, but also a long-time and lugubrious melancholic. What should we make of his dismal prediction?
Michelle Alexander argues in the Times that, were he alive today, MLK would be all in on BDS. We ask, WTF?
Music
The happy energy of Moshe Peretz
Allison Kaplan Sommer, Noah Efron, and Don Futterman discuss three topics of incomparable importance and end with an anecdote about something in Israel that made them smile this week.
Never Netanyahu?
Labor Party head dares and double-dares the heads of other parties in the center and on the left to swear on a million bibles that they’ll never join a Netanyahu government. Good politics or just more dumbassery?
Son of God, with a Side of Fries
There is blood on the streets of Haifa after the city art museum raises an exhibit including “McJesus,” a sculpture of Ronald McDonald on the cross, and demonstrations of offended Christians turn violent. How do you mesh artistic freedom and sensitivity to religious beliefs?
The (Too) Low Cost of Learning
An Israeli Nobel laureate says the country’s universities need to get hip to the logic of the market, and octuple tuitions. Does he have a point?
Allison Kaplan Sommer (the Notorious AKS) talks us through the heartaches and controversies surrounding this weekend’s Women’s March in America.
Music
Liora Isaac
Allison Kaplan Sommer, Noah Efron, and Don Futterman discuss three topics of incomparable importance and end with an anecdote about something in Israel that made them smile this week.
Terrorists, Murderers or Just Kids?
Five fifteen years-olds suspected of killing a Palestinian mother of nine by pelting her car with rocks are interrogated by the Shin Bet without being allowed to consult a lawyer to speak to their parents. Are the kids’ rights are being trampled?
Uniformity
A Hebrew U. prof who tells a student who complained about being treated uncivilly by a classmate because she came to class in uniform that she cannot expect others to treat her like a civilian when she’s dressed like a soldier. Should we be outraged?
Breeding Socialists in Schoolyards
In 2019, if a person joins an “educators’ kibbutz,” forgoing money, property and autonomy for the sake of higher ideals, are they a cultish dupe or a vanguard of a better future? Is capital-normativity the last great hegemony?
As you generous people asked, we discuss the legacy of Moshe Arens, may his memory be for a blessing, who died this week.
MusicRam Orion, who will be playing at Levontin 7 on January 23.
Allison Kaplan Sommer, Noah Efron, and Don Futterman discuss three topics of incomparable importance and end with an anecdote about something in Israel that made them smile this week.
Right (Or, Naftali & Ayelet’s Excellent Adventure)
Numbers one and two of the modern-Orthodox Jewish Home party, leave to start “The New Right.” It’s sad when kids run away from (The Jewish) Home.
Center (Or, Plenty of Benny)
A general starts a new centrist party in Israel, joining forces with another general and, just like that, they’re number two in the polls, behind Netanyahu. Does the future of Israeli politics run down the middle?
Left (Or, The Defenestration of Tzippi Livni)
Avi Gabbay, head of Israel’s labor party, defenestrates his main political partner on TV. But is there anything left of the left?
As you generous people asked, each of us discuss which party we would vote for, if elections were held tomorrow.
Music
Shay Nobelman, ahead of his first major show in three years, at the Ozen Bar, on January 9.
Allison Kaplan Sommer, Noah Efron, and Don Futterman discuss three topics of incomparable importance and end with an anecdote about something in Israel that made them smile this week.
Elections!
Netanyahu calls new elections, spurring the talking heads to talk, the pundits to pund, the experts to expectorate, and all the rest of us to grasp our heads in our hands and rock back and forth while muttering, “Let something good come of this, Puleeeze, let something good come of this.”
Alternative Modernity in Kiryat Gat
Does a traditional “Ethiopian farm” in Israel, with mud storehouses and subsistence farming, challenge the way the rest of us live?
Rasah to Slash Our Stash of Cash?
Should Israel go “cashless,” or is that just more Big-Brotherization?
We discuss a question sent in, in one variant or another, by a bunch of listeners: “Why don't you guys have any right-wing folks on your show to get a broader range of opinions? What's the value of talking just among yourselves? Whataya, chicken?”
Music
Yolanta and Rocker-Pocket, off their new debut record, Disteemia.
Allison Kaplan Sommer, Noah Efron, and Don Futterman discuss three topics of incomparable importance and end with an anecdote about something in Israel that made them smile this week.
The Vested Quest of the Oppressed Some Israelis watch yellow-vested Parisian protestors burn cars and break windows and thing, “We’d like in on that action.” But will Israel’s yellow-vest demonstrations produce any positive change?
The Left is from Mars, the Right is from Venus
A new study shows that Israeli leftists are from Mars, and right-wingers from Venus. They don’t even agree on what the word ‘democracy’ means. What does that augur for the future of the country?
The Grinch and the Jewish Question
A big honkin’ Christmas tree goes up in the Ashdod Mall. Is it good to have more pluribus in our unam?
As per the suggestion of longtime friend of the show, Janet Hiller, we discuss “the role of the first family of Israel - how it has become presidential in nature and potentially dynastic.”
Music
Sweatshop Boys, Haifa’s punkest punks, in honor of their new record, “Two Men.”
Allison Kaplan Sommer, Noah Efron, and Don Futterman discuss three topics of incomparable importance and end with an anecdote about something in Israel that made them smile this week.
Unsettling
A Tel Aviv leftist sets out to meet settlers in Tekoa, and makes a remarkable documentary about the discussions she has. The settlers come off as decent, human and humane. Is that a problem?
Dissed
Why do so many Israeli parents worry that kids with disabilities might rob their own kids of the attention they deserve at schools and in after-school clubs and activities?
Censoring Computer Copulation
PM Netanyahu shelves a bill to make porn “opt-in” in Israel, arguing that it is a threat to free expression. But is regulating the internet really so bad?
Extra: We call on our patreon supporters to send us questions or topics they’d like us to discuss, and we’ll discuss them in the upcoming weeks. We want to be your Siri of Israeli culture and politics!
Music
Yigal Bashan, may his memory be for a blessing.
Allison Kaplan Sommer, Noah Efron, and Don Futterman discuss three topics of incomparable importance and end with an anecdote about something in Israel that made them smile this week.
In Which Memory of George Herbert Walker Bush?
George H.W. Bush remade the Middle East and changed US-Israel relations forever. Was this a good thing?
What?!? Some Europeans Don’t Like Jews?!?
A CNN-sponsored poll finds that almost half of all Europeans don’t think Israel has a right to exist as a Jewish state. What’s an Israeli to do?
28,000 Shots
Hackers upload 28,000 historic photos purloined from Israeli archives. We go through them all and find an amazing vanished world!
Extra Segment: Operation Northern Shield
For our almost too generous patreon supporters, in our extra-special, special extra segment, we discuss the launch of IDF's “Operation Northern Shield” to stop Hezbollah bad guys from boring beneath Israel’s borders. Are we supposed to feel relieved or freaked out?
Music
Songs from Kol ha-Neshama, the new tribute album to the great Ofra Haza.
Allison Kaplan Sommer, Noah Efron, and Don Futterman discuss three topics of incomparable importance and end with an anecdote about something in Israel that made them smile this week.
AirBDS?
Airbnb kicked Jewish settlers off their site: A courageous political stand or a craven and hypocritical singling out of Israel for censure?
Solidarity on the Scaffolds
More and more Palestinians from the West Bank work in Israel, under better conditions than ever before. Does this bring peace closer, or just make it easier for the status quo to continue forever?
Getting High
In 2050, 98% of Israelis will live in skyscrapers crammed onto an endless expanse of concrete, says a new report. But is this really so bad?
Extra Segment: An EL AL Flight from Hell
For our almost too generous patreon supporters, in our extra-special, special extra segment, we discuss the El Al flight from New York to Tel Aviv forced to land in Athens so religious passengers could disembark before the onset of the Sabbath. Tempers flared, fists shook, frequent-flier cards were burned. What should we make of a religious war at 30,000 feet?
Music
A tribute to a genius grandmother and her brilliant grandson: Yaffa Yarkoni and Michael Suissa
Allison Kaplan Sommer, Noah Efron, and Don Futterman discuss three topics of incomparable importance and end with an anecdote about something in Israel that made them smile this week.
Sometimes They’ll Give a War and Nobody Will Come
Haaretz praises PM Netanyahu for single-handedly preventing war in Gaza. Are we in bizzaro-world, or were we just wrong about Netanyahu?
Slights, Plights, Fights and Flights of the Right
Israel’s right-wing Defense Minister resigns over the cease-fire with Hamas, and its right-wing Education Minister and Justice Minister almost do the same. Is Israel’s right experiencing a dark night of the soul?
Mothers, Children and the Quest for Peace
Israel’s biggest peace movement is run by women who say that “motherhood” is a moral and political tool that, if used right, might end more than a century of strife between Jews and Palestinians. Might the complications of family cut through the complications of our conflict?
Extra Segment: Black Friday, Israeli Style
For our almost too generous patreon supporters, in our extra-special, special extra segment, we will discuss the weird ascendance of Black Friday here, in a country that has neither Thanksgiving or Christmas. Is it globalization gone wild, or should we stop worrying and learn to love the low, low prices?
Music
Cookie Levanna (aka Kobi)
Allison Kaplan Sommer, Noah Efron, and Don Futterman discuss three topics of incomparable importance and end with an anecdote about something in Israel that made them smile this week.
Mourning in America
Is it true that American Jews may never forgive Israel for its reaction to the Pittsburgh massacre? Should it be true?
Our Rabin, Not Yours!
Leftists use whistles, stadium horns and vuvuzelas to drown out right-wing speakers at the 23rd annual memorial of Rabin’s assassination. Why has the left become more combative about our slain Prime Minister’s legacy?
Bloch Shock
A feminist woman with spectacular karma just became mayor of a majority ultra-orthodox town in Israel. How the hell did that happen?
Extra Segment: “Countries Without Nationalism are like People Without Souls”
For our most spectacularly generous patreon supporters, in our extra-special, special extra segment, we will discuss an essay by Gil Troy called, “No, Nationalism is Not a Dirty Word or Trump Property.” Is nationalism the problem or the solution? Or is it more complicated than that?
Music
Spinster Sister, in honor of their new singles ahead of their first record in thirteen years!
Crashing the First International Conference on Innovations in Conflict Resolution and Mediation, Don and Noah discuss seeking peace amidst violence and distrust, the secular and profane, ancient enmities and fragile hopes, with Northern Irish leaders who helped to end centuries-old conflict between Protestants and Catholics, Unionists and Republicans. What, if anything, do we have to learn from their experience?
Don and Noah then discuss with a rabbi and former MK and Minister, the roles religions play in prolonging and, perhaps, resolving the Palestinian-Israeli conflict.
God, country, violence, faith, hatred, love, death and rebirth: this episode has got it all! All that and the soulful Irish music of The Bloomers, and the genial good-will of Natalie Goodis!
Between Belfast, Bethlehem and Beer Sheva
What can Israelis and Palestinians learn from Northern Ireland? A lot, says former First Minister Peter Robinson, who devoted his life to finding peace among Protestants and Catholics.
Light Out from the Nations?
What else can Israelis and Palestinians learn from Northern Ireland? So so much, says Rev. Gary Mason, who devoted his life to finding peace among Protestants and Catholics.
Gods of War, Gods of Peace
Is religion a barrier to peace between Jews and Palestinians? Rabbi, MK and Minister Michael Melchior says that the path to peace is paved with religion.
Music
The Bloomers, which Haaretz rightly calls “Israel’s best traditional Irish music.”
In this very special, environmentally-sound, recycled edition of the Promised Podcast, we rebroadcast discussions about:
Participating in today’s show are Allison, Don, Noah, Times of Israel Ops & Blogs Editor Miriam Herschlag, and Shaharit Think Tank Grand Puba Eilon Schwartz.
Music
Coolooloosh, celebrating the tenth anniversary re-release of their classic album Elements of Sound and their forthcoming reunion concert at the Barbie in Tel Aviv on November 14.
Allison, Don and Noah gather agog among the movers and the shakers at the General Assembly of the Jewish Federations of North America to discuss three topics of incomparable importance and end with an anecdote about something in Israel that made them smile this week.
It’s Not Over ‘til the Yellow Bird Sings
The “Canary Mission” is a website clearinghouse of information about American students, professors and organizations who are critical of Israel. What impact does its “this-will-go-on-your-permanent-record” trolling of Jewish American (and other) critics of Israel have on all of us?
Marks and Surplus Values
If “Jewish values” are used to justify both right-wing and left-wing positions, there is any value to them at all? Is it time to stick a fork in “Jewish Values”?
Schools of De-Zion
There's an amazing resurrection in America of hip Yiddishism and Bundism and all sorts of spectacular Jewish cultural creativity, the roots of which reach back to sources that have little to do with Israel and Zionism. Should we celebrate or mourn this creative de-Zionising?
Music
The soulfulness of Naama Cooper and Natan Kamen
Subscribe to our WhyWhyWhy! True Stories from Israel podcast
Allison Kaplan Sommer, Noah Efron, and Don Futterman discuss three topics of incomparable importance and end with an anecdote about something in Israel that made them smile this week.
What’s Good for the Goose
Polls show that former IDF Chief of Staff Benny Gantz may soon be one of Israel’s most powerful politicians, even though no one knows what he thinks about anything. Why do we keep falling in love with strong, silent types in uniforms?
So You Couldn’t Find a Nice Jewish News Anchorwoman?
The winningest wedding of Israel’s social season is between a Muslim anchorwoman and a Jewish actor. Is it racist to have misgivings about “mixed marriages”?
“If I Creative-Class Thee, O’ Jerusalem”
Do we want Jerusalem 2.0, a shangrila for creative class types, tap-tap-tapping their screenplay into their laptop at the hip neighborhood café?
Extra Segment: Israel's “Fame Drain”
For our most spectacularly generous patreon supporters, in our extra-special, special extra segment, we discuss Israel’s “Fame Drain.” Should we care that so many on Israel’s A list are heading for Hollywood?
Music
Roei Freilich, who just rocked the IndieNegev Festival!
In this partially archival yet still very fresh edition of the Promised Podcast, we rebroadcast two segments from prior episodes, followed by a brand new third segment for your aural pleasure. Starring in this episode, in no particular order, are Allison Kaplan Sommer, Don Futterman, Bradley Burston, Miriam Herschlag, Gilad Halpern, and Noah Efron.
Aging Alone
A report prepared by the Government Research Institute unveiled that 32% of elderly people aged 65-74 in Israel report frequent or occasional feelings of loneliness.
Jewesses Packing Heat
There is something majorly messed up about how men think about Jewish women and, especially, Jewish women with guns. This is proved all too true today with a Girls-of-the IDF pinup calendar, and the icky charge guys get from Jewesses with Guns.
Eurovision Indecision
Is it really so great a thing, after all, for Tel Aviv-Jaffa to be hosting the expensive, disruptive Eurovision next May?
Music
The great Tamar Aphek, who just announced a new show, her first in a while, at Kuli Alma in Tel Aviv, on Sunday, Nov. 18, at 9 pm. Put it on your calendars!
Allison Kaplan Sommer, Noah Efron, and Don Futterman discuss three topics of incomparable importance and end with an anecdote about something in Israel that made them smile this week.
Book Learnin’
The Palestinian Authority publishes its first new schoolbooks in 18 years, and they contain scorched-earth rejection of Jewish presence in Palestine, so much so that the European Union cut Palestinian aid by 15 million Euros. How understanding ought we be of this pedagogy of rage?
Barak, Bezalel and Bennett and the Red Bellheifer
A former Prime Minister, a present Minister of Education and an MK argue about whether Israel’s modern orthodox Jews are quickly becoming more moderate or quickly becoming more fanatical. Who is right?
“Being Mayor is Tough!”
13.5% of city council members in Israel are women. 2% of mayors are. Why is it so damn hard for women to advance in local politics?
Extra Segment: Ignore or Fight NGO Monitor's Trolling?
For our most spectacularly generous patreon supporters, in our extra-special, special extra segment, we will discuss what one should do about being trolled by ideological detractors: Turn the other cheek? Fight until the last drop of blood is spilled? Haters gonna hate, and Trolls gonna troll, but is there anything we can do to preserve our honor?
Music
Eden Derso who, at the tender age of 20, is already Israel’s queen of rap, soul and reggae!
In this very special, collectors’ edition of the Promised Podcast, we rebroadcast a conversation with one of our favorite writers, the brilliant and enchanting magical-realist writer Etgar Keret, soon after the publication of his 2015 memoir, The Seven Good Years. The interview was done by the wonderful Ilene Prusher, long-time fill-in Promised Podcast panelist, and one-time TLV1 program director.
We also speculate, with Allison, Noah, and The Tel Aviv Review’s Gilad Halpern, about what six items we would each send up in a Voyager-Spacecraft sort of time capsule, to teach eager aliens everything they need to know about Earth’s only Jewish State.
Etgar Keret, on life, literature and low expectations
Etgar Keret on life, literature, longing and lowering expectations.
Israel, Encapsulated
What six items should we pack into a Voyager-Spacecraft sort of time-capsule, to teach eager aliens all they need to know about Earth’s only Jewish State. (And, no, BDS has not yet reached the outer atmosphere.)
Music
Shahar Saul, the 24 year old Tel Aviv rapper who says that his goal is to conquer Israel with his music, then America, then the world: He just might succeed!
Allison Kaplan Sommer, Noah Efron, and Gilad Halpern discuss three topics of incomparable importance and end with an anecdote about something in Israel that made them smile this week.
“A New Chapter in the Sad Book of Our Lives”: The Oslo Accords at 25
25 years ago this week, Yitzhak Rabin, Yassir Arafat and Bill Clinton gathered on the White House Lawn and made us believe that maybe a century of Palestinian-Jewish enmity was ending. What do we make of that unfulfilled hope, a quarter of a century later?
Let them play X-Box!, or, The End of the People’s Army?
The IDF plans to draft some for eight years, others for one year, others not at all: Is it finally really time to stick a fork in the notion of a “People’s Army”?
The Hebrew Innoversity
The Hebrew University makes all students – physicists, poets and philosophers – take a course on “entrepreneurship and innovation,” so students will find their way in a gig-economy in a high-tech nation. Is the notion of learning-for-its-own-sake dying before our eyes?
Extra Segment: Does the Israeli Left Need to Fight for Its Own Truth?
For our most spectacularly generous patreon supporters, in our extra-special, special extra segment, we will discuss an essay in Haaretz called, “Israel's Opposition Needs Sincere Leaders”, by one-time Labor-lion Uzi Baram, a minister throughout Rabin’s second run as Prime Minister, who argues that “the great mistake of the camp opposing the right is that it hasn’t clearly demarcated the 'good' and 'bad' players, and hasn’t fought for its own truth.” Does he have a point?
Music
Orphaned Land, whose video “Like Orpheus” just won the 2018 Progressive Music Award for Video of the Year, at the world-famous Globe Theatre in London, and whom an online petition nominates for a Nobel Peace Prize!
In an inspiring demonstration of environmental consciousness, this week the Promised Podcast mixes new discussions with gently repurposed discussions from our archives, producing an episode with the vintage grace of a fine wine and the bracing freshness of just-squeezed orange juice.
The G Word
A while back, in honor of the High Holidays, Haaretz polled all 120 Members of the Knesset, asking each of them whether or not they believe in God, and found, as one journalist later put it, mostly sycophancy and cowardice. But do we want and need to know whether or not our politicians believe in god, and what can we learn from the answers they gave us when asked if they did?
You Can’t Go Home Again
The brilliant novelist, non-fiction impresario Ayelet Waldman returns to Israel (where she was born, and where she once considered spending her life) after many years away, and this inspires each of us to try to see the country afresh through her eyes, and ask how have things changed as we have been raising families, pursuing careers and made our different ways in the world.
For the Sins
As every year on Yom Kippur, Jews chant the “Al Heyt” prayer, for me one of the most affecting and beautiful of all that days very affecting and meaningful prayers. It is a list of sins that we have committed over the previous year, categorized in various ways, together mapping a rich ontology of iniquity. We search our souls and ask ourselves what our greatest political sins have been over the past year, on the Left, maybe in the country, maybe as individuals.
Music
Shuli Rand, off his brand-new record, Ratzoh va-Shov.
Don Futterman, Noah Efron, and roving freelance journalist Naomi Zeveloff discuss three topics of incomparable importance and end with an anecdote about something in Israel that made them smile this week.
Send These, the Homeless, Tempest-Tost, the Bill!
Trump says to the UN that America won’t pay anymore for food, medicine, schools or homes for Palestinian refugees. PM Netanyahu says, yahoo, but most every other Israeli responds with quiet anxiety.
Home is Where the Homework Is
The number of homeschooled Israeli kids increases 1,150% in ten years. What the hell is going on?
5778
As a new year begins, we ask, What were the most important people and events of the tired, waning year limping to a close?
Extra Segment: What Can American Rabbis Say About Israel This Rosh Hashanah
For our primo Patreon supporters, in our extra-special, special extra segment, we discuss an intriguing essay in Haaretz called, “What on Earth Can American Rabbis Say about Israel this Rosh Hashana?”, by the singular Rav. Eric Yoffie , onetime President of the Union for Reform Judaism in America. With him we wonder, well, what on earth can a rabbi tell his flock about this stiff-necked people in this beautiful and troubled land?
Music
Galatz Songs of the year, 5774-5777 (As we impatiently await the song of the year for 5778!)
Don Futterman, Allison Kaplan Sommer, and Noah Efron discuss three topics of incomparable importance and end with an anecdote about something in Israel that made them smile this week.
Just the Vax
Should it be illegal for kids in Israel to go to school, if they haven’t gotten their vaccines?
The Great, Digital Sort
Rich Israelis surf real estate sites, poor ones gamble on-line – Is the internet tearing Israeli society apart?
Symbolic Justice
Is it weird to pardon 70 convicts in honor of Israel’s 70th year?
Extra Segment: Bursting Bibi-Haters' Bubble
For our primo Patreon supporters, in our extra-special, special extra segment, we discuss an intriguing essay in Haaretz arguing that we’re all thinking all wrong about Prime Minister Netanyahu’s opulent ways while travelling. Should give the guy a break when he orders the best wine to his room to wind down after a long day of diplomacizing?
Music
Mayonesa, off their debut album, Everything, that came out just this week.
Chair of Tel Aviv University’s Dept. of Public Policy Alon Tal, Allison Kaplan Sommer, and Noah Efron discuss three topics of incomparable importance and end with an anecdote about something in Israel that made them smile this week.
Avoidably Detained
The Shabak holds up journalist Peter Beinart at Ben Gurion Airport for a “cautionary conversation” about the perils of anti-Occupation activism. Are we sliding swiftly down a slippery slope?
Unsettled
Haaretz says all we need to do to implement a Two-State solution is to resettle 9,800 Jewish families. Have we overestimated how much Settlements are a barrier to peace?
Faded Green?
Is it time to stick a fork in Israel’s Green Parties?
Extra Segment: Prank Call for Democracy
For our primo Patreon supporters, in our extra-special, special extra segment, we discuss a recent bit of dada political prankerism by political activist Boaz Cohen, who published on social media the private phone numbers of all 120 members of Knesset, creating for MKs days of havoc, trolling, pranks, and perhaps too-direct-democracy. Did Cohen cross a line, we’ll ask, or is this 21st century Abbie-Hoffmanism just the sort of shaking up that our politicians need?
Music
Ori Mark, ‘cause this is journalism!
This episode of WhyWhyWhy! features true stories on the theme of “Sweat” as told by Anna Levine, Ephraim Rinsky, Susan Warchaizer, Libby Weiss, Mira Fox, and Israeli basketball legend Tal Brody.
Subscribe to the WhyWhyWhy! podcast in your favorite podcast app.
The next live WhyWhyWhy! storytelling event will be held Sept. 3rd (details) and will feature the theme, “Good Deeds, Bad Deeds.”
Pitch us your story or just come have a beer and listen. Either way, you have nothing to lose but your chains! Well, also your sobriety, as the evening is free, with a one drink minimum.
Twenty years ago, a week after Israel celebrated its fiftieth anniversary, a 26 year-old former drag-queen and trans woman won the world’s biggest song contest, The Eurovision. She also forever changed the way we Israelis see ourselves.
In this very special edition of The Promised Podcast, Noah tells her story, and explains why he thinks that in this moment of anxiety and dreadful Nation-State laws, Dana International represents the humane and decent Zionism so many of us long for.
Times of Israel Ops & Blogs Editor Miriam Herschlag, Allison Kaplan Sommer, and Noah Efron discuss three topics of incomparable importance and end with an anecdote about something in Israel that made them smile this week.
A Big, Beautiful Wall?
In building a massive 10 meter high wall all along the northern border with Lebanon and Syria, are we surrounding ourselves with ghetto walls of our own devising?
Primum Non Nocere
Nurses strike to keep from being punched, slapped and stabbed. How did our hospital wards and clinics become so damn violent?
Living Small
Co-housing takes off in Israel, launching an age of what some call “Kibbutz 2.0.” Is this the result of an admirable embrace of communal values, or because young folks here are being crushed by the levers of capitalism?
Extra Segment: Pen Pals
For our primo Patreon supporters, in our extra-special, special extra segment, we discuss, with ambivalence, a challenging Times of Israel essay by writer Yossi Klein Halevi called, “Letter to My Palestinian-Israeli Neighbors,” exploring what, if anything, is the thread linking Palestinian and Jewish Israelis.
Music
Arutz Hakibud
Times of Israel Ops & Blogs Editor Miriam Herschlag, Allison Kaplan Sommer, and Noah Efron discuss three topics of incomparable importance and end with an anecdote about something in Israel that made them smile this week.
Hear this week's extra segment.
Blood
Are Druze Israelis first among second-class citizens?
Sweat (and Splendor) Was the rise of a Sephardi Ultra-Orthodox in 1983 the turning point of Israeli history?
Milk
“Stay the hell out of our bras!,” say some Israeli women to the government. Are they right?
Extra Segment: But God Said, “Love Thy Straight Neighbor”
For our primo Patreon supporters, in our extra-special, special extra segment, we ask if the anti-LGBTQ letter signed by 200 rabbis is a sign of confident strength or scared-sh*tless weakness?
Music
Sharif & Friends
Don Futterman, Allison Kaplan Sommer, and Noah Efron discuss three topics of incomparable importance and end with an anecdote about something in Israel that made them smile this week.
Listen to the extra special, special extra segment.
Radical Tail Wagging a Moderate Dog?
Polls show that Likud voters are socialist, gay and lesbian supporting, religious pluralists, who are far to the left of their leaders on most matters: How can this be?
B2LGBTQ
Hundreds of Israeli corporations rush to support LGBTQ activists after the Knesset fails to extend to gay men the right to use surrogates to bear children. Business usually avoid politics like the plague: why is this issue different?
Street Smarts
Experts find that Dizengoff is the best street in Israel. But what makes a street great? And why are we so bad at creating hip and happening streets?
Extra Segment: Kinderguardians Come to Washington: One Congressman Seriously Hurt
For our primo Patreon supporters, in our extra-special, special extra segment, we discuss the segment of Sasha Baron Cohen’s new Showtime series, Who Is America, in which he impersonates one Col. Erran Morad, an Israeli lobbying American Republican gun rights activists and congressfolk, to adopt a faux Israeli program called Kinderguardians, aiming to arm kids tots. What the hell sort of image are these American Republicans carry around of Israel, that made Baron Cohen’s ruse seem plausible?
Music
Shalom Gad Vehayahalomim
Don Futterman, Allison Kaplan Sommer, and Noah Efron discuss three topics of incomparable importance and end with an anecdote about something in Israel that made them smile this week.
It’s Finally Nice & Legal! Israel is a Jewish State!
Israel passes its long embattled “Nation-State” law, declaring that this is definitely, but definitely, a Jewish state. It probably won’t mean much in practice, but it is one helluva symbolic statement. Question is, though, just what is it stating?
Rigged
Two of Israel’s leading environmental NGOs to break ranks with protesting activists, and support the plans of the government and huge energy corporations to build a gas rig just ten kilometers from shore. They say they’re doing what’s best for the environment, but shouldn’t environmental NGOs do what is best for the activists they represent? At the end of the day, who do NGOs answer to?
The Promised Proscenium, or, A Light Unto Netflix
“Start-Up Nation” is soooo 2008. With hits on Broadway, on the silver screen, and on Netflix, Israel of 2018 is a “Stage & Screen Nation.” How the hell did that happen?
Extra Segment: Birthright Israel, Birthright West Bank?
For our primo Patreon supporters, in our extra-special, special extra segment, we discuss the newest trend on Birthright tours, demonstrably getting off the tourbus near the end of the trip, and FB live-ing yourself as you go visit Palestinians in the occupied territories. We admire the young folks when they take a stand, but why does this protest feel, well, a little entitled and sour?
Music
Yagel Haroush & Shir Yedidot Ensemble
Don Futterman, Allison Kaplan Sommer, and Noah Efron discuss three topics of incomparable importance and end with an anecdote about something in Israel that made them smile this week.
Hear this week's extra segment.
Pole Position
The Prime Ministers of Israel and Poland issue a joint declaration about WWII, asserting that Poles mostly treated Jews benignly. Historians of the Holocaust express outrage. And, anyway, should Israel’s Prime Minister be signing agreements about what’s true and false in Jewish History?
Seeds of Doubt
A bunch of eager, energetic religious folks want to move together into a down-and-out Tel Aviv neighborhood, volunteer in the schools, open a synagogue, teach adult ed, and organize public celebrations of holidays, all in hopes of making their new neighbors a bit more Jewish. Should they be stopped or saluted?
Muskeljuden No More?
What are sports for, in a Jewish State?
Music
Mira Awad
Gilad Halpern, Allison Kaplan Sommer, and Noah Efron discuss three topics of incomparable importance and end with an anecdote about something in Israel that made them smile this week.
Avi Gabbay’s Excellent Imposture (With Apologies to Stephen Herek)
Labor Party Head Avi Gabbay pays shadowy consultants to post faux-Facebook pages trashing centrist rival Yair Lapid. Is Gabbay just a politician who is in it to win it, or is he yet another politician who has lost his soul?
Right=Bright, Left=Bereft?
A new poll finds that Israeli right-wingers, who tend to be poorer than the national average, are optimistic about the country’s economic future, while Israeli left-wingers, who tend to be richer than the national average, are pessimistic about the country’s economic future: Was PM Netanyahu right when he said that leftists like us are just sour-pussed nattering nabobs of negativism?
More Notes on Camp (with Continued Apologies to Susan Sontag)
What happened to good old summer camps when kids slept on rocks under stars and sang around campfires? Why have they yielded to space camp, video game camp and veterinary medicine camp?
Music
Tabarnak, in honor of their debut album, Maurice Academi.
Outgoing International Director of Haaretz Charlotte Halle, Allison Kaplan Sommer, and Noah Efron discuss three topics of incomparable importance and end with an anecdote about something in Israel that made them smile this week.
Hear this week's extra segment.
Put Away for Take Away?
First Lady Sara Netanyahu is indicted for charging taxpayers $100,000 for fancy take-out (while also charging the taxpayers for a full-time chef). Should the wife of a Prime Minister really stand trial for bilking the public coffers for cardboard cartons of comestibles?
Bougie’s Golem
Former Labor head and present-day chair of the opposition, Yizhak “Bougie” Herzog, is elected to head the venerable, old Jewish Agency. But is the organization better off dead?
The Council for the Preservation of Historic Inefficiency?
Should Israel’s government subsidize such quaint anachronisms as artisanal bread-baking and clothes-making, for the sake of preserving a once-beloved cultural heritage destroyed by the globalization, corporatization and factorization of pretty much everything?
Music
The White Screen, HaMasach HaLavan:
This episode of WhyWhyWhy! features stories on the theme of “Talkin' 'bout a Revolution” as told by Judah Ari Gross, Margot Saffer, Don Futterman, Adam Nice, Varda Spiegel, Avinof Frumer, Marcia Freedman, and Naomi Henoch.
The next live event will be held on July 23rd (details) and will feature the theme, “Sweat.” Pitch us stories about your sweaty situations! Or just come to have a beer and listen. Either way, you have nothing to lose but your chains! Well, also your sobriety, as the evening is free, with a one drink minimum.
Times of Israel Ops & Blogs Editor Miriam Herschlag, Noah Efron, and Don Futterman discuss three topics of incomparable importance and end with an anecdote about something in Israel that made them smile this week.
Benjamin Netanyahu’s New World Order
According to reports, PM Netanyahu used the threat of Iran’s nuclearization to build, strengthen and solidify relations with the Emirates and Saudi Arabia, sometimes behind the back of the American. Should we be high-fiving him, or tsk-tsking?
Mothballing The Hope
Tel Aviv University doesn’t play Israel’s national anthem at graduation, out of respect for the feelings of Muslims and Christians. Is this self-abnegation, as some argue, or a brave step towards a more inclusive Israeli future?
Notes on Camp (with Apologies to Susan Sontag)
Should Jewish summer camps teach campers “the Palestinian narrative”?
Music
Miriam Toukan
Outgoing International Director of Haaretz Charlotte Halle, Noah Efron, and Don Futterman discuss three topics of incomparable importance and end with an anecdote about something in Israel that made them smile this week.
Hear the extra segment on Patreon.
Terror with a Tail!
The flaming kites lofted by Palestinians into Israel have caused tens of millions in damage and left wasted millions of square meters of fields, forests and settlements. But is it right to call them “terror kites”?
Golan Heights?
A new musical features the music of the great Mizrahi pop singer, Eyal Golan, who was accused five years ago of having consensual sex with underaged girls in icky and abusive circumstances. Many protest, but is there racism and hypocrisy in their ostensible, Me-Too-ish feminism?
Advancing the Secular Lifestyle, One City at a Time
Do we need “secular politics” that advance “secular identity” and a “secular agenda” in Israel’s upcoming local elections?
Music
Pinhas Uvanav
Noah Efron, Times of Israel Ops & Blogs Editor Miriam Herschlag, and Ha’aretz columnist Bradley Burston discuss three topics of incomparable importance and end with an anecdote about something in Israel that made them smile this week.
Listen to this week's extra segment.
Cabel News
A Labor Party stalwart breaks ranks and says that some of the settlements should be annexed to Israel, as a first step to an eventual peace. His colleagues on the left call him nuts, but is he maybe nutty like a fox?
Messi Politics
Football great Lionel Messi and the Argentinian National Team cancel a friendly match against Israel after it was moved from Haifa to Jerusalem. Is this a turning point in Israeli attitudes about BDS?
To the Class of 2018
Michael Chabon tells newly ordained Rabbis to end their fetishist obsession with keeping Jews Jews, and tells Israelis to stop their us-vs.-them exclusionary wall-building. Mightn’t he have a point?
Music
Hadar Maoz
Noah Efron, Allison Kaplan Sommer, and Don Futterman discuss three topics of incomparable importance and end with an anecdote about something in Israel that made them smile this week.
Junior Partners in the Jewish People?
Israelis tell pollsters that the opinions of American Jews about what happens here matter, but not too much. What does this say about relations between the two biggest Jewish communities on earth?
Toying with Anti-Semitism
A Dutch parody of Israel’s Eurovision song includes lyrics about how Israelis control the world and love money. What do we do when legitimate criticism of Israel gets all jumbled up with old-fashioned anti-semitism?
The Sheep Goes Baaah, the Cow Goes Moooo, the Trident Missile Goes Whoosh-Boom!
Should the folks who sell us our trident missiles and F-35 stealth bombers be allowed to donate to us us the schools that shape our children (like so much plastic explosive)?
Music
Bones Garage
Noah Efron, Allison Kaplan Sommer, and Don Futterman discuss three topics of incomparable importance and end with an anecdote about something in Israel that made them smile this week.
Click here to listen to the extra segment.
Republikud & Labocrats?
Should Israel’s election system be rejiggered to do away with all the pesky, small parties? Most Israeli say yes.
The Great Sort, Sort Of
Are Israelis sorting ourselves according to our political beliefs (like Americans and Brits seem to be doing)?
LGBTQ: Lieutenants, Generals, Battalion-Commanders, Technical-Specialists, & Quartermasters
Is the promotion of an out, gay IDF officer to the high rank of Major-General a happy sign of integration or a worrying sign of cooptation? Or a little from Column A and a little from Column B?
Music
Erez Nataf, in celebration of his remarkable new album, “From Tunisia to Jerusalem”
This episode of Why why why! features stories on the theme of “Chutzpah”as told by Gwen Dreilinger, Mel Lidman, Alon Tal, Chavi Karkowsky, Judy Maltz, and Ibrihim Ahadi.
Next month's event will be held on June 4th (details) and will feature stories on the theme, “Talkin' About a Revolution!”
Pitch us stories about revolutions you've seen, fomented or undergone: personal, political, cultural, sexual, military, musical, sartorial, whatever! Or just come to have a beer and listen. Either way, you have nothing to lose but your chains! Well, also your sobriety, as the evening is free, with a one drink minimum.
Music by Itamar Haluts
Noah Efron, Allison Kaplan Sommer, and Don Futterman discuss three topics of incomparable importance and end with an anecdote about something in Israel that made them smile this week.
Click here to listen to the extra segment.
Sixty-One Dead
With a good deal of angst of our own, we ask the questions we often ask in the face of this sort of horrid perplexity: What ought we think? What ought we do?
Tel Aviv is to Jerusalem as Freedom is to Decency?
Jerusalem bans a right-wing billboard for incitement, while the same billboard is plastered all over Tel Aviv. Which should we prefer: Free expression, Tel Aviv style, or decency in the public square, Jerusalem style?
I’m Not Your Toy (Nix the Joy)!
Netta Barzilai wins the friggin’ Eurovision Song Contest, and many leftist Israelis’ reaction is a mirthless, bah-humbug! Does the left have a problem with national pride and just-plain happiness?
Music
All songs from the Jacob’s Ladder Festival, Two Days of Peace, Love & Music!
Itamar Haluts - Alexandra-Clyde
Dov Hammer - Her Love is Like a Rock
Heebie Gee Bees - Come On (Let the Good Times Roll)
Kim in the Sun - Light of God
Noah Efron, Allison Kaplan Sommer, and Don Futterman discuss three topics of incomparable importance and end with an anecdote about something in Israel that made them smile this week.
Click here to listen to the extra segment.
The Age of Uncertainty
What thoughts, fears, hopes, worries and other reactions does Trump’s decision (and the escalation in the North) raise in us, people who are watching with worry as they open and prepare bomb-shelters up north, who very much hope never to be incinerated along with their dogs, cats and children, and who have kids in the infantry?
The Long Arm of Israeli (Rabbinic) Law
Is the “Rabbinic Courts Bill (Marriage and Divorce)” as risible as its critics make it seem? After all, it is meant to ameliorate the terrible suffering of thousands of women. If it can do that, doesn’t it perhaps justify a little expansion of Israeli Rabbinic authority? What’s a little international Rabbinic hegemony among Jews?
Boots on the Ground
What do we think about ‘tiyul’ culture? Does it partakes of, and advance, a politics that is not our own? What is to be done with the tiyul?
Music Blue Pill
Noah Efron, Allison Kaplan Sommer, and Don Futterman discuss three topics of incomparable importance and end with an anecdote about something in Israel that made them smile this week.
Hear this week's extra segment.
Not THAT Jewish Agency
Is the most important unseen force in Israeli politics the great divide between those who think that Israelis have it in our power to bring peace, and those fatalists who think, in the end, it just ain’t up to us?
Israel First!
Three leading industrialists say the way to make Israel great again is to put “Israel First,” and flip the bird to economic globalism. Are they right?
Darwin on the Down Low
The Jerusalem Museum of Natural History cover up exhibits on evolution when ultra-Orthodox kids come to visit: Respectful pluralism or despicable cravenness?
Music
Ella Ronen
Noah Efron, Allison Kaplan Sommer, and Don Futterman discuss three topics of incomparable importance and end with an anecdote about something in Israel that made them smile this week.
Pfeffer’s Netanyahu, Netanyahu’s Israel
Sparks fly when Haaretz correspondent Anshel Pfeffer joins us to discuss his new book, “Bibi: The Turbulent Life and Times of Benjamin Netanyahu”.
Ben Gurion and the Matrix
Should Israel’s old Labor elite be lionized nostalgically or instead consigned to the dustbin of history?
What About Natalie?
Oh, Natalie!
Music
Pele Ozen, in honor of their new single, Hilchot Ger, the profits of which all go to the fight against the deportation of the African Refugees
Noah Efron, Allison Kaplan Sommer, and Don Futterman discuss three topics of incomparable importance and end with an anecdote about something in Israel that made them smile this week.
Conscript Kids
Does our wont to see all IDF soldiers as our kids, the safety of each and every one of whom is irreducibly and axiomatically important to us, prevent us from thinking morally, or even strategically, about the army?
Self-Portrait
A Ukrainian immigrant portrays the trauma of her absorption into Israeli culture, especially at the hand of Mizrahi men, in a new controversial exhibit at the Israel Museum. Is there something racist about this heartbreaking display?
Seventy Short Reasons
On the occasion of Israel's 70th anniversary, a round-robin of the top 70 reasons we love this place!
Music
Gazoz, “Likhvod ha-Kayitz” (With Mazi Cohen, Central Command Band, 1976-1978, Gidi Gov & Danny Sanderson, Fighting Pioneering Youth Band, 1969-1972)
Shalom Hanoch (Fighting Pioneering Youth Band, 1966-1968) “Mechakim La-Mashiach”
Nadav Guedj (Education Corps Band, 2016-today), “Ulai Nedaber”
DJ Gal Malka and various and sundry from the Army Troupes, “Ayn Lach Ma- Lidog,”
Noah Efron, Allison Kaplan Sommer, and Don Futterman discuss three topics of incomparable importance and end with an anecdote about something in Israel that made them smile this week.
The extra segment for Patrons is available here: https://www.patreon.com/posts/will-he-speak-18137370
Gaza
Is Gaza’s “Great March of Return” a non-violent protest, or a dangerous attempt to breach Israel’s border? Are IDF sharpshooters defending Israel’s sovereignty or wounding and killing unarmed protesters, or both?
Bring Your Seat to an Upright Position
When a flight attendant asks if you wouldn’t mind swapping seats with an ultra-Orthodox Jew, should you (a) kindly agree in the name of civility or (b) righteously refuse in the name of freedom and equality?
Edifice Complex
Israel’s Housing Minister proposes filling Israel’s skyline with huge stainless steel Stars of David, to offset the many minarets, steeples and spires that dot the horizon today. Why do we care whether ours is bigger than theirs?
Music: Yael Badash
Oneg Shabbat
Gvarim, Gvarim
Ma Yesh Bah she-Eyn Bi
Be-Halomi
Our debut episode of Why, Why, Why! features stories on the theme of “Crossing the Red Sea” told by Abe Silver, Jodi Davidovitch, Yaser Abu Areesha, Nancy Cahners, and Guy Sharett.
About “Why, Why, Why!”
An evening (and a podcast) of people sharing a true story for an audience while sipping a beer and pondering life in the holy land.
Why “Why, Why, Why!”?
There is a great gulf between the way people discuss Israel, and the way we live our lives here. Lots of talk about Israel happens in high dudgeon and low spirits: with anger, resentment, disappointment, frustration, irritation, grievance and worry.
For all that, life here is different and brighter. The rhythms of the sidewalks and supermarkets are weird. People are curious. Hebrew carves up the world in surprising ways. Boundaries turn out to be permeable. And everyone is always talking, advising, counselling, dissenting and suggesting.
What can bridge the gulf between the severe way Israel appears in the papers and the loopy way we experience it on the street are stories: true stories of our lives the way we lead them, with their moments of weird abasements, moments of grace and moments of transcendence.
Why Why Why! aims to capture some of these stories and share them live and on the podcast.
Noah Efron, Allison Kaplan Sommer, and Don Futterman discuss three topics of incomparable importance and end with an anecdote about something in Israel that made them smile this week.
Looking for this week's extra segment? It's available on www.patreon.com/promisedpodcast
The Curious Case of the Constancy of Bibi Boosters and Believers
How and why do so very many people (if polls are to be believed) still love Netanyahu with a force that seems to be growing with each revelation of possible corruption?
Low Marx
Is moving from a public “higher higher education” system to a mixed public-private system is a step forward, a step back, or one of those other fancy dance steps that turn you around and leave you breathless?
Still Leaving Egypt, After All These Years
What lessons should we, today, in Israel of 2018, take from the story of the Exodus and the 40 years that followed?
Music: Aya Korem
Mehandeset Mahshevim
Rona Omeret
Yonatan Shapira
Davar Aharon
Noah Efron, Allison Kaplan Sommer, and Don Futterman discuss three topics of incomparable importance and end with an anecdote about something in Israel that made them smile this week.
Looking for this week's extra segment? It's available on www.patreon.com/promisedpodcast
Surveilling Belligerents
Israel’s got a machine-learning AI system for identifying lone terrorists before they act. Should this bit of real-scifi-Minority Report-ism make it easier for us to sleep at night, or cause us to toss-and-turn in Orwellian angst?
Surveilling Rabbis
An activist spends long hours going over videos of rabbinic lectures, getting the sexist and homophobic bits on the nightly news. Is this smart progressive politics, or kind of creepy stalking?
Surveilling Prices
Israel’s Chamber of Commerce says the time has come to repeal a law mandating little sticky price-tags on every item in the supermarket, in favor of smart screens, q-codes and surge pricing in the freezer aisle. Is this the voice of progress, or of rapacious capitalists who want to squeeze a little more cash from consumers?
Music: The Amazing Persian-Georgian Groove of Hadar Maoz!
Lali Lavat
Azizam
Hadar Maoz Esh Avotay
Labhoi Turo Blues
Noah Efron, Allison Kaplan Sommer, and Bradley Burston discuss three topics of incomparable importance and end with an anecdote about something in Israel that made them smile this week.
This week's extra segment is available to our patrons on www.patreon.com/promisedpodcast
Gaza: A Moment Before
Israeli politicians and military brass have begun sounding the alarm about the humanitarian crisis in the Gaza Strip, where electricity is available for four to eight hours a day and where municipal services are being cut in half. While the military threat form Gaza appears containable, it is less clear that Israel can contain the ramifications of a total humanitarian collapse in Gaza. How can and should Israel act to forestall or prevent the humanitarian crisis that is about to swallow Gaza whole?
Show Me a Hero (and I’ll Write You a Tragedy)
Mizrahi journalists and activists, are calling for the name of journalist Aryeh Gelblum name to be stripped from a cul-de-sac, which was named after him after his death in 1991. That's because wrote that immigrants from Arab and North African lands possessed a "superlative primitiveness." Should Israel purge the names of those who described Mizrahi Jews as ignorant from the public sphere?
Judaism: The Theme Park
A massive new project is being planned for the relatively remote Israeli city of Dimona: the "Park of Wonders", a theme park based on Judaism. “The park will have the same rides and the same layout [as Disney World] but with content,” the project's CEO says. What, if anything, does it say about the place of Judaism in Israel, in Zionism, in the hearts and minds of Jews, in the 21st century?
Music: Omer Adam, in honor of this week selling out his May 24 concert Sami Ofer Stadium in Haifa, in less than 3 hours (including 40,000 folks signing up for the waiting list):
Noah Efron, Allison Kaplan Sommer, and Don Futterman discuss three topics of incomparable importance and end with an anecdote about something in Israel that made them smile this week.
A Kinder, Gentler AIPAC
The huge convention of a new and improved AIPAC, now containing progressives!
Wicked-pedia?
Ha-Michlol (“The Entirety”), an ultra-Orthodox, user-generated Wikipedia, aims to create “the largest Jewish encyclopedia in history, which includes articles on all issues pertaining to the Torah, Jewish values and the history of the Jewish people, but also knowledge pertaining to mankind and from all the secular [hulin] fields – written in clean language according to the Jewish worldview.” Is it a step towards a greater appreciation, on the part of Haredim, of western, secular knowledge, or a step away, or both, or neither)?
Worn Only Once, For Drinks at the King David
Two young Israelis have launched MINE, a website that allows folks to sell off their unwanted, unused, nearly-new expensive designer clothes, and allows the hoi polloi to buy them at a discount. They claims to be motivated by a desire to enable middle-class people to buy what they formerly couldn't afford, and to help the environment by discouraging "fast fashion". So should we be forsaking the mall for MINE?
Music: Nili Fink
Noah Efron, Charlotte Hallé, and Don Futterman discuss three topics of incomparable importance and end with an anecdote about something in Israel that made them smile this week.
Kill First!
Two thousand and three hundred: That's how many targeted killing operations Israel has carried out over the years, Israeli journalist and author Ronen Bergman estimates in his stunning new book Rise and Kill First: The Secret History of Israel's Targeted Assassinations. The book traces the history of a key strategy in the history of Israel's intelligence and security apparatuses, and raises questions about its ethical and practical aspects. When (if ever) are these assassinations justified, and are they even a smart idea?
Legislating Innocence
Poland's explosive "Holocaust complicity bill" may or may not be about to become law. After Israel raised concerns about the proposed penalty for anyone accusing Poland of complicity in Nazi crimes, Polish Prime Minister Mateusz Morawiecki's explanation that the Holocaust also had its "Jewish perpetrators" then sparked further outrage. Poles had good reason to be lumped together with Germans as perpetrators of the Holocaust, but Poles also have a lot to answer for. So what is Israel to do?
Won’t Anyone Think of the Tour Guides?
Israeli Tourism Minister Yariv Levin recently proposed a bill that would allow unaccredited tour guides to lead many (though not all) tours. Currently, a prospective guide needs to take a two-year course, a practice resulting in remarkably well-educated guides. But some ask why Israel can't have architects devising their own tours of cities' buildings, for example. Is liberalizing tour guiding another small step for post-modern freedom, or is it one liberalization too far?
Music: Lior Perla, in honor of his newest record, Bein Kotlei ha-
Zeman, released just this week!
Shoom Davar
Bein Kotley HaZman
Halev Hazeh
Ad Hasof
Noah Efron, Allison Kaplan Sommer, and Don Futterman discuss three topics of incomparable importance and end with an anecdote about something in Israel that made them smile this week.
Looking for extra segments and other patron-only perks? They're available to our patrons on Patreon.
Left to Decide
Israel's liberal-left Meretz party will hold its first-ever primary to pick its next leader in March, and the candidates have brought to the party new energy, excitement, voters, and vision to an entity whose relevance in contemporary Israeli politics is often called into question. The leadership race has developed into a vital debate into how the Left should present itself to voters and pursue change. What can we learn from this fascinating race?
Prize Possession
David Grossman the great Israeli writer who just seven months ago won one of literature’s most prestigious awards, the Man Booker Prize, last week learned that he would, on Israel’s 70th Independence Day, receive his homelands most prestigious award, the Israel Prize. But an essay this weekend in Haaretz by Israel’s leading civil rights lawyer Avigdor Feldman argued is that, in these days, to take the prize is an act of collaboration with a government with which people of principle ought no longer collaborate. Should Grossman, for decades one of the clearest voices of conscience on the Left, turn down the Israel Prize as a powerful and percussive expression of that conscience?
The (Harsh) Reality of Marriage
The most popular new show on Israeli TV is a science-based reality show called “Wedding at First Sight.” The show begins with scientific experts, who designed and administered examination protocols exploring the psycho-social-cognitive and physiological profile of thousands of volunteer singles, scientifically-identifying five heteronormative pairs, if science is to be trusted, are exquisitely compatible with one another. Each of the couples is sent on a luxurious honeymoon, at the end of which they will settle down to live together for 40 days, at the end of which they need to decide whether to continue their lives as married folks or dissolve their union. Does the success of the show, which is so retro, with the role of traditional matchmaker filled by science, reflect a wish for a simpler time when your parents, or your youth movement, pretty much ensured that you’d find a mate?
Music: Sputnik Hi-Fi
Eretz ha-Rakavot (ארץ הרכבות)
Ha-Laila hakhi Tov (הלילה הכי טוב)
Hashmal (חשמל)
Hol (חול)
Noah Efron, Allison Kaplan Sommer, and Don Futterman discuss three topics of incomparable importance and end with an anecdote about something in Israel that made them smile this week.
Looking for extra segments and other patron-only perks? They're available to our patrons on Patreon.
Bribes, Fraud and Breach of Trust
Israel's police have recommended indictments against Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu, saying "a sufficient evidentiary foundation has been established" for suspicions of soliciting and accepting bribes, fraud, and breach of trust. Netanyahu's party is standing by its man, while coalition partners are cautiously maintaining support. Opposition leaders are calling for him to resign. Should he? Regardless of personal opinion, what response befits the situation?
The Lie
Yaakov Perry, former head of the Shin Bet secret service, has resigned from his post as a Member of Knesset for the centrist Yesh Atid party, after it was learned that he lied about his military record. Should such a lie disqualify someone from serving in politics today? What is so distressing about learning that he lied about this issue specifically?
Tile and Error
Studio Ceramics, a premier boutique purveyor of high quality wall and floor tiles, is the first company ever sued under a new Israeli law banning "discrimination according to place of residence" after telling a journalist who lives in a settlements that it "does not deliver to the territories." Should Studio Ceramics ought to be forced to deliver their tiles and toilets to the territories, even if doing so is (a) more dangerous, (b) more expensive, and (c) a contravention of their political beliefs?
Music: Ariel Horowitz
Before a live audience including a delegation from UJA-Federation of New York, the largest local philanthropy in the history of the world, Noah Efron, Allison Kaplan Sommer, and Don Futterman discuss three topics of incomparable importance and end with an anecdote about something in Israel that made them smile this week.
Looking for extra segments and other patron-only perks? They're available to our patrons on Patreon.
Israel’s Urban Poorgeoisie Amia Leiblich, professor emerita at the Hebrew University, hasturned her gaze and attention to a group she calls “The New Poor.” “The new poverty,” she writes writes: “is poverty that is unexpected, given the place that those who suffer from it started. The new poor are people who stood on their own two feet, or who were supposed to stand on their own two feet economically, but for some reason the ground withdrew from beneath them.” Who are these folks? Do they represent a social problem and challenge that needs to be addressed on its own terms?
The Promised Podcast Guide to Purse-String Power American Jews continue to be astonishingly generous in their contributions to Israel, but some voices are calling for them to use their cash as leverage to strong-arm some changes in Israeli attitudes. What ought donors want to change in Israeli society? What is the best way to help bring about this change? Is it a good idea to use philanthropy as a cudgel?
Still and All, Israel Around Rosh ha-Shannah, Rogel Alpher published a column in Haaretz called “Why I am Leaving the Country” in which he explained that “Israel is not worth the price it extracts from us, that is the truth.” A few years ago, a Facebook page called “Olim Le-Berlin” -- we are moving (or “ascending”) to Berlin -- gained thousands of followers. The hosts of the podcast have their criticisms of Israel, and their worries about the future of the country and, therefore, their own futures. Yet they are here. How do we harmonize between our criticisms of Israel, and our worries, and the fact that we made this place our home by choice and, effectively, we each day make this choice anew?
Music: Vocatikva Ensemble – Social Music!
Noah Efron, Allison Kaplan Sommer, and Don Futterman discuss three topics of incomparable importance and end with an anecdote about something in Israel that made them smile this week.
Looking for extra segments and other patron-only perks? They're available to our patrons on Patreon.
Mind the Gap! In America in the age of Trump and Netanyahu, Israel has seemingly become a partisan issue. According to a new poll of Americans, 74 percent of Republicans sympathize more with Israel than with the Palestinians, while 43 percent of Democrats do. There are various theories about why there is such a partisan gap. Is this partisanization of Israel in America a danger to us and if so why and, most crucial of all, what the hell ought to be done about it?
Putting the “Low” in Diplomat Numerous mutually conflicting explanations have been offered for why Israel's Diplomatic Corps is disintegrating. Why it has become so difficult to find young people making a career of diplomacy. More important, does the decline of the diplomatic corps really matter in the age of Twitter diplomacy and rapid and direct communications between leaders?
Venting on Rent, Dissent and Discontent When the country’s leading expert on and advocate of social housing and, especially, affordable rent policy attacks the government’s first serious attempt in more than a generation to legislate an affordable rent policy, you know that on the way to doing something right, someone went desperately wrong. What should be done with the present bill under consideration? What should be done more generally about affordable rent in Israel? What vision of the neighborhoods and cities we want ought to guide us in setting housing policy?
Music: Soul J. (Alon Bloom):
Noah Efron, Allison Kaplan Sommer, and Don Futterman discuss three topics of incomparable importance and end with an anecdote about something in Israel that made them smile this week.
Looking for extra segments and other patron-only perks? They're available to our patrons on Patreon.
In furorem, veritas?, or Abbas Unbound Palestinian Authority President let loose twice last week in long angry speeches, claiming that Israel is the result of Western colonialist machinations and is "unconnected to Jews." What do we learn, if anything, from these remarks? What impact ought they have on how we go forward to see peaceful and secure relations between Israelis and Palestinians?
Speaking frankly As Israel announces a plan to deport most of the (estimated) 42,000 refugees (mostly) from Eritrea, an NGO decides to found the "Anne Frank Home Sanctuary Movement," aiming to persuade Israelis to open their homes to refugees hiding from police. When (if ever) is it right to use Anne Frank (and all she stands for) as a moral exemplar and object lesson in contemporary political debates.
Amazon and the Jewish Question Amid news that retail leviathan Amazon.com may build a "logistics center" in Israel, there were those who responded with fear and worry. Does Amazon's incipient presence in Israel signal the sad destruction of our local economy or the happy enthronement of low, low prices?
Music: Gil Ron Shama (in honor of his new record, Café Jalal):
Noah Efron, Ha’aretz journalist Allison Kaplan Sommer, and Don Futterman discuss three topics of incomparable importance and end with an anecdote about something in Israel that made them smile this week.
In Praise of Progressive Populism Dov Khenin, the sole Jewish lawmaker representing the Joint List, delivers remarks criticizing the Israeli Left's purism and calling for a left-wing populism like the movements that formed around Bernie Sanders in the United States and Jeremy Corbyn in the United Kingdom. Are there signs of an Israeli progressive populism developing? Is this the path the Israeli Left should take right now?
"Selfie in Auschwitz" The latest video to sweep viral through Israel is by a duet who call themselves Reggie & Sig, and is called "The Trip to Poland." Sample lyrics: To take a selfie in Auschwitz is disrespectful/ it's disrespectful/ it's disrespectful/ Selfie in Auschwitz!" What are its creators trying to say?
Decaffeinated to Death? Some of Tel Aviv's most storied coffeehouses are shuttering their doors. Does the demise of once beloved, one-time coffeehouse meeting places of intellectuals and artists signal the end of the intellectual culture and cultural intellect that once thrived in these caffeinated colossuses of creativity? demise of once beloved, one-time coffeehouse meeting places of intellectuals and artists, signals the end of the intellectual culture and cultural intellect that once thrived in these caffeinated colossuses of creativity?
Music: Talisman, in honor of being selected as the breakout act of the year by Galgalatz:
Noah Efron, Ha’aretz journalist Allison Kaplan Sommer, and Don Futterman discuss three topics of incomparable importance and end with an anecdote about something in Israel that made them smile this week.
UNRWA ShmUNRWA Should the very job description of the UN agency that provides aid to Palestinians be revisited and changed?
Pascal’s Meteorology Last week the Israeli minister of agriculture organized a huge vigil at the Western Wall to pray for rain. Was there something untoward and inappropriate about a minister initiating and taking part in a public prayer?
Rachael Ray’s Rapine Recipes Celebrity chef Rachael Ray sparked controversy with a picture of an "Israeli nite" feast. Is there something to the claims that the popularity of Israeli cuisine is, among other things, an erasure of Palestinian cuisine? If there is anything to these claims, how ought we feel about them and react to them?
Music: Efrat Ben Zur, in honor of her brand new single, “Al Derekh Ha-Teva”, lyrics by Dahlia Rabikovitch
Noah Efron, Ha’aretz journalist Allison Kaplan Sommer, and Times of Israel's Ops & Blogs Editor Miriam Herschlag discuss three topics of incomparable importance and end with an anecdote about something in Israel that made them smile this week.
Likud's Settlement-Schizoid New Year's Resolutions
On the last day of 2017, the Israeli prime minister's party made two precedented statements about the future of the Palestinian territories. How do we make sense of the two different voices we heard from Likud concerning settlements on December 31, 2017?
Linguaphobia
Some Israelis recently went into a tizzy when white-on-black billboards in Arabic filled their landscape. What accounts for many Jewish Israelis' fear of one of the country's two official languages?
Now That's Israeli!
A recent poll asked Israelis to pick the "most Israeli" thing in a number of categories, including the most Israeli PM, what the most Israeli character flaw is, and much more. What to make of the answers, and how do we answer the question of what is "most Israeli"?
Music by Nadav Hollander, from his new, debut record, Matat va'Ogen:
Noah Efron, Don Futterman, and Ha’aretz journalist Allison Kaplan Sommer discuss three topics of incomparable importance and end with an anecdote about something in Israel that made them smile this week.
New Right? After right-wing voices join (albeit hesitantly) protests against the putative corruptions of the Netanyahu government, we ask whether this marks an important (and perhaps portentous) change. Does it mark an important change in the attitudes of (at least a portion of) the right?
Only Sixteen Palestinian teenager Ahed Tamimi is only lately the most recognizable face in a venerable activist family. Most recently, she appeared in another video that drew international attention. We try to puzzle out what sense to make of the latest incident. What, if anything, do we learn from it?
The “Herem” of Public Opinion: On Excommunication and Rehabilitation After writer and pundit Ari Shavit cancels a lecture over past sexual harassment, we ask: Should we be crowdsourcing judgment, or meting out tribal justice, when there seems to be no other way to get justice at all? If so, then how do we know when the punishment ought to end?
Music by Sheila Ferber, in honor of her performance today at Beit ha-Yotzer, Hangar 22 in Tel Aviv’s port: "Yehiye Beseder" "Koresh 11" "Ha-Yalkut ha-Adom" "Bishvilkha"
Noah Efron, Don Futterman, and Ha’aretz journalist Allison Kaplan Sommer discuss three topics of incomparable importance and end with an anecdote about something in Israel that made them smile this week.
Capital Crimes?
Israeli and global pharmaceutical giant Teva – once the most successful company to come from the soil of the holy land – has announced it will close factories in Israel and fire 1,700 workers. Should the factories be nationalized?
More Thomas Hobbes, Less Dale Carnegie?
Do Israel’s opposition politicians to be less civil towards Prime Minister Netanyahu and his government?
Webbutz?
Is there something particularly Israeli behind the ideology of Israeli entrepreneur Adam Neuman’s WeWork communal work spaces?
Music by Noam Rotem, off his new tenth anniversary rerelease of his beautiful record, Ezra Ba-Derekh: Lalekhet k’mo Arieh Oleh ve-Yored Ezra ba-Derekh K’mo Ruah
Noah Efron, Don Futterman, and Ha’aretz journalist Allison Kaplan Sommer discuss three topics of incomparable importance and end with an anecdote about something in Israel that made them smile this week.
Looking for the extra segments and topic prep material? Support the show by becoming a patron. Learn more on Patreon.
See No Evil? Evil Not to See?
After an Israeli musician covered his eyes with duct tape rather than see women dancing, offending many, we ask: Should we really be mad at him? If so, why precisely?
The Perplexing Problem of Patriotism
Why does Israel's Left consistently fail to persuade fellow citizens that they are, indeed, just as patriotic as other Israelis?
Who Killed Hanukkah?
What explains the downgrading of Hanukkah from one of the most important Zionist holidays -- secular and political in nature -- to one of the least important Israeli holidays?
Music by Yonatan Raz’el, a musicians’ musician who unleashed an uproar this week when, for religious reasons, he taped over his eyes at a concert rather than watching women dance in front of the stage:
Hallelujah Nafshenu Hiktah Poteah Lev Ivdu et ha-Shem be-Simha
Noah Efron, Don Futterman, Ha’aretz International Director Charlotte Hallé, and and ARZA President Josh Weinberg are live in Boston to discuss three topics of incomparable importance.
Looking for the patron-supported extra segments? Find them on Patreon.
It Happens in the Best of Families
What can be done to allow American Jews to identify with a state whose leaders break deals with them, accuse them of living soft and convenient lives, and disparage them in a variety of ways?
If I Don't Recognize You, O Jerusalem
What fears and hopes are sparked by Trump's decision to recognize Jerusalem as Israel's capital city?
What Do and Don't Demonstrations Do?
What do demonstrations do? What have demonstrations done? Must we admit that they may have become an empty ritual?
All this live at the fabulous Union for Reform Judaism Biennial, through the largesse of the Association of Reform Zionists in America and J-Street, plus the brilliant music of young jazz sensation Lior Tzemach.
Noah, Gilad Halpern, host of TLV1’s Tel Aviv Review and Miriam Herschlag, Times of Israel Ops & Blogs Editor discuss three topics of incomparable importance and end with an anecdote about something in Israel that made them smile this week.
Looking for the extra segments? Access them by becoming a patron of the show. Learn more on Patreon.
Why Oh Why Won’t You Try Me? An IDF officer and spokesperson for human rights NGO Breaking the Silence demanding to be prosecuted for beating a Palestinian man, only to find that the State Attorney’s Office insists he is innocent.
The Revolution Won’t Be Televised A proposed amendment to the elections advertising law that will do away with government sponsored free TV spots during election campaigns, but is it too early to eulogize the place of television in electoral politics?
Bewarebnb Airbnb is driving up rent in Tel Aviv and driving out folks who desperately want to live there. Should we prefer hip German tourists over our own (also hip) college kids who just want to live in the big city?
All this and the soulful music of Toot Ard, in celebration of their great new record, Lassez Passer!
If you wish to attend our live show at the Boston URJ Biennial conference you must fill out this form by this Sunday, Nov. 26th!
Noah Efron, Don Futterman, and Ha’aretz International Director Charlotte Halle discuss three topics of incomparable importance and end with an anecdote about something in Israel that made them smile this week.
Help support the show. Learn how on Patreon.
Take From Us Our Tired, Our Poor, Our Huddled Masses Yearning to Breathe Free
Israel contemplates paying $8,500 a head for African asylum seekers to leave for Rwanda. Is this solving a thorny problem, or indulging an ugly xenophobia?
Losing Our Religion?
Has Israel’s left “forgotten what it means to be Jews,” as the new head of the Labor Party says?
The End of the Zooish People?
Tel Aviv is closing all its zoos and petting zoos, because they are inhumane and harmful to animals. But isn’t something crucial lost when kids grow up seeing no animals besides dogs, cats, pigeons and rats?
Music by Avior Malasa, off his new, eponymous debut album: Kaitz Matzanu Ahava Makom Leshinui (with Noa Kirel) Baleilot
Noah Efron, Don Futterman, and roving reporter extraordinaire Naomi Zeveloff discuss three topics of incomparable importance and end with an anecdote about something in Israel that made them smile this week.
Help support the show. Learn how on Patreon.
Unscrewed Why do members of Israel's secular and Mizrahi right not seem to feel the sense of grievance often attributed to them, and why do relatively well-off liberal-left voters feel they are subject to discrimination?
Expatriotism What is the Israeli-American Council? Why does it exist? And what is its impact on American Jewry and on Israel?
Between a Rock and a Hard-On: Israeli Women and the Patriarchy Amid ongoing revelations about powerful men committing harassment, abuse, and assault against women, we ask what this moment means, and also ask, particularly in the context of Israel, what can and must be done?
Music: Oshrat Masala, in celebration of Sigd! Kamah Ra’ash Awaki Al Tevater Tavoi Ahava
Noah Efron, Don Futterman, and Times of Israel Ops & Blogs Editor Miriam Herschlag discuss three topics of incomparable importance and end with an anecdote about something in Israel that made them smile this week.
Help support the show. Learn how on Patreon.
Body Politic Five Islamic Jihad militants were killed when the tunnel they burrowed to attack an Israeli kibbutz was destroyed. Should Israel immediately return the bodies, or use them as a "bargaining chip" to barter the return of the bodies of Israeli soldiers held by Hamas?
Refugee Repatriation Expectation: Acceleration to Reconciliation or Mummification of Negotiation? As Israel considers what a peace deal would look like, the debate continues about whether or not the descendants of Palestinians dispossessed of homes and lands in 1948 should be allowed to return.
On the Road to Perdition with Waze The Israeli-designed community-based traffic and navigation app Waze is one of the so-called start-up nation’s biggest success stories. But could Waze be harming our environment and our democracy?
Music Salsa-ish songs by Rotem Cohen, because sometimes only a Karaite pop star will do! Palavra Kol Kach Yafah Lach Ecoute Cheri (with Maggi Azarzar) Kimat She-Hitragalti
Noah Efron, Tel Aviv Review host Gilad Halpern, and Ha’aretz International Director Charlotte Hallé discuss the centennial of the Balfour Declaration which was controversial then and remains so today, the assertion of some leaders of Meretz that the party is no longer Zionist, and a Supreme Court ruling allowing stores to stay open on the Sabbath.
Help support the show. Learn how on Patreon.
Balfour’s Declaration, Jewish Celebration, and Palestinian Vexation: An Evaluation It is the centennial of the Balfour Declaration, affirming the right of Jews to a “national home” in Palestine. It was controversial then, and remains so today. What should we make of it?
Meretz: Same Great Party – Now, with Less Zionism! Leaders of the long-time standard-bearer for Israel’s liberal, Zionist left – Meretz – say their party is no longer Zionist. Is it time to retire the “Z Word”?
The Sabbath: Day of Unrest Israel’s Supreme Court says stores should stay open in Tel Aviv on the Sabbath. Some say they struck a blow for freedom. Some say, workers deserve a day off. Some say, God is a higher authority. Whose right?
Music: Jeremy Cool Habash, the remarkable rap artist, activist and educator Na’arot Ha-Halomot (with the Afula Group) Shir Ha-Emunah (with the Sderot Group) Vodka Limon (with the Ashdod Group) HaMoah hu Koach (with the Hadassah Group)
Noah Efron, Times of Israel Ops & Blogs Editor Miriam Herschlag, and Tel Aviv Review host Gilad Halpern discuss discuss three topics of incomparable importance and end with an anecdote about something in Israel that made them smile this week.
Help support the show. Learn how on Patreon.
Ruvi Rivlin’s Presidential Address of Existential Distress President Reuven Rivlin made a chilling start-of-the-winter-legislative-session speech to Knesset, in which he warned that Israeli democracy itself may be imperiled.
The Gift of Gabbay Avi Gabbay, the new head of the Labor Party, presumptive leader of the left, and heir not-so-apparent to Israel’s premiership, has triangulated to the right.
It’s the Patriarchy, Stupid! There’s a brouhaha over a feminist Member of Knesset who suggested that kids might be better off if there were no marriages or nuclear families.
Music: The Aprons, in honor of their newest, crowdfunded record, “Any Human Heart” Day Off Any Human Heart You Her and Me Champagne and Strawberries
Noah Efron, Don Futterman, and Ha’aretz reporter Dina Kraft discuss three topics of incomparable importance and end with an anecdote about something in Israel that made them smile this week.
Help support the show. Learn how on Patreon.
A Separate Peace The two battling Palestinian ruling parties – Hamas and Fatah – reconcile. What does it augur for Palestinians, Israelis, and other living things?
UNESCO = United Nations, Eat Sh*t & Choke On It? Trump pulls the US out of UNESCO. Netanyahu pulls Israel out of UNESCO. Good riddance or bad judgment?
Don’t be Fooled by Capitalism! Do Israel’s ultra-Orthodox have an answer to the vexations of capitalism?
Music: Yehu Yaron, all off his great new record, "Im Lo Nirkod, Lo Navin Klum" Oi Dvarim Kvedim kmo Kapara Cmo Lihiot Sameach Amur Lihiot Rach
Noah Efron, Don Futterman, and Times of Israel Ops & Blogs Editor Miriam Herschlag discuss three topics of incomparable importance and end with an anecdote about something in Israel that made them smile this week.
Looking to support the show? Learn how on Patreon.
“A Girl, and I Shoot Well!” There is a remarkable new documentary web series following three young women living in far flung parts of the occupied territories who have little in common, save that they are all passionate, articulate, beautiful, and armed settlers.
College of Corrections What should we make of a shocking new and “world’s first” proposal to allow a university to manage a prison jointly with the Israel Prison Service?
The Problem with Jewish Pride It’s a challenging claim by one of our most astute public intellectuals: the ascent of chauvinist Jewish pride is a sign that Zionism has failed.
Music: The Turkish. Gypsy genius of the Sumsum Band! Yedikule Shesh Shanim Deux Dents La Bemol
Noah Efron, Don Futterman, and roving reporter extraordinaire Naomi Zeveloff discuss three topics of incomparable importance and end with an anecdote about something in Israel that made them smile this week.
Looking to support the show? Learn how on Patreon.
Martial Mercy for Military Manslaughter? IDF Chief of Staff Gadi Eisenkot decided to reduce by 4 months the sentence of Elor Azaria, the soldier who shot dead a 21-year-old Palestinian who had minutes earlier stabbed and wounded an IDF soldier.
A Pall to Arms As protests swell over our sale of arms to the brutish generals of Burma/Myanmar, what is the morality of Israel’s weapons industry?
Museology of the Oppressed (with Apologies to Paulo Freire) There are plans to construct 20 museums in development towns, to finally acknowledge the contributions made by what was for so long regarded as “the other Israel.”
Music: Sivan Talmor! Halonot Chelsea Hotel (with Gal Nisman) 17 I’ll Be
Noah Efron, Don Futterman, and Times of Israel Ops & Blogs Editor Miriam Herschlag discuss three topics of incomparable importance and end with an anecdote about something in Israel that made them smile this week.
Looking to support the show? Learn how on Patreon.
Poll: Netanyahu is the Best PM and also a Liar who Must Resign! The first public opinion poll of the new year serves us up a mess of conflicting opinions, suggesting that the right has grown much weaker and at the same time is as strong as ever, that PM Netanyahu’s career is toast and also that it is as inevitable as a Shabbat challah, and more.
Foucault, Derrida, Shagar, the Settler Nakba, and the Future of Zionism Have young settlers rejected the nationalism of their parents, embracing instead a neo-Hasidic post-Zionism that changes their political views and aspirations?
For the Sins We Have Sinned Which of our collective sins should most occupy us on this Yom Kippur?
Music: Shuli Rand, because, you know, Yom Kippur (All off the amazing album, Nekudah Tovah): Sgula Ma Hatachlit Arafel Ayeka
Noah Efron, Don Futterman, and roving Middle East reporter extraordinaire Naomi Zeveloff discuss three topics of incomparable importance and end with an anecdote about something in Israel that made them smile this week.
Looking to support the show? Learn how on Patreon.
Serving God and Country The Supreme Court has rejected the government’s present policy of (effectively) allowing mass exemptions from army service to Haredi, or ultra-Orthodox, kids as unconstitutional and discriminatory.
The De-Malling of Israel Malls in Israel have been deserted and are collapsing: is this is a harbinger of the de-Amerification of Israeli culture?
5777 We review the most percussive and important events and people of the year that ends this week, 5777.
Music: Eti Ankri, ringing in the New Year with spirit: Et ha-Kol Be-Chol Libi Ha-Nigun Shelcha Sharach Bat Asher
Noah Efron, Don Futterman, and International Director of Ha’aretz Charlotte Hallé discuss three topics of incomparable importance and end with an anecdote about something in Israel that made them smile this week.
Looking to support the show? Learn how on Patreon.
Keeping Up With the Netanyahus (or, Reality Bites) The first family is full of reality-TV foibles as lady Sara Netanyahu faces indictment for stealing government monies and first son Yair Netanyahu posts on Facebook an ickily anti-Semitic meme. Should the Prime Minister pay a political price for the zany malefactions of his family?
The Likud is Not a Body that Needs Democracy? The Young Turk “New Likudniks” are trying to take over the party and move it leftward: is that o.k.?
Animal Politics Why does the struggle for animal rights and animal liberation resonate so strongly with so many Israelis?
Music: Alma Zohar, in honor of her moving performance at the big animal march after this past Shabbat. Kol Yom Osher Gadol Etze el ha-Sadeh Yeled Yafeh
Noah Efron, Don Futterman, and Times of Israel Ops & Blogs editor Miriam Herschlag discuss three topics of incomparable importance and end with an anecdote about something in Israel that made them smile this week.
Looking to support the show? Learn how on Patreon.
Nabi Saleh, 1:15 a.m. Al Jazeera published a video of IDF soldiers searching a West Bank Palestinian home. What, if anything, can we learn from it about the nature of the occupation and the Palestinian-Israeli conflict?
Paper Trail (or in the Gloam with Yisrael Ha-Yom) There was a shocking disclosure that Prime Minister Netanyahu conversed lots with the owner and editor of Israel’s biggest newspaper, the free daily Yisrael Ha-Yom, before elections and many other important news events. Could this possibly be kosher?
From Sex Industry to Ex-Industry? The courts and the Knesset have recently moved to squelch the sex industry: is this blessed feminism or cursed puritanism?
Music: Daphna Recter Ha-Shir Al Ha-aretz Elohimim Yom Tov Thank You, with Tal Ne’eman
Noah Efron, Don Futterman, and Times of Israel Ops & Blogs editor Miriam Herschlag discuss three topics of incomparable importance and end with an anecdote about something in Israel that made them smile this week.
Looking to support the show? Learn how on Patreon.
A Protest Stressed, Compressed, and Messed, all at the Supreme Court’s Behest There’s a brouhaha over whether, when and where protestors can demonstrate against the putative corruption of PM Netanyahu.
Grading Israel’s Schools, or Scientia potentia est? A new Ministry of Education website contains all imaginable data about Israel’s schools; but could this be too much information?
Dezionizing the Skies? There’s a hubbub around the suggestion that Israel needs to change the name of our airport, because some Palestinian citizens see Ben Gurion as an author of their people’s miseries.
Music: Apo & the Apostles, in honor of their return from their European tour, and their show next week at Sultan’s Pool in J-lem. Animaly Baji Wenek My Name is Hanna Stand By Me
Noah, The Tel Aviv Review’s Dahlia Scheindlin, and roving freelance journalist Naomi Zeveloff discuss three topics of incomparable importance and end with an anecdote about something in Israel that made them smile this week.
Looking to support the show? Learn how on Patreon.
Making War Prime Minister Netanyahu attempts to reduce the number of government ministers who must approve a declaration of war, which some see as Strangelovean megalomania.
Lanyard, Color War and Rocket Propelled Grenades: The Things I Learned at Camp New “camps” for tourists that teach firearms, explosives and other deadly arts are popping up in Israel. What are we to make of them?
Alternative Facts about Trees and Shrubs There is a surprisingly vicious debate over trees and shade taking place over who ought to decide what to plant, when, and where.
Music: All songs from Ha-Tishma Koli (גלגלצ במחווה לאלבום ״החלונות הגבוהים״) Kol ha-Shavua Lakh, Eliad Zemer Noga (Ha-Tishma Koli), Dana Spector and Alon Geva Ahavah Rishonah, Dikla Eifo Hem Kol Avoteinu, Yishai Ribo
Noah, host of TLV1’s The Tel Aviv Review Gilad Halpern, and Times of Israel Ops & Blogs editor Miriam Herschlag discuss three topics of incomparable importance and end with an anecdote about something in Israel that made them smile this week.
Looking to support the show? Learn how on Patreon.
How Much is Too Much Corruption? There are corruption charges against Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu: how seriously should we take them?
Summer of Godlessness Over the summer, parents’ groups formed across the country aiming to keep religion out of their kids’ schools.
Charlottesville and Jerusalem Do Israelis, as Israelis, have any special responsibility to act or any message to deliver about the Nazi narishkeit in Charlottesville and the White House?
Music: Chen Levy, in honor of her forthcoming debut record “Chen Levy,” who is having a gala pre-release show next week at Levontin 7: On the Sunny Side of the Street Down With It Hide and Seek All of Me
Allison, Noah, and host of TLV1’s The Tel Aviv Review Gilad Halpern discuss three topics of incomparable importance and end with an anecdote about something in Israel that made them smile this week.
Looking to support the show? Learn how on Patreon.
Yair in the Middle Prime Minister candidate Yair Lapid argues that centrism is the new black with a middle-of-the-road, moderation-in-all-things centrist manifesto.
Psychiatric Chic Two weird-ass initiatives aim to de-stigmatize mental illness, but probably say more about our anxieties about it than about our open-mindedness towards it.
Women of Influence What does the Forbes list of the fifty most influential Israeli women say about the state of gender, sex, and sexism in 2017?
Music: All songs by Yishai Ribo ‘Im Nin’alu Kol Dodi Ha-Nisayon Ha-Zeh Gam Ki-Elekh
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Allison, Noah, and host of TLV1’s The Tel Aviv Review Gilad Halpern discuss three topics of incomparable importance and end with an anecdote about something in Israel that made them smile this week.
Netanyahu’s Trump Card Benjamin Netanyahu has borrowed the war against “Fake News.” Are Israelis buying the idea of a media conspiracy against the Prime Minister and all that is sacred and pure?
Water Bottles Everywhere, and Not a Drop to Drink Drinking fountains have disappeared from Israel’s cities. Does this have to do with the gears of capitalism being greased with the blood of the workers?
When the Bands Stopped Playing Why have bands vanished from Israel’s hit parades, replaced by solo singers?
Music: Yuar (Arina Popova and Yury Poisik), from their EP Signal, marking the free show they’re doing this week at The Container in the Jaffa port: Perfect Miracle Song about You Superlove
Don, Noah, and Times of Israel Ops & Blogs editor Miriam Hershlag discuss three topics of incomparable importance and end with an anecdote about something in Israel that made them smile this week.
Sacred Sites, Fights, and Plights Frightful tensions are mounting over the Temple Mount/Haram al Sharif: are we teetering at the edge of religious war?
Moving Up? New research finds that the path for the poor into the upper-middle class is twisty and perverse.
The Queer Thing about Israel’s LGBTQ What is it about the struggle for LGBTQ rights that especially inspires so much support and sympathy in Israel?
Music: Ground Heights, in honor of their blowout show this week at the Container in Jaffa! Aynoche Esh Feta Feta In Disguise
Don, Noah, and roving freelance journalist Naomi Zeveloff discuss three topics of incomparable importance and end with an anecdote about something in Israel that made them smile this week.
A Tale of Two ‘One Percents’ A study found that Israel has two ‘one-percents,’ an economic elite and a political elite, each screwing us in their own way.
Movin’ Pictures The radical, political ‘Cinematheque’ in Tel Aviv seems to be going mainstream, abandoning provocation for entertainment. But is that what an avant garde art emporium is for?
BDS? There’s an App for hat Now! A new government funding app is meant to encourage young people to undo BDS: it’s Facebook meets Tinder meets Pokemon Go meets Spy vs. Spy meets Hasbara. What are we to make of a thing like that?
Music: Avigail Koevary, in honor of her turning thirty, and in honor of the show in honor of her turning thirty this week at Levontin 7. Polin Mesha’amem li Hibbuk, with Amir ve-Ben Biryon
Allison, Don, and Noah discuss three topics of incomparable importance and end with an anecdote about something in Israel that made them smile this week.
From Board Room to Barricades: The Unlikely New Leader of Israel’s Left Avi Gabbay emerged from obscurity to head the Labor Party and, perforce, the Israeli Left in a shocking upset. What the hell just happened?
Praying to No God What does the surprising rise of “secular prayer” among Israeli Jews say about the state of our souls?
Jews with Javelins! The Maccabiah Games have inexplicably (but charmingly) survived the years. Like cotillions, High Table at Oxford in full medieval regalia, and Scottish weddings in kilts, the Games seem like a living time capsule.
Music: Alon Eder ve-ha- lahakah, off their newest, Ha-Shamranim Shuv ba-Ofnah Al Ta-azov Oti Mili Hayu Yamim Yafim Ha-Yom be-Yisrael
Allison, Don, and Noah discuss three topics of incomparable importance and end with an anecdote about something in Israel that made them smile this week.
New Labor? Round one of the Labor Party leadership elections left the old elites thoroughly thrashed. What does the future hold for the Left now?
The Broken Man who Broke Israeli Politics It was a sad spectacle to see a diminished Ehud Olmert, the first Prime Minister convicted of a felony, being released from jail. Is he partly responsible for our cynicism about politicians?
Offshore Palestinians It’s a fantabulous utopian idea: building a high-tech, artificial island of Gaza with an airport, seaport, power plant, desalination center, and more. Will this solve Gaza’s humanitarian crisis?
Music: Hanan Ben-Ari, in honor of his forthcoming album, which we’re hearing bit by bit. Wikipedia Todah She-At Tutim Simu lev
Noah, Don, and Times of Israel Ops & Blogs Editor Miriam Herschlag discuss three topics of incomparable importance and end with an anecdote about something in Israel that made them smile this week.
We Got the Power Palestinian President Mahmoud Abbas demanded that Israel reduce the electricity it transfers to Gaza by almost half, leaving hospitals there unsure if can keep their ventilators going. Israel acquiesced. The move may weaken Hamas, but can such a thing possibly be justified?
Covering the Dead Do we pay too much attention to the tragic victims of terrorist attacks, at the expense of other things to which we ought to also be giving our consideration?
Pile of Stones The dispute continues over egalitarian prayer at the Western Wall, following the government’s decision not to implement its earlier decision to build a section at the Wall for liberal Jews to pray and slip their own notes to God between the stones. Should progressive Jews care about the wall, anyway?
All songs by Lior Perla, in honor of his new single, Al Telkhi Al Telkhi Shoom Davar Ve’im Gam Amarti (with Ido Mosseri) Ha-Lev ha-Zeh
Noah, Don and Allison discuss three topics of incomparable importance and end with an anecdote about something in Israel that made them smile this week.
Primum non nocere? Medical experiments were performed on Yemeni Jewish babies and kids in the early 1950s. What does this awful news tell us about ourselves and what should we do about it now?
Uppity Americans? American Jewish activists are organizing and taking direct political action in Israel, but some Israeli Leftists think that these foreigners may be getting too big for their britches.
A Cabinet of Experts There is a proposal to install “experts” instead of politicians as key cabinet ministers.
All songs by Miriam Tukan, off her EP, which, in an amazing coincidence, is also named Miriam Toukan! Tziltzulay Pa’amonim Sodkha We Are Young (Fun Cover), Featuring SAZ نحن جيل الشباب Mawal
Noah, Don and Allison (joined by uber-researcher to the stars, Amit Ashkenazi) discuss three topics of incomparable importance and end with an anecdote about something in Israel that made them smile this week.
Is the Man Israel Needs a Moroccan, Ultra-Orthodox Woman? The only female candidate to head the Labor Party is Dina Dayan, an ultra-Orthodox woman from the nether reaches of the Negev Desert. In a socko election ad, she attacked the party she aims to lead as racist and out-of-touch. Is she the future of the Israeli Left?
Will Politics be on the Midterm? A "Code of Ethics" for college and university teachers is being advanced by the Minister of Education. It aims to keep teachers from talking politics in the classroom, but is being decried by the professoriate as an attack on democracy.
Babies for LGBTQ Folk? Nyet!Was Israel was wrong to acquiesce to Russia's diktat that babies adopted from there not got to LGBTQ folks?
All songs by KGC (Kiryat Gat City) Le-Khol Sof Yom Yavo Avesha Sheli Adon kol ha-Briot, with Dani Almio
Noah, Don and Allison discuss three topics of incomparable importance and end with an anecdote about something in Israel that made them smile this week.
Climate Change and the Jewish Question: We’ll Always Have Paris? We discuss whether climate change is a danger to Israel’s very existence, and whether America’s withdrawal from the Paris Accord is a blow to Israel’s security.
Anthologizing the Occupation? We mull over the new “Breaking the Silence” anthology of essays about the occupation, edited by Michael Chabon and Ayelet Waldman. What results might this politics-by-literature approach produce?
Waiting for Gadot We ask whether the widespread fascination with Wonder Woman Gal Gadot’s IDF past and Israeli identity reflects some strange and unnerving psycho-sexual fetishization of Israeli Jewesses and power (Did we go to graduate school, or what?).
Music: Sivan Kanzucker Esrim Sheniot Hilazon Hinei Bah Shape of You – Ed Sheeran Cover
Noah, Don and Allison discuss three topics of incomparable importance and end with an anecdote about something in Israel that made them smile this week.
That War
We discuss how we ought to regard the momentous Six Day War, the fiftieth anniversary of which we mark this week.
MK = Meager Kapabilities?
We mull over a survey raising questions about how effective Members of Knesset are.
University Diversity Perversity?
We ask whether universities ought to provide sex-segregated courses to ultra-Orthodox students, and prohibit female professors from teaching religious males.
Music: Leora Yitzhak and friends (with thanks to Seffi Kogan!) Ma’alah, Ma’alah Emperia (with Hadar Shemueli-Zagori) Shenei Shoshanim (with Marsh Dundurma) Save Me (with Parakit)
Noah, Don and Times of Tel Aviv Review founder and co-host Gilad Halpern discuss three topics of incomparable importance and end with an anecdote about something in Israel that made them smile this week.
Donald Does the Holy Land!
We discuss President Donald Trump’s visit to Israel and the Palestinian Authority, and what it augurs for peace in the region.
Road Trip!
We mull over Why the Zionist Union decided to take a road trip in the occupied territories, and why some of its most popular MKs boycotted the excursion.
If I Don’t Press Thee, O’ Jerusalem, or The Dress!
We ponder the “Jerusalem Dress” that Culture Minister Miri Regev wore on the Red Carpet in Cannes, and why it broke the internet (hint: misogyny may be partly to blame).
Music: Aya Zahavi-Feiglin, in honor of her new EP, America, that just dropped this week! Sport My Dog Eifoh ha-Zahav Februar
Noah, Don and Times of Israel Ops & Blogs Editor Miriam Herschlag discuss three topics of incomparable importance and end with an anecdote about something in Israel that made them smile this week.
Breaking News: Ehud Barak Admits He’s Been Right All Along!
We discuss Former Prime Minister Ehud Barak’s book-review-cum-manifesto about why the Left is right and the Right is wrong.
Not that Conversion
We mull over icky and dangerous “conversion therapy” being offered by ultra-Orthodox therapists for men who wish to stop being attracted to other men.
Eurovisionaries
We ponder why Israelis are gaga over the cheesy, trashy, irresistible Eurovision song contest!
Songs: Israeli Eurovision Hits and Misses!
Izhar Cohen & Alpha Beta, A-ba-ni-bi (1978), Gali Atari & Milk & Honey, Hallelujah (1979) Dana International, Diva (1998) Teapacks, Push the Button (2007)
Noah, Don and Times of Israel Ops & Blogs Editor Miriam Herschlag discuss three topics of incomparable importance and end with an anecdote about something in Israel that made them smile this week.
Palestinians and Peace in the Age of Trump
We discuss the quick and remarkable developments in Palestinian diplomacy, with Pres. Abbas coming away optimistic from his meeting with US President Trump, Hamas suggesting they’re ready for territorial compromise and, in the background, a thousand Palestinian prisoners continuing their hunger strike: What does it all mean?
The High Cost of God
We mull over a commissioned study finds that Israel spends almost 9 billion NIS a year on religion: Is that an outrageous sum, a reasonable sum, or something in between?
The Lasting Legacy of the Likud
We ponder on the fortieth anniversary of Menachem Begin and the Likud winning leadership of the country for the first time, what is the lasting legacy of the Likud?
Songs by Skin Blues, in honor of their show this week at Levontin 7, launching a new album after an 18-year breakup-spurred hiatus. Welcome back!
Faradasi (פארדסי) Keltish Sheryl Crowe Down Hill She Jumps
Allison, Don and Noah discuss three topics of incomparable importance and end with an anecdote about something in Israel that made them smile this week.
Labor’s Battle Royal
We discuss the nine (!) candidates to head the Labor Party: what kind of leader does the left need now, and what sort of platform should she or he advance?
Living Together and Apart
We mull over a poll finding that almost three quarters of Palestinian Israelis do not want Jews living in their neighborhoods, and more than two-thirds of Israeli Jews do not want Palestinians living in their neighborhoods. What’s this say about the possibility and wisdom of greater integration?
IDF = In a Dither about Feminism?
We ponder the IDF’s lamentable decision to cancel a workshop on feminist theory for top ranking female officers, on the grounds that feminism is political and divisive.
Songs by Segol 59 & Ami Yares, in tribute to the Grateful Dead, off The Promised Land: The Jerry Garcia Hebrew Project:
Friend Of The Devil חבר של השטן Bertha נטע Me & My Uncle אני והדוד שלי I Know You Rider אני יודע
This episode of The Promised Podcast is sponsored by:
The Dreyfus Affair Apr 27 — May 7, 2017 Special pricing for listeners Visit RomanticCentury.org and use code 68857 Or call 718-636-4100 and mention code 68857
Allison, Noah and Don observe Memorial Day and celebrate Independence Day by discussing three topics of incomparable importance and end with an anecdote about something in Israel that made them smile this week.
Sorrow, Loss & Politics (13:58)
We discuss the complicated place of bereaved families in Israeli political discourse, where they are undisparagable disparagers.
69 Years (28:01)
We engage in a thought experiment about what two immigrants to Israel in 1948, a mother from Meknes and a survivor from Prague, would think about Israel today, if they could see it.
“And To the Glory of the State of Israel!” (41:36)
We ask who we would choose to light the traditional twelve torches marking the start of Independence Day and symbolizing what is best about this remarkable country.
Songs for Yom Haatzmaut!:
Zemer Nogah, performed by Shoshana Damari and Yoav Yizhak Shalom Lach Eretz Nehederet, performed by Sheigitz Hakhi Yisraeli, written and performed by Hatikvah 6 Barukh ha-Ba le-Yisrael, written and performed by Sarit Hadad
This episode of The Promised Podcast is sponsored by:
The Dreyfus Affair Apr 27 — May 7, 2017 Special pricing for listeners Visit RomanticCentury.org and use code 68857 Or call 718-636-4100 and mention code 68857
Allison, Don and Noah discuss three topics of incomparable importance and end with an anecdote about something in Israel that made them smile this week.
L’Affair Barghouti: The Times, They are Retracting
We discuss the convicted terrorist and likely-future Palestinian President Marwan Barghouti, the hunger strike he’s leading, and the rage over his op-ed in the New York Times.
Fighting the Good Fight Against the Bad Global Right
We mull over an analysis by the Israeli left’s most universally-respected leader – Dov Khenin – about how to fight the global right (and Israel’s).
Not Our Holocaust Day
We ask why Ultra-Orthodox Israelis ignore, and sometimes mock, Holocaust and Heroism Remembrance Day.
Music Tamar & Netanel, off their album Peace of Mind:
Niggun The Sun Once, Early in the Morning Farewell Song
Allison, Noah and Tel Aviv Review co-host, political scientist and pollster Dahlia Scheindlin discuss three topics of incomparable importance and end with an anecdote about something in Israel that made them smile this week.
Peace Train
We discuss the Minister of Transportation’s ambitious plans to build a vast network of trains connecting Israel with Jordan, Saudi Arabia and the Persian Gulf States.
Ranking and Rating Representatives
We mull over an NGO’s “Social Index” ranking of Members of Knesset according to their social conscience – does it really advance socially-aware politics?
The Serious Politics of Funny
We ask whether or not political satire – which is enjoying a golden age – has any political impact at all.
Music by Haya Miller:
Esrim Shannah (עשרים שנה) Hayei Madaf (חיי מדף) Yod (י) Lo Rokedet ke-she Af Ehad Lo Mistakel (לא רוקדת כשאף אחד לא מסתכל)
Allison, Noah and Tel Aviv Review co-host Gilad Halpern discuss three topics of incomparable importance and end with an anecdote about something in Israel that made them smile this week.
Press, under Stress and Duress
We discuss the controversy over public broadcasting that just almost toppled the government.
A Settlement for the New Millennium
We mull over the cabinet’s decision to build the first new settlement of this millennium, hot on the heels of the Arab League’s affirmation of a two-state solution and U.S. President Trump’s dictate to refrain from building in the territories.
Still Leaving Egypt, After All these Years
We ask what might Passover, the most political of all holidays, tell us about how to seek our own modern-day redemption?
Music by Songs of Freedom by various and sundry, in celebration of Passover, the holiday of freedom!:
Karizmo and Berko, “Hofesh” Doron Madali, “Hofesh” Ido B & Zooki & Franklin, “Daver Iti Hofesh” Shlomo Gronich, “Hofesh ad ha-Katzeh”
Allison, Don and Noah discuss three topics of incomparable importance and end with an anecdote about something in Israel that made them smile this week.
BDS and the Rat Bastard Conundrum
We discuss how the right uses the left’s defense of the free-speech rights of BDS’ers as a cudgel and what, if anything, can be done about this.
Secrets of Israel’s High-Tech Boom, Revealed!
We mull over Minister of Education Naftali Bennett’s explanation in the Wall Street Journal of Israel’s high tech success: Why are we so damn good at start-ups?
What’s Wrong with Kiryat Gat? Why Do Sephardim Vote for the Right?
We ask why Mizrahim/Sephardim keep voting for the right.
Music by Nahum Silverman who just dropped a new record and put the 33 albums he’s recorded over the past 19 years on sale in a digital boxed set on Bandcamp!:
UlLe-Ehovai Achshav Ani Motek Heart of Gold Lech ad ha-sof
Allison, Don and Noah discuss three topics of incomparable importance and end with an anecdote about something in Israel that made them smile this week.
The Primacy of Primaries
As elections are in the air, we ask: Should parties like liberal leftist Meretz chose their candidates through “open primaries,” or will that just rouse the rabble?
Does Feminism have Room for Zionism?: Reflections on l’Affaire de’Sarsou
We discuss whether or not there’s anything to the claim that, in 2017, feminism and Zionism don’t fit together as easily as we might hope.
The People of the Book, Those Elitist F*cks!
We mull over the proud admission of a right-wing MK that he hasn’t read a book in ten years, mofos, and whether anti-intellectualism is the new black.
Music by Katrix and Doron Biton:
Ulai Chofshiah Ohevet Lirkod Davka Ito (with Sagi Beatbox)
Allison, Don and Noah discuss three topics of incomparable importance and end with an anecdote about something in Israel that made them smile this week.
Right and Wrong
We discuss the debate over whether Israel should forge ties with far right leaders in Europe, now that they are growing in power and (mostly) denouncing antisemitism.
You Gotta Ac-Cent-Tchu-Ate the Positive, E-Lim-inate the Negative!
We mull over an expensive new project led by a former Minister of Education and two former IDF Chiefs of Staff, aiming to overcome the divisions in Israeli society.
God is a Feminist Issue!
We deliberate about mind-blowing new research finding that the more religious a Jewish woman is, the better her body image is likely to be.
Music by Mo’adon ha-Ketzev shel Avihu Pinhasov:
Yamin Yafim Dvash Malchut Matzilah Oti Neshama, Kapara, Mammi
Allison, Don and Noah discuss three topics of incomparable importance and end with an anecdote about something in Israel that made them smile this week.
Shriveling Settlements?
We discuss the shocking, but seemingly true, suggestion that the settlements are shrinking, not growing and failing, not succeeding.
The Shunning!
We mull over the Supreme Court’s sanction of the literally medieval punishment of “shunning” scumbags who refuse to grant their wives divorces.
Picturing a Jewish State
We ask what made David Rubinger’s famous photograph of paratroopers at the newly captured Wailing Wall “iconic”? Could there be such iconic photos today, or have we lost the social unity needed to all be moved by a single image?
Music by Eric Berman, mostly off his newest, Ahava ve-Elohim Acherim:
Aesthetica subyektivit be-re’i ha-meyah ha-21 Simla tabaat vemaher At lo maspik yafah Lama Ata Lemata
Allison, Don and Noah discuss three topics of incomparable importance and end with an anecdote about something in Israel that made them smile this week.
Courting Change
We discuss the four new Supreme Court Justices, and whether together they add up to a “conservative Judicial revolution.”
Peace in Just Ten Easy Steps!
We mull over Opposition Leader Yitzhak Herzog’s new “Ten Point Peace Plan,” that calls for a decade-long cooling off period before negotiations begin.
From Tots to Patriots
We deliberate about the continuing efforts of the Ministry of Education and the Jerusalem Municipality to turn city kindergarten tots into flag-waving patriots.
Music Amir ve-Ben, in gratitude for rocking the Tel Aviv Marathon!
Avodah Ba-Eynayim Bar be-Yaffo Hibbuk (with Avigail Koevary) Halamti
Allison, Noah and Don discuss three topics of incomparable importance and end with an anecdote about something in Israel that made them smile this week.
Eighteen Months
We discuss the sentence meted out to Alor Azaria, the combat medic who shot knife-assailant Adel Fattah al-Sharif dead while he lay prone; some are outraged he’s going to prison, others are outraged he’s going to prison for only a year and a half.
The Least Anti-Semitic Person You’ve Ever Seen & the Jewish Question
We mull over PM Netanyahu’s award of a “Jew Housekeeping Seal of Approval” to Pres. Trump, certifying him as antisemitism-free; was he just doing his job or was he derelicting his duty?
Wind-Down Nation?
A new report finding that Israel’s vaunted scientific talents are fading before our eyes. We ask, what can be done?
Music by Noa Eder: Beseder Flowers Nemalim Bo Iti
Allison, Noah and Times of Israel Ops & Blogs Editor Miriam Herschlag discuss three topics of incomparable importance and end with an anecdote about something in Israel that made them smile this week.
Two States, One State, Whatever
We discuss Prime Minister Netanyahu’s meetings in Washington with U.S. President Donald Trump, and what the hell they mean for Israelis, Palestinians, American Jews and other living things.
Bitcoins, the Holocaust & Psoriasis: Israel’s New Lobbyists
We mull over the the 64% increase in the number of lobbyists in the Knesset in just the last year, and their impact on Israeli democracy.
Ultra-Ortholopolis The City of Tomorrow, Today!
A long-term policy of building new Ultra-Orthodox cities to solve the Haredi housing crisis has reversed; from now on, its neighborhoods in cities already on the map. We ask, is this good news?
Music by Ron and the Red Beans, in honor of their show on Saturday at The Container in Jaffa: C’est Si Bon Mardi Gras Mambo Me, Myself and I I Want to Be Like You
Allison, Noah and Tel Aviv Review Host Gilad Halpern discuss three topics of incomparable importance and end with an anecdote about something in Israel that made them smile this week.
This Land Is Your Land, This Land is My Land (An Expropriation Meditation)
We discuss the bill approved by the Knesset this week that allows the expropriation of privately-owned land in the occupied territories, and the end-of-days public debate that ensued.
Playing with Fire
We mull over the firing of a rocket from Gaza towards a Jewish town and the pounding IDF response that was meant to be a warning but might nudge us to a war that nobody seems to want.
The Pious Floozies of the IDF
A viral cartoon aimed at persuading religious women to opt out of army service to avoid boredom, ennui and sexual harassment. Practically everyone attacked the cartoon’s producers. But we ask, do they sorta have a point kinda maybe?
Music by Static and Ben-El Tavori: Zahav Kvish ha-Hof Silsulim Stahm
Allison, Don & Noah discuss three topics of incomparable importance and end with an anecdote about something in Israel that made them smile this week.
Alt-Zionism
We discuss White-Supremacist claims that their dreams of an “ethno-state” is “very similar to the idea of Zionism,” and why lots of folks on the right and the left seem to agree, leading us to wonder if it is time to slit our wrists.
Schools, Cool & Uncool: An Education Rumination
We mull over what should be done when parents band together to build their own school, with its own ideology, and then ask the taxpayers to foot the bill.
The curious incident of the weed vaped in the night-time
We ask whether the weird political coalition that supports decriminalization of pot hints that maybe we don’t really understand Israeli politics after all.
Music by Yair Levi, who just crowdfunded his first album, and these are the very first fruit!
Ten Li (with Anat Malamud) Menagen (with Arcady Duchin) Emunah Shuv Linshom
Allison, Don & Noah discuss three topics of incomparable importance and end with an anecdote about something in Israel that made them smile this week.
Heart & Home
We discuss the tragic events at the Bedouin Village of Umm Al-Hiran, leaving two dead and dozens dispossessed of their homes.
“Reports of our Death are Greatly Exaggerated” (With apologies to Mark Twain)
We mull over the surprisingly growing popularity of Israel’s center left, and what it might mean if PM Netanyahu is forced to resign under accusations of corruption.
Crass Combat Couture
We ask about t-shirts printed up for fun by IDF soldiers displaying all sorts of sexist and bigoted images. Are these silk-screened sleazeries just harmless fun, or are they little cotton agents of patriarchy and racism?
All songs by Malca Baya (for a summer interlude in the dead of winter) Im At Ba-Inyan Chai Lo Be-Lahatz Kama Ham Stav
Allison, Don & Noah discuss three topics of incomparable importance and end with an anecdote about something in Israel that made them smile this week.
Cubans, Champaign and Bringing Bibi Down
We ask whether or not we should take to the streets to demand the resignation of PM Netanyahu, as evidence of influence peddling accumulates.
Should We Stop Worrying and Learn to Love Lieberman?
We mull over the strange fact that the strongest advocate of the Two-State Solution in the governing coalition is former hard-line Defense Minister Avigdor Lieberman; but does he mean what we mean when he says “Two State Solution”?
It is Good to Drink for our Country!
We discuss a recent exposure of low-level debauchery in Israeli youth movements, and why generally wholesome youth groups are, in fact, thriving here.
All songs by Meir Banai (with sadness in our hearts, on his much too-soon passing): U’veneihem Ahava Ketzarah Be-Shem Ha-Ahavah Lecha Eli
Allison, Don & Noah discuss three topics of incomparable importance and end with an anecdote about something in Israel that made them smile this week.
Killer-Hero-Scapegoat?
We discuss the furor over the manslaughter conviction of Sgt. Elor Azaria, for shooting in the head a subdued stabber in Hebron.
TEDs
We mull over a new effort by settlers to present themselves in a more sophisticated way, using TED-ish talks.
Yiddishkeit, that Trojan Horse!
We ask whether or not the claim by an important intellectual, journalist and leftist political analyst that Israel’s left cannot win its political battles because it has conceded it's cultural battles to the right, has anything to it.
All songs by The Ultras: Boker Tov Ein li et ha-ometz Ba-leilot levad Ba li
Allison Kaplan Sommer sits down for a conversation with decorated journalist Dahlia Lithwick about Trumpism, American Jewry's relationship to Israel, and Axe body spray.
Allison, Don & Noah discuss three topics of incomparable importance and end with an anecdote about something in Israel that made them smile this week.
The Unsettling Cost of Unsettling
We discuss the Government’s decision to spend 130 million shekels to resettle 42 settler families from an illegal outpost.
If he wasn’t good, he wouldn’t be rich, right?
We mull over the recent entry of businessmen into Israeli politics (especially on the left) and their claim that only they can drain the swamp in Jerusalem.
Social Change? There’s an App for that Now
We ask whether or not a new app designed by an NGO to improve public transportation is a good way to bring about political change.
All songs by Yossi Elephant:
Susan Yam Ha’ahava Rechov 60 Helem Kerakh
Allison, Don & Noah discuss three topics of incomparable importance and end with an anecdote about something in Israel that made them smile this week.
And as a Parting Gift: UN Security Council Resolution 2334
We discuss UN Security Council Resolution 2334, calling Israeli settlements illegal, and America’s failure to scuttle it, and the righteous apoplexy of Israel’s official response.
The Donalds (Futterman and Trump) Agree: Jerusalem is the Eternal Capital of the Jewish People
We recount Don’s shocking assertion that he agrees with US President-Elect Donald Trump: the American Embassy should be moved to Jerusalem – are we in some sort of political bizzaro world?
We Dreamt We were Farmers
We mull over the government’s decision to prop up agriculture with tax payer shekels, and why we should grow stuff at home that is cheaper to import.
All songs by Regel Sabres!: Amud Shidra Chalul Cochav Ba-Shemesh shel Natanya
Allison, Don & Noah discuss three topics of incomparable importance and end with an anecdote about something in Israel that made them smile this week.
675 Kilometers North
We mull over the human tragedy of Aleppo, and what Israelis are saying (or not saying) and doing (or not doing) about it.
You can choose your friends, but you can’t choose your ambassador!
We ask how we should regard David Friedman, President-Elect Donald Trump’s nominee for ambassador to Israel, who supports the occupation, opposes a two-state solution, and has called leftists “worse than Kapos,” the poor saps forced to give a hand to the Nazis
Hem-Line Politics
We discuss the brouhaha, hullaballo and rumpus over Knesset guards denying entrance to Parliamentary aides whose dresses were judged too short; is this decorum or just a reduction ad absurdum of the patriarchy?
All songs by Shtar, Beit Shemesh’s favorite religious hip-hop sons, including Ori Murray (MC), Brad Rubinstein (guitar), Dan “Zaki” Isaac (vocals), Avi Sommers (bass) and Tzvi Solomons (percussion): Lights Gone Again Restoring My Soul (Modeh) Infinity
Allison, Noah & Times of Israel Ops & Blogs Editor Miriam Herschlag discuss three topics of incomparable importance and end with an anecdote about something in Israel that made them smile this week.
Lousy Leftists Lack Loyalty
We mull over a new poll finding that almost one in two Israeli Jews think that leftists are not loyal to Israel.
Tenured Traitors, or Professors of Perfidy
We discuss the Minister of Education’s appointment of an ethicist to write rules governing when and how professors talk politics in their college classrooms; is this censorship or civility?
Double-Crossing Double X, or The Unbearable Lightness of Cyber-Sexism and On-Line Assholery
We ask what explains the spleen and bile, vilely aimed at women, especially politicians, on the Hebrew Internet.
All songs by Eliad: Ma She-Yesh Matok Kshemarli Linshom, with Shimon Buskila
Allison, Noah & Tel Aviv Review Host Gilad Halpern discuss three topics of incomparable importance and end with an anecdote about something in Israel that made them smile this week.
Cities of Sanctity, Cities of Sin
We discuss President Reuven Rivlin’s suggestion that each city, town or neighbourhood decide for themselves how much attention to pay to religion; Is it time to let Tel Aviv be Tel Aviv and Bnai Brak be Bnai Brak?
Righteous Jews
We mull over the scuffle between the Knesset and the Yad Vashem Holocaust Memorial Museum over whether to start lionizing “Righteous Jews” who saved folks during the Holocaust alongside “Righteous Gentiles.”
Aging Alone
We ask why so many Israeli old folks are lonely, and what we ought to do about it.
All songs by Mika Sade, off her new record, Birds and Guitars: Little Things Birthday Birds and Guitars Wonderful Gifts
Allison, Don and Noah discuss three topics of incomparable importance and end with an anecdote about something in Israel that made them smile this week.
Israel is Burning
We discuss the befuddled responses of politicians and our own to the 630 fires that blazed throughout Israel last week, some of which may have been set by arsonists wishing Israel harm.
Our Identity Crisis
We ponder the most talked about post-mortem of the American election, which attributes the fall of the Democrats to “identity liberalism”; in Israel, the right seems to be employing identity politics and it ain’t working out so badly for them.
You, You, You Oughta Know: Awkward Adventures in Post-Modern Culture
We fret about Shefita, a popular Arab chanteuse and diva, who is a character created by a Jewish singer named Rotem Shefy; Is this homage? Cultural appropriation? 21st century blackface? Interdenominational drag? And is it okay or icky?
All songs by Shefita & Rotem Shefy: Pink, performed by Shefita Lithium, performed by Shefita You Oughta Know, performed by Shefita Adif She-Lo, by Rotem Shefy
Allison, Don and Noah discuss three topics of incomparable importance and end with an anecdote about something in Israel that made them smile this week.
Repealing Godwin’s Law: How Do We Know When That “Again” We Never Want to See Has Arrived?
We ask whether we owe it to our ancestors who were swallowed by the Holocaust to decry Trump, Bannon, et. al., as shoving us down the slippery slope into the territory of Never-Again, or whether we owe it to them to not besmirch their tragedy by comparing it to the world’s present political woes.
Rabbinic Baskets of Deplorables & Baskets of Rabbinic Deplorables
We reflect on how to respond to the most recent Rabbi on the government payroll to unleash inane bigotries in an interview, once we admit that the guy’s done some admirable things alongside this icky one.
Post-Mortem & Pre-Natal
We discuss our mixed feelings over the court’s decision to allow the parents of a dead naval officer to use his sperm and a surrogate to create a kid whom they will raise as their own child, though he would be their biological grandchild.
All songs by Tamir Grinberg: Something Telephone Blues I Was Made to Love Her Take a Look Around
Allison, Noah and Times of Israel Ops & Blogs Editor Miriam Herschlag discuss three topics of incomparable importance and end with an anecdote about something in Israel that made them smile this week.
The Odeum and the Odium: Israel’s National Theater Live in the Settlements!
We discuss the controversy over Israel’s national theater company, Habima, performing in the most settlement-y of all the settlements, Kiryat Arba.
Citizens Disunited: Reflections on the Rejection of Election Collections
We reflect on a new law regulating how much Israeli NGOs can spend on election campaigns, like the failed, big “dump Netanyahu” campaign of the last election.
Gimme that ol’ time consumption!
We ask whether the rest of us have something to learn from the ways that stuff is advertised to the ultra-orthodox in Israel, which lack the employment of sex, longing and insecurity to make the sale.
All songs by Ha-Peel ha-Kachol (The Blue Elephant): 24/7 Ha-Kol Yehiyeh Ugiot Tiyul
Allison, Noah and Tel Aviv Review host Gilad Halpern discuss three topics of incomparable importance and end with an anecdote about something in Israel that made them smile this week.
Lessons of the Trumpocalypse
In what may be a historic first of an entire podcast episode recorded in fetal position, we wonder what we Israeli leftists can learn from the painful, frightening and massive defeat of the American left this week at the polls.
Rabin Rousing
We discuss politicization of the annual Rabin Memorial Demonstration, a new phenomenon, and ask what these politics mean.
Beat the Press
We try to understand PM Netanyahu’s invective-filled tirade on a respected Israeli investigative journalist. He impugned her motives, her talents, her integrity and her suitability for her job.
All songs by the Panic Ensemble:
Every Night Spring in Your Heart Flying How Many Ways
Allison, Noah and Don discuss three topics of incomparable importance and end with an anecdote about something in Israel that made them smile this week.
Jailing for the "Hate Wedding"?
We ask whether the revelers at a settler wedding who were filmed waving guns, stabbing a picture of a murdered Palestinian baby, and singing incendiary songs should be prosecuted for their loathsome display, or instead simply subject to the court of public opinion. Too much political common ground?
We mull over a charge by a retired Labor Party leader to stop trying to find common ground with the right. What are the most effective levels of partisanship and partnership today?
Our daughters: The state of the patriarchy
We consider new research that found girls and women in Israel are better off than almost anywhere else in the world: What is the state of the patriarchy in Israel, 2016?
All songs by Gimzu Blues Band on their album Me’ever le-kav ha-eruv :
Halichot Mephuzarot Em Sisra A Sukhla a kleine Ha-Balada al Rav Rahumi ve-IshtoAllison, Noah and Tel Aviv Review host Gilad Halpern discuss three topics of incomparable importance and end with an anecdote about something in Israel that made them smile this week.
Saving us from ourselves?
We ponder with angst the decision of the director of human rights group B'Tselem to implore the UN Security Council to act forcefully against Israel, in order to bring about an end to the Occupation.
Women’s ways of protest
The Women Wage Peace organization just finished their spectacular two-week "March of Hope." We consider the notion, put forth by some of the leaders of the march, that women seek peace in ways likely to be more effective than men.
On the internet, everyone knows you’re a d*ck!
Why did so many Israelis "unfriend" compatriots on Facebook during the 2014 Gaza War? A new study attempts to answer this by claiming that the social network forces us to present our authentic selves on line, letting folks know we hold views they find abhorrent.
All songs by Deaf Chonky:
Social Security Gozalim Shirley KontrolAllison, Noah and Times of Israel Ops & Blogs Editor Miriam Herschlag discuss three topics of incomparable importance and end with an anecdote about something in Israel that made them smile this week.
You say, “Al Aqsa,” I say, “The Temple”
Wonder what to make of the recent resolution by UNESCO – the United Nations Educational, Scientific and Cultural Organization – chastising Israel for its treatment of Muslim holy sites in Jerusalem, while ignoring Jewish affinities to the same sites? We deliberate.
BDS and the Dream of Nuance
A major new initiative “Israel and the Academy” aims to help folks think about Israel “in a much more nuanced way” than the BDS wars presently allow. But is the lovely dream of nuance too naive an ambition to truly attain?
The Museum of Jewish Awesomeness
We ponder the fact that $30 million dollars have already been raised (of an eventual $450 million) to build a Frank Gehry “World’s Jewish Museum” in Tel Aviv dedicated to the Einsteins, the Spielbergs, the Streisands and the Dylans. Is this the kind of museum we want and need at this fraught moment in our history?
All songs by Ha-Pussy shelLucy:
Ghetto Lech Lecha Le-Heros et ha-Knesset Rak Lo Etzleinu Ba-ShechunahAllison, Don and Noah discuss three topics of incomparable importance and end with an anecdote about something in Israel that made them smile this week.
The Triumphs of Benjamin Netanyahu
A recent essay asserted that PM Netanyahu’s foreign policy has been much more successful than most Israelis realize, and that Bibi has guided Israel with a sure hand in tumultuous times. Could the Israeli Left be wrong about Bibi?
Barack Obama's Zionist Idea
A vision worth adopting? We discuss whether exiting US President Barak Obama is, as one journalist recently suggested, “the most impressive exponent of liberal Zionism today.”
The 'G' Word
Haaretz polled Knesset members, asking whether or not each of the 120 lawmakers believes in God. The results differed from a similar survey taken in 1996, but not how you might expect.
All songs by Michelle Rosen:
Give it to the Beat In the Sun My Boy Love We Shall Find
Allison, Don and Noah discuss three topics of incomparable importance and end with an anecdote about something in Israel that made them smile this week.
Show me a dreamer: The legacy of Shimon Peres, z”l
We ponder the complicated legacy of Prime Minister and President Shimon Peres - for the country and, especially, for the left.
Not being there
The head of the Arab Joint List in the Knesset, Ayman Odeh, didn't attend Shimon Peres' funeral. What statement was he making and what do we learn from it?
For the sins
Every year on Yom Kippur, Jews chant the "Al Heyt" prayer, a list of sins we've committed over the previous year. We search our souls and discuss what our sins were - as Israelis and leftists - over the past year.
All songs by supergroup Armon:
Kayitz Ham Halom Bi At Be-Tokh Kuftzah
Allison, Don and Noah discuss three topics of incomparable importance and end with an anecdote about something in Israel that made them smile this week.
Netanyahu to the UN: “You like us! You really like us!”
In his startling speech at the UN, Prime Minister Netanyahu argued that the nations of the world really love us, even if they haven’t noticed yet. Might he have a point?
Shuttling Hassids for free!
Some Knesset members have cried foul over the government's decision to provide VIP services to Hassids travelling to the Ukraine to be with a beloved rabbi who sadly died in 1810. Is this the kind of culture the Jewish state should be supporting?
The year that was
As we approach Rosh Hashanah, the Jewish New Year: What were the most important things that happened in Israel over the last year, or the things that we overlooked?
All songs by Shai Tzabari:
Avo Be-Gevurot Me-Alai Demama Shemesh (with Hadag Nahash) Tfillat Ha-Derekh
Don, Noah and journalist-extraordinaire Naomi Zeveloff discuss three topics of incomparable importance and end with an anecdote about something in Israel that made them smile this week.
38 billion bucks
A $38 billion, ten-year military aid agreement has just been reached by Israel and the US. We discuss whether or not, in the long run, it makes Israel stronger - does more money really buy more security?
Ehud Barak 2.0
Mysterious billboards have started appearing in Israel, prodding former Prime Minister Ehud Barak to run again. He ruined the labor party and wrecked the Left, but is he now the best hope we've got?
Homogenizing Israelis for justice!
Should government economic reports slice and dice people by their ethnic identity, or should they just focus on salaries and spending? If the gears of capitalism are greased by the blood of the workers, does it matter whether those workers have Moroccan, Ethiopian or French backgrounds?
All songs by Adir L.C., mostly off his newest album Oceanside Cities:
Dinosaur Hung Over Same Big Ring Buyer’s Instinct
Allison, Don and Noah discuss three topics of incomparable importance and end with an anecdote about something in Israel that made them smile this week.
Judenrein Palestine? Nein!
PM Netanyahu released a YouTube video claiming that Palestinians advocate the "ethnic cleansing" of Jewish settlers as a precondition of peace negotiations: It’s nutty diplomacy, but might he have a point about the position of settlers in a future Palestinian state?
Derailed
PM Netanyahu's compromise with the ultra-Orthodox over controversial railway maintenance on Shabbat angered many in the Opposition, who claimed the PM had been railroaded, and that his policy is on the wrong track and a potential train wreck.
On the internet, everybody thinks you’re a dog!
We discuss scholarly suggestions that internet discourse in Israel is so mean because so many Israelis yearn to stick it to the leftist "lame-stream" media. But are Israelis really more mean on the internet than folks from other places?
All songs by The Energya Psychotronics:
She’s My Sister Insincerely Yours Valerie-Ann My Imagination
Allison, Don and Noah discuss three topics of incomparable importance and end with an anecdote about something in Israel that made them smile this week.
Left behind?
New polls show the Israeli left crashing and burning. What accounts for this recent slide in support, and what should the traditional Left be doing about it?
From Zion shall come what?
The Israeli state is funding organizations that strengthen Jewish identity on US campuses, and most of the money is going to Orthodox organizations. Should Israel be funding Jewish culture in the diaspora, and should it be doing so in this way?
The right to bare midriffs
A singer was booted off stage at a (publicly-funded) beach-side music festival because she wore a bikini top. Is sensitivity to delicate religious sensibilities going too far?
All songs by Noa Deutsch: Lo Gever Lo Isha Ha-Heder Mevulgan Oaf Muzar Ma She-Tivakshi
Noah, author and professor Alon Tal, and legendary tour guide William Slott discuss three topics of incomparable importance and end with an anecdote about something in Israel that made them smile this week.
Too many Israelis?
We discuss Tal's important, new book The Land is Full, claiming that we need fewer Israelis, not more, and that government policy ought to be changed to stem Aliyah and lower our birthrate.
Moral guides
An essay in the Times of Israel asserts that it is "immoral" to visit the City of David tourist site, which is located in East Jerusalem (Occupied Palestinian Territory). We discuss the morality of archaeology.
Our lives: A late-interim review
The three panelists discuss whether or not they made a huge existential mistake in moving to Israel, as they decided to do together, when kids in a Zionist youth movement.
All songs by Darling Angels:
Something For Your Pain Life Isn’t A Fair Game I Got A Woman, And She Loves Me Mad By The Light Of The Moon
Noah, TLV1’s Gilad Halpern and The Forward’s Naomi Zeveloff discuss three topics of incomparable importance and end with an anecdote about something in Israel that made them smile this week.
Ordination is the new B.A.
Israel's Minister of Interior Aryeh Deri, of the ultra-Orthodox Shas party, has issued a ministerial executive order to count advanced Yeshiva education and Rabbinic ordination as equal to a university degree, for applicants to government jobs.
Fear, loathing and Ha'aretz
Stalwart, liberal Israeli newspaper Ha'aretz receives constant, vicious criticism from right and left. Why does the paper cheese off so many?
Mo' better babies
Israelis are the most prolific users of prenatal genetic testing. Why are we so eager to have only "perfect" babies?
All songs by Karizmo (it’s summer, people!):
Noah, TLV1’s Gilad Halpern and Times of Israel Ops & Blogs Editor Miriam Herschlag discuss three topics of incomparable importance and end with an anecdote about something in Israel that made them smile this week.
Lapdogs of democracy
We discuss the uncertain future of the new Israel Public Broadcasting Corporation, and the uncertain future of freedom of the press in Israel. What sort of a press does a country like Israel need?
On the matter of Black Lives Matter
The new Movement for Black Lives platform describes Israel as a perpetrator of “genocide” against Palestinians. We discuss the depression that engulfed us after we read it, and how we should navigate this murky water.
So sorry for gassing grandma!
Should Israel continue to buy gas masks from the same German company that made gas masks for the SS soldiers manning the crematoria at Auschwitz? Oy!
All songs by Noga Erez, in honor of her appearance at the Olympics!
Worth None (with Efrat Ben Tzur) Where Did You Sleep Last Night Weapons After
Noah, TLV1’s Gilad Halpern and Times of Israel Ops & Blogs Editor Miriam Herschlag discuss three topics of incomparable importance and end with an anecdote about something in Israel that made them smile this week.
IDF to Knesset: Shut up already!
"We shall keep the rabbis in their synagogues and the generals in their barracks," Herzl wrote in 1896. Now, 120 years later, IDF Chief of Staff Gadi Eisenkot is telling Israel's politicians to shut the f*ck up already.
Ritual hypocrites
American passport-holding Knesset Members who love Conservative and Reform Judaism have been voting against it, most recently passing a bill outlawing use of state ritual baths (mikvehs) by non-Orthodox converts. Does this make them hypocrites?
Body-politic dysmorphia
We discuss whether Israelis have body-politic dysmorphia, causing us to think that we’re a whole lot bigger and more important than we really are.
All songs by Talevi:
Mah Shaveh Haagid Kedai She-Teheyeh Meushar Nylon Sofshavua
Don, Noah and Times of Israel Ops & Blogs Editor Miriam Herschlag discuss three topics of incomparable importance and end with an anecdote about something in Israel that made them smile this week.
Expelled
We discuss Israel's new "Impeachment Law," passed by Knesset members to allow Knesset members to prevent Knesset members from remaining Knesset members.
Leaving the Left
A slew of prominent and thoughtful folks, including former leftist Knesset members, have said "goodbye to all that" and left the Left. These recent defections are causing us to ask, "Is it something we said"?
The moral economy of the IDF
Do we, as two cool Mizrahit feminists say, send Mizrahim to do the IDF's morally ugly work, and then hate them for it?
All songs by Aya Zahavi Feiglin:
Hadera Juke Berlin Kulam
Allison, Don, and Noah discuss three topics of incomparable importance and end with an anecdote about something in Israel that made them smile this week.
Who killed social justice?
Did the 2011 “social protests” – which began five years ago this week – leave any real mark on the country? If not, who is to blame?
An officer and a chauvinist
The new Chief Rabbi of the IDF and a rabbi who runs an army preparatory school own up to some Neanderthal opinions about women and LGBTQ folks. How do men of loathsome views find purchase in the army?
The art of politics
The president of a Tel Aviv area design college banned a student painting because it contained a nude rendering of Minister of Justice Ayelet Shaked: Censorship or just good feminist values?
All songs by Ha-Tavlinim:
Ba Li Rosh Ba-Kir Ba-Tahanah Nimas Li Mimekh
Allison, Don, and Noah discuss three topics of incomparable importance and end with an anecdote about something in Israel that made them smile this week.
Into Africa
PM Netanyahu recently visited Uganda, Kenya, Rwanda, and Ethiopia. Is this part of a "periphery strategy" that aims to build relationships with the under-democratic developing world, as ties to Europe and the US seem to be deteriorating?
Education Reparation?
We discuss the much-anticipated recommendations of a government committee charged with repairing discrimination against Sephardi/Mizrahi Jewish heritage in Israel’s education system.
Your kid’s childhood, sponsored by Proctor & Gamble
Proctor & Gamble built air-conditioned bathrooms for girls in Israeli summer camps, with flat screens playing loops of tampon ads. Is commercializing sleep-away camp a crime against wholesomeness itself, or just good sense?
All songs by The Aprons:
Day Off This Time The Second Time Firefly
Allison, Don, and Noah discuss three topics of incomparable importance and end with an anecdote about something in Israel that made them smile this week.
Kids in beds
How can we understand the failure of Palestinian leaders to condemn the brutal murder of a 13-year-old Jewish girl in her bed?
Is deprizing the Left despising the Left?
Ben-Gurion University president Rivka Carmi stripped human rights NGO Breaking the Silence of a prize it had been offered by the university. Does this simply reflect pusillanimous wussiness?
Jew of silence?
We ask whether or not there is room for criticism of Nobel Laureate Elie Wiesel for failing to embrace Palestinians, even as he is being laid in his grave.
All songs by Hank & Cupcakes off their brand new record, Cheap Thrill:
Old And New Telephone Line A Thousand Times Ice Machine
Allison, Don, and Noah discuss three topics of incomparable importance and end with an anecdote about something in Israel that made them smile this week.
Brexit and the Jewish Question
We discuss the various lessons Israelis are drawing for our own politics and our own futures from the Brexit vote (because, in the end, isn’t everything really about us?).
The forefathers are your fathers
Why do secular Israelis feel little for the country’s founding fathers (who were all secular), while religious Israelis feel growing identification with the founding fathers (who rather despised religious folk)?
Entebbe, then and now
On the fortieth anniversary of the miraculous Entebbe rescue, as the children who were then hostages are now grandparents, what enduring imprint did this stunning event leave on the country?
All songs by Jerusalem’s Nati Hassid, off his moving album, "Ze Ma Yesh":
Sippur Ahavah mi-Tsrif 9 Stam Ki Kvar Lo Echpat (with Shaanan Street) Ktzat At (with Tuna) Michtavim
Allison, Don, and Noah discuss three topics of incomparable importance and end with an anecdote about something in Israel that made them smile this week.
I think I’m turning Haredi!
Although a great many people fear that our schools, army, courts, and public square are undergoing an inexorable process of "religification," do the facts on the ground really justify these fears? And if not, where does this fear come from?
Bureaucrats!
A new poll finds that Israelis think their civil service sucks, melding inefficiency with corruption and nepotism. In fact, by European standards, Israel’s bureaucracy ain’t so bad. So what accounts for the discrepancy?
Rage!
A personal essay in +972 Magazine called "When your own Jewish father calls you a Nazi" recounts how a friendly father-daughter lunch meeting turned nasty. Does the acrimony of the street now reach hearth and home?
All songs by Kiryat Gat's finest hip-hop trio, KGC:
Me-Hamar La-Matok (with Avior Melasa) 100% Ten Li Koach Yom Yavoh
Allison, Don, and Noah discuss three topics of incomparable importance and end with an anecdote about something in Israel that made them smile this week.
Terrorists in Tel Aviv? A pleasure!
We discuss reactions to last week’s heartbreaking terrorist murders at Tel Aviv's Sarona Market. Why were some people here inspired to write on social media such bons mots as “So long as it’s in Tel Aviv: A pleasure”?
Anyone but Bibi?
We discuss whether intensely personal animus against Prime Minister Netanyahu hasn’t gotten the best of the Israeli left, leaving our politics in a shambles.
Art. What Is It Good For? Absolutely Nothing!
In a recent interview, David Tartakover, who has for decades been the unofficial graphic designer of the Israeli Left, seemed pretty bummed out about the lack of impact his art has had on Israeli society. Should we give up on political art?
All songs by Maya Isacowitz:
Allison, Don, and Noah discuss three topics of incomparable importance and end with an anecdote about something in Israel that made them smile this week.
Peace in Paris or conciliation in Cairo?
We discuss the weird-ass peace retreat in Paris, without Israelis or Palestinians, and the Egyptian-Saudi peace initiative: So much peace-talk, so little time?
Tots & moms & fallacies of feminism
There is a controversial push to repeal a 54-year-old law that places tots with moms in divorce cases. We discuss the split among feminists about whether, in a sexist society, sometimes a sexist law is a necessary evil.
The Good (for-what-exactly?) Book
In honor of Shavuot, the holiday that marks the giving of Torah at Sinai, we discuss whether Holy Writ should play any role in Israel’s public sphere, and if so, what that role should be.
All Songs by Nadav Barnea:
Allison, Noah, and Times of Israel Ops & Blogs Editor Miriam Herschlag discuss three topics of incomparable importance and end with an anecdote about something in Israel that made them smile this week.
IDF = “It Don't Fucking-Matter”?
We discuss human rights group B’Tselem’s decision to stop telling IDF lawyers about crimes committed by soldiers because the army doesn’t give a shit and doesn’t do shit about these crimes.
The Other F-Word
There's a new trend on the left of using the word "fascist" to describe the direction in which our government is traveling. We discuss this mainstreaming of the "F-Word," which is becoming as much a part of the Tel Aviv lexicon as "Sababa."
Who are you to lower the rent?
The Ministry of Housing seems to be moving against municipal affordable housing programs on the grounds that they discriminate by, for instance, preferring locals and young people. But shouldn’t cities be able to decide who gets cheaper housing?
All songs by Avi Mesika, who won our hearts when he built a protest tent in front of the IDF radio station to demonstrate against bias in their playlist:
Yored La-Yam Reva Le-Sheva K’he Oti Ayin Tachat Ayin (with Roni Levy)
If you love Israel, this podcast will make you inexplicably happy: Israel Story's current season is almost over, so it's a perfect chance to catch up on everything you've been missing!
Today, Allison, Noah, and superstar guest Ilene Prusher discuss three topics of incomparable importance and end with an anecdote about something in Israel that made them smile this week.
And now, right-wing Israeli democrats?
We discuss whether a new species is emerging in Israeli politics – right-wingers terrified by Netanyahu into embracing liberal democratic politics.
Donald Trump & the Jewish Question
Will Trump rend asunder once and for all right wing Jews from left? Or will he perhaps become a uniting force for Jews who may reject him en masse, and with him, reject Adelsonism as well?
Exhibiting confusion
Is an Israeli national museum possible or even desirable in 2016, or do we need a thousand museums for the thousand different stories we tell about ourselves? Is collective memory and collective identity just soooo twentieth century?
All songs by Dorin Yanni & The Band (in honor of their knockout show at the Jacob’s Ladder Festival this past weekend):
Whistle Wheels Singing With The Rain I Won't Go Home
Allison, Don, and Noah discuss three topics of incomparable importance and end with an anecdote about something in Israel that made them smile this week.
Coalition ambition, suspicion, sedition, contrition & admonition
We discuss the expansion of Prime Minister Netanyahu’s coalition that leaves Herzog and Labor out, and Avigdor Lieberman and his right-wing Yisrael Beiteinu Party in.
Birthright, Divest & Sanction?
A small number of "Birthright" alums are returning home to fight Israeli policy, and some are even joining BDS. How do you solve a problem like Birthright? Should we even try?
Be like Bar?
As new Israeli hair-straightening invention the "Dafni brush" flies off the shelves, we discuss the politics of Israeli images of beauty that find lithe, blond, and northern-European to be the ne plus ultra of hotness.
All songs by Omer Leshem, in honor of his great new album:
Highway Of Life I Can’t Say You Were Mine You’re O.K.
Allison, Don, and Noah discuss three topics of incomparable importance and end with an anecdote about something in Israel that made them smile this week.
Term limits of endearment
We discuss a newly-proposed bill that would limit Israeli prime ministers to two terms, thereby giving the heave-ho to Prime Minister Netanyahu.
Wages of peace?
A new report argues that "economic peace" is growing between Palestinians and Israelis. If true, will this promote real, political peace or impede it?
E Unibus Pluram?
Rather than splitting into warring "tribes," as many pundits think, are Israelis perhaps becoming one nation, under Netflix, with Bamba and Bisli for all?
All songs are old Gevatron folk songs, performed by Ha-Shibolim, in honor of Israeli Independence Day!
Shibolim Halleluyah Emek Sheli Gvanim
Allison, Don, and Noah discuss three topics of incomparable importance and end with an anecdote about something in Israel that made them smile this week.
"Never again" what? "Never again" why?
We discuss what lessons we Israelis should draw from the Holocaust, and what lessons we shouldn’t. Is there a different kind of Israeli exceptionalism to be found in the memory of the Holocaust?
Legislation nation
Why do Israeli lawmakers propose more bills than lawmakers anywhere else on earth? Is this a good thing, making the country better in countless small ways, or is it a distracting side-show?
Ugly, ugly Israelis
We discuss the finger-pointing at Israelis who leave trash on beaches and in national parks, and whether or not it has racist undertones.
Songs of pain, loss, and destruction, in recognition of recording on Yom Ha-Shoah (Holocaust Memorial Day):
Shuli Rand - Eiyeka Yehudah Poliker - Efer Ve-Avak Aviv Geffen & Arik Einstein - Yoman Masa Efrat Ghosh - Lir’ot Et Ha-Or
Gilad Halpern (host of The Tel Aviv Review), Naomi Zeveloff (Middle East Correspondent for the Forward), and Noah discuss three topics of incomparable importance and end with an anecdote about something in Israel that made them smile this week.
OUR Killer?
Last week 2,000 Israelis demonstrated in Tel Aviv in support of the 19-year-old soldier who shot in the head the immobile 21-year-old Palestinian stabber. But what exactly were they supporting?
Is right the new left?
We ask why leaders on the left and center sound more and more right-wing every day, and whether this shift will help them get elected.
You have the right to remain stupid
We discuss the former ultra-Orthodox who are suing the country for allowing their parents to raise them as Haredim, thereby denying them the skills they need to make it in secular Israel.
All songs by Quarter to Africa:
Yalla, Boh Navi Et Zeh Gam Ki Elekh Ten Ta-Layback Connect
In this Passover potpourri of propitious, panegyric perspicacity, Don, Allison, and Noah update the old story in the Midrash about the four sons. Then they serve up a primo pastiche of past "Vatacountry!" pieces, in which the panel (and guests) describe stuff that delights, enchants, surprises, and amuses them about this crazy country we live in and love.
Four Sons for a New Generation
We update the old story in the Midrash about the four sons - one wise, one evil, one simple, and one who does not know how to ask - by discussing who would be the modern versions of these ancient archetypes.
The Joys of Family
The Promised Podcast panel and guests discuss some of their most touching family moments in Israel, including birthdays, graduations, and anniversaries.
The Unbearable Lightness of Being Israeli
The Promised Podcast panel and guests recall some of their more poignant moments in special places in Israel, whether it be the Hula Valley, the Jerusalem Hills, on the street or around the dinner table.
Sometimes Israel Inspires
The Promised Podcast panel members tell stories about inspiring things they've witnessed in Israel: The kindness of strangers to a blind man; thought-provoking teaching in the army; and political activism among the younger generation.
Songs of slavery and freedom by some of Israel’s greatest:
Yehudah Poliker – Hatchalah ChadashaAviv Geffen – OnotBerry Sakharov – AvadimShlomo Artzi - Shir Baboker Baboker
Allison, Don, and Noah discuss three topics of incomparable importance and end with an anecdote about something in Israel that made them smile this week.
What makes Bibi tick?
A new essay challenges the leftist article-of-faith that PM Benjamin Netanyahu tacks back and forth out of opportunism and naked ambition. It argues that at the base of everything he does is a bedrock of principle consisting mostly of weird-ass eschatology.
School’s out, completely
The Tel Aviv Municipality plans to turn a park in a troubled southern neighborhood of the city into a school for refugee kids. Many activists are saying, "Over our dead bodies!" - are they right?
Yids online!
A new survey of the habits of commerce and recreation of Israeli Modern Orthodox (or "National Religious") Jews finds that they use the internet a good deal more than everyone else. Are Modern Orthodox more "Modern" than Secular Israelis?
All songs by the groovy Gili Yalo:
Allison, Don and Noah discuss three topics of incomparable importance and end with an anecdote about something in Israel that made them smile this week.
Israel’s Supreme Court: Democracy’s BFF or Frenemy?
We discuss a spate of Supreme Court decisions that leave right-wing politicians sputtering about judicial overreach, which in turn leaves left-wing politicians sputtering about right-wing court bashing, and leaves everyone accusing everyone else of breaking Israeli democracy.
Peace Now, Still?
The decline of venerable anti-occupation activist group Peace Now, as its leader for the past 14 years resigns in a huff.
This is Your Brain on Shoah!
One high school’s decision to quit making trips to concentration camps in Poland, because of the lousy lessons kids get from them.
All songs by David Peretz, in honor of his pretty lovely new album, Eretz she-lo Sham, that judy dropped on Bandcamp.Ashan Ha-ZmanEretz she-lo ShamMakom be-TochiTfillah Le-Nos'im be-Sheloshah Metosim
Allison, Don and Noah discuss three topics of incomparable importance and end with an anecdote about something in Israel that made them smile this week.
Killer and Hero
We discuss the twist of logic and emotion that leads some Israelis to regard the combat medic who shoots a motionless injured Palestinian terrorist in the head, a hero.
$653,868.35
A new law that limits the salaries of bank presidents to just 44 times minimum wage, or a mere $653,868.35 a year; is this populist pitchfork polishing, or good legislating?
Shallow, Selfish, Egocentric, Childish, Stunted, & Lazy: How Israel’s Gen Y-ers are Destroying the Country
Two middle aged sociologists find Israeli Gen Y-ers (aged 21 to 34) shiftless and selfish, and a threat to the very existence of the state; are they full of shit?
All songs by Sivan Talmor, in honor of her new album, Fire, now available for download at Bandcamp:Chalonot (Start at 0:25)FireI'll be17
Allison, Don and Noah discuss three topics of incomparable importance and end with an anecdote about something in Israel that made them smile this week.
Quo Vadis, Bibi?
We discuss the weird state of the Israeli government, which seems to be, at once, on the verge of collapse and surprisingly stable: What gives?
The Curious Case of the Rabbi Excommunicated for Exercising Free Speech
The moral and political dilemma arising from the Minister of Defense’s decision to excommunicate a rabbi for advising soldiers to ignore orders to evacuate settlements; we may hate the rabbis politics, but don’t we still need to defend his right to free expression.
A Tale of Two Censors
Whether it’s better for democracy to have an army censor who’s in our face, or one who expects that we censor ourselves (or maybe option C, no censor at all!.)
All songs composed by the great Ahuva Ozari (a “Founding Mother” of Mizrahi Music), in honor the last 17 immigrants secreted this week from Yemen to Jerusalem: Daklon and Sagiv Cohen with Ahuva Ozari, “Tzilzulei Pa'amonim”Yehudit Ravitz and Ahuvah Ozari, “Ha-Ish Ha-Hu”Ahuva Ozari, “Ha-Or Ha-Ganuz”Daklon and Sagiv Cohen with Ahuva Ozari, “Kol Koreh”
Allison, Noah and "Tel Aviv Review" host Gilad Halpern discuss three topics of incomparable importance and end with an anecdote about something in Israel that made them smile this week.
Expulsion!
We discuss this wrenching finding of the Pew Research Center: 48 percent of Israeli Jews report that, under certain undefined circumstances, Palestinians ought to be expelled from Israel. The poll is problematic, but it says something too important to ignore.
Not feeling the Bern?
Why are we Israelis, who usually love it when Jews become luminaries and celebrities in the wide world, strangely unmoved by the success of that most Jewy of US Presidential candidates, Bernie Sanders. What is it about the Sanders campaign that has silenced our normally robust tribalism?
Americans are from Mars, Israelis are from Venus
The Pew poll findings also suggest that Israeli and American Jews may be two peoples separated by the same religion, and the rift seems to be growing wider by the moment. Are Israeli Jews and American Jews speciating, and is the day growing near when we will no longer be able to reproduce with one another?
All songs by Kfar Saba's favourite son, hip-hop artist E-Z:Lo Mafseek LachlomKeSheHaOlam Yaatzor (with Shira Gavriellov)Mi Muchan? (with Nechi Nech)Marior
Allison, Noah, and Times of Israel Ops & Blogs editor Miriam Herschlag discuss three topics of incomparable importance and end with an anecdote about something in Israel that made them smile this week.
Death by Facebook?
We discuss the emergent popular wisdom that Facebook bears some responsibility for the continuing epidemic of stabbings, by bringing persuasive, murderous messages to the mobile phones of Palestinian teens, and the demand of Minister of Public Security Gilad Erdan that the social network censure dangerous posts.
Rattling Skeletons in Knesset Closets
A new project by journalist-activist Tomer Avital, called “100 Days of Transparency,” uses drones and private investigators to uncover putative politician scumbaggery. Is this the sort of transparency we want and need?
The Sexist Skewering of Stav Shaffir: Salacious Satire or Simple Scumbaggery
A dumb-ass satire of MK Stav Shaffir on the right-wing Jewish Heritage TV channel strikes some on the left as sexual harassment, leading some on the right to cry “double-standard.” Is it o.k. to suggest that Member of Knesset masturbates on her bicycle?
Great songs of feminist rage, in honor of International Women’s Day:Korine Alal, MotekSarit Hadad, Telekh Kappara AlaiPoliana Frank, Gibor Tzavah HahaganahDana International, Ani Nitzahti
Allison, Don, and Noah discuss three topics of incomparable importance and end with an anecdote about something in Israel that made them smile this week.
Our grief and theirs
Pundits, politicians, and plain folks are enraged at those who express sympathy for the parents of slain terrorists; on one side, they claim, are those who love life, and on the other those who glorify death. Why did empathy become a zero-sum affair?
Now it’s our turn
We discuss a new political movement that seeks to undo what it sees as 135 years of Ashkenazi hegemony, and to reestablish Zionism on a new, more open, more friendly, more humane, and more Mizrahi basis.
Trump ♥ Israel?
Donald Trump recently made the very un-Republican assertion that the US President needs to be neutral about the Israeli-Palestinian conflict. Cruz and Rubio attacked him, but is it possible that they love Israel a little too much for our own good?
All songs by Raphy Cohen:
Allison, Don, and Noah discuss three topics of incomparable importance and end with an anecdote about something in Israel that made them smile this week.
Girls with scissors
We discuss the anger over IDF Chief of Staff Gadi Eisenkot’s statement that "I would not want a soldier to unload an entire clip into a girl who is holding scissors." What the hell is wrong with that?
There’s something about Miri
We discuss the revelation that Israel's Minister of Culture & Sport, Miri Regev, just eight years ago considered joining the Labor Party. Is the populist right the only lane open to ambitious Mizrahi politicians?
Cyber fodder
A new school program is tracking Israeli nine-year-olds towards careers in the army’s cyber intelligence units. Has cyber replaced Shakespeare in the smithy of our children’s souls?
All songs by Nomke (the nom de guitar of Noam Sadan), just back from her triumphant tour of Italy:
Allison, Don, and Noah discuss three topics of incomparable importance and end with an anecdote about something in Israel that made them smile this week.
Peace 2.0?
We discuss opposition leader Isaac Herzog’s proposal to build a massive fence – “They over there and we over here” – and disengage unilaterally from Palestinians. We ask, “Is unilateralism the new black?”
Litigating the Silence
A secret lawsuit has been brought by the army against NGO “Breaking the Silence,” to compel the group to share information it has gathered in the form of soldiers' testimonies. If BtS can hide the sources, shouldn't it share the information?
Too much of a good book?
A report has emerged showing that fewer high-schoolers are studying “humanities,” while more are studying Bible. Is scripture replacing Shakespeare in the smithy of our children's soul?
All songs by Yishai Kiczales:
Ata VeHaShtuyot ShelkhaMingle And SchmoozeAsiti Ta’utHaYafim VeHaAyefim
Allison, Noah, and the Tel Aviv Review’s Gilad Halpern discuss three topics of incomparable importance (which this week all touch on issues of emotion) and end with an anecdote about something in Israel that made them smile this week.
Dour, sour, and out of power: The Left's Grinch problem
We discuss whether the Israeli left is hobbled by its own anhedonia and general 'Grinchiness.' Should we, in such serious and fraught times, assume a more light-hearted attitude?
Invisible wounds
A viral video of a former IDF soldier testifying before the Knesset about his debilitating PTSD has shed light on the fact that this kind of trauma is more prevalent in Israel than previously thought. What should we do about it?
Anti-social networks
We discuss the assertions of an Israeli applied anthropologist that Israeli kids' excessive use of screens and social networks is turning them into sociopaths and solipsists. Might this have political implications?
All songs by Zaaluk, whose EP is available for download right now:
En Casa De Mi PadreFuerame A BanarUna HoraZaaluk’s drummer Roy Brosh’s drum cover of Dhafer Youssef’s "Farha"
Allison, Don, and Noah discuss three topics of incomparable importance, and end with an anecdote about something in Israel that made them smile this week.
Best Western?
We discuss the historic cabinet decision that designates part of the Western Wall as pluralist and egalitarian. Is it a great victory for the home team or sort of a sell-out?
The hexed, vexed & perplexed textbook
The hubbub over a new edition of an Israeli civics textbook threatens to develop into a furor. Do we really need a unified civics textbook in a disunified civil society?
"We're here!, Vey iz mir!, Get used to it!"
How are we to regard the protester at the LGBTQ conference who opposed letting pro-Israel voices be heard? We may disagree with such Jewish BDSers, but don't we share at least some common cause?
All songs by Ella vs Mountain (Ella Doron), because sometimes you need a little pure pop for now people:
Charmed LifeI like youBigger than lifeSigns
Gilad Halpern (host of the Tel Aviv Review), pollster and political consultant Dahlia Scheindlin, and Noah discuss three topics of incomparable importance, and end with an anecdote about something in Israel that made them smile this week.
Lucre, filthy & clean
We discuss the "NGO Transparency Bill" and whether money donated by foreign governments is any different from money donated by foreign individuals.
Trust in an age of terror
We discuss the alarming deterioration of trust between Jewish and Arab Israelis, demonstrated by the results of the latest INSS poll.
Love of Labor lost
Eitan Haber, one of Yitzhak Rabin's closest advisers, wrote this week that Rabin's party just has too much baggage to continue. Is it time to stick a fork in the Labor Party?
All songs by Hagar Raveh in honor of her new album, Yeled Kof, that just dropped this week:
Allison, Don, and Noah discuss three topics of incomparable importance, and end with an anecdote about something in Israel that made them smile this week.
Tales of moles and weasels
We discuss some recent revelations of right wing moles infiltrating human rights organizations. What, if anything, should be done about it?
Street justice?
We discuss the rage over a statement by Sweden’s Foreign Minister that Israel condones the "extra-judicial killing" of terrorists.
"I pledge excretion to the flag"
We discuss the decision to try a performance artist who defecated on the flag – is this another dead canary in the mine of Israeli democracy?
All songs by Nili Fink:
Toss AwayRiot CityDying AloneMasa Asphalt
Allison, Don, and Noah discuss three topics of incomparable importance, and end with an anecdote about something in Israel that made them smile this week.
Condemn, and this time with feeling!
Some right-wing Israeli politicians are demanding that Palestinian Israeli leaders condemn Palestinian violence quickly, contritely, and convincingly. Do Palestinian Israelis have a special obligation to condemn Palestinian violence?
The Oligarch Faculty of Judaic Studies
We discuss a shocking exposé finding that Israeli hospitals, museums, universities, and zoos will let rich philanthropists do pretty much whatever they want in exchange for a donation.
Occupation is a feminist issue!
We discuss the decision of America’s National Women’s Studies Association to boycott Israel because their struggles "intersect" with the struggles of Palestinians. What are we to make of the politics of "intersectionality"?
All songs by Aviva Dese:
ShorashimTheir EyesUnfarasMurder
Allison, Don, and Noah discuss three topics of incomparable importance, and end with an anecdote about something in Israel that made them smile this week.
People of not-this-book!
We discuss the brouhaha over the Israeli Ministry of Education’s decision to not include a book in the high school curriculum because of the book’s "racy" themes.
Trigger warning: May contain optimism
We found a rare, leftist end-of-2015 wrap-up that finds reason for hope – what’s up with that? Maybe this year hasn't been as bad as most of us are telling ourselves?
Gay for the Likud!
The newest MK, Amir Ohana, calls himself “Jewish, Israeli, Mizrahi, gay, Likudnik, a security hawk, a liberal, and a man of the free market,” but can you really embrace Gay politics from the right?
All songs by Dafna ve-ha-Oogiot:
Allison, Noah, and Oxford Prof. Sara Hirschhorn are live (on tape) from Limmud in Birmingham, England! They discuss three topics of incomparable importance, answering questions from the audience, and end with an anecdote about something in Israel that made them smile this week.
Are reports of Israel’s demise exaggerated?
What explains a recent spate of articles by bummed out Zionists suggesting that Israel’s days are numbered?
The other American revolution
We ask why so many of the Jewish terrorists in Israel carry American passports. What part does their American heritage play in their murderous zealotry?
Thug Jews
Is there anything to the claims of gadfly former Knesset Speaker Avrum Burg that, because Jews had no power in the past, Israelis today are on a power-bender and out of control?
All songs with an UK theme, in honor of recording from Limmud, England:
Arisa - Po Zeh Lo IropahKol Ha-Hatichim Etzli - LondonInbal Perlmutter - Zehirut Me-Ha-MervachEran Tzur - Tachlit Ba-Tachtit
Technical production by Graham Harold Carpenter & Alex Benish
Allison, Noah, and host of The Tel Aviv Review, Gilad Halpern, discuss three topics of incomparable importance, and end with an anecdote about something in Israel that made them smile this week.
Breaking the Left?
We discuss the furor over Breaking the Silence, a watchdog NGO that publishes reports of IDF misconduct. Why do they inspire such rage in so many people?
Dying to be in Israel
We discuss a stunning new report that reveals shocking figures about how often immigrants to Israel - especially from the Ethiopian and Russian communities - kill themselves. What drives them to the brink?
“You want reality, B*tches?!?”
We discuss a brilliant, charismatic, angry, radical feminist Mizrahi activist on the “Big Brother” reality show. Who’s co-opting whom?
All songs by Kol ha-Hatikhim Etzli:
Tzla'otPosaHa-Fakulta Le-Mada MeduyakOy, Elohim Yishmor
Allison, Don, and Noah discuss three topics of incomparable importance, and end with an anecdote about something in Israel that made them smile this week.
Pity the poor Afula!
We discuss demonstrations by residents of Afula, a town in the north of Israel, against a tender for hundreds of new apartments that was won by Arab Israelis.
Am I not Ayman?
We discuss MK and leader of the (mostly-)Arab “Joint List,” Ayman Odeh’s tour of America. What does it say about the new sort of politics he represents?
Cool to a warming world?
We discuss Israel’s lackluster participation in the Paris climate conference – has “light-unto-the-nations-ism” died?
All songs by the bona fide, no-doubt-about-it, genius Ryskinder:
Stam PahaditiYashen Be-AmidahThis Zero Is MarriedCan’t Shake It
Allison, Don, and Noah discuss three topics of incomparable importance, and end with an anecdote about something in Israel that made them smile this week.
Politics of purism
Former MK and political commentator Yossi Sarid tragically died this week. We discuss the legacy of the longtime leader of the “peace camp.” Was he part of why the Left is now in a shambles?
The 'Mizrahification' of peace
We discuss Amir Peretz’s bid to take over the Zionist Union, his new peace plan, and his claim that only a Mizrahi candidate like himself has the chops to win an election and negotiate a peace deal.
A third way?
We discuss a new movie about an effort of settlers and Palestinians to forge a "third way" to peace, inspired by Rav Menachem Froman. Director Harvey Stein joins the conversation!
All songs by Ashkera Metim:Kesef U-MenayotMeatzben Et Ha-KayitzYahmiAnachnu Ha-Shampanya
Allison, Don, and Noah discuss three topics of incomparable importance, and end with an anecdote about something in Israel that made them smile this week.
"Horny for you"
We discuss the member of Knesset who resigned after it became public that he harassed women, and ambivalent efforts to address sexual harassment elsewhere.
It’s a gas, gas, gas
We ask why Israel's incipient gas deal has sparked mass protests on the streets, while other issues are met with apathy.
Kidnapped 67-year-old babies
We discuss why many people believe that Yemenite babies were transferred from their parents to Ashkenazi parents 60-odd years ago.
All songs from the special project by musician David Peretz, "Yodim Atem Likhvod Ma? Artists Perform Songs of Hanukah":Adam Cohen – Maoz TzurNoa Shemer – Neirotai Ha-ZeirimEran Tzur – Hava NarimaAlbert Sofer – Ner Li
Allison, Don, and Noah discuss three topics of incomparable importance, and end with an anecdote about something in Israel that made them smile this week.
Did peace slip through our fingers?
We discuss a socko television documentary showing how close Ehud Olmert and Mahmoud Abbas came to a peace agreement eight years ago, and yet how far, raising a raft of “what if?” questions.
The corruption deduction
We discuss the behind-the-scenes deals that allowed MKs to funnel monies to their favorite causes in exchange for their acquiescence to the proposed budget. Is it quite as unsavory as it seems?
Fighter flight
We discuss an IDF poll showing that, increasingly, the guys with the guns are the guys with the kippot. Should we be worried that the army seems to be becoming a religious person's institution?
All songs by Tamar Aphek:
Who Cares/Summer ComesWhere Were You When It Happened?The Dynamic Of MotionTaking Over
Allison, Don, and Noah discuss three topics of incomparable importance, and end with an anecdote about something in Israel that made them smile this week.
"Well, what family doesn't have its ups and downs?" (With apologies to James Goldman and Katherine Hepburn, or perhaps to King Henry II and Eleanor of Aquitaine)
We discuss Prime Minister Netanyahu’s recent attempts to fix relations with American Jews. Is his "charm offensive" more charm or offensive?
Bickering about stickering
The EU has issued new guidelines for the labeling of products from the occupied territories, and many Israelis are up in arms. We ask how those of us on the left ought to respond.
What happened in Paris
Finally, we discuss what sense we in Israel make – or should make – of the infinitely sad mass-murders in Paris.
All songs are tributes to Paris, with a heavy heart and a troubled mind:
Yael Naim - ParisRiff Cohen - A ParisYair Ziv - Be-Rechovot ParisEthnix - Tel Aviv Kmo Paris
Noah, Don, and Haaretz columnist and ubermensch Bradley Burston discuss three topics of incomparable importance, and end with an anecdote about something in Israel that made them smile this week.
"They don't like us. They really don't like us!" (With apologies to Sally Field)
A meta-survey suggests that Palestinians really don’t think highly of Israelis and Jews, and other polls suggest that Israeli Jews don’t have much sympathy for Palestinians. Does this prove a one-state solution is completely implausible?
Leaving the land
We ask whether or not it's time to stick a fork in the old Zionist dream of Jews returning to the land and making it bloom. Should we lament the "abandonment" of the agriculture industry?
Sound salvation (with apologies to Elvis Costello)
We discuss the efforts of Minister of Culture and Sports, Brigadier General Miri Regev, to make army radio station Galgalatz play more Mizrahi music.
All songs by Bint El Funk, in honor of their Headstart campaign, which you can (nay, should) support:
Mujik SheliMin ZamanUmakYa Habibi (Live from IndieNegev)
Noah, Don, and Times of Israel Ops & Blogs editor Miriam Herschlag discuss three topics of incomparable importance, and end with an anecdote about something in Israel that made them smile this week.
If I Divide Thee, O Jerusalem…
A shocking new poll shows that 56 percent of Israelis wish to transfer Arab majority neighborhoods in Jerusalem to the hands of the Palestinian Authority, to let them keep the peace. We discuss its potential political implications.
Partition ambition
We discuss a proposal to slice Israel up into two states: An enlightened, progressive, leftist, secular state called "Dan" and a benighted, religious state called "Judaea." Why is this separation so appealing to those on the left?
Trapped in the Net: Are social networks killing Israeli politics?
Did the personal computer kill the raucous political rally? We talk about how the internet has changed the face of Israeli politics, and not necessarily for the better.
All songs by Ariel Kleiner:
In a show marking, with sadness, the 20th anniversary of Prime Minister Yitzhak Rabin’s murder, Allison, Noah and Don (fresh back from rehab) discuss three Rabin-related topics, and end with an anecdote about something in Israel that made them smile this week.
Whose death is it, anyway?
We discuss the struggle over Rabin’s legacy: Should it be a broad message about political violence, or a narrower message about the dangers of the occupation?
Who really killed Rabin?
Alarming polls show that one third of all Israelis and half of religious Israeli Jews do not believe that PM Rabin was killed by Yigal Amir, instead believing one of the many conspiracy theories that proliferate. We ask why.
Had Rabin lived…
We try to answer that unanswerable, counterfactual question: Had Yigal Amir eaten some bad sushi on the 3rd of November, 1995, what country and what world would we be living in today?
All songs by Nati Hassid, in honor of his show this week at the Ozenbar club here in Tel Aviv!
A Love Story From Platform 9KaspomatBecause We Don't Care Anymore - ft. Shaanan Streett Pass It Along
Allison, Noah, and special guest, professor and environmental leader Alon Tal, discuss three topics of incomparable importance, and end with an anecdote about something in Israel that made them smile this week.
Standing together or coming apart?
We discuss competing narratives on the left for explaining the “knifey, stabby” times we’re living in.
Rage of Consent?
We discuss efforts to change Israel’s rape laws that turn the focus of the courts from the victims to the perpetrators.
Political Environment?
We ask whether Israeli environmental organizations are crypto-leftists in crummy disguises.
All songs by Beer7:
7 Beer BottlesAnti-ShantiMy Mom Killed The PunkA Pig In Answer
Allison, Noah, and special guest Miriam Herschlag (Times of Israel Ops & Blogs Editor) discuss three topics of incomparable importance, and end with an anecdote about something in Israel that made them smile this week.
Savage times
These may not be the worst of times, but never have times been bad in just this way. We discuss what this week has been like for us, as parents and as people, as our Facebook feeds fill with ever-more-horrifying videos.
What Israel’s right makes of the violence
How has Israel's right reacted to this gruesome spate of attacks, and do they have a point?
What Israel’s left makes of the violence
How has Israel's left reacted to this gruesome spate of attacks, and do they have a point?
Music:
Omer Netzer - Goodbye SongOmer Netzer - TroubleOmer Netzer - WaitingTamar Eisenman - Creation
Allison, Noah, and special guest Miriam Herschlag (Times of Israel Ops & Blogs Editor) discuss three topics of incomparable importance, and end with an anecdote about something in Israel that made them smile this week.
Third Intifada?
We discuss the waves of violence engulfing us, as stabbings follow shootings follow stonings, accompanied by violent demonstrations and mass arrests. What the hell is happening around us, and what, if anything, can make it stop?
Kids and racism
A study has found that almost two in five of teachers say they lack adequate teaching tools to combat racism among their students - our kids. Is racism common coin in our children’s economies and, if so, what should be done about it?
The temptations of battle-tested testes
New research has found that Israeli women shopping at sperm banks prefer soldiers' sperm, the more battle-tested the better. What is that about?
All songs by Ravid Kahalani and Yemen Blues (off the Insaniya-Humanity album):
BeautalityTonight I'll Be Pretty (Featuring Mariem Hassan)FarhaMa'ahla Asalam (Featuring Zion Golan)
Allison, Noah, and special guest Gilad Halpern (Managing Editor of Ynet News and host of TLV1’s Tel Aviv Review) discuss three topics of incomparable importance, and end with an anecdote about something in Israel that made them smile this week.
The coming of the Repub-Likud & Avodah-mocrat parties
We discuss PM Netanyahu’s plans to unify the parties on the right into an "Israeli Republican Party," and the nascent efforts of the Labor Party and the Tnua Party to do the same thing on the center left, forming an "Israeli Democratic Party."
Sham-bassador?
We discuss the efforts of three leftist diplomats to block the appointment of Dani Dayan, one-time chair of the settler YESHA Council, as Israel’s ambassador to Brazil, by convincing Brazilia not to allow him to serve.
Charming settlers
We discuss the "charm offensive" of settlers, who have lately taken to inviting folks to their towns, their vineyards, their homes, to demonstrate how much, if we just give them a chance, we'd like them, we'd really like them.
All songs by Ha-Tavlinim:
Ba LiBa-TachanahRosh Ba-KirTzilzalei Paomonim
Allison, Don, and Noah discuss three topics of incomparable importance, and end with an anecdote about something in Israel that made them smile this week.
Sticks and stones
We discuss the raft of government proposals to increase the penalties for stone-throwing, in the wake of the tragic death of Alexander Levlovich. How ought we to treat kids in kaffiyehs pelting with potentially deadly projectiles in the name of political protest?
Won’t anyone think of the capitalists?
We discuss an essay in Haaretz magazine entitled "Capitalism in Israel is Under the Brutal Attack of Social Activists" - oh my, won't anyone think of the rich people!? But is there a point here? Have do-gooders turned capitalism into a dirty word?
Portmania (A Tale of Love and Sadness)
We discuss the new movie written and directed by, and starring, FOPP (Friend of the Promised Podcast) Natalie Portman, "A Tale of Love and Darkness," based on the astonishing book by Amos Oz.
All songs by Adi Madanes, in honor of his new record, "Lachlom, Lirkom, Lifrom":
Biglal AnatIm At Ta’azvi Oto Hu Yichtov ShirimAsher AhavtiBo’u Nachgog
To mark the Days of Awe, Allison, Don and Noah discuss a trinity of topics aimed to divine the state of the spirit and the spirit of the state here in Israel. We ponder the state of religion & irreligion, spirituality & superstition, creed & cult in the Jewish State, even as God looks down upon us and ponders whether or not to inscribe The Promised Podcast in the Book of Many Downloads, or instead, in the Book of Too Few Facebook Likes, heaven forefend!
The religiouser we get, the happier we feel?
A poll commissioned by Haaretz has found that ultra-Orthodox Jews are happier than Orthodox Jews, who are in turn happier than traditional Jews, who are in turn happier than secular Jews. What's the explanation?
Gimme that ol’ time irreligion!
That same poll has found that 70 percent of Israeli Jews believe in God, and 98 percent of Israeli Arabs, meaning – among other things – that lots of ostensibly secular Jews have begun to believe in God. Are atheist Zionists becoming an endangered species?
Taming theists with technology?
Research indicates that ultra-Orthodox Jews are using the internet in rapidly growing numbers. Can frumkeit and Facebook really mix? Or will the wiring of the ultra-Orthodox lead to their assimilation into the great unwashed mass of instagramming idiots?
Songs by Tuna, one of Israel’s great rappers, in honor of his new album, "Gam Zeh Ya’avor"!
Lama Lo AchshavGam Zeh Ya’avorOlam Meshuga (with Nechi Nech)Rock Shloshim
Allison, Don, and Noah discuss three topics of incomparable importance, and end with an anecdote about something in Israel that made them smile this week.
To hell with what folks think about Israel!
This year, perhaps more than ever before in history, our government seems to be saying a big "FUCK YOU" to the world. We just don’t care what you think about us. Obama? Screw you! Hollande? Up yours! Merkel? Take a hike! But why? Why? Why?
The beginning of the end of the Rabbinate
Blatant rebellion against Israel's Chief Rabbinate broke out this year after a group of rabbis established an alternative, “friendlier” conversion court. Everyone expected the Orthodox hegemony to get even stronger, but are the rabbis losing their grip?
Dazed, confused, drunk, and depressed
Israeli leftists spent this year mad, muttering, and morbidly depressed. This was the year that so many of us on the left lost our nerve, our mojo, our hope - even though now is when we need them the most: What the hell can we do to get them back?
Songs for a happy, indie Rosh Hashanah!
Devek – Shir TishreiEfrat Ben-Tzur – Shnei TapuhimRona Keinan – Sof Ha-OnaYermi Kaplan – Ruach Stav
Allison, Noah, and The Times of Israel Ops & Blogs editor Miriam Herschlag discuss three topics of incomparable importance, and end with an anecdote about something in Israel that made them smile this week.
Constraining kids in casts: A scene from the occupation
We discuss the inescapably viral video of an Israeli soldier grappling with a 12-year-old boy, one of his arms in a cast, as two Palestinian woman and one girl grapple with him, pounding, scratching, and biting. What are we to make of such a distressing sight?
Opposing Netanyahu, this time with feeling
Israel’s youngest MK (at 30) and social protest leader Stav Shaffir has called her party’s failure to challenge the ruling coalition “a first-rate leadership failure.” We ask whether she's right, and what the opposition should be doing instead.
Teaching kids the Classics: Gates, Jobs & Zuckerberg
New Minister of Education Naftali Bennett is trying to convince high-schoolers to take high level math, which will give them primo salaries - a sort of Start-Up National Service. We ask why all this neo-capitalist ideology on school grounds makes us want to puke.
All songs by the cool and ethereal Luna Abu Nassar
Bint MeenRakevetEynayimBoha
Allison, Don, and Noah discuss three topics of incomparable importance, and end with an anecdote about something in Israel that made them smile this week.
Peace by the numbers
A new poll commissioned by the energetic, leftist think-tank Molad, suggests a new strategy for ending the right’s grip on power and, in time, for ending the occupation and achieving peace with the Palestinians. We ask what these new numbers add up to.
A new (leftist) saviour to rise from these streets
There's a buzz in the sidewalk cafes of greater Tel Aviv this week, as we saw politic's future and its name is General Gabi Ashkenazi. Is he our “Great White Hope”? Or is “Great White Hope-ism” the religion of fools, and are those fools us?
This land is your land, this land is my land
We discuss the bill proposed by Labour MK Danni Atar, which would grant traditional agricultural settlements effective ownership over 90 percent of their lands, while requiring them to fork over the remaining 10 percent to nearby development towns.
All songs by Avraham Tal, in honor of his kick-ass free show in the sandbox in the Tel Aviv Port:
Ve-ha-boker Ya’alehAni ItachBo’ee NishkavBo Kmo she-Atah
Allison, Don, and Noah discuss three topics of incomparable importance, and end with an anecdote about something in Israel that made them smile this week.
Israel and the "A Word"
Haaretz columnist and mensch Bradley Burston wrote an essay entitled “It’s Time to Admit it. Israeli Policy is What it Is: Apartheid.” It went viral. We ask if it makes sense – factually and politically – to use the "A word" to describe Israel.
The wages of politicization
The newly more-politicized “Judicial Appointment Committee” met this week, and Likud MK Nurit Koren proposed advancing a judge because she is a woman of Yeminite descent, like Koren herself. We ask if Koren was really that off base.
The Way Home (Road Trip!)
Social protest leader Daphni Leef and singer-songwriter Yael Deckelbaum are planning to load up a van with all manner of shit and travel cross country for a month, listening to people describe their vision for the country. Is Dafni and Yael’s fantabulous journey a political act of meaning?
All songs by the Bob Marley-loving Hatikvah 6:
Od Pa’am Pa’amHachi YisraeliKol Yom MihadashMa She-Yehiyeh, Yehiyeh
Allison, Noah, and The Times of Israel's Ops & Blogs editor Miriam Hershlag discuss three topics of incomparable importance, and end with an anecdote about something in Israel that made them smile this week.
A decade out of Gaza
On the tenth anniversary of Israel’s unilateral withdrawal from the Jewish settlements in Gaza, we discuss the lasting legacy of the withdrawal - one of the most dramatic events in Israel's history. What, if anything, can we learn from it a decade later?
Jewing up the diaspora real nice
An ambitious new program has been announced by the Ministry of Diaspora Affairs meant to fix “the weakening of the Jewish foundations of the family unit” among diaspora Jews. Is this just more insufferable Israeli meddlesome condescension?
Israel's dead, long live the Jewish State!
We discuss 91-year-old peace activist and moral compass Uri Avnery’s assertion in Haaretz that we’re seeing a frightful shift in Israel from a “Hebrew” state to a “Jewish” state that will subvert Zionism and soon bury us all.
All songs by Tamar Eisenman, in honor of her new record, Limbo, her first in Hebrew!
Klum LoRegaLimboDay & Night
Noah and special guest Sandy Fox - Yiddishist, historian, and bon vivant - seek some solace from the news of a tragic week in the magnificent mosaic of Israeli music.
Music: Astonishing, 100-percent-authentic Israeli music in Arabic, French, Russian, Amharic, Judeo-Iraqi, Judeo-Yemini, Judeo-Moroccan, Ladino, Yiddish, Romanian, Spanish, English, and Hebrew. It’s an almost miraculous mosaic, and a beautiful one!
Ruba Shamshoum - Fuqaati (My Bubble) (فُقاعَتي - ربى شمشوم) Riff Cohen - J’aime Sadyle - Imena Zvuloon Dub System - Tenesh Kelbe Lay Dudu Tassa & the Kuwaitis - Walla Ajabni Jamalak A-Wa - Habib Galbi Joe Elbaz & The Blues Angels - Moroccan Hoochie Coochie Guy & Roey Zu Aretz - Quando El Rey Nimrod Ramzeilach - Fir Zin Balkan Beat Box - Balkumbia Los Caparos - Volver Daniella Spektor and Rotem Bar Or - Giant Heart Corinne Alal - Ein Li Eretz Aheret
Noah, Ilene Prusher, and radio impresario Shoshi Shmuluvitz discuss three topics of incomparable importance, and end with an anecdote about something in Israel that made them smile this week.
World Jews to Israel: "Quit Messing Up Our Game!"
A new study finding that Jews around the world are ambivalent about how Israel uses force, and convinced that Israel’s sometimes ill-advised use of force in the occupied territories, and our failure to pursue peace in a serious way, put Jews around the world in danger. But isn’t Israel supposed to protect the Jewish People?
Playing Backgammon Alone
Another poll (the 6th Annual European Survey) finding – unsurprisingly -- that Israelis are very happy but also -- surprisingly -- that Israelis score lower than ever on "community well-being." Is the sense of community and solidarity that characterized Israel in its first generations now deteriorating? If so, why?
Are Smart Cities a Dumb Idea
Cisco and IBM have teamed up with the Tel Aviv-Jaffa municipality to make it one of the world’s "smartest" cities, with apps and electronic kiosks. Sounds great, but are digital cities are turning citizens into consumers, voters into buyers, and democracy into a sham of a shell of a simulacrum?
All this and the happy sounds of Ta’ani Esther, in honor of their just released album, Maskanot.
Don, Noah, and special guest Ilene Prusher discuss three topics of incomparable importance, and end with an anecdote about something in Israel that made them smile this week.
How far is J Street from my street?
We discuss J Street’s upbeat campaign in support of the Iran deal, which leaves no room for the worry and ambivalence that most Israelis feel. Is a chasm spreading between the Israeli left and the American Pro-Israeli left?
The new face of Israel's opposition?
MK and Yesh Atid party head Yair Lapid is attempting to parlay PM Netanyahu’s failure to prevent the Iran deal into his own political asset. Is this the beginning of a campaign that will lead him to the Prime Minister’s residence?
The wages of compassion
Security experts have found that six Israelis have been killed by men released as part of the deal that brought Gilad Shalit back to his family three years ago. Should this grim calculus affect future Israeli hostage negotiations?
Songs from the new EP "Esek Mishpahti" ("Family Business") that just dropped this week, by pioneering Israeli M.C. Sagol 59 (Khen Rotem) and young rapper & producer Shiroto (Tomy Rotem). In addition to the musical simpatico of the two hip hop stars, they are also father & son!Shimiot ba-avirMaspikMatzav HeirumHip Hop
Don, Noah, and special guest Miriam Herschlag discuss three topics of incomparable importance, and end with an anecdote about something in Israel that made them smile this week.
Apocalypse Soon?
Since every other sentient being is discussing it today, we thought we'd join in: What does the Iran deal mean for Israel, its people, its politicians, its Prime Minister, and its relations with America? Is it time to start digging fallout shelters?
And here come the rabbis!
We discuss the recent, rollicking resurgence of the rabbis of the Knesset, who are trying to reverse liberalizing legislation on a whole host of issues. Is this a religious putsch by a junta of rabbis, or merely a reversion to the status quo?
An ode to hypocrisy
Mizrahi poet Roy Hasan has won the Bernstein Prize. We examine his recent poem that calls out Ashkenazim for hypocrisy, hegemony, and all-around ass-hole-itude. What should we, the Ashkenazi assholes, learn from these slings and arrows?
Today's playlist features the Youtube sensations of the summer:Eden Ben Zaken - Malkat Ha-ShoshanimLior Narkis - Reichot Shel AlcoholPeer Tasi - Mashkeh YakarDudu Aharon and Sharif - Ha-Kol Koreh Be Tel Aviv
Don, Noah, and special guest Ilene Prusher discuss three topics of incomparable importance, and end with an anecdote about something in Israel that made them smile this week.
Gas-holes!
We discuss the deal that gives the rights to the country’s natural gas windfall to American and Israeli corporate consortia, leading many to argue that PM Netanyahu, like Esau in the Bible, just sold off our birthright for a mess of pottage.
The peace movement stirs?
As we mark the one year anniversary of last summer’s tragic Gaza war, hundreds of women launch a symbolic hunger strike, and other peace initiatives compete for public attention. Is Israel’s peace movement showing signs of life?
Too hip for Hebrew?
As more of Israel’s best young musicians opt to forsake Hebrew in favor of the more commercial English, we ask whether Hebrew culture is endangered among the country’s hipperati.
All Songs by the oh-so-positive acoustic rock trio with the oh-so-negative name, “Lo”:NoaKaren/Sof HayomBiladeynu GamSara
Allison, Don, and Noah discuss three topics of incomparable importance, and end with an anecdote about something in Israel that made them smile this week.
Fox News for the Jews
We discuss the Israel “Jewish Heritage Network” (Channel 20), which is morphing into a right-wing news network before our eyes. What does the addition of a local, right-wing partisan news organization auger for the country?
Princes of resentment
We discuss a fascinating new book that suggests the key to understanding Israeli politics may be the resentment felt by the children of a generation of right-wingers who were cruelly excluded from the institutions of the state when it was established.
Let Us Now Praise: Political hacks, functionaries & smoke-filled rooms
We discuss the claim of a Brookings Institution genius, Jonathan Rauch, that all America's efforts to do away with smoke-filled rooms is actually damaging its politics. Might something like that be true here in Israel as well?
All songs by LFNT (a short and fun way of saying "Elephant," and also a life philosophy hidden inside an acronym: Live Free Not Troubled):
The Birds And The BeesI Won’t TellChanceBetween Understanding And Salvation
Allison, Don, and Noah discuss three topics of incomparable importance, and end with an anecdote about something in Israel that made them smile this week.
Oren unbound or Oren unhinged?
We discuss three essays by MK and former Israeli Ambassador to the US Michael Oren, which surprised everyone, outraged many, and left the rest of us wondering how an ex-diplomat can be so, well, undiplomatic.
War crimes & misdemeanors
We discuss the report on last summer’s Gaza war, issued this week by the UN Commission on Human Rights, finding that both sides may have committed war crimes, and their leaders should be tried in the International Criminal Court.
Is this man the future of the Israeli left?
We take a look at Tel Aviv-Jaffa Mayor, Ron Huldai, who just told the press that he may challenge MK and opposition leader Yitzhak Herzog to become the new leader of the Labor party and the Left. Is the ex-fighter pilot and high school principal our best hope?
All songs by Erez, the 22-year-old jazz, R&B, and rock singer who just released her first album, "Proper Lady," and who rocked the “Groove” festival at the Tel Aviv port, for free, this past week:
ClichéBlending The UniverseWild, Sweet PlaceJust Another Color
Allison, Don, and Noah discuss three topics of incomparable importance, and end with an anecdote about something in Israel that made them smile this week.
2 States, 1 Homeland?
There's another peace initiative proposing two states – Palestine & Israel – with no borders to separate. Palestinians will settle in ancestral homes in, say, Haifa. But, they live in Palestine but vote and pay taxes in Israel. Can such a scheme work in practice?
Israel’s Other Crisis
Finance Minister Moshe Kahlon’s unveiled new proposals to solve Israel’s housing crisis. The proposals include a variety of measures all aimed at jimmying the free real estate markets.
Uncultured Wars
Minister of Culture and Sport, Miri Regev isn't a hometown favorite right now. She threatened to pull government funding from just about anything that offends her sensibilities. Furious artist types organize against what they call "anti-democratic censorship".
All this and a tribute to an Israeli cultural landmark, the hip-hop & rap radio show Jigga Juice, on the occasion of its fifth birthday!
Music:
Victor Jackson - Nimrod Reshef Tribute MedleyCohen@Mushon & Peled - Tel AvivNechi Nech - GodzillaCohen@Mushon, Peled, Nechi Nech, Ortega, Z.K, Lukach & Tuna - The Jigga Juice Anhtem
Allison, Don, and Noah discuss three topics of incomparable importance, and end with an anecdote about something in Israel that made them smile this week.
The High Price of Hate
The Rand Corporation study found that the benefit of ending the Israel-Palestine conflict would be $123 billion for Israelis and $50 billion for Palestinians. Wow! With that money, we could buy Whatsapp, Waze, Skype & Instagram! But does knowing how much the conflict costs us bring us any closer to ending it?
Everybody Hates the Jews!
A poll found that 71% of Israelis think that the world has a double standard when it comes to criticizing Israel. Do most Israelis think that the whole world is against us? If so, how does that belief affect our politics?
Segregating the Sexes
A high school principal decides to separate the girls from the boys in advanced math classes, in hope that it’ll boost girls’ achievements. Some applaud this, others argue that in a society where some folks think that some buses should be segregated by sex, we must resist all segregation by sex. Is separating the girls from the boys a good idea?
Playlist:
Hip LGBTQ music in honor of Pride Week!:Naama Ha-Cohen, Le Zalman Shoshi Be-AhavaCorrine Alal, Zan NadirYehudit Ravitz, Eretz Tropit YafaDana International, Eifo ha-Lev
Allison, Don, and Noah discuss three topics of incomparable importance, and end with an anecdote each about something in Israel that made them smile this week.
FIFA = “Frankly, Israel Foments Apartheid”?
We discuss the brouhaha over a Palestinian proposal to expel Israel from the international football association, FIFA, and the suggestion of some leftists that Israel deserves to be expelled. Do they have a point or are they just spoiled sports?
IDF = “Impeding Democracy Fulsomely”?
We discuss two recent trials of IDF soldiers, one charged with mouthing off against the occupation on German TV, and the other charged with - wait for it - eating a ham sandwich. Is the army enforcing the ideological agenda of the new government?
BFF = “(You) Better F*cking Fail”?
We discuss an intriguing essay by Ari Shavit, pointing out that when Cleveland Cavaliers coach, American-Israeli David Blatt, coached in Israel, we couldn’t have been meaner to the guy. Are we Israelis unable to appreciate each other’s achievements?
Playlist:
All songs by Labrador Laboratories, in honor of their show this week at Levontin 7:
Dance All Night In The RainLonely TribesWhat A MessGoing underground
Allison, Don, and Noah discuss three topics of incomparable importance, and end with an anecdote each about something in Israel that made them smile this week.
The anti-social network
We discuss the tragedy of a government bureaucrat who, accused on Facebook of racism against an African-American woman seeking his help, shot himself in the head this week. Is the power of social network rage something we need to tamp?
The legacy of leaving Lebanon
On the 15th anniversary of Israel’s unilateral withdrawal from its self-declared “security zone” in southern Lebanon, we ask what imprint the occupation and withdrawal left on today's world. Was the withdrawal a heroic turning point in Israeli political history?
Labor’s Loser?!?
We discuss the documentary, “Herzog,” which aired this week and led journalists and politicians to pile onto Labor Party leader Isaac Herzog. What do we learn from the film about the leader of opposition, who still hopes to one day be Prime Minister?
Playlist:
All songs by Igor Krutogolov's Karate Band & Toy Orchestra - it’s punk klezmer performed on toy instruments, people!
Skeleton DanceSevenMad MedowLast Supper Souffle
Allison, Don, and Noah discuss three topics of incomparable importance, and end with an anecdote each about something in Israel that made them smile this week.
Netanyahu’s Ministry of Magic?
We discuss the odd new ministerial alchemy that produced a “Minister of Space” and other strange concatenations. Did PM Netanyahu create bullshit ministries for bullshit reasons, destined to produce bullshit results - all to silence critics and reward friends?
Religious fanatics or Godless heathens?
A world-wide poll recently carried out by the WIN/Gallup Organization found that Israel is one of the least religious countries in the world. This conflicts with other findings - that in Israel religion is very important to most, growing more important by the day.
Short trip from cradle to grave
We discuss the ultra-Orthodox woman from Bnei Brak, who through the first 46 years of marriage was unable to conceive, and who achieved the positively biblical feat of giving birth to her first child at the age of 65. Is Israel a little too baby crazy?
Playlist:
All songs by Shelly & Rotem, in honor of their show this week at Levontin 7. Their EP, Between Shores, is on Bandcamp.
East BerlinMaps (Yeah, Yeah, Yeahs Cover)Streaming LowBells In My Head
Allison, Don, and Ilene Prusher discuss three topics of incomparable importance, and end with an anecdote each about something in Israel that made them smile this week.
BDS bummer on campus
We discuss the spread of the BDS movement on American college campuses, feeding off last summer’s Gaza War. Student councils and minority activist groups are demanding divestment from Israel while telling Jewish students they are privileged whites.
Will Negev Bedouins have to make way for the Jews?
A high court ruling allows plans to go forward to demolish a 60-year-old Bedouin village in the Negev in order to establish a new Jewish town in its place. We’ll ask what these rulings portend for Jewish-Arab relations in Israel and the direction of the High Court.
An Ode to Jerusalem, unified and disunited on Jerusalem Day
As Jerusalem Day arrives, celebrating the reunification of the city during the Six-Day War, our panel tries to look past the violence that rocked the city less than a year ago, and we consider our own evolving relationship to Israel’s capital.
Playlist:
All songs by Ehud Banai (the most gifted musical Banai of all)
Ani HolechHayomMaaseh B’arbaahCmo Tzippor V’Shira
Allison, Don, and Noah discuss three topics of incomparable importance, and end with an anecdote each about something in Israel that made them smile this week.
Days of rage and race
We discuss the video of police officers assaulting a kid of Ethiopian descent in IDF uniform. It unleashed a wave of angry protests about police brutality against Ethiopian Israelis, and more broadly about a racism few of us here have looked squarely in the face.
A government of Rabbis, Rightists, and a Reformer
We discuss just what we might expect from the new coalition of 61 that Prime Minister Netanyahu cobbled together at the last minute. What kinds of policies are on the horizon?
Breaking ranks
We discuss a new report by leftist NGO Breaking the Silence, containing excerpts of interviews with 60 soldiers who fought in the Gaza War last summer. What, if anything, can we learn from its troubling conclusions?
Playlist:
All songs by young Ethiopian-Israeli hip hop singers because, well, you know.
Sasha & Shrulik - Summer TimeNaor Asresay - Nilham Beshvil AtzmiCafé Shahor Hazak - Rak La’AlotTazazo & Tzemer - Eema
Allison, Don, and Noah discuss three topics of incomparable importance, and end with an anecdote each about something in Israel that made them smile this week.
The wages of boycott
We discuss the recent Supreme Court decision to uphold a law that will make Israelis who advocate boycotts against Israeli businesses or institutions liable for any damages that result. Have the courts just criminalized free speech?
Girls just wanna have guns!
We analyze new findings that Israeli women are more hawkish than Israeli men. For instance, they are less favorably inclined to a Palestinian State, and more favorably inclined to spending more on the army. But they're also more likely to support social programs.
Will Judaism survive Israel?
We discuss Tomer Persico's much-discussed Haaretz essay, in which he claims that the growing dichotomy between Judaism and democracy in Israel is “one disaster that Judaism will not survive.” Yikes. Does he have a point?
Playlist:
All songs off the great new Israeli homage to David Bowie, “Bowie from Here”
HaMasach HaLavan - Tembel, TembelDeer John - Wild is the WindNomke - Life on MarsStay - Munch
Don, Noah, and special guest Debra Kamin discuss three topics of incomparable importance, and end with an anecdote each about something in Israel that made them smile this week.
Pillorying Peres for pilfering
We discuss whether former PM and President Shimon Peres deserves to be pilloried for shilling for Israel’s richest and most rapacious bank, Bank HaPoalim, in exchange for $30,000 a month. “Say it ain't so! Tell us we're dreamin', Shimon!”
The Culture Wars: "Burn, baby, burn!"
We discuss an essay by brilliant journalist, writer, cultural critic, screenwriter, and documentary film maker Nissan Shor, arguing that Israel is in flames, but the best thing to do is bring a bag of marshmallows and develop our appetite for destruction.
Celebrating Israel in the Age of Ambivalence
We ask how Independence Day should be celebrated in 2015, an age when ponderous ceremonies and jets-flying-overhead-in-formation may not be the sources of inspiration they once were, and when ambivalence saturates the land.
Playlist:
All songs by Arik Einstein, in honor of Yom Haatzmaut!
Sa Le’atHabalada Shel Yoel Moshe SolomonAni ve-AtaYesh Bi Ahavah
Allison, Ilene, and Noah discuss three topics of incomparable importance, and end with an anecdote each about something in Israel that made them smile this week.
Coalition proposition disquisition
We discuss the dilemma facing opposition leader Isaac Herzog: Is opposition a form of perdition? Is joining the coalition electoral sedition demanding contrition? In short, should the center-left consider joining a coalition led by PM Netanyahu?
The bio-matrix
We discuss whether Israel ought to require all citizens to swap our old-fashioned identify cards and passports for new “biometric” ones that may enhance our security at the cost of our privacy.
Relearning to remember
We discuss how we ought to remember the greatest tragedy to befall the Jewish people, as it recedes into history and the presence of survivors grows less with each passing year.
Playlist:
All songs courtesy of the unpolished sweetness of Yotam Perel
Shara Bamiklahat (Yup, the Yoni Bloch song)Aeroplane Over The Sea (That’s right, the Neutral Milk Hotel song)Toasty, the Yotam Perel songSaddest Hug
The Times of Israel's Miriam Herschlag, Activist Professor Alon Tal and Noah discuss:
Fission Indecision
How Leftist Israelis ought to react to the framework agreement limiting Iran's military nuclear program, but leaving the country (which, as we speak, is hosting a Holocaust denial cartoon contest) with lots of uranium and lots of centrifuges to process it at a future date.
Trailing off
Is Israel's culture of hiking the land is imperiled as the Zionist ethos that gave birth to it is itself waning.
So much to protest, so little protest music?
Whether, as one music critic has just written, Israeli pop music is hopelessly and cluelessly apolitical and navel-gazing.
Playlist:
All songs by OSOG – On the Shoulders of Giants – in honor of their Headstart campaign to fund their new album!
Sweet MelodySymphony Of TreesWake Up In A JacuzziUnder My Ukelele
Allison, Don, and Noah discuss three topics of incomparable importance, and end with an anecdote each about something in Israel that made them smile this week.
How do you solve a problem like Ted Cruz?
The love bomb Ted Cruz tossed in Israel’s direction as he declared his candidacy for the US Presidency at Liberty College. How does “Support Israel!” fit with “Ban Abortion!,” “Guns for All!,” and “Abolish the IRS!”?
Keeping the Generals in their Barracks?
A recent petition saying that ex-generals are politicizing the army when they try to use their positions to influence Israeli politics.
Why is this Podcast different from all other podcasts?
What should we tell our kids about the meaning of the Exodus story now, in Israel of 2015?
Playlist:
Habanot Nechama-So Far/LehiyotYaFlowersLies
Allison, Don, and Noah discuss three topics of incomparable importance, and end with an anecdote each about something in Israel that made them smile this week.
Let the pressure begin?
We discuss Peter Beinart's proposal that it's time for American Jews to lobby the US government to pressure and punish Israel, channeling the Piper Chapman dictum, “Bitches gots to learn.”
"V" for "vanquished" (and you thought it was for "victory"!)
We discuss former defense minister Moshe Arens' assertion that the left’s "anyone-but-Bibi" campaign is what cost them the election, by making Netanyahu seem like an unfairly maligned neophyte.
Angry, angry Ashkenazim
We ask why one white leftist after another expresses crazy rage in crazy ways against the Mizrahi voters who came out to support Netanyahu; why do us privileged folks have so much spleen?
Playlist:
All songs from the hip collection of Mizrahi women artists, “Bat Makom 2”:
Liat Yizhaki – Or Min Ha-MizrachLiron Meyuhas – LailaRakefet Amselem – Yedid NefeshYasmin Levy – La Nave De Olvido
Allison, Don, and Noah discuss three topics of incomparable importance, and end with an anecdote each about something in Israel that made them smile this week.
We-the-People have spoken! (What the hell did we say?)
Allison, Don, and Noah discuss what these elections said, if anything, about the hearts and minds of Israeli voters: Headlines from Tel Aviv to Timbuktu have said that PM Netanyahu won in a landslide, but did he really?
Fear! Uh! What is it good for?
We discuss the fear and fear-mongering at the heart of the election campaigns: Was PM Netanyahu a diabolical genius who played up, played on, and played with our fears, or was he just addressing our deepest concerns?
What the hell do we do now?
We discuss what the left should do now, as it faces several years in the opposition. Elections are like Adam Sandler movies: There's always another coming soon. So what does the left need to do to be ready for the next one?
Playlist:
All songs by the hit art-pop of The Compromises (Ha-Pesharot)
Listen to our special election panel with Noah Efron, Debra Kamin, and Gil Troy as they break down the surprising overnight results.
Don, Noah, and Allison discuss three topics of incomparable importance, and end with an anecdote each about something in Israel that made them smile this week.
Behind the Curtain
We discuss the imminent elections and our expectations. For whom will we be casting our ballots? Why do we support that list? What do we think (or perhaps hope) will be the eventual outcome?
Surprise! No Prize!
Generally considered the country’s highest honor, the Israel Prize is awarded annually on Independence Day. This year the prize will be awarded in only three of its four categories. Why did this occur? Who is to blame?
Thou shall not be a total dick
An NGO called Gesher (or Bridge) recently produced a video which, as part of a “new ten commandments” they’ve formulated, encourages more friendly interactions among politicians. The video includes MKs saying and writing nice things about colleagues across the aisle.
Playlist:
All music by La Vache Qui Rit (הפרה הצוחקת) in honor of their show this week at Ha-Azor:
Opa Cupa (Gypsy Serbia)
Besena Rovena (Gypsy Albania)
Tchavo (Gypsy Manouche)
Disapozhkelekh (Trad. Ukraine)
Don, Noah, and Allison discuss three topics of incomparable importance, and end with an anecdote each about something in Israel that made them smile this week.
Death, Tyranny & the Pursuit of Jihad in the US Congress
We discuss Prime Minister Netanyahu's much-anticipated speech to the combined houses of the United States Congress. Did it accomplish anything with Iran? In the end, did it strengthen or weaken Netanhayu? How about Israel, the country he’s paid to captain?
Shakespeare vs. Shlonski: Does the Anglo vote matter?
Why are English speakers becoming the darlings of the political class? Is there really an “Anglo-Saxon” vote that carries any weight in Israel?
Our forefathers were Adam and Eve, not apes
Haartez asked political party leaders what they think about religion & science. While many supported science, Darwin wasn't as popular as we thought.
Playlist:
All songs by the 1840s
I’ve Always Wanted To
Queen of the Sky
Rainbow
No
Don, Noah, and special guest Judy Maltz (Haaretz reporter and documentary director) discuss three topics of incomparable importance, and end with an anecdote each about something in Israel that made them smile this week.
Who gives a f*ck about a returned bottle?
We discuss the State Comptroller's report, which details the profound profligacies and petty corruptions of the first family, including spending over 3000 shekels a day on cleaning. While it may be douche-baggery, is such behavior really an election issue?
Collect Jews: Win valuable prizes!
Judy Maltz's riveting essay in this week's Haaretz describes the ingathering to Israel of a small and exotic sect of “lost Jews” in India called the Bnei Menashe. We ask, is it time to stop seeking lost or threatened Jews in the hope of dragging their asses to Israel?
Important breaking news about Bissli
Israeli digital newspapers increasingly mix disguised ads among the legitimate and unpaid content. They are turning to Advertorials, or branded content, as a way of balancing their budgets. We ask, is it time to “stop worrying and learn to love the Advertorial?”
Playlist:
All songs by Marsh Dondurma, in honor of the brassy and joyful sound they produced at Ha-Azor this week:
Allison, Noah, and special guest Ilene Prusher discuss three topics of incomparable importance, and end with an anecdote each about something in Israel that made them smile this week.
We discuss a remarkable new election video posted by the Shomron Settlers’ Council, which finds its place alongside new ads by PM Netanyahu suggesting that Leftists will invite the Islamic State to overrun Jerusalem.
Class warfare
We discuss the election campaign of the ultra-Orthodox Shas party, which says, among other things, “If you live in Ramat Aviv don’t vote for us, but if you work for those heartless bastards do vote for us.”
Political warfare
We discuss the decision to bar two candidates from running for the Knesset this week: Balad MK Haneen Zoabi and Yachad prospective MK Baruch Marzel. One is an anti-Zionist Hamas-sympathizing Palestinian, the other an ultra-nationalist former Meir Kahana acolyte.
Playlist:
All songs by Indiana, in honor of their show this week with the hippest band in Holon, Ha-Zeevot, at E.P.G.B in Tel Aviv.
WonderlandBlack JackIt's all On UAt Margiah Oti
Allison, Don, Miriam Hershlag, and Noah discuss (1) Why Mizrahim shun the Left (hint: It’s the oppression, stupid!), (2) the perhaps growing phenomenon of tourists who come seeking not to see the country’s sites of historic and cultural wonder, but rather, the sites of conflict and oppression: Why is this happening, and is it a good or bad thing?, and (3) As the Ministry of Education spends tens of millions to fund what is essentially a huge nationwide bookclub to read the Bible in an initiative called 929, we ask if it’s money we’ll spent, with some of us enchanted by this projects, and others of us a little repulsed.
All this and hardcore klezmer from Kfar Saba with Ramzailech!!
Songs:Fir ZinShtetleAmzalegAl Titakni Oti
Allison, Noah, and special guest Miriam Hershlag discuss three topics of incomparable importance, and end with an anecdote each about something in Israel that made them smile this week.
Poking Obama in the Eye?
We discuss PM Netanyahu’s decision to address the US Congress two weeks before Israeli elections, which has left President Obama livid, congressional democrats in despair, Israel’s US Ambassador discredited, and domestic political opponents outraged.
To V or not to V?
We discuss the probity of V15, a foreign-funded, get-out-the-vote NGO dedicated to removing PM Netanyahu from office, which has kicked up an election-time storm.
Left behind
We discuss Meretz and its leader Zahava Gal-On, as part of our continuing series of discussions about the parties and individuals at the heart of these elections. Is Meretz spending its advertising shekels wisely?
Playlist:
All songs by Ha-Trempistim, on the occasion of the launch of their 2nd album and the tour that goes with it
Allison, Don, and Noah discuss three topics of incomparable importance, and end with an anecdote each about something in Israel that made them smile this week.
Pour encourager les autres
We discuss the decision of the Israeli Steimatzky bookstore chain to cancel a “Charlie Hebdo” event, in which they had planned to sell a shipment of the post-massacre issue. Should offensive cartoons be in our face?
The merger of Israel's Arab parties: An historic unification?
We discuss what the historic unification of three Arab parties and one joint Arab-Jewish party augers for Israeli politics. Can the Balad-Ra’am-Ta’al-Hadash list, which incorporates such opposing ideologies, succeed?
Israeli elections 2015: Hell is other people
We ask what it says about the state of Israeli politics today that this election is shaping up to be about which bastard not to vote for.
Playlist:
All songs by Maureen Nehedar in honor of her tour and remarkable new album, 'Asleep in the Bosom of Childhood.'
Tzur MisheloKhon Ta-khonAshreichem IsraelYesheina be-hek Yaldut
Allison, Don, and Noah discuss three topics of incomparable importance, and end with an anecdote each about something in Israel that made them smile this week.
Of Labor glossed
We discuss the Labor Party primaries, which produced a list of candidates that is youngish, Ashkenazi-ish, female-ish, and socially-aware-ish. But has the party made a mistake by combining two agendas: Distributive justice and territorial compromise?
Women in Israel: The seen and the unseen
We discuss whether or not an ultra-Orthodox paper photoshopping Angela Merkel out of a picture of the heads-of-state at the Paris solidarity march says something important about the status of women in Israel.
Which side are you on?
We discuss a new Foreign Ministry propaganda video that says, basically, “Give us a break, you know that Israel is the good guy and Islam is the enemy.” Does it highlight a basic truth that often gets lost in the debate, or is it self-serving claptrap?
Playlist:
All songs by Gevolt, the pioneers of Yiddish Metal Music!
Der AlefbeysBay Mir Bistu SheynDer Rebe ElimelekhZog Nit Keyn Mol
We discuss the crass response of Israel's leaders to the Paris terror attacks, a kind of double-pronged 'I told you so' - to Europe's leaders regarding the threat of radical Islam and to diaspora Jews about the lures of the Holy Land in an anti-semitic world.
Spotlight on Moshe Kahlon
We ask: What makes the leader of the new 'Kulanu' party tick? He's tacking to the center, but will that be where he stays after the elections? He promises to break monopolies and make the country safe for the consumer - a kind of 'Marx of the mall.'
Thinking about thinking about same-sex marriage
Does Naftali Bennett's religious party suffer from 'Jewish Home-ophobia'? Why did the party release a video of its candidates giving their opinions on same-sex marriage? None of them supported it, of course, but civil union was mentioned by some.
Playlist:
All songs by Lior Shoov, in honor of her brilliant show at the OzenBar this week, and her sell-out show at Ha-Azor.
Caress my skinOr (cover of a Neomi Shemer song)A Song to MamaWalking the Night
Allison, Don, and Noah discuss three topics of incomparable importance, and end with an anecdote each about something in Israel that made them smile this week.
We discuss the decision of the Israeli government to withhold half a billion shekels of Palestinian tax money. Is this just one of a bunch of clever strategies Israel can employ at will, or does it show that in international diplomacy we are plum out of ideas?
Losing faith
The Israel Democracy Institute's annual report shows that Israelis are losing faith in all their institutions, save the army. Why should this be? Why do Arab Israelis trust the police more than any other institution except the Supreme Court?
The recent Likud primary produced a list of candidates some have hailed as a great improvement. We ask whether the parties that pick their Knesset candidates through democratic primaries produce better results than the parties run by autocrats.
Playlist:
All songs by The Betty Bears, in honor of their kick-ass show ringing in the New Year at the Pasáž!
After You’re GoneIf You’re A ViperJack, I’m MellowWhen I Get Low
Allison, Don, and Noah discuss three topics of incomparable importance, and end with an anecdote each about something in Israel that made them smile this week.
Israel's 'crucial, last-chance, decisive watershed'
We discuss the weird notion, asserted by politicians, pundits, and intellectuals, that these elections are “the most important” in Israel’s history and will determine our fate forever. Could this rhetoric be setting us up for a huge disappointment?
Spotlight on Naftali Bennett
What makes the Jewish Home leader tick? We discuss the power of his 'No More Apologies' message, which is at the heart of his election campaign. Is this also at the heart of his appeal to so many voters?
The Promised Podcast’s Person, Place or Thing of the Year
Allison, Don, and Noah each present candidates for 'Israeli person, place or thing of the year' for each of two categories: (1) Politics/Diplomacy, and (2) Culture & Society. Then they try to pick an overall winner...
Playlist:
All songs by Gal De Paz, or Goldie, in honor of her return to the country and her show at the OzenBar this week
Allison, Don, and Noah discuss three topics of incomparable importance, and end with an anecdote each about something in Israel that made them smile this week.
Give peace a deadlineThe recent Palestinian proposal to the UN Security Council mandates peace negotiations that must, within a year, produce an agreement ending the occupation and establishing a state in Palestine. A deadline on peace? Where will it lead?
Ha’am (is seriously) Itanu?Eli Yishai, the natty ex-Shas leader has just started his own competing party, Ha’am Itanu (The Nation is with Us). This makes us wonder, can Eli Yishai remake Mizrahi politics in Israel?
Shabbat Sha-shut-upWhy did a campaign promoting Shabbat observance have everyone grousing and grumbling? We ask, what’s all the fuss about?
PlaylistAll songs by Nowadays:Song 14Cold and NewAdvertisementRain
Allison, Don, and Noah discuss three topics of incomparable importance, and end with an anecdote each about something in Israel that made them smile this week.
#Israelex: Picking teams
We discuss the the Labor Party’s efforts to bring all the center-left parties, save one, under its wing. Can the Livni-Herzog rotation really work? How long can the center-left stay on the good side of the ultra-Orthodox?
Spotlight on the leaders who impact our world: Moshe Feiglin
Moshe Feiglin, the man challenging Netanyahu for leadership of the Likud, wants to annex the territories but make marijuana freely available to us all - an odd amalgam of views. We ask: What makes Moshe Feiglin tick?
20 great American scholars, leftist Zionists all, want to sanction individual politicians (like Naftali Bennett) who sustain the occupation. We ask: Are 'personal sanctions' are a good idea. Do desperate times call for desperate measures?
Playlist:
All songs by the sultry Keren Ann:
Lay Your Head DownStephanie SaysFor You & I
Allison, Don, and Noah discuss three topics of incomparable importance, and end with an anecdote each about something in Israel that made them smile this week.
Woman of valor, who will elect?
We discuss the campaign to get ultra-Orthodox women on the ballot for the upcoming elections, which encourages people not to vote for religious parties that don’t allow women to run. Does it reflect tectonic changes among the ultra-Orthodox?
Give peace a policy
At this week’s Saban Forum at Brookings, former Ambassador to the US Michael Oren challenged Labor leader Isaac Herzog on his policy towards the Palestinians and the peace process. What exactly does the mainstream Left plan to do to advance peace?
Will the elections make any difference at all?
We try to answer the (slightly annoying) questions asked in this NYT piece: Does the prospect of a purely rightist government show how much Israel has changed? Could the coming elections transform Israel’s future, it’s place in the world, and chances for peace?
Playlist:
All songs by Ha-Zeevot, in honor of their show at Levontin 7 this week:
Yoredet ve-OlahBack HomeOmeret LoAdamot Yeveshot
The pall of the poll
Israel’s last elections were in January 2013, and now, it seems, the smoke-filled rooms have spoken: We’ll be heading to the polls again very soon. Why do we need elections? Won’t they be all about style over substance? Think about the 2 billion shekel price tag!
This week, Secretary General of the Labor Party Hilik Bar submitted a bill that would enshrine the language of equality in Israel’s Declaration of Independence as a Basic Law. Is this a sufficient political response to the controversial ‘Nation State’ bill?
The Women Wage Peace group held its official inaugural event last week, a remarkable train-caravan of 700 women to the embattled southern town of Sderot. How could such a movement impact Israeli politics? Can women do it better?
Playlist:
All songs by Electric Desert:
TfilaMagrebPeshte RomanesteEl Mishkan Beiti
Allison, Don, and Noah discuss three topics of incomparable importance, and end with an anecdote each about something in Israel that made them smile this week.
Although apparently about nothing, the 'Jewish State' bill could still become a tsunami that, if nothing else, wrecks the coalition. Could the law help reaffirm the principle of national self-determination, or could it turn Israel into a discriminatory ethnocracy?
A 'Likud' for the Left?
Is it really possible for the entire center-left to join together into a single 'super-party,' as the center-right did in 1973 with the formation of 'Likud' (meaning 'unification')? We discuss the potential costs and benefits of the left hanging together.
Miriam Shler, the director of the TA Sexual Assault Crisis Center, joins the Promised Podcast team to discuss the disturbing case of the judge who refused to press charges against her rapist, avoiding what feminists have for years called 'the second assault.'
Playlist:
All songs by Saz (Sameh Zakout), to remind ourselves that Israel may be a Jewish state, but it’s not just a Jewish state:
The Only PlaceYou’re the LoveI Love YouStory
In the shadow of the horrifying murders in a Jerusalem synagogue, Allison, Noah, and Times of Israel Ops & Blogs Editor Miriam Herschlag discuss:
Squirmin’ on the Mount
The question of whether Jews should be allowed to pray on the Temple Mount has reentered public discourse since the shooting of Rabbi Yehuda Glick. With this and other tragic recent events, we ask whether we're heading for a full-blown religious war.
Henry Kissinger's "peace later"
In his acceptance speech for the World Jewish Congress' Theodor Herzl Award, Henry Kissinger remarked that Jews and Palestinians can’t settle their problems while the Middle East is in disarray. Is there something to this rejection of the "peace now" meme?
Coalition crises and stinking maneuvrers
We all know the love is gone between Prime Minister Netanyahu and his coalition partners. But should Bibi's detractors be getting excited about the chance to unseat him? How likely is a Herzog-Lapid coalition? How is it that Bibi is at once so weak and so strong?
Playlist:
All songs by Dikla, in honor of the release of her new record, Ve-Eem Preidah:
Are we terrorized yet?
News analysts and professors are holding forth about whether or not the third intifada has started, and the question of whether or not the killing we’re seeing now will pass soon. So the question remains, how do the recent stabbings and rammings impact folks like us?
Can the Bible reduce poverty?
MK Ruth Calderon is working to implement the biblical injunction to forgive debts every seven years. She says, “It is an idea that will change the lives of thousands of kids who live beneath the poverty line. An idea that contains within it traditions that pertained in the days of the Talmud, through which people helped their fellows.”
Why do guys get an icky charge from Jewesses with guns?
There is something majorly messed up about how men think about Jewish women and, especially, Jewish women with guns. This is proved all too true today with a Girls-of-the IDF pinup calendar, and the icky charge guys get from Jewesses with Guns.
Playlist:
All songs by Mika Karni, in honor of her forthcoming album (and the single she just released)
Nashakti Bahurah
Kol Dodi
Mi Zot
Shvil
Allison, Don, and Noah discuss three topics of incomparable importance, and end with an anecdote each about something in Israel that made them smile this week.
Is Bibi rooting (too openly) for his American home team?Prime Minister Netanyahu’s unmasked hope that Republicans capture the US Senate, and whether we won’t pay a price for his partisan enthusiasm.
How many generals does it take to reinitiate a peace process? Maybe 106106 Generals call on Prime Minister Netanyahu to initiate a regional peace process.
Jewish conversion rules are a'changingAre the new rules about how conversions work in Israel a sign that the Rabbis’ grip is loosening?
Allison, Don, and Noah discuss three topics of incomparable importance, and end with an anecdote each about something in Israel that made them smile this week.
Whither Jerusalem?
Recent acts of terrible violence in Jerusalem have had pundits debating whether the Third Intifada has begun. We discuss political analyst Gershom Gorenberg’s suggestion that a divided city can be turned into a bridge between two divided peoples.
The President and the precedent
We discuss President Rivlin's speech at the annual Kafr Qasem memorial service. What we are to make of a President whom we all know as an advocate of a one-state solution, who is also emerging as the country’s strongest voice for Palestinian rights?
The astounding wisdom of the Jewish people
The Yavne City Council just voted unanimously to begin work on a museum to be called 'The Hall of the Wisdom of the Jewish People,' in which 120 Jewish geniuses are to be memorialized. Is it time to drop the 'Jews are so smart' trope?
Playlist:
All songs by Mira Awad:
Singing My Song
Cloud
All I Want
We Can Work It Out (With Achinoam Nini)
Allison, Don, and Noah discuss three topics of incomparable importance, and end with an anecdote each about something in Israel that made them smile this week.
Palestinian statehood and the tale of two lefties
With the dust settling on the British Parliament's Palestinian vote, we consider the two leftist models for dealing with the growing international embrace of Palestinian Statehood - one for it, the other against - embodied by MKs Zahava Gal-On and Hilik Bar.
The Berlin brouhaha continues to baffle
The Olim leBerlin Facebook group caused a tidal wave of anger: Anger that groceries are so expensive in Israel, and anger at the people willing to emigrate (especially to the site of such painful Jewish memories) just for cheaper 'Milky.' What's it all about?
The Jewish watchdog: Saving Soviet Jews
We discuss the ethos behind the recently-divulged 1990 Israeli plan to invade the USSR to save Russian Jews: What does it say about the Israeli psyche? Is this sense of responsibility towards Jews around the world, wherever they may be, still alive today?
Playlist:
All songs by the post-punk genius of Morah Machlifah:
Lo Tsarich
Tagid Li
Shir Al HaTkufa
Beton
llison, Don, and Noah discuss three topics of incomparable importance, and end with an anecdote each about something in Israel that made them smile this week.
The United States of Israel?
Could 'Cantonization' save Israel? We discuss a proposal to slice and dice Israel into small ethnically and ideologically defined localities that would each have laws that better fit their populations. Would such a system benefit Israel's minorities?
The great media parallax
The coverage of Operation Protective Edge this summer looked very different on Israeli TV screens compared to American or European ones. Why is this, and should something be done to change Israeli media coverage of regional events?
Calamari is kosher, right?
Why did PM Netanyahu feel compelled to make this dubious statement to a journalist recently: "I do not eat unkosher foods"? Is the legitimacy of being an out-and-out secular politician diminishing? Is this a sign that secular Judaism is on the retreat?
Playlist:
All songs by the anarchic genius of 'Old Man River' (whom you can call Ohad Rein):
Amazing Grace
La
You’re On My Mind
Shanti Aaye
Allison, Don, and Noah discuss three topics of incomparable importance, and end with an anecdote each about something in Israel that made them smile this week.
A spoonful of politics helps the medicine go down?
Lancet editor Richard Horton visited Israel this week to apologize for his publication's controversial 'An Open Letter for the People of Gaza.' As authoritative social figures, should doctors express their political views publicly, while wearing their white coats?
How to judge the judges
The Israel Bar Association, ignoring fierce opposition from representatives of the bench, recently decided to reinstitute the annual rating of judges by lawyers. Does this serve to remind judges that they're human, or is it populism at its most problematic?
Seeing black at 30,000 feet
We discuss the now-infamous El Al flight that took off 20 minutes late because an ultra-Orthodox man was negotiating not to have to sit next to a woman, which led to a change.org petition and global feminist uproar. Is this the classic paradox of liberalism?
Playlist:
All songs by Shmemel, because we can:
Berlin
Shir Ahava Hevratit
Shmemel ve-Ha-Omanim Ha-Koasim – Al Tig’u Lanu Ba-Arak
He
Allison, Don, and Noah discuss three topics of incomparable importance, and end with an anecdote each about something in Israel that made them smile this week.
A tale of two speeches: Fear and loathing at the UN
In the last few days, PA President Mahmoud Abbas and Israeli PM Benjamin Netanyahu have given speeches to the United Nations General Assembly. Which speech was more depressing, and should we even care about what was said?
How Supreme a Court?
Over the past two weeks, the Israeli Supreme Court has angered many with its rulings on 'admission committees' and the Holot detention facility for illegal immigrants. Does the Supreme Court overreach or should judicial activism be encouraged?
They cry of the silenced
We discuss journalist Mairav Zonszein's New York Times op-ed, 'How Israel Silences Dissent': Have dissenters in Israel really been silenced in any meaningful way? Or have they just failed to work out what they should be saying and how they should be saying it?
Playlist:
All songs by Hadara Levine Areddy (in honor of her cool show this week at Levontin 7):
Wedding Song
Not Another Sad Song
Anything More (with Duvid Swirsky)
Mishehu Pa'am Ahav Oti
Who really killed the Israeli Left?
Where exactly is the Israeli Left failing? And if it is, indeed, dead, was it killed by an ill-advised infatuation with 'abroad,' which distracted it from winning hearts and minds at home?
Can the army smash class barriers in Israel?
Is the Israeli Army a great equalizer and civilian high-tech incubator? Or are today’s soldiers, who will be tomorrow’s entrepreneurs, just yesterday’s privileged rich, white boys? And what of those who don't participate in the army?
The Promised Podcast's 'year that was'
PM Netanyahu's Rosh Hashanah speech to the nation listed Israel's accomplishments over the last year - we didn't know we'd had it so good! In reality, what, if anything, has changed over the past year? And what changes would we like to see next year?
Playlist:
All songs by Tamar Aphek, in honor of the European tour she’s just announced:
We Deserve ItWho Cares/Summer ComesThe Second I Am HoneIt’s For Us
Allison, Don and Noah discuss three topics of incomparable importance, and end with an anecdote each about something in Israel that made them smile this week.
Were the Unit 8200 'refuseniks' right to break ranks?
Unit 8200's 'refusenik' letter exposed some Israeli intelligence practices some are finding very hard to swallow. Were the soldiers right to publicly expose these practices? Why are important leaders of the moderate left so fiercely opposed to the letter?
"You say goodbye...": Reasons to get the hell out of dodge
TLV1's very own Rogel Alpher caused a stir in his recent Haaretz piece, in which he announced his reasons for wanting to emigrate from Israel. How will this affect other leftists? In Rogel's words, is Israel worth the price it's exacting from us?
"…And I say hello": Reasons to make Aliyah
The government's recent promotional video aimed at getting young Jews to come and study in Israel has received mixed reviews. Should the government be marketing Israel in a political vacuum, as a bitching lifestyle choice, in order to seek American immigrants?
Playlist:
All songs by Shirly Kones, in honor of her show this week at Tel Aviv's Levontin 7:
SiraBeKarov BaCfarShniot ArukotYasha
Host Noah Efron conducts a very special interview with a conscientious objector, and we pull together our favorite 'Vatacountry' segments.
Acts of conscience: Summer in the slammer
Noah interviews IDF reservist Gilad Halpern, who spent the summer in a military jail for conscientiously objecting to his call-up during Operation Protective Edge. How does conscientious objection in Israel map onto the political landscape?
Acts of love: 'Vatacountry' best bits
A personal reflection by podcast listener Andrew Wirth on art, freedom of expression, and the army in Israel; plus some of our favorite 'Vatacountry' segments about life in this infuriating country that, at the end of the day, we cannot help but love.
Playlist:
All songs by The Victor Jackson Show:
Mechva LeNimrod Reshef
HaDor HaBa
Safa Shnia LeBchira
Allison, Don and Noah discuss three topics of incomparable importance, and end with an anecdote each about something in Israel that made them smile this week.
988 acres of land
Israel has announced the takeover of 988 acres of land belonging to five Palestinian villages in the Etzion settlement bloc, clearing the way for a new settlement named Gvaot. Why did the cabinet decide to appropriate these lands at this moment?
Why are Bibi's approval ratings in free-fall?
According to a recent poll, PM Netanyahu's approval ratings have taken a sharp dip, the acceleration of a trend that started six weeks ago. Why the plummeting popularity, and what about the political consequences?
The “Annual State of the Schools” (ASS) assessment
Israeli kids receive more hours of schooling than most OECD countries, but what do they get to show for it? We discuss what works and doesn’t work in Israeli schools at the moment.
Playlist:
A potpourri of great, classic kids’ music, in honor of the start of school:
Ha-Keves Ha-Shisha Asar - Reamim U-VrakimYehudit Ravitz & Yoni Richter - Mah Osot Ha-AyalotMatti Caspi - Shir Am NakiLahakat Iyam - Kilafty Tapus
Allison, Don and Noah discuss three topics of incomparable importance, and end with an anecdote each about something in Israel that made them smile this week.
Now the ceasefire’s signed, what the hell just happened?
What should we make of the ceasefire agreement? What can and should be done to take advantage of the opportunities created by this war (notwithstanding its many miseries and tragedies) to create a better future for us all?
Iron Dome saved lives, but at what cost?
Has Israel's missile defense system, which probably saved hundreds of Israeli lives in this war, actually saved Hamas from destruction and undermined Israel's image as a civilized state in the eyes of the West?
Liberal Zionism, RIP?
Are we nearing the watershed at which 'liberal Zionists' will have to choose between liberalism and Zionism? Does the reality of modern Israel offer no hope for Jews committed to liberal values?
Playlist:
All songs by Los Caparos, the coolest Russian-Israeli punk-ska band you’re ever likely to hear, in honor of their great performance at Barby this week:
Haim BaseretLo KoneRasta VasilyShir Hamakolet
Allison, Don and Noah discuss three topics of incomparable importance, and end with an anecdote each about something in Israel that made them smile this week.
Time to lose those 'war-goggles'
As we try to figure out what happened over the summer, is it useful to ask whether the war in Gaza addled our perceptions? Are we hardwired to become more hawkish in times of war?
Preaching to the converted
We discuss Rabbi Yuval Sherlow's critique of David Grossman's speech at this week's anti-war rally in Tel Aviv's Rabin Square. Is he right to criticize the Left for failing to find a bridging discourse between Left and Right?
What the hell should we do next?
The time has come for left-wing activists to dust themselves off and do something. But what? What should we be lobbying our politicians for? What should we be writing op-eds about?
Playlist:
All songs by Efrat Lotenberg, in honor of the release of her amazing new album, Ha'Machbesa shel Acha:
Hi Lo MevinaT.A.Be'Regaim KaeleBe my Baby
Allison, Don and Noah discuss three topics of incomparable importance, and end with an anecdote each about something in Israel that made them smile this week.
Is Bibi too strong to make peace?
Would a weaker Netanyahu would be more willing “to make some very difficult compromises, including taking on the settler movement,” as President Obama claimed in an interview last week?
When war and peace are held hostage to machismo
To what extent are Israel’s notions of peace, security and war 'male' in character? Are women relegated to the margins in times of war? Would we even be in this mess if women wielded greater influence?
The 'one-and-a-half state' solution
Could a Jewish state and a Palestinian state both exist within the same territorial borders? Can fancy thinking solve our problems, or does the old received wisdom have the best chance of succeeding?
Playlist:
All songs by Nechi Nech
Cafe Ve-Sigaria
Ayiddisha Rasta Man
HaSimcha
Bur Ve-Am HaAretz
Summary: Ilene, Don and Noah discuss:
'What's the blockade about?'
What is Israel's embattled blockade on Gaza supposed to do, and what does it do in reality?
Has Israel lost Europe, now and forever?
What to make of Europe's increasingly muscular anti-Zionist populationHas Amos Oz found a new tune for the Israeli left?
How to understand Amos Oz' remarkable interview on German radio, in which he compared Hamas to a neighbor across the street with snipers, gunning for your children.
Playlist:
All songs by Malox:
Polkas for PunksPopcornSorvant HoroNeli Kola
The way the war ends
How can and should this war be brought to a close? Might Israeli demands for 'demilitarization' as a condition for ending the operation become an excuse for prolonging it?
Can there be too much solidarity?
Does the moving solidarity we've seen among Israeli Jews since the war began harden our hearts even as it softens them? Does it further exclude and alienate Palestinian Israelis?
Beyond the double standard
Is Israel held to an impossible (double) standard in world opinion? Why is this the case and should Israelis just accept it and move on, or fight it tooth and nail?
Playlist:
All songs by Shai Nobleman, for the pick-me-up we all need:
Yesh AhavaPowerpop SymphonyReally Have To GoJulian Ve-Ani
Ilene, Noah and Elion discuss:
Is asymmetry the new black?
Israel is fighting the mother of all asymmetrical wars. Is Israel’s military superiority also its greatest weakness? Is Hamas’ weakness also its greatest strength?
Empathy for the 'devil'
Showing empathy for the suffering of the other side in these times of war should not be equated to Hamas-sympathizing.
Second thoughts on uprooting the family tree?
Watching funeral after funeral of young IDF soldiers causes us to reconsider the decision to uproot ourselves and our families and move to Israel.
Playlist:
The powerful peace music of Hadag Nachash
Od Ach Ehad
War
Shirat Ha-Stiker
Lo Frayerim
With some of the cast in shelters, and most living the high-life in the capitals of Western debauchery, we present a collection of “vatacountry” segments, in which each of us describe something that surprised and amazed us, delighted and amused us, in our day-to-day lives in Israel. As if to say, “Times were better once, and they’ll be better again soon.”
Dancing the Ethiopian shoulder shake on Sigd
Don discusses the Ethiopian holiday of Sigd; Elon tells us about his very erudite taxi driver; and Noah reviews Shimon Peres' biography of David Ben-Gurion.
Songs of Innocence and Experience
Elon talks about the sporty Strawberry family; Miriam reviews the film 'Invisible'; and Noah introduces us to a very precocious couple of musicians.
Family Album: Arabian Babblers and fake ski slopes
Emily talks about her experiences on the Israel Trail; Noah tells us about the time he tried to go skiing on Mt. Gilboa with his son.
A journey right back to our roots
Don takes us into total darkness; Elon reminisces over Yaffa Yarkoni; Noah gets deep and meaningful over Vaclav Havel; and Don visits the Dead Sea Scrolls.
Playlist:
Danny Sanderson – Ha-Galshan
Gazoz – Likhvod Ha-Kayitz
Tomer Ve-Ha-Bsora (Tomer and the Gospel) – Ha-Pa'am
Machina – El Derekh La-Yam
Yaffa Yarkoni – Bab El Wad
Ilene, Noah and special guest, The Times of Israel's Miriam Herschlag, ask:
'We have met the enemy and he is us'
When a pack of Jewish teens lynches a Palestinian kid, is it time for soul-searching? Is there still a moral high-ground and do we occupy it?
Life interrupted: Can we plot peace from our bomb shelters?
The irony of Haaretz's Conference on Peace being interrupted by sirens escaped no one. But when the rockets are heard, must the peaceniks be silent?
Is social justice always subordinate to security?
Exactly three years after they started, did Israel's social protests of 2011, which culminated in a demonstration of almost half a million people, actually achieve anything?
Playlist:
All songs from the album 'Af Al Pil' – Yiddish poetry sung by cool young indie stars, including Shahar Barabash, Rona Keinan, Omer Klein and Alon Lotringer:
Ani Ve-Atzmi
HaYaar Ba-Stav
HaParpar ve-ha-Zahal
Etel
Is it time for Lapid and Livni to quit Netanyahu’s government?
Tzipi Livni, and to a lesser extent Yair Lapid, joined Netanyahu's government to run the 'Peace Show.' Now there is no Show, should they answer the Leader of the Opposition's call to resign?
Letters to a kid contemplating conscientious objection
What do we tell a 17-year-old considering whether he should serve in the IDF? Given the tough consequences of objection, is it different when it comes to our own children?
Will 'Uber' taxis take us for a ride?
Social taxi app 'Uber' is coming to Israel. Taxi drivers in Europe have been striking in protest against the arrival of Uber in their countries, but will it be a boon or bust for Israel?
Playlist:
All songs courtesy of Ben Blackwell's Hebrew-Israelite hip-hop:
Od VeOdWe Bout It
Amitit
Sky Rains Fire
Is it time to revive Israel's vicious political debate?
The solidarity engendered in Israeli society by the West Bank kidnappings is genuinely moving, but is it preventing us from holding our leaders to account?
Is the great summer exodus a search for 'normality'?
More and more Israelis are fleeing the country for trips abroad. What are they trying to escape? Do they want to see what life is like in 'normal' countries?
Free and fearless Amazons: The chest as a weapon of protest
The new 'sextremist' feminist group Femen has hit Israel with its bare-breasted Amazon protestors. Will they win Israeli hearts and minds?
Playlist:
The tuba-based surf music of Boom Pam:
Surfing Tuba
Light Up
Hatul ve-Hatula
Wedding song
This episode of the Promised Podcast doesn't deal with the recent West Bank teen kidnappings straight-up; it's already been instrumentalized by too many, based on too few facts. We adhere to Ludwig Wittgenstein's dictum: "Whereof one cannot speak, thereof one must be silent."
Allison, Don & Noah discuss:
Have we lost patience with settlers?
Is mainstream Israel losing patience with settlers, as found in a recent poll conducted by an institution that supports the settlements?
Is Netanyahu's stonewalling beginning to crumble?
How long can Prime Minster Netanyahu go on being the Peace Process' "obstructionist-in-chief?' Has he lost his grip?
Why swooning over the Stones just isn't cool
Is our joy over the Stones, Neil Young, Lady Gaga and other A-List acts coming to Israel just a little pathetic?
Music:
All songs by Baladino, singing in the dying language of Ladino, from their new album “Dos Amantes”:
La Kumida La Manyana
Si Veriash A La Rana
A Sinyora Novia
Kuando El Rey Nimrod
Allison, Don & Noah discuss:
Rubi Rivlin: A man of contradictions
What to make of Israel’s newly elected President, Rubi Rivlin, a mensch (good guy) who also opposes a two-state solution? Oy, the dissonance!
A pro-Palestinian settler leader?
The startling NY Times op-ed by a settler leader who insists that Israel must hatch a “bold plan to improve every aspect of day-to-day life for Palestinians”: What gives?
Is this the end of prisoner swaps?
A cabinet decision to prohibit future pardons of murderers, ruling out Gilad Shalit-style prisoner exchanges.
Music:
All songs by Assaf Amdursky & Karni Postel, from their lovely new live album:
Rabim HaYamim
Ma'ayan
Mashehu SheAni Lo Yachol
Rakevet LaTsafon
Hamas-Fatah reconciliation: Just suck it up?
How the hell should we react to the reunification of Hamas and Fatah in the Palestinian Authority?
The right to remain unremembered
Do Israelis need “the right to be forgotten” on the internet?
Where did evolution go?
Why did it take 66 years for evolution to make it into Israeli schools?
Music: All songs by the awe-inspiring Balkan Beat Box
Move It
War Again
Balcasio
Part of the Glory
Allison, Don, Noah and special guest star, author Ayelet Waldman discuss:
The thinnest of lines — between 'Jewish' and 'Democratic'
How do Jews around the world think Israel ought to balance its “democratic” and “Jewish” values? The Jewish People Policy Institute's new report, “Jewish and Democratic: Perspectives from World Jewry,” shows that diaspora Jews view Jewish values as essentially democratic ones. But what about the rights of non-Jewish minorities in Israel?
Romanticizing the Draft?
A Knesset member put forth a proposal to end the draft in favor of an all-volunteer army. This would appease ultra-Orthodox Israelis and other who are against the draft, but most Israelis are against replacing conscription with a volunteer professional army. Apart from the more practical considerations, canceling the draft would undermine Israeli society's romantic and nationalistic image of the army as a melting pot and expression of citizenship.
'You Can't Go Home Again'
After spending her salad days in Israel, author Ayelet Waldman emigrated to the U.S. and didn't return for twenty years. Now she's back for a visit and has come to the TLV1 studio to tell us whether, as Thomas Wolfe wrote, you can't go home again.
Allison, Eilon, and Noah discuss:
Why one MK has complained that “we have become a country of idiots that does not respect the Torah,” in response to the wild celebrations following Maccabi Tel Aviv's victory in the European basketball championship; why a famous Hebrew University historian asserts that the victory is “the biggest proof that Zionism has failed when it comes to sports;”Whether the minimum wage should be boosted by 30%, as advocated by 61 Members of Knesset and by basically no economists;The state of poetry in Israel, including soulful readings of translations of our favorite Hebrew poems.All this and new political music by the redoubtable David Broza!
Music: All songs by David Broza, from his latest album East Jersualem –West Jerusalem.
East Jerusalem (with Wyclef Jean)
What’s so funny about peace, love and understanding
Peace (Ain’t Nothing but a Word)
Jerusalem
Allison, Don, and Noah discuss:
“iNakba,” an iPhone app that aims to put the dispossession of Palestinian homes and villages into your pocket;
Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu’s pledge to “legally define the Talmud as the basis of the Israeli legal system” and to make the Jewish calendar the official calendar of the state;
and whether Israel, like the rest of the west, is experiencing a “crisis of authority” that makes it impossible to govern
Music: All songs by indie mainstay Kob, from his new record 'Tugat ha-Mafsidim'
Pitom AtLiat Shel Yom ShishiTugat ha-MafsidimAl Kol Ele
Allison, Don and Noah discuss (1) Why the Conference of Presidents decided to keep J-Street out of their nifty club, and what’ll happen as a result, and (2) Why the proliferating “alternative” ceremonies for Memorial Day and Independence day piss off so many. Plus (3) OurFirst Annual Promised Podcast State of the State Addresses (or, for you commonwealth times, our First Annual Speech from the Throne). All this and rocking with Noam Navo!
Music: All songs by Noam Navo
Kol Yom Ani Me’abedet – cover of Chava AlbersteinPirurimHamabulMashehu nofel
Show Summary – Allison, Don, Eilon and Noah discuss (1) Whether we are cheapening the memory of the Holocaust by applying it to our present-day politics, (2) Whether the amateur Abbasologists filing newspaper opinion columns have a clue about what motivates Palestinian President Mahmoud Abbas, and (3) Whether or not the remodeling of Israeli schools into cubical habitats to prepare kids for office life should make us want to barf. All this, and the music of Dafna ve-ha Oogiot!
Music: All songs by Dafna ve-ha-Oogiot (with special thanks to the brilliant and charming NYU PhD candidate Sandy Fox for the tip)Dafna PikWhat a manThe future looks promisingPoor thing
Allison, Don and Noah discuss:
Mahmoud Abbas’ two “Hail Mary” plays, either dismantling the Palestinian Authority or joining up with HamasThe new 83 year-old head of the Council of Torah Sages, who gave a crowd-pleasin’ inaugural address calling all those who are not ultra-orthodox “ignoramuses” who “pursue nonsense”The mind-blowing new report of the OECD that finds that Israel is “the land of low taxes”
Music: All Songs by Uzi Ramirez, in honor of his new album that just came out last week, Cheese in My Pocket
I know its mine
Cheese in my Pocket
Surrender
The elevator goes up and down
Don, Eilon, and Noah discuss:
the growing trend in the army to rely on donations by well-wishers for basic supplies like boots and sockswhy the peace process seems to be gasping its last gaspwhether or not it should bug us that the average CEO in Israel makes 76 times what the average rest-of-us make
Music: All Songs by The Hazelnuts (האחיות לוז)
Single Ladies (with a tip of the hat to Beyonce)
Crazy People
Shout Sister Should
Letting in Song
Don, Noah, and Miriam Herschlag (Ops & Blogs editor of the Times of Israel) discuss:
a new report finding that almost a million Israelis go to bed hungrywhether Israeli leaders ain’t what they used to be, and whywhether or not stores in Jewish neighborhoods should sell leavened bread on Passover.
Music: All Songs by “(Amit Erez and) The Secret Sea”AfterlifeNot About UsSlow Burning LightKilling Light
Allison, Don and Noah discuss (1) whether Foreign Minister Avigdor Lieberman’s proposal to exchange blocs of population is sincere or mere smartassery, (2) How do we solve a problem like corruption? (With apologies to Rogers and Hammerstein), and (3) Why Israeli parents let their kids play with fire and rusty nails, and take candy from strangers? All this, and the music of Vitarti on the week of their valedictory concert!
Music: All Songs by Vitarti, in honor of their final concert this week (http://vitarti.bandcamp.com)
בעתיד, אנשים לא בהווהמאז שעשיתי אסיד אני לא מבחין בין אמא לאבאטיפשה אחתאני דתי אבל בגלל שאני הומו אני מרגיש רגשות אשם אז גזמתי לעצמי את הפין
Show Summary – Allison, Don, Eilon and Noah discuss (1) whether there is (as journalist Yossi
Klein Halevi recently wrote) a slowly surfacing, stealthful, steadily swelling, and subtly subversive
moderate Center in Israeli politics, (2) why so many ex-pols are becoming rich through influence
peddling, and what can be done about it, and (3) whether a proposed new law that would ban free
daily newspaper is a blow for democracy, or one against it. All that and the heartbreaking new
album by Israel’s most important hip-hop artist, Sha’anan Streett.
music: AugustNovemberJanuaryJulyAll Songs by Shaanan Streett from Tova: A Good Project
Don, Eilon and Noah discuss (1) Whether, now that the head of the ultraorthodox Shas party has endorsed Labor Party leader Yitzhak Herzog for Prime Minister, the time has come for the Labor Party to pal up to the haredim, (2) Why Evangelical support for Israel is waning, and whether we should lose sleep over it, and (3) How our own political views have changed over the years. Plus music from the red-hot, up-and-coming all-woman rock band, Hazeevot!
Former Ambassador Michael Oren’s “Plan B” for unilateral withdrawal – what could go wrong?!?Why MK Adi Kol is being crucified on Facebook for declaring undying love for her party chief, Yair LapidWhy “Good Deeds Day” inspires and nauseates in equal measure.Plus the first annual listener Purim Quiz !
Playlist: All songs by Danny Sanderson & Friends (Danny Sanderson, Kavah Baht-Israel, Eleshevah Baht-Israel, Ziv Harpaz, Kfir Ben-Laish, Gilad Ben-Laish, Amit Harel, Shai Wetzer)
Signed, Sealed, Delivered
Baby it’s you
Who do you love
Rescue Me
Allison, Eilon and Noah (Or, Travoltafied, Alexis Keezy, Erin Stonz and Niall Edbrards) discuss:
Outsourcing our political activism to entrepreneurs and captains of Industry, who claim that they anyway know best what’s best for the country;
Whether it is time to stick a fork in AIPAC, and if it is, what then?; and
Does our Judaism need professional coordinators, as the Ministry for Religious Affairs sets up a “Jewish Identity Administration,” which is hiring neighborhood “Judaism Coordinators” to beef up our flagging identities?
Playlist: All songs by Labrador Laboratories (In honor of the release this week of their new album, Lonely Tribes).
All Night in the RainI’m a ThiefDirty BootsLonely Tribes
Allison, Don and Noah discuss:
Whether PM Netanyahu ought to leave his opponents in the Likud behind and start a new party, à la Arik Sharon;
A Knesset committee’s vote to force Haredim into the army (well, maybe); and
Whether keeping foreign produce off local shelves is screwing the poor or helping farmers.
Playlist: Music by a crazy-hip female punk foursome, “Not on Tour”I Wanna Be Like You!All This TimeThis is RevealingThe Question Came Up
Allison, Don and Noah discuss:
Whether the Israeli press is hobbled or hackneyed
The roles academics and intellectuals play in Israeli politics, and
The ambivalent comforts of holding two passports
Playlist: A tribute to Israeli tributes to the Beatles, in honor of the 50th the Ed Sullivan Show.
When I’m 64 - Jericho Jones
I Will - Hipushiot Ha-Kfar
Dear Prudence - Adam Ben Ezra
Tamid - Gidi Gov and Shlomo Yidov
Allison, Don, Eilon and Noah discuss:
Settlers who say they’ll stay put, even if Israel withdraws and they find themselves in Palestine;
Whether “medical tourism” is a way to stave off the collapse of Israel's medical system; and
How the hell we’re supposed to feel while watching video from Iran showing drones laying waste to Tel Aviv.
All this, and music from “Kids from Nowhere”! (http://kidsfromnowhere.com)
Playlist:
BiscuitsAll the Things We DoBaby DollFavorite Time of Year
Allison, Don, Eilon and Noah discuss:
All this, and punk by ShittyCT (sound it out)!
Music: ShittyCT
Erev Tov Lekha (Good Evening to You)
Babylon Will Fall
Propaganda
Tarbut ha-Parkim (Park Culture)
Allison, Don, Eilon and Noah discuss:
All that and authentic Israeli bluegrass with Jacks of Diamond!
Music: Jacks of Diamond
A sad email
Kind of Substance
Would it be so bad
Dear Roommates song
Allison, Don, Eilon and Noah discuss:
All this and the retro punk of Uzi Navon!
Playlist: Four songs by Uzi Navon ve-Makarim:
Hi lo sham (available here: )
Lo Evater al Atzmi (available here: )
Ha-Mosech ba-Hutim (available here)
Hofesh (available here:)
Plus, one by Matisyahu: Tel Aviv’n
Photo by Holger Motzkau.
Allison, Don, Eilon and Noah discuss:
All that and music by crazy brilliant visionary cellist, Maya Belzitzman!
Music: Maya BelzitzmanParanoid (Black Sabbath Cover)I say a little prayer for you (Aretha Franklin cover)Nature boy (Nat King Cole cover)Change the world (Stevie Wonder cover)Allison, Don, Eilon and Noah discuss:
All that and music by Rona Kenan.
Playlist: Rona Kenan Pale Blue Eyes (with Shlomi Shaban)Lihyot NachonBetoch Agam Kafu Rona Kenan and Tamar Eisenmann
Allison, Don, Eilon and Noah discuss:
All that and the trippy music of Hila Ruach and Kalbey Ruach.
Allison, Don and Noah discuss:
All that and the weird and wonderful music of Lorna B. (aka Adi Ulmansky).
Eilon, Noah and The Times of Israel’s Miriam Herschlag discuss (1) the proposed Red Sea-Dead Sea pipeline, and whether along with water, peace may flow through the pipe; (2) why and how US college kids are challenging Hillel to allow more criticism of Israel on campuses; (3) whether Reality TV needs to be tamed through legislation. All this and Geva Alon, alone again naturally!
Eilon, Noah and The Times of Israel’s Miriam Herschlag discuss
(1) the sad passing of Nelson Mandela, and Israel’s ambivalent relationship to him,
(2) former MK Avraham Burg’s spilling the beans that Israel has nukes,
(3) the brouhaha over vegan activist, Gary Yourofsky.
All this and grunge by Left, in honor of their new album.
Allison, Eilon and Noah discuss (1) the new head of the Labor Party – “Buzghi” Herzog – and his plans to give peace a chance, (2) the facebookization of the Knesset, and (3) the (figurative and, sadly, literal) death of the old cultural guard. All this and cool songs by Efrat Ben Zur with lyrics by Emily Dickenson!
Efrat Ben Zur - BeeEfrat Ben Zur - A ThoughtEfrat Ben Zur - StormEfrat Ben Zur - Till the End
To celebrate the confluence of Thanksgiving and Hanukkah, Allison, Eilon, Don and Noah devote the show to the meetings of American and Israeli cultures. They discuss (1) Why the Conservative Movement is ailing in America, and how it’s doing in Israel, (2) Them Crazy-Ass American Settlers in the West Bank, and what really makes them tick, and (3) The anxieties and joys of immigrants from America raising Israeli kids. Plus, the music of Americans who rock the Israeli music scene.
Allison, Eilon and Noah discuss the Supreme Court’s dressing down of the government, the hot mic in the UN that divulged the world’s worst secret - yes, it's about Israel's being unfairly singled out - and Israelis' inking habits, or the new, surprising tattoo culture.
Allison, Eilon, Don and Noah discuss (1) the evaporation (or evisceration) of environmental parties in the last elections – where have all the flower-lovers gone?, (2) the yawning digital divide in Israel, whether this google-gap ought to concern us, and (3) the primaries in the Labor Party, and why the once beloved Shelly Yacimovich is now embattled. Plus, the alt/folk music of Botimzog.
Allison, Eilon, Don and Noah discuss (1) the dramatic exoneration of MK Avigdor Lieberman of charges of “breach of trust” on the part of a three judge panel, a verdict that brought to a swift end a languorously slow (17 year) investigation and trial; (2) the IDFs decision to buy boots from American factories, which amounted to a death sentence for a local factory and firings for its hundred employees, and (3) the spate of recent legislation reducing the power of rabbis, and amounting to what one journalist called a “slow-moving legislative revolution is taking place that may dramatically change how Israelis live their lives
Allison, Eilon, Don and Noah discuss
The gang also chats with Knesset Member Dov Khenin about what’s up in new the legislative session, and especially the so-called “Better Governance Bill” that may change the face of Israeli politics forever, if it’s passed. Plus, the insanely great music of “Ha-Hatzer ha-Ahorit,” with lyrics by legendary songwriter Yankele Rotblit.
Allison, Don, Eilon and Noah discuss:
All this and new reads, looks and listens you might want to check out in your idle hours. Plus, three mashups by arguably the coolest (and, ironically, the hottest) DJ in Tel Aviv: Maya Jakobson.
En liten tjänst av I'm With Friends. Finns även på engelska.