Jewish Humor Central is a daily publication to start your day with news of the Jewish world that's likely to produce a knowing smile and some Yiddishe nachas. It's also a collection of sources of Jewish humor--anything that brings a grin, chuckle, laugh, guffaw, or just a warm feeling to readers.
Our posts include jokes, satire, books, music, films, videos, food, Unbelievable But True, and In the News. Some are new, and some are classics. We post every morning, Sunday through Friday. Enjoy!
Thanks to our thousands of loyal
subscribers and casual readers worldwide who have joined us during the year.
We started this blog on October 5, 2009 and it's been going strong with more
than 3000 blog entries and more than 3 million page views over the last ten years.
We appreciate your
loyalty and we hope to keep bringing you a daily mix of Jewish humor in all of
its forms -- traditional, eclectic, musical, unbelievable but true, and just
funny, tempered with touches of nostalgia and Yiddishe nachas.
5779 has been a great year for us -- a year of wonderful friendship, a year in which our nine books on Jewish humor have been selling on
Amazon.com, and in which we performed comedy shows and lectures in Florida, New York,
and New Jersey.
We'll be attending services for Rosh Hashanah Sunday, Monday, and Tuesday, and we'll be
back posting again on Wednesday. Here's wishing you Shabbat shalom, and a happy, healthy, joyous,
prosperous and funny New Year from our family to yours!
The tish (table) of Rabbi Elimelech Biderman in Beit Shemesh, Israel, was the scene of dancing and singing last June, when one of the chasidim jumped onto the table. The chasid started wearing a shtreimel, but quickly removed it, revealing a black kippah. He then picked up a traditional brimmed black hat and proceeded to dance, balancing the brim on his nose. Next, he danced with a bottle on his head and, with only partial success, attempted to fill the almost empty bottle with more liquid from a second bottle. Who says chasidim don't know how to have fun? Enjoy! A SPECIAL NOTE FOR NEW EMAIL SUBSCRIBERS: THE VIDEO MAY NOT BE VIEWABLE DIRECTLY FROM THE
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Shai Abramson, Chief Cantor of the Israel Defense Forces, performs with the most
prominent cantors and musicians of our generation, and participates in
prayer services and in concerts throughout Israel and the world with a
variety of musical ensembles
He has presented his cantorial repertoire in Jewish
communities and concerts in the U.S. England, Canada, Australia, Italy,
France, Hungary, Poland, Romania, Bulgaria, Belgium, and more… with the
intention of developing and strengthening ties with Jewish communities
around the world, and intensifying connections with Israel and with the
IDF In this week before Rosh Hashanah, we're sharing a video in which Abramson sings Hineni He'ani, (I am poor in deed), a liturgical poem from the Rosh Hashanah Musaf service composed by Yossele Rosenblatt, accompanied by the Raanana Symphony Orchestra conducted by Ophir Sobol. The Hebrew text appears below the video.
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Here I am, utterly bereft, shuddering and afraid, in fear of the One who sits in judgement of the prayers of Israel.
I have come to stand before You and plead on behalf of Your people, Israel, who have sent me, as unfit and unworthy as I am.
I
beseech You, God of Abraham, God of Isaac, God of Jacob, Oh God, God of
mercy and grace, God of Israel, Mighty One, exalted and awesome - may
this path on which I tread - to stand and beseech mercy for myself, and
those who send me - come to success.
Don't
let them be punished for my failings, don't hold them guilty for my
sins, for I am due punishment for my failings. Let them not be
embarrassed by my failings. Let them not be ashamed of me and I won't be
ashamed of them. Receive my prayer as a prayer of one wise and decent,
of kind ways, great experience, of sweet voice and bound up in the ways
of creation. Hold back The Distractor, so he shouldn't distract me. Pour
out love towards us. Wipe away our sins in love. And overturn all our
woe and pain, the woe and pain of all Israel, into joy and delight, life
and peace. Love truth and peace.
Place
no stumbling block before my prayer. May it be Your will, God, God of
Abraham, God of Isaac and God of Jacob, the great mighty and awesome
God, God on high, the One who Is and Will Always Be, may each of the
Angels who receive prayer bring my prayers before the seat of Your
glory and spread them before You for the sake of all the just, kind,
pure and decent, and for the sake of the glory of Your great and awesome
name, for You are the One who hears the prayers of Your people Israel
in mercy. Blessed are you the One who hears prayer.
It’s almost Rosh Hashanah and that means apples, honey, pomegranates,
shofarot (ram’s horns) and... New Years' cards.
Given our love of all things digital, that last one is something of a
throwback.
But
it might surprise you just how far back in history you
have to go to find the origin of this festive tradition.
Let's go back
in time to discover more about the centuries-old tradition
of Shana Tova cards, and to see what made the covers of Rosh Hashanah
cards for past generations.
Is it time to put the funny videos and memes aside and bring
the physical Rosh Hashanah Card back?
Any
way you express it, now is the time for High Holiday greetings from
Jewish Humor Central to all of our readers. We'll be looking for new
ways of wishing you a Happy New Year as we count down the days until
Sunday evening, the start of the year 5780. We hope you enjoy this retrospective of Rosh Hashanah greetings through the years.
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We
were lucky to discover a collection of more jokes from the talented
Toronto joke tellers who put on a performance of Jewish Folks Telling Jokes, a night of comedy to benefit Jewish Family and Child, one of the foremost Jewish service agencies in North America.
We'll be posting some of these jokes on upcoming Mondays. Here's another oldie but goodie, told by Al Fitleberg.
Here's
the setup: Chaim and Moishe owned a haberdashery store in downtown Dallas. They were talking and said "You know, it's already 40 years that we're in this business. It's already time we should sell the place, live a little, and go for a trip." And then...
Enjoy!
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The Disney organization announced that its first Jewish princess will appear on the Disney Channel in a Chanukah-themed episode of its series Elena of Avalor.
The role of the animated Sephardic princess will be voiced by Jewish actress Jamie-Lynn Sigler, who appeared on The Sopranos as Meadow Soprano.
As The Times of Israel reported this week,
The princess, still to be named, will appear on the Disney Channel
series “Elena of Avalor” in December. The Hanukkah-themed episode will
feature a visiting princess who is from a “Latino Jewish kingdom,” the
Disney Channel announced.
The series centers on Princess Elena Castillo Flores, a 16-year-old who
saves her kingdom from an evil sorceress. For the past two seasons, the
teenager has been learning to govern Avalor. The third season launches
in October.
In the video below Cheddar TV's
Kim Murstein and Azia Celestino discuss Disney's move to expand
representation and become more inclusive. A SPECIAL NOTE FOR NEW EMAIL SUBSCRIBERS:
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Beit T'shuvah in Los Angeles calls itself "a Congregation Like No Other" and certainly organizes Kabbalat Shabbat services like no other congregation. Over the years we have posted some of their liturgical selections set to tunes of the Beatles and Country and Western stars. They specialize in Shabbat services of other popular culture genres as well. Last July they conducted a service with most of the tefilot set to songs made famous by Frank Sinatra. Would you believe Fly Me to the Moon as Shalom Aleichem? Enjoy, and Shabbat shalom! A SPECIAL NOTE FOR NEW EMAIL SUBSCRIBERS:
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We never get tired of watching the mischievous piano comedy antics of the great Victor Borge, the Danish comedian, conductor and pianist who
achieved great popularity in radio and television in the United States
and Europe.
His blend of music and comedy earned him the nickname "The
Clown Prince of Denmark","The Unmelancholy Dane", and "The Great Dane." He
was born as Borge Rosenbaum to a Jewish family in Copenhagen. His
parents were both musicians. He began piano lessons at the age of two,
and it
was soon apparent that he was a prodigy. In this video clip from 1951, Borge played Happy Birthday in the styles of Tchaikovsky, Chopin, Brahms, Wagner, Beethoven, Strauss, Mozart, Irving Berlin, and Shostakovich.
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VIDEO. #Throwback Thursday #TBT
We've become big fans of Ashley Blaker,
the British Orthodox comedian who's been getting rave reviews on his
stand-up tours and requests for more video clips from our readers.
He has previously performed two sell-out tours of the UK (Ungefiltered
and Meshuga Frum) to great acclaim and toured his comedy across Israel
and South Africa. He started performing in USA with a sold-out show at
New York's Gramercy Theatre.
In June Ashley performed in London and included a bit about the circumcision of his son, explaining the little known custom of burying the foreskin under a tree.
Enjoy!
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There are currently 26 synagogues of various sizes in Nigeria. An estimated 30,000
Igbos were practicing some form of Judaism in 2008.
Some Nigerian communities with Judaic practices have been receiving
help from individual Israelis and American Jews who work in Nigeria,
out-reach organizations like Kulanu,
and African-American Jewish communities in America. Jews from outside
Nigeria founded two synagogues in Nigeria, which are attended and
maintained by Igbos.
Because no formal census has been taken in the region, the number of
Igbos in Nigeria who identify as either Israelites or Jews is not known. Seven years ago we posted a portion of a documentary called Re-emerging: The Jews of Nigeria.
The Israeli TV Station i24 News recently broadcast an update on the Jews of Nigeria. Here is their video on the subject.
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We
were lucky to discover a collection of more jokes from the talented
Toronto joke tellers who put on a performance of Jewish Folks Telling Jokes, a night of comedy to benefit Jewish Family and Child, one of the foremost Jewish service agencies in North America.
We'll be posting some of these jokes on upcoming Mondays. Here's another oldie but goodie. Here's
the setup: An artist's studio served hors d'oeuvres and wine at night. So I said to the couple we're with "Let's go in." So we go in. And then...
Enjoy!
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Harmonica music
is not usually performed by a solo performer in concert. Its unique style is
not only present in original compositions but throughout many different genres.
Yoonseok Lee, a Korean harmonica virtuoso,
has a repertoire that ranges from popular and folk music to original
compositions and contemporary music, from Bach to the Beatles.
And now he has
incorporated Hava Nagila into his recitals.
Born in 1992 in
South Korea, Yoonseok Lee started learning the harmonica at the age of 11 and
majored in musicology at the Seoul National University where he graduated in
2017. In 2012, he gave his first public recital and orchestral debut.
In this video,
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For today's welcoming Shabbat video, let's take a trip to Sydney, Australia and the Emanuel Synagogue's Shabbat Live service, which is conducted every Friday evening at 6:15 pm.
Established in 1938, Emanuel Synagogue is a pluralist community
affiliated with the Masorti, Progressive and Renewal movements.
The Shabbat service in this video was recorded on November 29, 2013. It welcomed USA guest star Joshua Nelson "The Prince of Kosher Gospel", along with Rabbi Jacqueline Ninio, Martin Yafe and the Shabbat Live Band. Martin Yafe now directs programs at the YM-YMHA in Washington Heights, New York.
While attending Hebrew University in Jerusalem, Nelson started blending Hebrew texts with gospel melodies and arranging Jewish hymns in gospel style, resulting in solo CDs like "Hebrew Soul" (2004) and "Mi Chamocha" (2005).
Both of Nelson’s parents are Jewish, and his family attended
temple at a black synagogue in Brooklyn, then switched to Sharey
Tefilo-Israel, in South Orange, New Jersey, a reform synagogue with a
liberal reputation. Together with the synagogue rabbi and cantor Nelson leads the congregation in Shalom Aleichem and Motown versions of Mi Chamocha and Adon Olam.
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First telecast on Caesar's Hour on October 10, 1955 on NBC, this
kinescoped sketch is a take-off on the Italian opera Pagliacci by
Ruggero Leoncavallo. Sid plays the role of "Gallipacci" ("Canio" in the
real opera) an actor in a traveling Italian comedia dell'arte troupe
during the late 19th century.
His wife "Rosa" ("Nedda" in the actual
opera), who is played by singer and comedienne Nanette Fabray, falls in
love with fellow actor "Emilio" (the opera's "Silvio" character),
performed by Carl Reiner, and they make plans to elope. Sid sings a
rendition of songs in a gibberish Italian dialect which he picked up in
his youth from waiting tables at his father's 24-hour blue-collar diner
in Yonkers, New York.
Straying off of the real opera's musical score
just a bit, we hear hilariously bastardized renditions of Santa Claus
is Coming to Town, Cole Porter's Begin the Beguine, and Take Me Out
to the Ball Game among others. Howie Morris (Ernest T. Bass from "The
Andy Griffith Show") is "Vesuvio" (whose real opera character is
"Tonio") and he performs a parody song and dance rountine to the tune If I Know What You Know.
In one of the most famous "saves" in the
history of live television, Sid was supposed to paint a teardrop on his
cheek when the mascara pencil broke at the beginning of his nonsense
rendition of Just One of Those Things. Not breaking his stride, Sid
proceeds to pick up one of Nanette's lip brushes and paints an
unscripted tic-tac-toe board on his face.
The grand finale concluded with a variation of the song The Yellow Rose of Texas after Gallipacci
takes care of the situation along the lines of a Mafia hit. Also, in
the early days of live television, one time "specials" which pre-empted
regular series programs were initially called "spectaculars". Listen for
a young Don Pardo introducing the sketch.
Enjoy!
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SJ Tannenbaum is a 22-year-old comedian, impressionist, rapper, and entertainer. His specialty is celebrity impressions.
He was a participant in the Funniest Jewish Comedian Contest at the Broadway Comedy Club in June. In this video clip, he reflects on the different treatments coach and first-class airline passengers get from flight attendants, and imagines a gemara learning session with Barack Obama, George W. Bush, and Bill Clinton. Enjoy! A SPECIAL NOTE FOR NEW EMAIL SUBSCRIBERS: THE VIDEO IS NOT
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The Melbourne Jewish Comedy Festival is a showcase of the very best of
Jewish humour in Australia. One of Australia's best Jewish comedians is Michael Shafar.
Michael
started out with a law degree, but decided he
didn't want to work in an office all day. So he became a standup
comedian.
We recently posted a clip of Michael contrasting Jewish holidays with Australian
holidays. Here's another clip with Michael reading unexpected online ratings and reviews by vistors at the JFK gravesite and the Holocaust Museum.
Enjoy!
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