Great to see Judy Gold. Almost 30 years ago, I saw her perform in NYC and she did a bit where she would find someone in the audience who was clearly not Jewish and mess with him. Well, on my night she got a guy who was not game and was getting offended so she asks "What's Yom Kippur." Guy responds "I'm not Jewish." Judy says "I know, but do you know what Yom Kippur is." Guy indignantly responds "I told you, I'm not Jewish." So Judy then responds, "you know what Yom Kippur is? It's the day that your boss doesn't come to work." Huge laughs and then the guy stormed out. I have been telling that joke ever since.
As a Roman Catholic kid in England.....I grew up laughing my head off at The 3 Stooges,Marx Bros and later on Woody Allen and Jerry Lewis......NOBODY told me their religion,they were just FUNNY!!!!!!!!!😂😂Thank God for our Jewish friends,their contribution to the world of entertainment is immesurable👏👍
So two bees are flying around and one bee is wearing a yarmulke. The other bee says to him…so why are you wearing a yarmulke and the other bee says…I don’t want to be confused for a wasp!
My brother was a standup in the 1970s-'80's, doing late night waits to get on stage in LA. I have his trophy from winning a weekly episode of Chuck Barris'' Gong Show, which got him a slot on "Norm Crosby's Comedy Shop" He said that Norm was warm and supportive to all the comedians, no matter how unknown or green they were
My father, who wasn't Jewish, grew up in a Jewish neighborhood in the Bronx in the 1920s and 30s. My dad had a lot of Jewish friends. So, when I was a kid in the 1960s, my family would go every summer to a different "Jewish hotel" in the Catskill Mts of New York State with my dad's friends. (Almost everyone there was Jewish except for my family.) Every hotel had a nightclub, and they would typically showcase a "Jewish comic." The Catskill hotel circuit was known as the "Borsht Belt." And I would sneak into the nightclubs to watch. I don't remenber anyone famous, but it was a hoot nonetheless.
The hotels in the Catskills would round up all the kids during the day and try to entertain them with various activities. This would allow the adults to go off and do adult things like play golf and hang out at the pool without any bratty kids around. One time the teenaged "counselors," as I think the babysitters were called, wanted to read a story to us. So, the counselor decided to read a book called, "Why We Take Noisemakers to Temple." Before he started, though, he asked if anyone in the group wasn't Jewish. Only my brother and I raised our hands. He said we didn't have to stay if we didn't want to. But, we both said we didn't mind staying. (I figured I might learn something.) But, when the counselor started reading "Why We Take Noisemakers to Temple," the kids, as kids do, started to get a bit fidgety. The counselor threatened that if we didn't behave he was not going to read "Why We Take Noisemakers to Temple." Now, even as a 7 year old, I had a strong feeling that wasn't likely to be a very effective threat. And, sure enough, everytime he tried to read "Why We Take Noisemaker to Temple," the kids would get even more fidgety. After several attemots, he finally said, "that's it, I'm not going to read anymore!" And that is the reason, to this day, I don't know why we take noisemakers to temple.
I’m sure they mention the Borscht Belt .No other group had a version of the borscht belt . Having a large number of places to perform and hone their craft with a guaranteed audience was why the Jewish comedians came up in such numbers
guy goes to the psychiatrist, says: i think my wife is dead. The psychiatrist: why do you say that. Guy: well the sex is the same but the dishes are piling up
My wife's co worker father died. Jackie Kahane/Kahan ( he was billed both ways) was Elivis' Comic for decades -- it was said both Elvis and Col Tom Parker liked him because he "worked clean" - no cussing or overt sex in his act. So we are at a typical sad public event at Mt. Sinai Cemetary. After some nice words they opened it up for comment froim the audience. THEN comes the hilarity. Probably 7-8 Comics get up and they all start the same way..."Jackie Kahane was a great man, a family man, etc.." THEN as if not missing a beat they all launched into their schtick..."A Rabbi and a Priest walk into a bar...etc etc.." THE FUNNIEST Funeral I have ever attended. Jackie would have loved it... The last guy up was Jack Carter who held up the obituary and said to the gathered crowd full of working and retired Comics and started with..."I gotta read in the paper that my great and talented friend Jackie Kahane died and not a single sonofabitch among you had the freakin' DECENCY to call me and invite me to this great man's funeral?? Like what am I? ...Chopped liver?"... It went on and on and soon the entire crowd was howling with laughter. Rest in Peace Jackie and all those who were at that funeral and have since passed...
The man doing the interviews had virtually no sense of humour, so the facial expressions and attitudes of those he interviewed were a study in "WTF is wrong with you?" Best line from them, and there were many, was "You don't believe in God, but you sure believe in Jews."
Growing up in the military, I barely had contact with Eastern city insular Judaism, so it was almost as foreign to me as to a non-Jew. There was no yiddishkeit in my family, even though we all knew a few phrases in Yiddish. When dad retired, my high school was 99% non-Jewish. We were big, athletic Jews who actually knew how to use power tools. Despite all this, when I am 80, I will be a wizened old Jew, eating soup and kvetching.
I'm a hard core comedy fan which means by default most of my favorite comedians and comedy writers are Jewish. I use to live in Los Angeles. When I lived there, I always hoped I would run into Don Rickles and he would "dress me down". Never happened but at least he gave me tons of laughs. . . . RIP Don. . . . Miss you.
Never heard this til now: "Mamaloshen" is a Yiddish word that means "mother tongue". It is an affectionate term for the Yiddish language. Explanation Yiddish is a language that is closely related to Judaism and is a mix of German, Hebrew, and Slavic languages. It is considered the language of the heart and is an integral part of Jewish culture. Yiddish is written using a modified version of the Hebrew alphabet. Yiddish words have become part of the English lexicon, such as "bagel", "knish", "kvetching", and "schmoozing".
I am an atheist. I have always loved these old Jewish comedians. I didn't know they were Jewish or very much about Jewish people until the last 10 or twenty years. I did hear about the holocaust from my mother when I was about 10 years old, around 1961. I was not raised by religious parents. I have a lot of respect for Jewish people and just hate it when I hear them being put down as a group.
Everyone is. Which mother doesn't want their child to be a doctor, or worries about who they're marrying? It's just about being able to do an impression everyone instantly recognizes. If I did that, it'd be in a regional accent, with expressions that most of my country probably wouldn't recognize. On the other hand I could/can talk about concepts that might have alienated a traditional audience, a freedom that I think most comedians enjoy now. Pros and cons...
We had the records WHEN YOURE IN LOVE THE WHOLE WORLD IS JEWISH and YOU DONT HAVE TO BE JEWISH. I still think about those jokes and still have occasional when I quote them.
Wow, Shelly Berman doesn't look a thing like he did on Curb. This must've been close to the end for him. Nice to see Norm Crosby. I remember a show he hosted in the late 70s called The Comedy Shop.
I was quite surprised by the generational split on this, where the old-timers so strongly reject any claim to Jewish humor, or being "Jewish comedians," or the notion that Jews have some special gift or tradition for comedy -- while the next generation embraces it completely. I'm guessing the older comics are still sensitive about it. Maybe it's a holocaust generation thing. (Also, to be honest, some of these guys seem to find Alan Zweig, and the whole idea of this movie, pretty annoying.)
Me: Oma*, do you want a drink of water? Oma: N0, no, Ich bin fine. Me: You just said you were thirsty. Oma: Ja, ja, Ich been thirstig. Me: Oma, I'll bring you a glass of water. Oma: No, no, I bin OK. Me: Oma, I'm getting a glass for me, I'll bring you one. Oma: OK, OK so bring me wasser. (I bring Oma a glass of water) My Oma: What? No ice? (*German grandmother)
You can't have 20th century American comedy without the Jewish community. The greatest comedians and comedy writers were all Jewish. God bless them all.
I felt the interviewer had an agenda with these older comedians and they weren't buying it. Of course they were Jewish, but they wanted to appeal to Jews and a wider audience. I found the interviewer annoying at times, and so did some of these gentlemen.
This is a treasure for showing us a last moment with these great comics. And some not great. But the questions, the interviewer, was really not well-prepared and too off-target, especially with poor Shelley Berman. He bordered on disrespectfulness.
Berman was never known for being a good interview subject. One of the best in the game, Marc Maron, had to walk around eggshells during his WTF episode because Berman was so volatile. I wouldn’t fault this doc’s interviewer for that.
Not true. My stiff upper lip WASP Yankee mother would say, “It’s Christmas Eve. Can someone decorate the tree ALREADY?” And the aphorisms! “Oy! We grow too soon old and too late shmart.” It’s part of American English!
Where did THEY get it? I'm Of PA Dutch lineage, and I'm not so sure we invented it. My name is about as Jewish sounding as they come, so I grew up in the quandary of German Catholic roots being taken for Jewish. As much as I was infused with Jewish humor through TV, growing up, it wasn't until I was an adult that I spent any time in Jewish households. Now I'm old, and my Jewish friends still have to explain to me sometimes when they're joking.
I'm areligious by nature 🙃... my 2nd my stepfather was very "Jewish"... weell to my 7yr old mind anyway... he had red hair after all! 🤔.. But I remember him as the best of the 4 dad's I had... very insightful & attentive... I reckon Jews introduced self-deprecating Yiddish humour into our tortured, tormented Christian mindset... lol! ... It was such a relief back then.. over 60yrs ago.. ... no one wanted to draw attention to the unravelling undertow!...👀 in the event of reprisals of blasphemy 😅😇... perhaps it's Time to get real again...... ✨....💫 ........ ☯
When they moved from the cities to the suburbs…that’s when the communities disappeared. This was played out in the film Avalon, directed by Barry Levinson.
MARC - an old Jewish guy in Las Vegas, NM used to do this routine which I thought was original with him, til I saw it in "High Anxiety". Now I'm wondering where it originated? Marx Brothers? Vaudeville? Catskills? Just the culture? ruclips.net/video/8k_B5DGt2AIs/видео.html PS - Your Dr. Bob Rosen was my second cousin.
I appreciate this documentary when clean comedy was appreciated , but I can’t get over these old guys wearing bad wigs and thinking “this looks fine , everyone will think this is my natural hair “. Or , “ the interviewer is here ? Let me grab my hair “
Heyyy, why Abraham Avinu, Our Patriarch, called His Son Yitsrak, that all when it's all begin, that really Deep, and maybe even before. Yesh Kohar Yesh Kohar
My favorite comedians are Rodney Dangerfield, Jack Benny, Robert Klein, Albert Brooks, the Marx Brothers, but I also like Dave Chappelle, Laurel and Hardy,,Robin Williams, Johnny Carson, and David Letterman.
You have to learn how to be funny if you're always the guy that's most likely to get the shit kicked out of you. We always pushed the Jew towards the thug. It was our best chance. He had to think of stuff to say because he was slower than us, and besides, he'd just trip if he tried to run.
Absolutely, awful interviewer with some of the worst dumbass questions for comedy legends, who were understandably perplexed. The humor was in their reactions to some of these questions.
Terrific. The interviewer was the Straight man and he let the guests be funny. Plus it's great to hear everyone's personal view and history.👍
Great to see Judy Gold. Almost 30 years ago, I saw her perform in NYC and she did a bit where she would find someone in the audience who was clearly not Jewish and mess with him. Well, on my night she got a guy who was not game and was getting offended so she asks "What's Yom Kippur." Guy responds "I'm not Jewish." Judy says "I know, but do you know what Yom Kippur is." Guy indignantly responds "I told you, I'm not Jewish." So Judy then responds, "you know what Yom Kippur is? It's the day that your boss doesn't come to work." Huge laughs and then the guy stormed out. I have been telling that joke ever since.
As a Roman Catholic kid in England.....I grew up laughing my head off at The 3 Stooges,Marx Bros and later on Woody Allen and Jerry Lewis......NOBODY told me their religion,they were just FUNNY!!!!!!!!!😂😂Thank God for our Jewish friends,their contribution to the world of entertainment is immesurable👏👍
Didn’t know that Woody Allen was Jewish? Are you serious?
I guess there were no Jews in England!
So two bees are flying around and one bee is wearing a yarmulke. The other bee says to him…so why are you wearing a yarmulke and the other bee says…I don’t want to be confused for a wasp!
So good to see Norm Crosby! I always loved watching his appearances with Johnny Carson… his play on words was something I always found so brilliant
My brother was a standup in the 1970s-'80's, doing late night waits to get on stage in LA. I have his trophy from winning a weekly episode of Chuck Barris'' Gong Show, which got him a slot on "Norm Crosby's Comedy Shop" He said that Norm was warm and supportive to all the comedians, no matter how unknown or green they were
We lost some of those wonderfully funny people recently. RIP Gilbert Gottfried, & Bob Einstein.
Great documentary- for those of us who remember some of these people.
What's great is seeing some of these comics for the first time in a long time. The piece itself not so much.
I absolutely LOVED this. Thanks to the uploader👏🏼👏🏼👏🏼👏🏼
Me too!
Thanks for putting a little shine on an otherwise lackluster world
Shelly Berman!! Thank you and your friends for wonderful comedy!!! Thank you!!
My father, who wasn't Jewish, grew up in a Jewish neighborhood in the Bronx in the 1920s and 30s. My dad had a lot of Jewish friends. So, when I was a kid in the 1960s, my family would go every summer to a different "Jewish hotel" in the Catskill Mts of New York State with my dad's friends. (Almost everyone there was Jewish except for my family.) Every hotel had a nightclub, and they would typically showcase a "Jewish comic." The Catskill hotel circuit was known as the "Borsht Belt." And I would sneak into the nightclubs to watch. I don't remenber anyone famous, but it was a hoot nonetheless.
The hotels in the Catskills would round up all the kids during the day and try to entertain them with various activities. This would allow the adults to go off and do adult things like play golf and hang out at the pool without any bratty kids around.
One time the teenaged "counselors," as I think the babysitters were called, wanted to read a story to us. So, the counselor decided to read a book called, "Why We Take Noisemakers to Temple." Before he started, though, he asked if anyone in the group wasn't Jewish. Only my brother and I raised our hands. He said we didn't have to stay if we didn't want to. But, we both said we didn't mind staying. (I figured I might learn something.)
But, when the counselor started reading "Why We Take Noisemakers to Temple," the kids, as kids do, started to get a bit fidgety. The counselor threatened that if we didn't behave he was not going to read "Why We Take Noisemakers to Temple." Now, even as a 7 year old, I had a strong feeling that wasn't likely to be a very effective threat. And, sure enough, everytime he tried to read "Why We Take Noisemaker to Temple," the kids would get even more fidgety. After several attemots, he finally said, "that's it, I'm not going to read anymore!"
And that is the reason, to this day, I don't know why we take noisemakers to temple.
Marc Marons stand-up is the best. Catch him if you can. You won't be disappointed.
I’m sure they mention the Borscht Belt .No other group had a version of the borscht belt . Having a large number of places to perform and hone their craft with a guaranteed audience was why the Jewish comedians came up in such numbers
The Chitlins Circuit. Google it.
Is the Borscht Belt anything like the Van Allen Belt?🤔
Recently listened ( again!!) to Woody Allen' s moose joke! So funny!
guy goes to the psychiatrist, says: i think my wife is dead. The psychiatrist: why do you say that. Guy: well the sex is the same but the dishes are piling up
😅😅😅😅
My wife's co worker father died. Jackie Kahane/Kahan ( he was billed both ways) was Elivis' Comic for decades -- it was said both Elvis and Col Tom Parker liked him because he "worked clean" - no cussing or overt sex in his act. So we are at a typical sad public event at Mt. Sinai Cemetary. After some nice words they opened it up for comment froim the audience. THEN comes the hilarity. Probably 7-8 Comics get up and they all start the same way..."Jackie Kahane was a great man, a family man, etc.." THEN as if not missing a beat they all launched into their schtick..."A Rabbi and a Priest walk into a bar...etc etc.." THE FUNNIEST Funeral I have ever attended. Jackie would have loved it... The last guy up was Jack Carter who held up the obituary and said to the gathered crowd full of working and retired Comics and started with..."I gotta read in the paper that my great and talented friend Jackie Kahane died and not a single sonofabitch among you had the freakin' DECENCY to call me and invite me to this great man's funeral?? Like what am I? ...Chopped liver?"... It went on and on and soon the entire crowd was howling with laughter. Rest in Peace Jackie and all those who were at that funeral and have since passed...
Really enjoy Marc Maron’s podcast. Has such good recall of comedy and other topics
He's the best interviewer of comedians (and musicians) in modern times.
The man doing the interviews had virtually no sense of humour, so the facial expressions and attitudes of those he interviewed were a study in "WTF is wrong with you?" Best line from them, and there were many, was "You don't believe in God, but you sure believe in Jews."
He’s the straight man.
He's Jewish
Great memories of a lost time.
This is fabulous. It really brings you back and also makes you think.
Growing up in the military, I barely had contact with Eastern city insular Judaism, so it was almost as foreign to me as to a non-Jew. There was no yiddishkeit in my family, even though we all knew a few phrases in Yiddish. When dad retired, my high school was 99% non-Jewish. We were big, athletic Jews who actually knew how to use power tools. Despite all this, when I am 80, I will be a wizened old Jew, eating soup and kvetching.
I'm a hard core comedy fan which means by default most of my favorite comedians and comedy writers are Jewish. I use to live in Los Angeles. When I lived there, I always hoped I would run into Don Rickles and he would "dress me down". Never happened but at least he gave me tons of laughs. . . . RIP Don. . . . Miss you.
Wow - Mark Breslin really nails it!
i learned all my yiddish watching the ed sullivan show when i was a kid growing up catholic.
Maron is a hero of mine. Awesome work!
I love The Producers with Gene Wilder and Zero Mostel. A wonderful parody.
"There's something funny about everything." Sage words.
In the Midwest we had lots of German, Swedish and Norwegian comics! They were fabulous jazz musicians too!
I kid, I kid.
Never heard this til now:
"Mamaloshen" is a Yiddish word that means "mother tongue". It is an affectionate term for the Yiddish language.
Explanation
Yiddish is a language that is closely related to Judaism and is a mix of German, Hebrew, and Slavic languages.
It is considered the language of the heart and is an integral part of Jewish culture.
Yiddish is written using a modified version of the Hebrew alphabet.
Yiddish words have become part of the English lexicon, such as "bagel", "knish", "kvetching", and "schmoozing".
Very well done. Would like to have a translation of songs. Thanks for sharing.
Fantastic and hilarious!
I am an atheist. I have always loved these old Jewish comedians. I didn't know they were Jewish or very much about Jewish people until the last 10 or twenty years. I did hear about the holocaust from my mother when I was about 10 years old, around 1961. I was not raised by religious parents. I have a lot of respect for Jewish people and just hate it when I hear them being put down as a group.
After seeing this I can say that Bengalis on the Indian side and Bangaladeshis are Jewish
Everyone is. Which mother doesn't want their child to be a doctor, or worries about who they're marrying? It's just about being able to do an impression everyone instantly recognizes. If I did that, it'd be in a regional accent, with expressions that most of my country probably wouldn't recognize. On the other hand I could/can talk about concepts that might have alienated a traditional audience, a freedom that I think most comedians enjoy now. Pros and cons...
We had the records WHEN YOURE IN LOVE THE WHOLE WORLD IS JEWISH and YOU DONT HAVE TO BE JEWISH. I still think about those jokes and still have occasional when I quote them.
Wow, Shelly Berman doesn't look a thing like he did on Curb. This must've been close to the end for him. Nice to see Norm Crosby. I remember a show he hosted in the late 70s called The Comedy Shop.
I remember Shelly Berman from The Judy Garland Show and I can still see some of that old 'spark' in him here.
I was quite surprised by the generational split on this, where the old-timers so strongly reject any claim to Jewish humor, or being "Jewish comedians," or the notion that Jews have some special gift or tradition for comedy -- while the next generation embraces it completely. I'm guessing the older comics are still sensitive about it. Maybe it's a holocaust generation thing. (Also, to be honest, some of these guys seem to find Alan Zweig, and the whole idea of this movie, pretty annoying.)
Yes. It is annoying. The whole thing is an insult.
Me: Oma*, do you want a drink of water?
Oma: N0, no, Ich bin fine.
Me: You just said you were thirsty.
Oma: Ja, ja, Ich been thirstig.
Me: Oma, I'll bring you a glass of water.
Oma: No, no, I bin OK.
Me: Oma, I'm getting a glass for me, I'll bring you one.
Oma: OK, OK so bring me wasser.
(I bring Oma a glass of water)
My Oma: What? No ice?
(*German grandmother)
You can't have 20th century American comedy without the Jewish community. The greatest comedians and comedy writers were all Jewish. God bless them all.
I feel very sorry for this interviewer. He is a lost little puppy.
This interviewer had no clue how to build a rapport with his interview subjects.
Following up, the great Bob Einstein was just hilariously brutal. He saw fairly quickly that he was sitting there with a schmuck.
@@gheller2261That was the point.
I felt the interviewer had an agenda with these older comedians and they weren't buying it. Of course they were Jewish, but they wanted to appeal to Jews and a wider audience. I found the interviewer annoying at times, and so did some of these gentlemen.
@@barbarapaige4587 Indeed.
I still have Shelly Berman’s album. He made my WASP parents laugh.
My teeth itch
The joke about airline pilots: "He has a crooked smile but straight teeth." 🤣
This is a treasure for showing us a last moment with these great comics. And some not great. But the questions, the interviewer, was really not well-prepared and too off-target, especially with poor Shelley Berman. He bordered on disrespectfulness.
Berman was never known for being a good interview subject. One of the best in the game, Marc Maron, had to walk around eggshells during his WTF episode because Berman was so volatile. I wouldn’t fault this doc’s interviewer for that.
Great documentary. But we are still here.
"It's in Irving, not Nate".
Not true. My stiff upper lip WASP Yankee mother would say, “It’s Christmas Eve. Can someone decorate the tree ALREADY?” And the aphorisms! “Oy! We grow too soon old and too late shmart.” It’s part of American English!
Agree, HOWEVER: the Too Old Too Soon saying was credited to the Pennsylvania Dutch, to my memory...
Where did THEY get it? I'm Of PA Dutch lineage, and I'm not so sure we invented it. My name is about as Jewish sounding as they come, so I grew up in the quandary of German Catholic roots being taken for Jewish. As much as I was infused with Jewish humor through TV, growing up, it wasn't until I was an adult that I spent any time in Jewish households. Now I'm old, and my Jewish friends still have to explain to me sometimes when they're joking.
@@barrykochverts4149 Interesting story... well, then, probably like many a great old folk saying, lots of communities want to claim it.
Can anyone tell where the clip "My Hebrew Friends" 35 seconds into the video is from?
Wonderful.
I'm areligious by nature 🙃... my 2nd my stepfather was very "Jewish"... weell to my 7yr old mind anyway... he had red hair after all! 🤔.. But I remember him as the best of the 4 dad's I had... very insightful & attentive... I reckon Jews introduced self-deprecating Yiddish humour into our tortured, tormented Christian mindset... lol! ... It was such a relief back then.. over 60yrs ago.. ... no one wanted to draw attention to the unravelling undertow!...👀 in the event of reprisals of blasphemy 😅😇... perhaps it's Time to get real again...... ✨....💫 ........ ☯
We did not change, Thank G.D, and we ll stay the Same
Bizarre sound quality - why is there this weird short delay effect - hard to listen to - too bad because this is great
You’re kvetching but you’re not funny.
17:38 Super Dave Osbourne.
Thanks John in Chicago
Diaspora Jews kept the humor that Israeli's lost.
You haven't seen Israeli comics. They are hilarious!
When they moved from the cities to the suburbs…that’s when the communities disappeared. This was played out in the film Avalon, directed by Barry Levinson.
The constant music makes it really hard to concentrate on the words.
Agree -I found it so distracting between the music and the interviewer that I couldn't finish what otherwise was a great video
Shelly was great! And missed! Gilbert, too! Bob, eh.
Who was the uncredited, wonderful old gentleman right at the start in the top hat?
Omg! Park your carcass! I just thought that was something that my parents said. Wow
I notice the younger the comedian, the more arrogant they come off, and that ain't just Jewish....feels me?
Maron rules.
... and a woman appears at 43:34 ... Is that some kind of Jewish miracle?
A COMEDIAN WENT TO THE NURSING HOME AND HE WAS SO FUNNY HALF THE PEOPLE THERE CRAPPED THEIR PANTS!!
Seinfeld was Jewish humor. All the food jokes, situations with food, soup nazi, etc.
It was nothing without the laugh track and even less with it.
That was all Larry David and the other writers.
I HEARD ON THE RADIO ABOUT A LAWYER WHO HAD A WONDERFUL TEAM. A LAWYERM 2 PARALEGALS AND 2 INCOMPETENTS!!!
Lovely
I'm stealing a couple of those jokes.
MARC - an old Jewish guy in Las Vegas, NM used to do this routine which I thought was original with him, til I saw it in "High Anxiety". Now I'm wondering where it originated? Marx Brothers? Vaudeville? Catskills? Just the culture? ruclips.net/video/8k_B5DGt2AIs/видео.html
PS - Your Dr. Bob Rosen was my second cousin.
Bob Einstein was HOT that day, damn. Chill out dude.
15:22😭😭😭😭1:04:20
I appreciate this documentary when clean comedy was appreciated , but I can’t get over these old guys wearing bad wigs and thinking “this looks fine , everyone will think this is my natural hair “. Or , “ the interviewer is here ? Let me grab my hair “
WITH A NAME LIKE FECKLEMANN ITS GOT TO BE GOOD!!!
Just tell jokes!
Heyyy, why Abraham Avinu, Our Patriarch, called
His Son Yitsrak, that all when it's all begin, that really Deep, and maybe even before.
Yesh Kohar
Yesh Kohar
i watched the entire program and didnt laugh once. now thats funny.
A wool cap?
I love comedy. But this documentary made me think less of the people involved.
Gee, it's open season on these persecuted people.
My favorite comedians are Rodney Dangerfield, Jack Benny, Robert Klein, Albert Brooks, the Marx Brothers, but I also like Dave Chappelle, Laurel and Hardy,,Robin Williams, Johnny Carson, and David Letterman.
I never bought into the Black Patten Leather Shoes Reflecting Up comedy play. Nothing funny in Catholic religion. Priests are not funny.
You have to learn how to be funny if you're always the guy that's most likely to get the shit kicked out of you. We always pushed the Jew towards the thug. It was our best chance. He had to think of stuff to say because he was slower than us, and besides, he'd just trip if he tried to run.
Why do older Jewish guys let their brow, nose and ear hair grow so long.
Absolutely, awful interviewer with some of the worst dumbass questions for comedy legends, who were understandably perplexed. The humor was in their reactions to some of these questions.
That was the point, to get the guest to talk.
G.D Almighty gave Us The Land of Israel.
And when Mashiach s coming, will all be back Home. ISRAEL.
🌼
👍🏻👍🏻👍🏻
revelation 12:1 will michael do stand up???
Feeling mentally spent most of the time?
Gilbert Gottfried Lost His Job at AFFLACK!! Its Alright!!! He Got A Job Saying, "ANTHRAX"!!!
funny
Success is the death of humor…OYE!…NYC does seem to have lost something…🤔
Listen to Sat. NPR game shows, everyone is laughing hysterically at every word that’s said. None of it funny. Like Wait, Wait, Don’t Tell Me, etc.
Marc Maron, one of the unfunniest people who ever called himself a comedian, is going to define "funny" for us?
However funny Jews may have been in the past, no one is laughing now.
Louis ck is
Crack a joke and take the money.
After 16 months its just not funny and needs reinventing
When Marc Marron was funny…. Cuz his woke anti-comedy stance is FAR from funny now.
You're too ignorant to get it
Oh give it a break Trump Cult loser. Marc Maron WAS NEVER FUNNY.
I still can't pull up that old SNL skit..
Ewe or not a ewe......now that was hilarious.
Willingly getting on the cattle cars was kinda funny.
Are you a troll , trying to be an A-hole or just an A-hole?
@robertcheiffetz3886 antisemites are people too.