Zee’s just gotten engaged, and registering for $200 pillows is not something he’ll forget soon. On that note, we jew down our listeners with a discussion of the so-called “shidduch crisis” sweeping through the Jewish singles community. And how do little Orthodox kids learn about sex? It’s not sex ed – it’s HBO.
Join us for our annual summer movie preview. Will we be hung over? Dragged to hell? Transformed? Probably not.
Television sucks. I mean, there’s some stuff we like, but most of the rest of it is pretty bad. How is One Tree Hill still on the air? When will the Desperate Housewives get eaten by the Smoke Monster? Do any of us still watch network television? What season is Dynasty up to?
Zee questions why he hates people so much. Is it because of the tendency to tell others how to run their businesses? Is it because of Brooklyn? Is it inappropriate behavior at movies? No, it’s probably because of Brooklyn. Have you ever seen The Passion of the Christ with Gilbert Gottfried?
Weed brings a lady friend, prompting us to question whether Dead Air makes a good date. Camel spiders and anal fish make an appearance as well . . . so to speak. But the real question is whether our new technology is keeping us from each other. Meanwhile, augmented reality is changing the way we deal with people we don’t like.
Join us as we discuss the death of Bea Arthur, our patron saint, as well as Obama’s first hundred days. Craigslist also begins to supply our new serial killers, as well as the newest virus of which we should be terrified. We also discover how crazy Glenn Beck has become, along with the new kind of tea-bagging (no, not that kind) that’s sweeping the nation.
This is our first episode after Passover, and we have a lot to discuss: the danger of a life of Somali piratitude, Nazi trivia, and the oddity of Hitler’s birthday being the same day as Pot Day. Of particular interest is Zee’s recent stay in prison, due to (we are forced to assume) him having killed a man in Reno, just to watch him die. Join us for the story and other post-Passover festivities.