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In Netflix’s ‘You People,’ Jonah Hill is a Jewish guy who finds love with a Farrakhan follower’s daughter

(JTA) – Were Jews the “OG slaves”? Can American slavery be compared to the Holocaust? And who gets the last word on Louis Farrakhan?

These questions have spurred very serious debates over time — and now will be getting a raunchier take in the new Netflix comedy “You People” that hits streaming Jan. 27. 

Starring Jewish funnyman Jonah Hill, who also co-wrote the script with “Black-ish” creator Kenya Barris, the film stars a visibly tattooed Hill as Ezra, a young Jewish man who falls in love with Amira, a Black woman played by “Without Remorse” actress Lauren London.

In a new trailer for the movie that opens with a scene shot at the Skirball Cultural Center, a Jewish institution in Los Angeles, Hill’s Jewish parents, played by Julia Louis-Dreyfus and David Duchovny, seem to immediately bless the union following some awkward comments about hair and rappers.

It’s Amira’s parents, Akbar and Fatima (played by Eddie Murphy and Nia Long), who prove a tougher sell — particularly once Akbar, who says he identifies as “Muslim,” tells them he is a follower of Nation of Islam leader Louis Farrakhan, whose antisemitism is longstanding and well known. If Murphy’s character is following in the long tradition of adopting zany antics to try to prevent a marriage, it’s not clear in the trailer, where he tells Ezra’s mother that his hat was a gift from Farakkhan.

“Are you familiar with the minister’s work?” Murphy asks Louis-Dreyfus. “I’m familiar with what he said about the Jews!” she replies.

Other awkward moments abound in the trailer, including a dinner-table argument about comparing slavery to the Holocaust. (“Our people came here with nothing like everybody else,” says Louis-Dreyfus’s character, to cringes.) It’s all in a day’s work for Barris, whose series of sitcoms are known for prompting uncomfortable conversations about race and culture, and who — in the recent aftermath of antisemitism controversies involving Kanye West, Kyrie Irving and Dave Chappelle — has found quite the moment for a “Guess Who’s Coming To Dinner”-style comedy about Black-Jewish relations. 

An earlier trailer for “You People,” featuring only Hill and Murphy, had made no references to the film’s Jewish content. The new trailer’s density of Jewish jokes is sure to fuel an ongoing debate over “Jewface,” or whether it is appropriate for non-Jewish actors to be cast as Jewish characters. While Hill is Jewish – the star recently petitioned to drop his legal last name, Feldstein, because he has never used it professionally — his on-screen parents are not. But Duchovny and Louis-Dreyfus do have Jewish fathers, as does London.


The post In Netflix’s ‘You People,’ Jonah Hill is a Jewish guy who finds love with a Farrakhan follower’s daughter appeared first on Jewish Telegraphic Agency.

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British Police Continue Investigation Into Bob Vylan’s ‘Death to the IDF’ Chant at Glastonbury

Bob Vylan lead singer Bobby Vylan. Photo: BANG Showbiz via Reuters Connect

Police in the United Kingdom said on Tuesday they interviewed a man in his mid-30s as part of an ongoing investigation into the British punk rap duo Bob Vylan and comments they made seemingly calling for the death of Israelis on stage at the Glastonbury Festival over the summer.

Avon and Somerset Police said in the “investigation update” that the man voluntarily attended a police interview on Monday in connection to comments made by the band’s lead singer Bobby Vylan, whose real name is Pascal Robinson-Foster, at Glastonbury on June 28. During Bob Vylan’s set at the music festival in Somerset, England, Robinson-Foster led the audience in chanting “death, death to the IDF [Israel Defense Forces].” He also proclaimed “free, free Palestine” during the band’s Glastonbury performance, which was televised live by the BBC.

“The matter has been recorded as a public order incident while we continue to investigate and consider all relevant legislation,” police stated on Tuesday. “Voluntary police interviews are commonly used in investigations where an individual agrees to attend and an arrest is not considered necessary, for example on the grounds of public safety or for the preservation of evidence. Attendees are interviewed under caution and have the same legal rights as anybody who is arrested.”

The police force added that in October they received legal advice about the investigation from the Crown Prosecution Service.

Bob Vylan was scheduled to have two performances in the UK in early November but postponed the concerts to February after government officials, Members of Parliament, and Jewish groups called for the shows to be canceled.

The Manchester Evening News recently paid £16,000 in damages to Robinson-Foster after printing the false claim that he “performed Nazi salutes on stage” at a Bob Vylan gig in October. The hand gesture was in fact a guided meditation and light stretching routine that Bob Vylan regularly perform to open their shows. The accusation about the Nazi salute was made in an article published by the Evening News on Oct. 6, and the British publication subsequently printed a full correction and apology.

Following Bob Vylan’s “death to the IDF” comments at Glastonbury, the band was dropped by the United Talent Agency (UTA), which said the “antisemitic sentiments expressed by the group were utterly unacceptable.” Bob Vylan was also dropped from a number of music festivals, and their US visas were revoked, which prevented them from embarking on their North American tour. Their anti-IDF comments were condemned by British Prime Minister Keir Starmer, Jewish groups, the Israeli Embassy in London and Glastonbury organizers. The BBC later apologized for live streaming the band’s “offensive and deplorable behavior.”

During a podcast interview last month, Robinson-Foster said he does not regret saying the anti-IDF remark.

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Why this congressional candidate is making attacks on AIPAC central to his campaign

As criticism of Israel increasingly becomes a litmus test for progressive candidates seeking to define themselves against establishment Democrats, a New York congressional hopeful is making an attack on AIPAC central to his campaign. In doing so, he’s brushed aside his past support for the group and reversed earlier positions on the Israeli-Palestinian conflict.

Michael Blake, a former state legislator who ran for mayor in the Democratic primary, accused Rep. Ritchie Torres, a three-term pro-Israel progressive from the Bronx, of putting Israel’s military interests ahead of addressing his district’s affordability crisis; he also accuses Torres of being influenced by the American Israel Public Affairs Committee’s support. “Ritchie Torres cares more about Bibi than he cares about the Bronx, more about AIPAC than he does about your academics,” Blake said in his campaign launch video last week.

Polling shows AIPAC’s influence is increasingly unpopular among some mainstream Democrats. Last year, the group’s United Democracy Project super PAC spent $28 million in high-stakes Democratic primaries. That included more than $14 million, which contributed to the defeat of Rep. Jamaal Bowman, a strident critic of Israel, in an adjacent New York district. Congressional candidates, including some Jewish Democrats, have promised not to take contributions from AIPAC.

In an interview last week, Blake said he was emboldened by the victory of Zohran Mamdani, a democratic socialist, in the mayoral election and the support he received from voters in his district. A plurality of New York City voters said that Mamdani’s criticism of Israel resonated with them. Nearly half of Mamdani voters, 49%, said his position on the Gaza conflict was a factor in their support, according to a CNN exit poll. A recent poll by the progressive Data for Progress found that three of 10 voters in New York’s 15th congressional district, which Torres represents, dislike AIPAC. However, a majority, 53%, didn’t have an opinion.

Critics ridiculed Blake, a former vice chair of the Democratic National Committee and a former Obama administration official, for targeting AIPAC despite his own past support for the pro-Israel lobby, which included speaking at its events and annual policy conference and joining a 2010 trip to Israel. Blake has scrubbed most of his AIPAC and Israel-related content from his social media.

Some called the launch video — which included clips of social media influencers attacking Torres for his AIPAC support and defense of Israel — antisemitic. Noa Tishby, an author and activist who served as Israel’s special envoy for combating antisemitism and delegitimization of Israel, noted that the video featured Guy Christensen, an influencer who justified the murder of two Israeli Embassy staffers at the Capitol Jewish Museum in Washington, D.C., earlier this year.

Mark Treyger, head of the Jewish Community Relations Council (JCRC) of New York, said Blake’s campaign “further inflames an already inflammatory climate” in New York. “Hurling a bus-load of antisemitic tropes and platforming bigots who cheer antisemitic violence in a launch video is not the pro-humanity flex one thinks it is.”

Torres, who is endorsed by AIPAC, has since his election to Congress in 2020 been a vocal defender of Israel. He faced rising criticism from the party’s left and progressives for his support of Israel’s military campaign in Gaza, though his stance on the Israeli-Palestinian conflict is nuanced. Torres called for an end to the war in Gaza in July and said Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu’s leadership was causing “irreparable damage” to the U.S.-Israel relationship. He has a 63% favorability rating in the district and has more than $14 million in his campaign chest, according to a recent FEC filing. He was listed as one of “25 young(ish) new Democrats to watch in 2026 by New York magazine.

Blake is among several primary challengers to Torres in next year’s election. Benny Stanislawski, a Torres campaign spokesperson, said Bronx voters appreciate their congressman’s “laser-focused” work on issues like public housing and affordability and standing up to President Donald Trump, concerns where most Democrats are aligned.

Buoyed by Mamdani’s victory

Zohran Mamdani greets voters with Michael Blake on June 24. Photo by Michael M. Santiago/Getty Images

Blake, who also ran for mayor in the primary, cross-endorsed Mamdani days before the ranked-choice contest, while Torres withheld an endorsement, citing concerns of voters, including Jewish voters in the Riverdale part of the district, about Mamdani’s past statements and stance on Israel.

“Despite the constant negative barrage of information against Mamdani, he won the district,” Blake said.

Commenting on Mamdani’s victory, AIPAC PAC said in a fundraising email that his win “has galvanized the anti-Israel forces in America” and that the Jewish community “is being politically tested unlike ever before.”

By making AIPAC central to his challenge against Torres, Blake is betting that criticism about the lobby’s influence now resonates with a diverse, younger electorate.

Blake argued that AIPAC and Netanyahu no longer represent where most people stand and accused the incumbent of neglecting his own constituents. Speaking with reporters at the annual SOMOS conference of New York politicians in Puerto Rico on Friday, Blake claimed that Torres “has spoken about the governmental decisions in Israel 300% more than he has talked about poverty in the Bronx.”

An AIPAC spokesperson didn’t immediately respond to a request for comment.

Inconsistent about Israel 

Blake traveled to Israel twice, once in 2014 with the JCRC and in 2017 with the AIPAC-affiliated American Israel Education Foundation. Both visits, he said, were eye-opening experiences. He told Jewish Insider during his congressional bid in 2020 that he saw parallels between his experience as an African American in the Bronx and the plight of the Jewish people in Israel.

Blake attended more than a dozen AIPAC events in the past decade, according to his now-deleted social media posts.

Since the Oct 7, 2023 Hamas attack on Israel, he has accused the Israeli military of spreading a “horrible and disrespectful lie” regarding the killing of aid workers in Gaza last April, and criticized a bipartisan House bill aimed at federally monitoring the rise in antisemitism on college campuses.

During his campaign for mayor, Blake also flip-flopped on whether Israel was committing genocide. In an interview with the Forward in May, Blake said that his genocide accusation in Oct. 2023 was the “wrong language to use.” He said his campaign had clarified that “the intent was never to state that the State of Israel was doing that.” In another phone interview after the Mamdani endorsement, Blake said he doesn’t agree with everything Mamdani has said on Israel. “I’ve always stated that Israel has a right to defend itself,” he said. In September, Blake reversed his position and posted on X, “Genocide is happening in Gaza.”

Last week, Blake insisted he never changed his position. “The question that gets asked to me, ‘Why did we state differently in the mayoral campaign?’” he said. “The only reason I said that is that people couldn’t hear you in these conversations. But we can’t ignore the pain.”

Assemblymember Simcha Eichenstein, an Orthodox Democrat from Brooklyn, said in a post on X that Blake presented himself to him during the mayoral campaign as “the most pro-Israel candidate.” Blake dismissed that characterization as “factually inaccurate.”

Blake said he supports an arms embargo on Israel, but would still support funding for the Iron Dome defense system. “I think we have to be attentive to the moment that we’re in right now,” he said. “That does not at all mean that you don’t believe in the security of Israel. But it just means we have to have a shift in some of the funding decisions.”

Asked if he’d seek the endorsement of the Democratic Socialists of America, Blake said he would, although the DSA had asked candidates seeking their support to pledge not to travel to Israel. In 2021, he called the local DSA chapter’s questionnaire about the issue “outrageous and antisemitic.”

“I am not determined on where I’m not going to travel,” Blake said. His spokesperson intervened and added, “There are plenty of DSA members who do not line up with the platform of DSA.”

Blake also demurred when asked whether, like the new mayor-elect, he supported the Boycott, Divestment and Sanctions movement. In 2016, Blake co-sponsored a resolution that rejects BDS. “There have to be actions that are being taken” against funding to Israel, he said. “And as people are considering what has to happen around funding, around BDS or anti-BDS, that is for them to make that own determination.”

The post Why this congressional candidate is making attacks on AIPAC central to his campaign appeared first on The Forward.

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British Actor John Cleese Says He Canceled Israel Shows Due to ‘Safety’ Concerns After Being Accused of Caving to BDS

John Cleese. Photo: BANG Showbiz

British actor and comedian John Cleese took to social media on Tuesday to clarify claims about him canceling a series of sold-out shows in Israel, a move that a local promoter blamed on pressure from supporters of the boycott, divestment, and sanctions (BDS) movement against the Jewish state.

The “Monty Python” actor, 86, was set to perform a series of shows in Jerusalem and Tel Aviv in late November and early December. All of the performances were to be moderated by Israeli entertainer and comedian Tzivka Hadar.

Alon Yurik Productions, the promoter behind the shows, issued a statement on Monday night claiming that Cleese called off the sold-out shows after he “succumbed to threats from BDS organizations,” according to The Jewish Chronicle.

In a social media post on Tuesday morning, Cleese explained that “contrary to the claims made by Alon Yurik Productions,” he rescheduled his shows in Israel “following advice about safety” because “at 86, that is obviously all important.”

“I will rearrange these shows as soon as it’s possible – and I would be happy to perform without receiving any fee,” he added. “I am hugely fond of Israeli audiences and send my sincere apologies to all the people who bought tickets.” The same performances were originally scheduled for June, but Cleese, who in 1975 created and starred in the sitcom “Fawlty Towers,” postponed the shows because of the war between Iran and Israel at the time.

The actor has recently shared on social media several posts that criticize Israel, the Israel Defense Forces (IDF), and Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu. He shared a video of Jewish actor Mandy Patinkin blasting Netanyahu and another clip of American actor Mark Ruffalo talking about severing ties with friends who justify Israel’s military actions targeting the Hamas terror group in the Gaza Strip over the past two years. Cleese also shared posts that promote fake news, including a claim that a former IDF soldier admitted to killing “countless babies for Israel,” which he never said.

In another post, Cleese commented “unbelievable” regarding a tweet of a fake quote attributed to former Israeli Ambassador to the United Kingdom Tzipi Hotovely. The fake quote reads: “There could be a million dead Palestinian children and I would still sleep well in the evening.” Hotovely said during an interview on “Piers Morgan Uncensored” over the summer: “We [Israel] never target civilians. Israel is not killing children, Hamas is using them as human shields … Israel is not deliberately killing children and this accusation is a fake thing.”

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