AND HERE’S MODI

Episode 98

December 13, 2023 Modi Season 5 Episode 98
AND HERE’S MODI
Episode 98
AND HERE’S MODI
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Episode 98: Modi and Periel regroup and discuss their upcoming event at 92NY.

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Speaker 1:

Welcome to and here's Modi. Welcome back to and here's Modi. We are in the studio. I am sorry Leo is not in. You can all start your DMs. How much you hate when he's not here right now. We are here. Me and Periel are a little catching up. Before the begin, we of course begin by thanking a and eight provisions. The best glad kosher meets hot dogs, and someone gave me an amazing line at a show. They said instead of machine energy, machine energy. So A&H, you are machine energy. And what's the?

Speaker 1:

website and 30% 30% off of your first order from them. And that that's machine energy. And now go for kosherdogsnet.

Speaker 1:

Thank you very much and, of course, we want to thank whites and Luxembourg. We had Arthur on and he was a blast. Everybody loved him. Everybody loved Arthur, of Arthur, of Arthur Luxembourg, of whites and Luxembourg, and he still didn't give us a good tag for for the. So we're going to stick with is the law firm that's doing well and doing good, very philanthropic. They do a lot of charities. We spoke about them on the podcast. Again, thank you, whites and Luxembourg for being a part and collab and friends and and all that it takes to make a podcast.

Speaker 2:

Oh, go ahead, it's luxecom.

Speaker 1:

White's luxecom. You can get that on Sesame or rye. No, okay, so we are here in the studio and we are a little catch up. I got back into the comedy cellar. I've been traveling so much so much.

Speaker 1:

And then this was the first like weekend and like Sunday and Monday that I was back at the cellar trying out all the material and it was so much fun. I there's new comedians that are working there I've I've not seen and I give it to Estie, she finds them, she knows who's what's happening, she has that, that she has I don't know where she finds these, that what's happening in the comedy world. And it was amazing. I also did an hour, I took an hour at the the West Side Comedy Club to try all the material.

Speaker 2:

Wow, nice.

Speaker 1:

It was so good. First of all, you know you get tired of hearing your own act, which I love doing and I, and it's so easy and I'm in a flow when I give it the energy and I love it and I know where the audience gets hit, and but to try the new stuff and see where it goes is so much fun.

Speaker 2:

You did a whole brand new hour.

Speaker 1:

Our yeah, I didn't do anything. I didn't do any old material.

Speaker 2:

Wow.

Speaker 1:

The topics were David Beckham, how doctors know nothing, comparing Catholic and Jewish. It's just so many other little topics that I've just been dying to get out there and, of course, what's happening in Israel a little bit, but that I can't. That the comedy cell is much more of a place where you can see where that's going to go or not, because that's not only all Jews Right.

Speaker 1:

Although last night at the Black Pussycat Lounge, which is a part of the comedy cellar, I did the material I was doing about about the war Like I try not to do it during the during my shows for Jewish audiences because just I'm giving them an hour and 15 minutes to not think about it.

Speaker 1:

But I was doing all the material about that and this girl comes over afterwards so sweet, like if she was 20, 21, just so happy. You can see the joy is almost a tear in her eye that I was talking about it and she's a big fan and she gave me the necklace with the bring them home necklace. And it was so sweet. It was a great way to just end the weekend.

Speaker 2:

It's really nice and speaking of this weekend.

Speaker 1:

It was a well I mean well. My parents celebrated their 60th anniversary. Wow, my parents celebrate their 60th anniversary and they're the best and they didn't want anything over the top. No restaurants, no, the whole family going on a cruise. They just wanted all the kids and grandkids to come in. We had Shabbat dinner in my mother's house and Saturday we had sushi at our house. She didn't want any restaurants. I was like, should we do the lounge at the second half? And you'd go. No. In the house on top of it.

Speaker 2:

So on top of each other.

Speaker 1:

Yeah, because otherwise groups conversations break out. And she, even though they were married on the first night of Hanukkah we had to do it a week before because my niece is on that circuit of weddings and she's booked next week. And we made latkes and schnitzels and everything with oil and we were like why, what are we doing that for? And my mom said it's when the grandkids get to play together. So she just liked to watch the grandkids catch up with each other. And what are you guys up to? Because some of them live here, some of them live in Houston. It was very, very sweet. I'm grateful. I thank God that I have my parents and that they were able to do this and that was kind of the catch up that I can give you. What?

Speaker 2:

No, I think it's really incredible that you just don't want anything except for anybody, except for everybody to be together.

Speaker 1:

I had the best gifts for them. So a few years ago, I mean like five, six years ago, I was in Israel and I see this artist on the street with this picture of somebody diving off a pool and I see it's Brachad Godon the. Gordon pools, which are across the street, across the back of the Hilton.

Speaker 2:

It's sort of like iconic.

Speaker 1:

It's iconic yeah.

Speaker 2:

It's no, it's like where everybody went in, like the 70s. It's a saltwater pool.

Speaker 1:

Yeah, yeah.

Speaker 2:

It's a public pool.

Speaker 1:

I mean you have to pay to get in. It's not a public pool. No, no, you can buy a ticket. You can buy a ticket, yeah.

Speaker 2:

Like and you don't have to be at the hotel.

Speaker 1:

It has nothing to do with the Hilton Right, so anybody can buy a ticket, but it's still today.

Speaker 2:

It's like if you're going to go to the pool, you need a pool. You go to Godon.

Speaker 1:

Right. So this was no, but now they have like racing and training and it's like a very serious now, but back in the day it was the pool that you went to. You know it was in the 60s. My parents were married in 1962, I think, Wow, or something like that, or well, 63 probably 63.

Speaker 2:

Whatever?

Speaker 1:

But I was walking in Israel and I see this gorgeous picture of this guy diving on the pool I could tell that it's the Gordon pool in the Hilton and I start speaking to him and he says to me my parents met at this pool. I go, so did mine.

Speaker 2:

Stop.

Speaker 1:

And he had a picture of the pool when the Hilton was still under construction, which was 1962. So this is exactly the year they met, so I had that picture framed beautifully.

Speaker 1:

Oh, I have goosebumps, yes, and that was very, very nice and it's so funny. My parents had been living in their house for 46 years Some insane amount of time. They're not hoarders and there's no garbage in the house, but there are things that are like things you don't throw away. Nice little. We found this little Versace ashtray thing. My sisters were going through everything, just going through the drawers Each drawer is packed full of nice stuff.

Speaker 1:

Nice stuff my mother loves to entertain, so she loves to make a table, so whatever things. And she found underneath the whole. She found this little ashtray, this Versace ashtray. I don't know where she got. I go to go give this to Leo. And so she my mother's giving me a Versace ashtray. It was just so funny and so I was like you know, god forbid when your parents die. You have the estate sale. I'm like, literally I'm ready to have the sale tomorrow. Just put tags on everything. And of course, as we say that we find these nice tags, my mom always likes to put tags where everybody should sit for her meals, you know.

Speaker 1:

So she had like tag tags. So I was just like it is so many.

Speaker 2:

She didn't want any gifts. No, no, no, she's not a person, no.

Speaker 1:

I'm just saying in the song Mayid Shemama there's a verse her jewels and her treasures she finds within her baby's eyes. She does the grandkids there and the kids there and everybody getting along. No one's in fights and no one's not talking to each other and no one's not. It's just that's the best gift you could ever have. That is better than money and watches and plates and shtuyot and that's all she wanted. And you know my dad drives Leo's godfather, manny and D. His godparents gave him this when we were first dating and he moved to New York. He goes do you want a car? His grandfather had this white 1999 CLK320 Mercedes brand new, 20,000 miles, no-transcript. My father and my uncle, you know they had a shop, so they we brought it up. My father's been driving that car ever since he's been driving that car. The whole neighborhood knows him and I got plates with his name on it, stop it.

Speaker 1:

His name is but sale, but everybody calls him Tzali. So I got Tzali on the plates and it looks so cute.

Speaker 2:

You did not get him vanity plates, vanity plates.

Speaker 1:

That's what they call vanity plates.

Speaker 2:

He is not driving around.

Speaker 1:

And he started to wear the watch again, which made me so happy. You know, I read that his watch and while he, while I read that his watch, I gave him the same this like the Seiko watch, the rubber one, and he hasn't taken that off. When I gave him the new one, he wouldn't put the. I got, do me a favor. And he finally started to wear the watch again the Rolex.

Speaker 1:

Now it's Audemars Piguet, it's next level, it's it's vintage, it's amazing, and and so it was a great weekend for me. We should talk. We should have waited for Leo to talk, because he was there too.

Speaker 2:

And he's a big part of it. We'll talk about it again with Leo. I'm just imagining your father in his fancy watch with his gorgeous vintage white Mercedes in his A&H jacket.

Speaker 1:

In his A&H jacket and hat and all which. We should start talking about what we are doing.

Speaker 2:

Yes, we are. I heard that you are extraordinarily excited about our upcoming event.

Speaker 1:

I can't believe it's happening. Mashiach energy. If that's not Mashiach energy, it's.

Speaker 2:

Mashiach energy. It's iconic, it's iconic, it's iconic.

Speaker 1:

It's the 90 second street Y. What's the gear? Do you hear me? What is that In Yiddish? Do you hear me? The 90 second street Y is doing an in conversation with Modi.

Speaker 2:

Yes.

Speaker 1:

And I'm honored to be in the conversation with.

Speaker 2:

Periel, I'm honored. Wait, I have to read you.

Speaker 1:

What.

Speaker 2:

Have you heard the history of the 90s? I started.

Speaker 1:

I only read what Leo makes me read.

Speaker 2:

I go. I you know I do these like deep dives.

Speaker 1:

Yeah, oh, no, oh, I know it's, I don't need to read. I've been alive for many years. I've seen who they had there, from Woody Allen, to Forget, forget that what?

Speaker 2:

Forget that.

Speaker 1:

No, go ahead 1874. 1874.

Speaker 2:

Okay, a group of German Jewish professionals used to meet there, led by Dr Newton Leo. Oh, it was the home of. Okay, one second, I'm fucking this up, sorry.

Speaker 1:

She won't be cursing at the 90 second street, why?

Speaker 2:

Why am I not allowed to curse? Could you not curse for that 90 second street? You cannot curse, you're going to be the old Schmutzie with the I don't know, I'm going to be natural People like me because I'm authentic.

Speaker 1:

Nobody likes me, people like you, because you're authentic. She put that in a t-shirt. I'm authentic, like me.

Speaker 2:

I can't listen, I can be, I'm whatever, I don't think that. I don't think there's anything wrong with cursing Okay.

Speaker 1:

All right.

Speaker 2:

The night, the story of the 90 second street. Why, on March 22nd 1874, in the home of Dr Newton Leo, a group of German Jewish professionals and businessmen met to explore ways in which they could serve the social and spiritual needs of the American Jewish community, and that's how it was founded.

Speaker 1:

And now it's Modi.

Speaker 2:

No, and now we're doing the same thing.

Speaker 1:

We are You're doing the same thing? Yeah, but the people that they've had there it's icon, I mean like who they had there that you're excited about. I can't even begin to. First of all, one of my, one of my icons, alan King, was one of the things there I am. The first one I met. Him was there.

Speaker 2:

The first one I met.

Speaker 1:

Alan King was at the 92nd Street.

Speaker 2:

Why tell me what happened?

Speaker 1:

The. We were doing this. They were doing like an in conversation with him, but there was comedy involved too, and they asked me to perform. I have a picture from it. It's, it's because of my used to always wear a dark blue suit with a dark blue tie on a white shirt. Because of him, I wore that for years, for years.

Speaker 2:

Why is that what he wore?

Speaker 1:

That was how this is thing. Yeah, oh, that's so cute. He was, yeah, and, come on, woody Allen's been interviewed there and I mean it's probably better people to Dershuits probably another people, but like no, but like amazing people who've done amazing things, and I am, you know, I feel honored, I'm it's, it's an iconic place. It's like it's, it's, it's such a great thing. I'm so happy and we're going to be in conversation and the topic is going to be Is the transformative nature of comedy in dark times for Jews, yeah which is now which is what's

Speaker 1:

happening now. I was on the phone last night with the Israeli UN ambassador, gilad Ildan, because we're playing and doing an event together and I'm like I think you know I see his videos, I follow him on Instagram and what he's going through is like he's working in the. If you talk about Jewish hatred, I think the UN is the number one place of it. It's, it's basically it's the the hatred's there, but they're pretending that they're. That's civilized. And he said to me how are you doing Like, are you OK performing in these times? I'm like me. You're the one with Arab countries screaming at you and you're holding up signs and he's I so glad you're done. Good, I mean, god bless him and I'm trying to get him on the podcast, but we're going to be doing an event over there at the at the UN soon, and so that that's happening. I don't know how we got off that. I don't know.

Speaker 2:

I was trying to get some prom. We're, no, we're in OK promos. What are you doing on February 1st Modi?

Speaker 1:

February 1st we are at the 92nd Streetwide in conversation with who Periel Ashen.

Speaker 2:

Brand, I'm almost sure my name should go first.

Speaker 1:

Well, you said.

Speaker 2:

I'm in conversation. That means you're in conversation with me we try to get for a better click.

Speaker 1:

Ok. What's that? We can do a blooper. Ok, go ahead. What's the thing? What's the date? February 1st.

Speaker 2:

February 1st 2024.

Speaker 1:

Wow, it's around the corner. Oh my God, I almost corrected you why February 1st? 2024,. I'm going to be at the 92nd Streetwide for an event called in conversation with Moa Modi, and I'll be in the conversation with Periel discussing the topic of the transformative nature of humor in these dark Jewish times Dark.

Speaker 2:

Jewish times. I don't think it's quite like that.

Speaker 1:

Let me get the, get the thing.

Speaker 2:

OK, we'll get it right.

Speaker 1:

Anyway, everybody's going to be amazing and as they navigate the complexities of finding light and joy, in the midst of rising tensions and antisemitism.

Speaker 2:

Are you finding light and joy in the midst of rising tensions? I'm creating it. Am I finding it? I am creating it. I'm creating it too, am I?

Speaker 1:

finding joy. I find the joy in making people have a sense of joy. I always said when I do a show, I'm the one having the best time of everybody. That's yeah, with it's 500 or 5,000 people in front of me.

Speaker 2:

I'm having a better time than anybody. That's the secret of being great at comedy. I really think that like that's one of the things that if you can figure out and I think it takes years of experience and all sorts of other things- yeah. If you are enjoying yourself, if you're having fun, everybody else is having fun too.

Speaker 1:

Again. My guru, one of my rabbis, one of the people that I go, Ru Paul, says if you're not having fun, then not having fun, and that's something that you have to always make sure. That's why, when you texted me, when you texted me, Periel had a show in a Jewish event and she texted me. Is it okay if I do my anal joke? That was the text. She's about to perform in front of Jews in Tenefly T-neck.

Speaker 1:

In T-neck 100 from Jews 100 religious Jews she was performing Right before she goes on. She texts me and Leo, should I do my anal joke?

Speaker 2:

No, I said, is it okay Is?

Speaker 1:

it. Okay, and did you do it? I did it, and how to go.

Speaker 2:

It was amazing.

Speaker 1:

Yeah.

Speaker 2:

It was an amazing show. It was, as you would say, full of Mashiach energy. Listen, you're walking into. It's a private event at somebody's house.

Speaker 2:

Gorgeous and it's somebody's it was their surprise big birthday and there's a lot of pressure to really do a good job. You've been invited into something so special for these people and this guy and I was nervous but like all I kept thinking about was you guys and I'm like I've got this, like it's going to be great, and then you know, but I'm not clean, like no, but they didn't hire you for that.

Speaker 1:

They didn't hire you for a clean. They wanted some X-Motsi to show that they're on the edge, or whatever. How'd they get to you?

Speaker 2:

Through a mutual friend. I don't know if they knew.

Speaker 1:

The mutual friend said to them she's funny, she's, he's going to be great, but she's not clean.

Speaker 2:

I don't know what she said. What I do know is that they transformed their indoor basketball court into a comedy room, which was something else I learned from you guys. Because, I was like where is this happening? There needs to be a dedicated space. She showed me a living room with like these lush couches. I was like absolutely not no. I had a hundred folding chairs.

Speaker 1:

Of the most uncomfortable folding chairs. You can find that they have to sit up and engage their poor and be alive, that's everything A sofa is a disaster.

Speaker 2:

It's a death sentence.

Speaker 1:

It's a death sentence for comedy. Yeah, death sentence.

Speaker 2:

So they were all sitting Now. It was going very well, except the person it's. The person right in front of me is a 70-something year old man from Vienna.

Speaker 1:

Okay.

Speaker 2:

He's the father of the person whose birth it is. They're dying, it's going well, everybody's having fun. This guy has not smiled once.

Speaker 1:

He's deaf? No, he's.

Speaker 2:

Austrian.

Speaker 1:

Okay.

Speaker 2:

I was trying to ignore it and I was like. I finally was like it's going to kill the whole night if you don't address the elephant in the room.

Speaker 1:

Okay, so it's only happening in your head, right? You understand that.

Speaker 2:

You're the only person you see Right, the only one.

Speaker 1:

The only one you see is the one not laughing.

Speaker 2:

And I said I don't know if this guy hates me or he doesn't speak a word of English, but he has not smiled once and that kind of like broke the tension because then, like I put it on him right.

Speaker 1:

Like it's not on me anymore.

Speaker 2:

And then, when I told the anal sex joke, he started laughing. Oh good, that's when he broke up.

Speaker 1:

Yeah, okay, good, good, good Good.

Speaker 2:

Good.

Speaker 1:

Last night at the cellar there was this woman up front not laughing and every all the comics before said that this room's tough, this room's not good. It was a Sunday night at like pouring rain outside, and but they got there and whatever, and there was the front row was people from Argentina and they weren't really, and this one woman was just very stiff and I got her with one of my jokes and, like I was in shock that that was a joke, she took that I dressed it, but the whole room or every, every of the comic was already crapping on them for being such a crappy audience. But that's it.

Speaker 2:

So 90 Second Street Y is happening, and then people expect that the 90 Second Street Y a gift from A&H?

Speaker 1:

I think no. Is A&H doing gifts or no?

Speaker 2:

I don't know. I'm sure they're welcome to that.

Speaker 1:

I thought you guys were working on that.

Speaker 2:

I was working with Jackie.

Speaker 1:

Oh, Jack Snacks.

Speaker 2:

I mean we could put a little frozen hot dog on every chair, Ew.

Speaker 1:

No, no, I asked.

Speaker 2:

Jackie, if she wanted to put a cookie on every chair.

Speaker 1:

That's cute.

Speaker 2:

Thank you.

Speaker 1:

That's cute Okay.

Speaker 2:

But I'm sure I mean Seth is more than welcome, to put some meat Okay, so, okay, so, never mind.

Speaker 1:

So what they can expect is what are you excited to talk about the exact situation of what's happening in the world right now and what it's like to be doing comedy in this situation. You know, other people that are influencers are running around, they have what to speak about, they and clips to show where people were anti-Semitic and all that, and I don't have, I mean, I'm just here to make them laugh. It's a different experience, you know.

Speaker 2:

So, I guess, as an influencer, what it is as a comedian, what it is as a podcaster, as a I think that I've one of the things that I've noticed that's actually been extremely powerful is that, like when we talk about anti-Semitism, it gives I think we should really change over to Jew Hatred. You and Brooke. Okay, I think Brooke is onto something with with.

Speaker 1:

I saw some comedian horrible.

Speaker 2:

Yeah.

Speaker 1:

Do a whole take on anti-Semitism and what, what, what he thinks it meant, and he was in shorn. He googled it and it was anybody that speaks Hebrew or Arabic and it's so. I think Jew hatred is much more. I think we had Brooke on and and Brooke Brooke Goldstein.

Speaker 1:

You know, I just thought and and I I wasn't completely with the, but I think that's what it is she was ahead of her time she understood that you're messing around with this, this word, and no one knows what the hell it means and people just hate you just it's just Jew hatred, isn't it to do with Palestine? Nothing, a valve has been opened, yeah, and now they can just hate Jews at will and blame it on Palestine, and blame it on, and you know they are so happy to hate the Jews railed, thrilled, to just scream we hate Jews by, you know, instead of saying we hate Jews, free Palestine, free Palestine.

Speaker 2:

It's just insane what's happening like hating Jews in America and all over the rest of the world and like breaking down like bagel shops glass in my kosher in Houston does not help free Palestine in?

Speaker 1:

Houston. My sister lives in Houston. Their kosher restaurant, their kosher bakeries were all vandalized disgusting wait how does that freeing Palestine?

Speaker 2:

it's not. How is that freeing Palestine?

Speaker 1:

it's it's just showing. It's just showing that your barbarians and you're living in a country that allows you to that it's gonna end. It's gonna, it's, it's going to, it's going to. You're going to see how this is. I don't know the algorithms of of my of my Instagram, but I don't like and follow the crazy bombings and screamings of Israelis that my child is missing. I I'm more on the more positive side and I'm seeing politicians that are speaking out against Muslim communities that are doing bad things not all Muslims, but the ones that are doing bad things and by the way, it's not just.

Speaker 2:

Muslims.

Speaker 1:

There are plenty of other people who have been very happy to get on the I hate Jew bandwagon of course, but the, the yeah, yeah it's fun and and into the other cause for it, but like the, the, the president or the prime minister of the Netherlands warning everybody that this is happening.

Speaker 2:

This is just an Israel now, but it's gonna happen in your country, and letting them know and it's it's listen our friends, who has been a guest on the podcast, mike Salaman, of his restaurant Goldie in Philadelphia, was they like surrounded and they were screaming horrible, horrible things. That what I mean, what? This is a restaurant in Philadelphia like. What does it have to do with anything screaming about? Kill the Jews? I have a kosher.

Speaker 1:

It's just an Israeli style restaurant. Right, they're just serving for Laughlin hummus. That means you should go run to every halal stand and bomb them too what's wrong with people?

Speaker 2:

what do?

Speaker 1:

you what? How is that helping anything?

Speaker 2:

but I like how you focus on like the good stuff.

Speaker 1:

I think that it and it gives it to me, so it shows me. It doesn't show me the gram I mentioned.

Speaker 2:

Obviously that's how the algorithm work.

Speaker 1:

The algorithm does work, I but.

Speaker 2:

I think that, as a general note, I really try. There are some incredible groups that are bringing together Muslims and Jews and that's the kind of stuff that I think is really important, but that's not what we're gonna be talking about no, why we're going to be talking about Mashiach energy yes you have some very interesting philosophies about the very spiritual and profound role of a comedian.

Speaker 1:

Yes, yes, that too, and then also being gay and being married and I don't know. And also the blessing of being able to work with your partner different types of your case.

Speaker 2:

That's a blessing. In my case that would be well, you the blessing you have is that you don't work with your partner.

Speaker 1:

God forbid, you should be in business together, no my god, somebody would be in general, but you guys are raising a child together. That's a full business of its own. Yes, that's raising a child is a family business. There is schools, doctors there's, there's clothing, there's food. There's a lot of things involved.

Speaker 2:

It's a family business that's a really interesting yes, that's I've never thought about yeah somebody that's very good though somebody said to me it's, having kids is like running a daycare center with somebody you used to fuck you had to get that in there.

Speaker 1:

You had to get that. It was such a great clip right until you.

Speaker 2:

It's a better clip now there's a better clip now.

Speaker 1:

Yeah, okay, my, my niece was in town. She has four kids. She had two kids in the twins. She has four kids within like five years of each. Less than five years of each other less yeah, yeah yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah.

Speaker 2:

Eight to like four, yeah, four years of each other, yeah, they're four year old, yeah it's a full on job, it's a wait you have for a four-year-old twin, niece, nephew, situation going on.

Speaker 1:

Great niece, nephew. It's my niece's kids Got it. It's my niece's kids it's. I'm the great. It's so funny. They called me great uncle, which was the craziest thing, because when I had a, I had a great uncle.

Speaker 2:

Oh, my God.

Speaker 1:

My grandmother's brother came to America. They moved to Chicago. He was this big guy that came to the house and was like back in the day. Back in the day when we were young, there weren't like 85-year-olds a lot around. People died at 77. You called it in. You're done Now people because of heart surgeries and whatever, people lived forever. But back then he was the first like old guy we saw, came to the house, had a gut, spoke like this with an accent and in Yiddish he spoke in the house and a fat cigar.

Speaker 2:

And he was probably like 42.

Speaker 1:

No he was back then in the 70s or 80s and we were just like looking at it. It was like wow, and now I'm the great uncle.

Speaker 2:

That's insane With.

Speaker 1:

Leo, leo's a great uncle. Ha, ha ha, oh my God.

Speaker 2:

That is so crazy. Yeah, it was. Do they call you Uncle Modi?

Speaker 1:

No, no we don't do titles before things. It's Modi uncle. I guess it's very American, is it? It's actually an American thing? Eww, it's so.

Speaker 2:

I feel like I had a great aunt too who had like a very big mole on her face and one really long white hair coming out of it.

Speaker 1:

Stop and you didn't just discuss it with her.

Speaker 2:

I was little like I don't. I just remember being like oh, that doesn't look good oh.

Speaker 1:

God say something. See something, say something. See something, say something, Say something, yeah that is a crime.

Speaker 2:

to have people walk around like that A crime really a crime. But who wants to be the person to say that Me?

Speaker 1:

I'll say that hey, right there, ha ha ha, right here, right there, that's it. Right there, you got a hair coming out of your mole. You would really 100% and they'll say thank you very much.

Speaker 2:

Right, yeah, I would, I would appreciate it. Okay, what else?

Speaker 1:

What else? So that's basically it, but we have the why. Again we are at the why. It's gonna be not just like a regular it's gonna be the 100th episode of the podcast, but it's gonna be much more structured and much more like with a message and much more with ABC Meshikh energy and it's gonna be a vibe to sit with fans. And I think I'm gonna open with comedy. Right, I think I'm just gonna go up and do a few minutes.

Speaker 2:

I think you can do whatever you want. Say that again, they'll start with the 100th episode, a live taping.

Speaker 1:

We're gonna be doing a live taping of and here's Modi at the 92nd Street. Y called In Conversation with Modi. Periel will be the one I'll be in conversation with.

Speaker 2:

It's.

Speaker 1:

February I was talking, and now she's began. That's how, but at that event, yeah, that's how it's gonna go.

Speaker 2:

The 100th episode. That was what I. You didn't say no in the beginning.

Speaker 1:

I said I did, I did. I said this is the 100th episode. The 100th episode of and here's Modi will be live taped at the 92nd Street Y. It's gonna be called In Conversation with Modi that's the title of it, and they'll be in conversation with Periel and we have a surprise guest, leo, and we will be. It'll be a structured episode of and here's Modi.

Speaker 2:

And we're gonna take questions at the end.

Speaker 1:

Yes, we'll do Q and A, so make sure you bring good questions with you, and it's amazing that the tickets are available already.

Speaker 2:

Tickets are available at modilivecom. Oh, at modilivecom, where? And at the 92nd Street Y.

Speaker 1:

Yes, speaking of which, ladies and gentlemen, we are going on tour. We are me, leo are going on tour. We have shows all over America. Look at modilivecom, find a show near you. We have Dallas, we have Orlando, cleveland, we have an extra show we added in San Diego, we added an extra show at the Paramount in Huntington. We are in all over Pennsylvania, pa and Minnesota, and Minnesota, minnesota.

Speaker 2:

Where are you going in Minnesota? No, not.

Speaker 1:

Minnesota, detroit, michigan, michigan, michigan. Sorry, mi is Michigan, right, mi is Michigan. I'm gonna be in MI, in Michigan, again, and tickets are at modilivecom. Be the friend that brings the friends to the comedy show, get a ticket. And not only that, let your friends who you see know that live near that I'm gonna be coming and they should come to see the shows and it's gonna be amazing. Yeah, what about you?

Speaker 2:

I'm Israel Chai.

Speaker 1:

That's your thing now. That's my thing now. That's your.

Speaker 2:

It's my entire personality now.

Speaker 1:

Is. I'm Israel Chai. The nation of Israel lives.

Speaker 2:

Okay, I listened to that song on loop.

Speaker 1:

I'm Israel Chai. I'm Oda Vinu, oda Vinu that. No, which one? I'm Israel, chai, I'm Israel, chai, I'm Israel.

Speaker 2:

Chai, which one In second. I'm fine with that. There's so many versions. No, this is the best one.

Speaker 1:

Oda Vinu. Oda Vinu no no.

Speaker 2:

Like a oh, it's a newer version.

Speaker 1:

Who's the singer? Ayyal Golan. Ayyal Golan. Okay, Very nice. Okay, that's a great song too.

Speaker 2:

And that's it. We are wrapping this episode up.

Speaker 1:

That's it. I'm so excited for the 90 Seconds Streetwise, the 90 Seconds Streetwise and be litty.

Speaker 2:

I wanna say this yeah that I met you.

Speaker 1:

We've talked about you and I'm so excited for the 90 Seconds Streetwise.

Speaker 2:

I'm so excited for the 90 Seconds Streetwise. I met you we've talked about this before almost 15 years ago when I was trying to hire you to be a canter at my wedding Correct and I had heard somehow I knew that you were a comedian, you were very funny, but I had heard that you come in like a full cantorial garb which I thought would be hot for pictures.

Speaker 1:

Which is amazing. Any wedding I've ever done, the pictures all come out amazing. One thing I know how to do in a wedding is to set everything up for the photographer for there to be amazing, but you and your husband were cheap.

Speaker 2:

No, my husband's was. My husband thought it was crazy. He thought it was a crazy idea. He says really he didn't like you know, but anyway I thought about that when we got the 90 Seconds Streetwise thing that like somehow 15 years later Hashem knew that like we were destined to be on this road together.

Speaker 1:

That's right.

Speaker 2:

It's so crazy, how incredible that we're gonna be doing this event at this iconic Jewish New York City institution.

Speaker 1:

Yeah, yeah and it's gonna be. It's something I'm revved up for. It's not like just another thing happening. I'm like super stoked. It's gonna be super interesting.

Speaker 2:

What are you gonna wear?

Speaker 1:

I am working on that right now.

Speaker 2:

Do you have some ideas that you can share with me?

Speaker 1:

Yeah, it's things you can sit. I'm not sure I'm gonna do a suit, because it'd be sitting a lot. Okay, they wanna sit in a blazer.

Speaker 1:

Okay, it might just be. Like. You know, since it is an episode, the black t-shirt is the thing you know. It's still a part of the podcast, so the black t-shirt. Anyway, start sending your questions now for the 90 Seconds Streetwise, just so we can get a feel of what you wanna hear. And thank you all for listening. Again, modilivecom for all shows. Thanks for being a part of the and here's Modi Family and we will hopefully see you at a live show very soon. Thank you, periel.

Speaker 2:

Thank you.

Catch-Up and Celebrations With Family
In Conversation
Anti-Semitism and Comedy