WPIX-TV (New York, NY) – New York Living – Part 2
We need to combat all forms of hate. yeah. and also, you know, combating that. what you're seeing on the 5 forms of tiktok and instagram and facebook and so on and so forth.
We need to combat all forms of hate. yeah. and also, you know, combating that. what you're seeing on the 5 forms of tiktok and instagram and facebook and so on and so forth.
we're going this year talk to them a little later on the show right now. >> we have a a very, very important topic. you know, some might say we're living in divided times. division leads to a lot of things. confusion, misunderstanding.
David Schwimmer on Tuesday called on his fellow Jewish members of Hollywood to stand up against antisemitism. “Plenty of people I respect, even some of my heroes in entertainment, music and sports, have chosen to keep a low profile and sit this one out,” the Friends alum told the audience at the Anti-Defamation League’s annual Never Is Now antisemitism conference in New York. “So many have chosen not to say anything publicly at all. And if I can say something directly to them: I really wish you would.”
With antisemitism surging, Israeli influencer and author Hen Mazzig is launching a new online series “And They’re Jewish,” headlined by celebrities including Emmanuelle Chriqui, Debra Messing and Mayim Bialik.
David Schwimmer addressed his Hollywood peers who are reluctant to get “political” in a rousing, impassioned speech at the Anti-Defamation League’s annual Never Is Now summit against antisemitism on Tuesday.
Participants in the rally, held a half-block from the Javits Center, aimed to call attention to the organization’s support for the “Trump-Musk alliance.”
The 97th Academy Awards was a banner night for Jews in Hollywood. Adrien Brody and Mikey Madison won the Oscars for best actor and best actress, the first time in decades that Jewish actors have swept that category; best supporting actor went to the co-star of a film about Jewish cousins who tour Majdanek; and The Brutalist, a film about a Holocaust survivor’s experience of antisemitism in America, won for cinematography and score.
"Ori Danino physically fought with the terrorists so that they would treat the hostage Hersh Goldberg-Polin, whose hand was blown off during the kidnapping. Thanks to his struggle, the wound was closed. The terrorists were afraid of him," Eliyah Cohen recounted.