Anonymous wrote:I didn’t think Esther was “awesome” at all. She was a complete jerk to Joanne.
Anonymous wrote:The rabbi's mom actress was the Jewish mom in the show Crazy Ex Girlfriend.
That show has a very similar scene at a camp where the male crush is working. The hot male crush (who all the teen girls are crushing on, too) ends up ignoring his (ex) girlfriend. She then tries to be all hip older friend to the teen girls, like "hey grrrllfriend!" The teens totally find her cringe and tell it like it is.
Like the same plot! How weird, right?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I’m half Jewish and the stereotypes really bugged me. Along with Bell’s aforementioned lip issue.
On the other hand, I think Adam Brody is really cute and see that in real life he’s a secular Jew.
“Secular Jew” is more offensive than most of the clearly intentional stereotypes in the show. You can’t be a “secular Jew.”
It’s a religion.
I think PP meant that he does not practice it, but he is ethnically Jewish. So, there are many secular Jews. Just like there are religious Jews.
Anonymous wrote:The Jewish tropes are ridiculous. When Bell's character shows up to the synagogue and camera zooms in on the woman playing Brody's mom I knew she was going to call her a shiksa before she spoke. And agree that the pushy women desperate to marry their daughters off to Brody were silly.
It was also INSANE when Brody's girlfriend digs up the engagement ring and just starts wearing it without talking to him and then tries to just force an engagement. This combined with the scene at the synagogue really rubs me the wrong way because it portrays all the Jewish women in his life as marriage-obsessed with no interest in romance and essentially justifies him doing something he knows will stir up a ton of trouble by pursing a relationship with a non-Jewish woman. It has "look what you made me do" vibes.
Having said all that I do enjoy the scenes between Brody and Bell and I actually do think this could be an interesting premise (without the broad Jewish tropes that are especially harsh towards Jewish women). It's a shame they went this route and betrays a really laziness -- this was the only way you could think of to make it funny. Lame.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Isn’t Bell firstly a fantastic singer?
I feel like you’re thinking of Anna Kendrick.
NP. Bell is a fantastic singer. She was Anna in Frozen.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Isn’t Bell firstly a fantastic singer?
I feel like you’re thinking of Anna Kendrick.
NP. Bell is a fantastic singer. She was Anna in Frozen.
Do you think she reenacts frozen for her daughters?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Isn’t Bell firstly a fantastic singer?
I feel like you’re thinking of Anna Kendrick.
NP. Bell is a fantastic singer. She was Anna in Frozen.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Isn’t Bell firstly a fantastic singer?
I feel like you’re thinking of Anna Kendrick.
Anonymous wrote:Isn’t Bell firstly a fantastic singer?
Anonymous wrote:Regarding Sasha and Morgan, I think the reason their relationship is do delightful is specifically because they aren't attracted to each other. Morgan is definitely not into Sasha and even if Sasha finds Morgan attractive, I don't think he actually wants to be with her or leave Esther.
Rather I think they just bonded over having similar dynamics with their "main character" siblings and I think their personalities are complimentary. But not in a romantic way.
If Sasha left Esther or even expressed any interest in cheating on her o think Morgan would lose all respect for him. His marriage is the biggest indication that he is smarter and stronger than he comes off because Esther is clearly awesome and he obviously adores her and respects her.
I think Morgan and Sasha are just meant to be a sign that actually Joanne and Noah actually could work and that their families and lives are more compatible than at first glance.