Tag Archives: Judaism

Josh Peck and Robby Hoffman Debate Where to Keep a Menorah During Hanukkah

Josh Peck and Robby Hoffman have vastly different ideas about a few core aspects of celebrating Hanukkah.

“You taught me something that is a little bit of a Jewish superstition. It’s not a superstition, but it’s inappropriate to blow out the candles on a menorah,” Peck, 39, told guest Hoffman, 36, during a recent episode of his “Good Guys” podcast. “You were not pleased with me.”

Hoffman stated that “it’s not OK” to ever blow out the candles on a menorah.

“It’s like a Yahrzeit candle,” she said, referring to the traditional 24-hour candle to honor deceased relatives in the Jewish religion. “Just let it go. It’s, like, one person had a candle that burned everything down. You never heard of it again.”

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Peck speculated that candles catching on fire probably “happens a lot” because many menorahs are placed in a windowsill next to fabric curtains.

“We always had the menorah, my mother did on the stove with a lot of tin foil,” Hoffman said. “Just grab some in foil, there’s nothing tin foil can’t do. It’s a to-go box, it’s a tray [or] it’s a cover. There’s nothing it can’t do.”

Peck, for his part, revealed that he’s “a menorah-in-the-sink guy.”

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Josh Peck and his son in 2019. Courtesy of Josh Peck/ Instagram

“Is that nuts?” the Drake & Josh alum said. “It just kind of looks like I’m hiding it ‘cause you’re supposed to put it in the window.”

Hanukkah, also known as the Festival of Lights, takes place every winter and celebrates the rededication of the Temple of Jerusalem by the Maccabees. The holiday — it starts at sundown on Sunday, December 14, this year — is often marked by individuals who practice Judaism lighting candles on a menorah for eight consecutive nights.

While Peck’s sink storage may help prevent a fire from breaking out, Hoffman had qualms about the symbolism.

“I think it’s not a great look,” the Hacks actress said. “It feels like you’re washing it down.”

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Hoffman was raised in a Hasidic Jewish family but has since strayed from the conservative rules. She still identifies with the religion, though, and has even taught wife Gabby Windey about her traditions.

“She’s desperate to [convert],” Hoffman said on a 2023 episode of Bethenny Frankel’s “Just B” podcast, referring to her now-wife. “I’ve said nothing. We don’t need. At this point, when people go, ‘Important to you Jewish?’ I say, ‘It’s over, what are we talking about?’ She’s so into it.”

Windey, 34, further revealed that she had been getting a crash-course in Judaism since she and Hoffman started dating earlier that year.

“I get a Jewish history lesson almost every day, which I love and I die for now,” the former Bachelorette said. “There’s so much culture, I mean truly.”

Windey also noted that she had been learning a few Yiddish phrases from Hoffman, too.

“I like the number things [with] the 18. I was at the spa the other day, and I looked for a multiple of 18 to put my stuff in ‘cause this is probably good luck,” Windey said. “I’m buying it just for the fun of it.”

Jenna Jameson Shares How Her Partner ‘Inspired’ Her to Find Jesus

Former adult film star Jenna Jameson found her match in partner Mil R. Ocampo, who has embraced her spiritual journey.

“I think the most beautiful part about her is [that] she has been a devout Christian the better part of her life,” Jameson, 51, exclusively told Us Weekly. “She never once pushed her faith on me. I watched her beautifully worship Jesus, and I felt so incredibly inspired. So without words, she led me straight into the arms of Jesus.”

Jameson (real name Jenna Marie Massoli) hard-launched her relationship with Ocampo earlier this year, sharing a selfie of the couple at the time via Instagram. While reflecting on their romance, Jameson gushed that things are going “better than I ever thought possible.”

“I’m at peace and incredibly happy, she understands me,” Jameson said, noting that she and Ocampo “love going on camping trips, antique hunting and she smiles and patiently waits while I shop.”

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When the pair initially crossed paths, Jameson explained that Ocampo was not familiar with her adult entertainment past.

“I didn’t bring it up right away, and honestly, it never changed how she saw me. The conversation ended with her saying, ‘Oh, OK … can we go have that UBE ice cream in a bear-shaped mold?’” Jameson told Us. “And that was it. No judgment, no hesitation. That’s when I knew I could be honest with her, because she already accepted me as I was.”

Years before their relationship, Jameson announced her retirement from the adult entertainment industry in 2008 after appearances in adult magazines like Penthouse, Hustler and Cheri. She returned to the industry briefly in 2013 but has yet to perform any pornographic scenes for any studios. She has instead appeared on MyFreeCams, a community of online sex workers.

Outside of the industry, Jameson converted to Judaism in 2015. One decade later, Jameson announced that she “found her faith again” and converted back to a faction of Christianity.

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“I love Judaism and I still feel incredibly connected to it,” Jameson told Us. “Recently, over the last year, I felt a pull on my heart, though. My partner is incredibly well versed in Christianity and has helped guide me when I expressed interest.”

Jameson has since said via social media that she hopes to help others “find Jesus too,” noting that she has gotten baptized. The response to her post has been “predominantly kind and welcoming,” Jameson shared.

“I’ve had a fringe few that have had rotten things to say about my past, and my sexuality, but I know in my heart that Jesus loves me fully, even in my brokenness,” Jameson said. “I was overwhelmed by the beautiful outpouring of love from so many of my followers, and even from well-known pastors with a huge reach.”

Jameson now belongs to a “fantastic” church.

“I have had quite a few people that supported my early work send me hateful messages, but that is how I know I’m on the right track,” she said. “I knew it wouldn’t be easy, but … if you know me, you know I fear nothing. I know being saved is an important milestone in my life and it’s imperative for me to share it, if only to give others hope.”

COVID-19 and Common-sense Religion

GOVERNMENT OF MALAWI: STATEMENT ON CORONAVIRUS OUTBREAK(COVID-19)

There is a new religion, a new world religion. This religion has suddenly taken over from various religions. This new religion is an umbrella religion that encapsulates others-African traditional religion, Hinduism, Judaism, Christianity, Islam, and Bahai. Even the non-religious outlooks subsists under its shade and cover.

The new religion has members of these religious faiths as followers and adherents. It includes all religious minutiae but to the extent that they accommodate and abide by the new injunctions. It is not a matter of choice for other religions and ideologies to align with the new religion.

All religions must and have to abide by the doctrines of this faith regime, the common-sense religion. Some may wonder if commonsense and religion go together. Yes, they do because the creators of the old religions, religious worshippers and religious entrepreneurs are common-sensical beings.

Old religionists are also uncommon-sensical beings because they sometimes behave in ways that depart from everyday reason. Religions owe their differences to their specific uncommon-senses, to their uncommon-sense practices and doctrines, uncommon-sense prophets and personalities, uncommon-sense places of worship, uncommon sacred texts and rituals.

These differences account for religious diversity but also for religious competition and rivalry. The differences are linked to the quest for domination by the various faith traditions. They underlie the zero-sum game, the winner-takes-all, that various religions indulge. Thus religious competition is not a common-sense competition. It is an uncommon-sense battle.

Each religious tradition fights to prevail over others, to foist its uncommon-sense on others, or make its uncommon-sense the uncommon-sense for all. The history of religion is a history of successions, of substitution of one religion by another, of one uncommon prophet, message, book, place, and style of worship by another. Incidentally, these competitions have only yielded limited results.

The quests have fallen short of total domination. Thus existing religions have strongholds, that is, regions of the world where they are dominant. From their strongholds, in the east or the west, in the north or the south, they try to advance and to dominate the world.

They try to make their particular uncommon-sense the uncommon-sense for the world. That is until a global threat emerges or a pandemic such as a coronavirus occurs. These religions retreat. They sheath their swords and close ranks to confront the common enemy. These religions behave as if they never quarreled, attacked or shot at each other. They cooperate and forge alliances to find a solution; to get rid of the enemy.

As soon as the threat is neutralized or the problem is resolved, the old religions return to their various uncommon-sensical battlefronts and the fights resume all over again. That is the cycle of religious common and uncommon-sense. The coronavirus has forced a religious ceasefire. COVID -19 has become the code word for a global religious truce, and the new religion, the common-sense religion. The common-sense religion is now the world’s religion.

African traditional religionists observe it. Jews, Christians, and Muslims profess it. Hindus, Shintoists and Buddhists abide by this religion. The pope and the Ayatollah submit to it. The sheikh and Rabbi, the Ifa priest and bishop, whites and blacks, Africans, Europeans and Americans are all members of this new religion.

All that is being observed across the world including the washing of hands, no shaking of hands, ban on hajj and religious services, removal of holy water from the churches, wearing of medical face masks, working, praying and studying from home, etc are all teachings of the new religion. They are common-sense religious rituals. The prophets of the new religion are scientists, doctors, and researchers. Their advice and instructions are the new revelations. The new churches and mosques are the laboratories and research centers.

However, the new religion is a contingent phenomenon. It appears when there is a global threat and disappears when the threat that caused its emergence expires. The common-sense religion holds sway as long as the threat is out there, as is the case now with the coronavirus. Thus as the new prophets try to find a cure or vaccine for COVID-19, the common-sense religion holds sway.