Épisodes

  • Olympic hockey snubs + golf in January
    Jan 21 2026

    The Menschwarmers return after a lengthy winter break! In this mid-January catch-all catch-up, Gabe and James get started looking at arguably the biggest trade of the NHL season last, involving two Jewish players—Quinn Hughes and Zev Buium—who were swapped with predictable results. Then they start looking at Winter Olympics rosters, starting with Olympic hockey: which Jewish players got snubbed? After that, a glimpse at Deni Avdija's odds at being the first Israeli NBA All Star and an obsessive look at golf in the dead of winter.

    Credits

    • Hosts: James Hirsh and Gabe Pulver

    • Producer: Michael Fraiman

    • Music: Coby Lipovitch (intro), chēēZ π (main theme, " Organ Grinder Swing ")

    Support The CJN

    • Follow the podcast on Twitter @menschwarmers

    • Subscribe to The CJN newsletter

    • Donate to The CJN (+ get a charitable tax receipt)

    • Subscribe to Menschwarmers (Not sure how? Click here )

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    29 min
  • 'Marty Supreme' could be the best Hanukkah movie that doesn't take place around Hanukkah
    Dec 12 2025

    As far as Jewish filmmakers go, the Safie brothers could well be the GOATs (Greatest Of All Time) when it comes to Jewish sports cinema. One of their earliest collaborations was a 2013 documentary on high school basketball star Lenny Cooke; their breakout feature, Uncut Gems, was a sports-adjacent thriller featuring a Passover Seder with Adam Sandler and Idina Menzel; then younger brother Benny Safdie went on to star in Sandler's Happy Gilmore sequel—another sports film with a Jewish lead character.

    Now, in late 2025, the brothers (who are great-nephews of architect Moshe Safdie, for those wondering) have gone their separate ways, each directing their own sports movie. Benny directed The Rock in a biopic of MMA fighter Mark Kerr in The Smashing Machine, while older brother Josh Safdie tapped Jewish actor Timothée Chalamet to play table tennis champion Marty Reisman in Marty Supreme.

    While Marty Supreme is slated for a Christmas Day release 2025, the Globe and Mail's film editor, Barry Hertz, just published a review of the Oscar contender, in which he says the story "burns with the relentless, fight-for-your-life spirit of the Maccabees.... With apologies to Adam Sandler’s Eight Crazy Nights, Marty Supreme is, thematically and spiritually, the greatest Hanukkah movie ever made." Hertz joins the Menschwarmers to explain his reasoning and how this ping pong epic fits into the larger canon of Jewish cinema.

    And before that, the boys chat about Jake Retzlaff leading the Tulane Green Wave to success, and get to the source of an incorrect rumour about the Toronto Blue Jays' Eric Clement being Jewish.

    Credits

    • Hosts:

    James Hirsh and Gabe Pulver

    • Producer:

    Michael Fraiman

    • Music:

    Coby Lipovitch (intro),

    chēēZ π

    (main theme, "

    Organ Grinder Swing

    ")

    Support The CJN

    • Follow the podcast on

    Twitter @menschwarmers

    • Subscribe to The CJN newsletter
    • Donate to The CJN

    (+ get a charitable tax receipt)

    • Subscribe to Menschwarmers

    (Not sure how?

    Click here

    )

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    38 min
  • Getting nachas from Deni Avdija, Zach Hyman and Jake Retzlaff
    Nov 19 2025

    It's taken the Menschwarmers several weeks of mourning to get over the Toronto Blue Jays' World Series loss against the Los Angeles Dodgers, and no amount of broadcast cutaways to 89-year-old Sandy Koufax in the crowd during that intense seven-game series can help. But now, weeks later, after the shivas have ended for that miracle run, The CJN's sports podcasters are back—and they have a lot to look forward to.

    In this episode, they take note of Deni Avdija, the Portland Trail Blazer who's having a breakout season that could make him the first Israeli to ever make an NBA All-Star team. Then they turn to Zach Hyman, who triumphantly returned to the Edmonton Oilers and immediately logged a career-high 11 hits in a game, after getting injured in last season's Western Conference Finals and missing the Stanley Cup Finals entirely. After that, they look south to college football, where Jake Retzlaff has lead the Tulane Green Wave to tie for first place in the American Conference.

    There are plenty of accomplishments worth celebrating for Jewish athletes—catch up on what's happening with this week's episode of Menschwarmers.

    Credits

    • Hosts: James Hirsh and Gabe Pulver

    • Producer: Michael Fraiman

    • Music: Coby Lipovitch (intro), chēēZ π (main theme, " Organ Grinder Swing ")

    Support The CJN

    • Follow the podcast on Twitter @menschwarmers

    • Subscribe to The CJN newsletter

    • Donate to The CJN (+ get a charitable tax receipt)

    • Subscribe to Menschwarmers (Not sure how? Click here )

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    33 min
  • Blue Jays nachas + Israeli soccer breakdown
    Oct 24 2025

    Even though the Toronto Blue Jays traded away Spencer Horwitz, their only recent Jewish player, there are still multiple Hebraic angles that our Jewish sports podcasters are celebrating as the team charges into the World Series against the Los Angeles Dodgers this week.

    The father-son team of Dan and Ben Shulman will be calling the Jays' broadcasts; macher Mark Shapiro sits as team president and CEO; two of the biggest celebrity fans include Eugene Levy and Geddy Lee; and at least two rabbis—one in Toronto, the other in L.A.—have engaged in a friendly wager over the outcome.

    Menschwarmers co-hosts Gabe Pulver and James Hirsh dig into all this as the two lifelong Jays fans get ready for Game 1 on Friday night.

    After that, Gabe sits down with soccer journalist and broadcaster David Gass (co-host of the Kickback Committee podcast), who explains all the chaos of the last week involving Israeli soccer teams, including Birmingham's decision to ban fans of the Maccabi Tel Aviv team and a subsequent called-off match between Maccabi and Hapoel Tel Aviv.

    Credits

    • Hosts: James Hirsh and Gabe Pulver
    • Producer: Michael Fraiman
    • Music: Coby Lipovitch (intro), chēēZ π (main theme, "Organ Grinder Swing")

    Support The CJN

    • Follow the podcast on Twitter @menschwarmers
    • Subscribe to The CJN newsletter
    • Donate to The CJN (+ get a charitable tax receipt)
    • Subscribe to Menschwarmers (Not sure how? Click here)
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    42 min
  • Rise of the Blue Jays & fall of Israel–Premier Tech
    Oct 9 2025

    After a tumultuous season, international cycling team Israel–Premier Tech, co-owned by Canadian-Israeli billionaire Sylvan Adams, is officially going to change its name and remove the word "Israel". The decision comes after repeated anti-Israel protests across Europe disrupted the team—whose international roster of 31 cyclists includes just three Israelis—during their open-road events, which can last hundreds of kilometres across the continent. Several cyclists crashed due to protester intervention. The decision to remove Israeli branding from Israel–Premier Tech led co-owner Adams to announce he would step away from day-to-day involvement with the team.

    There's a lot to be said about the political ramifications of wearing the Israeli name on your shirt in 2025, but our sports podcasters have a different theory about the shift. Israel–Premier Tech enjoyed a successful season that brought them back to full status with the UCI World Tour, after being relegated down to the secondary UCI ProSeries since 2023. That means the stakes are higher, the stage is bigger, and the league's propensity for risk and disruption may well have shrunk considerably. Is this purely a move to placate protesters, or are the team members—and possibly UCI executives—trying to prevent more bad press in the coming year?

    Also on the docket: the boys talk about the Toronto Blue Jays' run to the American League championship series, big baseball moves, early NHL impressions and a quick NFL check-in.

    Credits

    • Hosts: James Hirsh and Gabe Pulver
    • Producer: Michael Fraiman
    • Music: Coby Lipovitch (intro), chēēZ π (main theme, "Organ Grinder Swing")

    Support The CJN

    • Follow the podcast on Twitter @menschwarmers
    • Subscribe to The CJN newsletter
    • Donate to The CJN (+ get a charitable tax receipt)
    • Subscribe to Menschwarmers (Not sure how? Click here)
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    28 min
  • Why did Tennis Canada bar fans from attending the Israel-Canada Davis Cup match? We have theories
    Sep 12 2025

    Canadians who've never before heard of the Davis Cup, a men's team tennis tournament, grew outraged when they discovered Canada was hosting Israel in a match on Sept. 12 and 13. Anti-Israel activists demanded a ban on the Israeli athletes over their country's war in Gaza; pro-Israel advocates insisted the sport remain free of political interference.

    In the end, nobody won: Tennis Canada announced they would not permit any fans to enter the venue this weekend, refunding anyone who bought a ticket. What will likely ensue is a relatively uneventful match between two lower-seeded tennis teams, accompanied by some everyday protests outside.

    But while Tennis Canada cited security concerns for their decision, our sports podcasters ask: is that really the reason?

    The venue holds 5,000 people, and only 1,500 people were expected to attend. Of that, a small handful of anti-Israel protesters—in the realm of a dozen people—said they bought tickets with the explicit intention of disrupting the event. Team Israel has significant security resources, and has said nothing that indicates they were worried for their players' safety. So was this really a security concern, or is Tennis Canada more concerned with a clean product for television and to encourage the opportunity of hosting international events in the future? Was this a political move, or simply a bureaucratic one?

    The hosts dig into all this, plus what happened with Israeli teams in European cycling and soccer.

    Credits

    • Hosts: James Hirsh and Gabe Pulver
    • Producer: Michael Fraiman
    • Music: Coby Lipovitch (intro), chēēZ π (main theme, "Organ Grinder Swing")

    Support The CJN

    • Follow the podcast on Twitter @menschwarmers
    • Subscribe to The CJN newsletter
    • Donate to The CJN (+ get a charitable tax receipt)
    • Subscribe to Menschwarmers (Not sure how? Click here)
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    22 min
  • Keith Law on the New York Yankees swastika incident
    Aug 28 2025

    In July, the New York Yankees drafted a Canadian shortstop from Wyoming, Ont., named Core Jackson. They did so despite knowing that Jackson, as a 17-year-old freshman at the University of Nebraska, had drawn a swastika on a Jewish student's dorm room while he was, he later told The Athletic, "blackout drunk."

    But this isn't a run-of-the-mill case of antisemitism. By all accounts, according to the Yankees' ground scouts and the recent investigation by The Athletic that ran Aug. 20, Jackson was, simply, acting like an ignorant drunk teenager, and was forthright about the incident with teams before the draft. The team did significant due diligence, engaging with New York's Jewish community and sending scouts to learn about Jackson's family and personality.

    The resulting story is less about the insipid rise of casual antisemitism, and more about the power of forgiveness when people—especially teenagers—make mistakes and try to do better.

    Keith Law, a longtime baseball journalist and former front office worker with the Toronto Blue Jays, broke this story for The Athletic. He joins us to share his impressions of Core Jackson and how the Yankees are viewing this opportunity.

    After that, podcast hosts Gabe and Jamie run through this year's hottest Jewish sports movies, from Happy Gilmore 2 to both Safdie brothers' award-season offerings, The Smashing Machine and Marty Supreme. Then they give a quick NFL preview and recap Zach Hyman's ceremonial opening of the new ice hockey rink at the Schwartz/Reisman Jewish Community Centre in Vaughan.

    Credits

    • Hosts: James Hirsh and Gabe Pulver
    • Producer: Michael Fraiman
    • Music: Coby Lipovitch (intro), chēēZ π (main theme, "Organ Grinder Swing")

    Support The CJN

    • Follow the podcast on Twitter @menschwarmers
    • Subscribe to The CJN newsletter
    • Donate to The CJN (+ get a charitable tax receipt)
    • Subscribe to Menschwarmers (Not sure how? Click here)
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    38 min
  • Jake Retzlaff starts a new chapter
    Aug 8 2025

    Jake Retzlaff has earned a spot as one of America's top college football quarterbacks, rising with the Brigham Young University Cougars as the first Jewish quarterback to ever play at the Mormon university. But it's precisely that religious juxtaposition that got Retzlaff in trouble with the BYU Cougars, after a brief legal action in May 2025 saw an anonymous accusation of sexual assault lobbied against the college athlete. Even though the case was dismissed with prejudice on June 30, Retzlaff conceded that he had sexual relations with the woman, which is against BYU's religious rules. Instead of facing a lengthy suspension, Retzlaff applied for a transfer.

    BYU's loss turned into Tulane University's gain, as Retzlaff will now vie for the starting QB spot on the Tulane Green Wave, repping a university that proudly stands as one of the first in the American South to allow Jews—and now has, according to some estimates, a Jewish student population as high as 40 percent. How will Retlaff perform at "Jewlane" University? What are the expectations? We ask Isaac Popper, an insider with the Green Wave and sports reporter based in New Orleans, for answers.

    Credits

    • Hosts: James Hirsh and Gabe Pulver
    • Producer: Michael Fraiman
    • Music: Coby Lipovitch (intro), chēēZ π (main theme, "Organ Grinder Swing")

    Support The CJN

    • Follow the podcast on Twitter @menschwarmers
    • Subscribe to The CJN newsletter
    • Donate to The CJN (+ get a charitable tax receipt)
    • Subscribe to Menschwarmers (Not sure how? Click here)
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    39 min