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"This is not your father's Judaism: Funny, loud, over-the-top. Jews with an edge and proud of it." Baltimore Jewish Times
"Their musical interpretations of Jewish life have been called 'hilarious' from coast to coast." Philadelphia Weekly
"Clever and funny." Chicago Tribune
"Irresistibly tasteless." Boston Phoenix
"Makes Adam Sandler sound like an altar boy." New York Magazine
"A pair of razor-sharp wiseacres." Village Voice
"Unorthodox, irreverent and hilarious." Blueprint
"Hilarious brilliance." New Jersey Jewish Standard
"Appeals to the same young-adult audience that eats up performers like Jon Stewart and Sarah Silverman." Chicago Jewish News
Good For the Jews is the new band from What I Like About Jew creator Rob Tannenbaum. Tannenbaum was featured in Time Out New York's cover story on "The New Super Jews" and in a recent New York Times feature on "the Jewish hipster moment."
A ground-breaking approach to songs about Jewish life brought What I Like About Jew national acclaim, a four-star review on AllMusic.com, and an NPR profile by Terry Gross of "Fresh Air." "Hilarious," said the Village Voice. "Hilarious," said the Baltimore CityGuide . "Hilarious," said the Jewish Telegraph. "Hilarious," said Jewlicious.com. "Hilarious," said the SF Bay Guardian . "Hilarious," said Flavorpill.com.
DAVID FAGIN is the leader of The Rosenbergs, an acclaimed indie rock band that has toured with No Doubt, The Strokes and Duran Duran. David has been a guest on the Dennis Miller and Howard Stern shows, and finally made his parents proud when he lectured on the business of music at Harvard Law School. His songs have been heard on Dawson's Creek, Party Of Five, One Tree Hill and Queer Eye , among other TV shows. AllMusic.com hailed the Rosenbergs for "a clever, incessantly buoyant pop sound that could compare to the brightest days of Cheap Trick." David hopes to one day open a hair salon in Boca called "Bagels and Locks."
ROB TANNENBAUM was described as "snarky" by the Village Voice, "snarky" by New York Magazine and "diminutive" by the Boston Globe. His song "It's Good To Be A Jew At Christmas" appeared on the Shout Factory compilation Now That Sounds Kosher, alongside songs by Mel Brooks and Tom Lehrer. Rob earned his first theater credit for helping John Leguizamo write "Sexaholix," a Tony-nominated Broadway comedy; was interviewed by Terry Gross of NPR for a "Fresh Air" segment; has performed at the Just For Laughs comedy festival in Montreal; and was named one of "New York's Best Emerging Jewish Artists" at the Museum of Jewish Heritage in 2006. The music editor of Blender magazine and a member of the Jewish-owned media elite, he appears frequently on VH1, created and starred in the VH1 special "So Jewtastic," and has appeared on NBC's "Today Show," ABC's "World News Now" and Fox News. Like a pork chop, he's bad to the bone.
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