

No.
But the character in the film, OUR IDIOT BROTHER, sort of is. The film, starring Paul Rudd and directed by Jesse Peretz, is about the Rochlin sister and their drug smoking, well-meaning, idiot brother, Ned. The script was written by Jesse and Evgenia Peretz (brother and sister, kids of Martin Peretz of The New Republic) and David Schisgall (Evgenia’s husband). The Rochlin’s were originally written as a Jewish family with a domineering mother, and even a scene with a mohel. In rewrites and editing, the family became protestant and there is no bris.
In other Jewish news:
Earlier this year, Jewlicious reported on a rabbi who was restoring and selling Torah scrolls that he said he had salvaged from Eastern European towns destroyed during WWII. There were those who said that his “Jewish Indiana Jones” stories were factually-challenged.


Rabbi Youlus resigns from Save a Torah
Speaking of scrolls and impressions, the current leader of New York City’s Jewish Museum, Joan Rosenbaum, is retiring after three decades, and the museum directors have selected Claudia Gould, 55, the current director of the Institute of Contemporary Art at the University of Pennsylvania to replace her. The Jewish Museum in NY has a budget of about $16 million. The ICA spends about $3 million. Of course, the cost of living is much higher in Manhattan, so I guess those museum budgets are nearly even?


Goaaaaaaaal. Adam Kleinberg wins
Actually the winner was Adam Kleinberg, 21, from Mexico, who sang “La Kol” Adam Kleinberg Alazraki was a member of the Habonim Dror youth movement and currently works as an industrial cleaning products salesperson. Some of his favorite Israeli musicians are Hayehudim (La Kol), Mosh Ben Ari, Ehud Banai, and Hadag Nahash.







OMG. I love that line. Thanks
You should have written it funny and said something like “the family was written as Jewish but changed to non-Jewish when Paul Rudd” was cast.
Let’s see… how many Jews has Seth Fogen played… about 102. How many Jews has Paul Rudd played… 0, at least on film.
Thanks, Judd Apatow.