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Latest podcast episodes about devil next door

Darrer vol a Formentera
Entrevista Devil Next Door - Primer vol a Formentera IB3 Ràdio

Darrer vol a Formentera

Play Episode Listen Later Feb 10, 2025 14:04


Entrevistam Steve Keller i Fran Sobrino, guitarrista i baixista respectivament del grup mallorquí Devil Next Door, que han publicat el seu primer EP ‘Into the fire’.

The LEFT Show
668 The LEFT Show | The Devil Next Door

The LEFT Show

Play Episode Listen Later Dec 2, 2024


It’s Monday in America, time for The World’s Greatest Political Podcast: THE LEFT SHOW! This week, J.M. Bell, Tiffany, Taylor and JC talk Trump Tariffs, Biden’s warnings, and Jack Smith’s towels. More bad cabinet picks, dumping MSNBC because of Morning Joe, and Butts for Buses is genius. Walmart returns to racism, GOP takes their ball […]

The Forgotten Exodus

“Today's Morocco is a prime example of what a great peaceful coexistence and international cooperation can be with an Arab country.” Eli Gabay, an Israeli-born lawyer and current president of the oldest continuously active synagogue in the United States, comes from a distinguished family of Jewish leaders who have fostered Jewish communities across Morocco, Israel, and the U.S. Now residing in Philadelphia, Eli and his mother, Rachel, share their deeply personal story of migration from Morocco to Israel, reflecting on the resilience of their family and the significance of preserving Jewish traditions. The Gabay family's commitment to justice and heritage is deeply rooted. Eli, in his legal career, worked with Israel's Ministry of Justice, where he notably helped prosecute John Ivan Demjanjuk, a Cleveland auto worker accused of being the notorious Nazi death camp guard, "Ivan the Terrible." Jessica Marglin, Professor of Religion, Law, and History at the University of Southern California, offers expert insights into the Jewish exodus from Morocco. She explores the enduring relationship between Morocco's Jewish community and the monarchy, and how this connection sets Morocco apart from its neighboring countries. —- Show notes: How much do you know about Jewish history in the Middle East? Take our quiz. Sign up to receive podcast updates. Learn more about the series. Song credits:  Pond5:  “Desert Caravans”: Publisher: Pond5 Publishing Beta (BMI), Composer: Tiemur Zarobov (BMI), IPI#1098108837 “Suspense Middle East” Publisher: Victor Romanov, Composer: Victor Romanov; Item ID: 196056047 ___ Episode Transcript: ELI GABAY: Standing in court and saying ‘on behalf of the State of Israel' were the proudest words of my life. It was very meaningful to serve as a prosecutor. It was very meaningful to serve in the IDF.  These were highlights in my life, because they represented my core identity: as a Jew, as a Sephardic Jew, as an Israeli Sephardic Jew. These are the tenets of my life. MANYA BRACHEAR PASHMAN: The world has overlooked an important episode in modern history: the 800,000 Jews who left or were driven from their homes in the Middle East and North Africa in the mid-20th century. Welcome to the second season of The Forgotten Exodus, brought to you by American Jewish Committee. This series explores that pivotal moment in history and the little-known Jewish heritage of Iran and Arab nations. As Jews around the world confront violent antisemitism and Israelis face daily attacks by terrorists on multiple fronts, our second season explores how Jews have lived throughout the region for generations – despite hardship, hostility, and hatred–then sought safety and new possibilities in their ancestral homeland. I'm your host, Manya Brachear Pashman. Join us as we explore untold family histories and personal stories of courage, perseverance, and resilience from this transformative and tumultuous period of history for the Jewish people and the Middle East.  The world has ignored these voices. We will not. This is The Forgotten Exodus.  Today's episode: leaving Morocco. MANYA: There are three places Eli Gabay calls home: Philadelphia, the city where he has raised his children; Morocco, the land where his parents Rachel and Amram were born and his ancestors lived for generations; and Israel, his birthplace and original ancestral homeland. Eli has been on a quest to honor all those identities since he left Israel at the age of 12. ELI: On my father's side, they were all rabbis. On my mother's side, they were all businesspeople who headed synagogues. And so, my grandfather had a synagogue, and my other grandfather had a synagogue. When they transplanted to Israel, they reopened these synagogues in the transition camp in Be'er Sheva. Both families had a synagogue of their own. MANYA: For the past five years, Eli has served as president of his synagogue--the historic Congregation Mikveh Israel, America's oldest continuous synagogue, founded in Philadelphia in 1740. Descended from a long line of rabbis going back generations, Eli is a litigation attorney, the managing partner of a law firm, a former prosecutor, and, though it might seem odd, the Honorary Consul of the Republic of Nicaragua in Philadelphia. But the professional role that has brought him the most acclaim was his time in the 1980s, working for Israel's Ministry of Justice, decades after the Holocaust, still trying to hold its perpetrators accountable. CLIP - ‘THE DEVIL NEXT DOOR' TRAILER: Charges were filed today against John Demjanjuk, the 66-year-old Ukrainian native, who's accused of being a Nazi death camp guard named Ivan the Terrible. The crimes he was accused of… MANYA: We'll tell you more about that later. But first, we take you to the Jerusalem Israeli Gift Shop in northeast Philadelphia, a little slice of Israel on the corner of Castor Avenue and Chandler Street. [shofar sounds] Every day, amid the menorahs and shofars, frames and mezuzahs, Eli's 84-year-old mother Rachel Gabay, the family matriarch and owner of thisJudaica shop, is transported back to the place where she grew up: Israel. ELI: My father was a teacher all his life, and my mother [shofar sounds] runs a Jewish Judaica store that sells shofars, you can hear in the background. RACHEL: It's my baby. The store here became my baby. CUSTOMER: You're not going to remember this, but you sold us our ketubah 24 years ago. RACHEL: Yeah. How are you, dear? ELI: Nice. CUSTOMER: We're shopping for someone else's wedding now. RACHEL: Oh, very nice… For who? CUSTOMER: A friend of ours, Moshe, who is getting married and we wanted to get him a mezuzah. MANYA: For Rachel, Israel represents the safety, security, and future her parents sought for her when in 1947 they placed her on a boat to sail away from Morocco. By then, Casablanca had become a difficult place to be Jewish. Israel offered a place to belong. And for that, she will always be grateful. RACHEL: To be a Jew, to be very good… ELI: Proud. RACHEL: Proud. I have a country, and I am somebody. ELI: My father's family comes from the High Atlas Mountains, from a small village called Aslim.The family arrived in that area sometime in 1780 or so. There were certain events that went on in Morocco that caused Jews from the periphery and from smaller cities to move to Casablanca. Both my parents were born in Morocco in Casablanca. Both families arrived in Casablanca in the early 30s, mid 30s. MANYA: Today, the port city of Casablanca is home to several synagogues and about 2,000 Jews, the largest community of Morocco. The Museum of Moroccan Judaism in suburban Casablanca, the first museum on Judaism in the Arab world, stands as a symbol of the lasting Jewish legacy in Morocco. Indeed, there's been a Jewish presence in what is considered modern-day Morocco for some 2,000 years, dating back to the early days of the establishment of Roman control.  Morocco was home to thousands of Jews, many of whom lived in special quarters called “Mellah,” or Jewish ghetto. Mellahs were common in cities across Morocco. JESSICA: Morocco was one of the few places in the Islamic world where there emerged the tradition of a distinctive Jewish quarter that had its own walls and was closed with its own gates. MANYA: Jessica Marglin is a professor of religion, law, and history at the University of Southern California. Her research focuses on the history of Jews and Muslims in North Africa and the Mediterranean. JESSICA: There's a bit of a debate. Were these quarters there to control Jews and force them to all live in one spot and was it a sort of form of basically repression? Or was it a way to protect them? The first mellah, the one in Fez is right next to the palace. And so there was a sense that the Jews would be closer to the Sultan or the Sultan's representative, and thus more easily protectable. It could be interpreted as a bad thing. And some Jews did see it as an unfair restriction. But I would say that most Jews didn't question the idea that Jews would live together. And that was sort of seen as natural and desirable. And there was a certain kind of autonomous jurisdiction to the mellah, too.  Because Jews had their own courts. They had their own butchers. They had their own ovens. Butchers and ovens would have been kosher. They could sell wine in the mellah. They could do all these things that were particular to them. And that's where all the synagogues were. And that's where the Jewish cemetery was, right? It was really like a little Jewish city, sort of within the city. MANYA: Unlike other parts of the Middle East and North Africa where pogroms and expulsions, especially after the creation of the state of Israel, caused hundreds of thousands of Jews to abruptly flee all at once – spilling out of countries they had called home for centuries – Jews chose to leave Morocco gradually over time, compared to the exodus from other Arab countries.  JESSICA: When I teach these things, I set up Morocco and Iraq as the two ends of the spectrum. Iraq being the most extreme, where Jews were really basically kicked out all at once. Essentially offered no real choice. I mean, some did stay, but it was choosing a totally reduced life.  Versus Morocco, where the Jews who left did so really, with a real choice. They could have stayed and the numbers are much more gradual than anywhere else. So there was a much larger community that remained for years and years and years, even after ‘67, into the ‘70s.  Even though they kept going down, it was really, it was not like Iraq where the population just falls off a cliff, right? It's like one year, there's 100,000, the next year, they're 5,000. In Morocco, it really went down extremely gradually. And that's in part why it's still the largest Jewish community in the Arab world by far. MANYA: Morocco's Jewish history is by no means all rosy. In all Arab countries, antisemitism came in waves and different forms. But there are several moments in history when the Moroccan monarchy could've abandoned the Jewish population but didn't. And in World War II, the Moroccan monarch took steps to safeguard the community. In recent years, there have been significant gestures such as the opening of the Jewish museum in Casablanca, a massive restoration of landmarks that honor Morocco's Jewish past, including 167 Jewish cemeteries, and the inclusion of Holocaust education in school curricula. In 2020, Morocco became one of four Arab countries to sign a normalization agreement with Israel, as part of the U.S.-backed Abraham Accords, which allowed for economic and diplomatic cooperation and direct flights between the two countries. MANYA: Oral histories suggest that Jews have lived in Morocco for some 2,000 years, roughly since the destruction of the Second Temple. But tangible evidence of a Jewish presence doesn't date as far back. JESSICA: The archaeological remains suggest that the community dates more to the Roman period. There was a continual presence from at least since the late Roman period, certainly well before the Islamic conquests. MANYA: Like other parts of the Middle East and North Africa, Jews in Morocco were heavily concentrated in particular artisanal trades. Many were cobblers, tailors, and jewelers who adorned their creations with intricate designs and embellishments. Gemstones, carved coral, geometric designs, and symbols such as the Hamsa to bless the wearer with good fortune and protect them from the evil eye. JESSICA: And there were certain areas where they kind of were overrepresented in part because of stigmas associated with certain crafts for Muslims. So gold and silver jewelry making in certain parts of Morocco, like in the city of Fez, Jews were particularly overrepresented in the trade that made these gold threads, which are called skalli in Moroccan Arabic, and which are used to embroider sort of very fancy clothing for men and for women. Skalli for instance, is a very common last name for Jews.  MANYA: Jessica notes that in the 12th and 13th Centuries, Morocco came under the rule of the Almohad caliphate, a fundamentalist regime that saw itself as a revolutionary reform movement. Under the Almohad dynasty, local Christians in North Africa from Morocco to Libya all but disappeared.  Jews on the other hand stayed. She suspects Morocco developed its own version of crypto-Jews who superficially converted to Islam or at least lived outwardly as Muslims to survive.  JESSICA: There's probably more of a sense of Jews had more experience of living as minorities. Also, where else were they going to go? It wasn't so obvious. So whatever conversions there were, some of them must have stuck. And there are still, for instance, Muslim families in Fez named Kohen . . . Cohen. MANYA: Jews chose Morocco as a place of refuge in 1391, when a series of mob attacks on Jewish communities across Spain killed hundreds and forcibly converted others to Christianity. As opposed to other places in Europe, Morocco was considered a place where Jews could be safe. More refugees arrived after the Alhambra Decree of 1492 expelled Jews from Spain who refused to convert. That is when Eli's father's side of the family landed in Fez.  ELI: Our tradition is that the family came from Spain, and we date our roots to Toledo, Spain. The expulsion of the Jews took place out of Spain in 1492 at which time the family moved from Spain to Morocco to Fez. MANYA: At that time, the first mellahs emerged, the name derived from the Arabic word for salt. Jessica says that might have referred to the brackish swamps where the mellah were built.  JESSICA: The banning of Jews from Spain in 1492 brought a lot of Jews to North Africa, especially Morocco, because Morocco was so close. And, you know, that is why Jews in northern Morocco still speak Spanish today, or a form of Judeo Spanish known as Haketia. So, there were huge numbers of Iberian Jews who ended up throughout Morocco. And then for a long time, they remained a kind of distinctive community with their own laws and their own rabbis and their own traditions. Eventually, they kind of merged with local Jews. And they used Spanish actually, for decades, until they finally sort of Arabized in most of Morocco. ELI: My father's family, as I said, comes from a small town of Aslim. The family arrived in that area sometime in 1780 or so after there was a decree against Jews in Fez to either convert to Islam or leave. And so in a real sense, they were expelled from that region of Fez. There were Jews who arrived throughout the years after different exiles from different places. But predominantly the Jews that arrived in 1492 as a result of the Spanish expulsion were known as the strangers, and they integrated themselves in time into the fabric of Moroccan Jewry.  MANYA: For Eli's family, that meant blending in with the nomadic Amazigh, or indigenous people of North Africa, commonly called Berbers. Many now avoid that term because it was used by European colonialists and resembles the word “barbarians.” But it's still often used colloquially.  ELI: Aslim is in the heart of Berber territory. My father's family did speak Berber. My grandfather spoke Berber, and they dressed as Berbers. They wore jalabia, which is the dress for men, for instance, and women wore dresses only, a head covering.  Men also wore head coverings. They looked like Berbers in some sense, but their origins were all the way back to Spain. MANYA: In most cases across Morocco, Jews were classified as dhimmis, non-Muslim residents who were given protected status. Depending on the rulers, dhimmis lived under different restrictions; most paid a special tax, others were forced to wear different clothes. But it wasn't consistent.  ELI: Rulers, at their whim, would decide if they were good to the Jews or bad to the Jews. And the moment of exchange between rulers was a very critical moment, or if that ruler was attacked. MANYA: The situation for Jews within Morocco shifted again in 1912 when Morocco became a French protectorate. Many Jews adopted French as their spoken language and took advantage of educational opportunities offered to them by Alliance Israélite Universelle. The borders also remained open for many Jews who worked as itinerant merchants to go back and forth throughout the region.  JESSICA: Probably the most famous merchants were the kind of rich, international merchants who dealt a lot with trade across the Mediterranean and in other parts of the Middle East or North Africa. But there were a lot of really small-time merchants, people whose livelihood basically depended on taking donkeys into the hinterland around the cities where Jews tended to congregate.  MANYA: Rachel's family, businesspeople, had origins in two towns – near Agadir and in Essaouira. Eli has copies of three edicts issued to his great-grandfather Nissim Lev, stating that as a merchant, he was protected by the government in his travels. But the open borders didn't contain the violence that erupted in other parts of the Middle East, including the British Mandate of Palestine.  In late August 1929, a clash about the use of space next to the Western Wall in Jerusalem led to riots and a pogrom of Jews who had lived there for thousands of years. Moroccan Jews also were attacked. Rachel's grandfather Nissim died in the violence. RACHEL: He was a peddler. He was a salesman. He used to go all week to work, and before Thursday, he used to come for Shabbat. So they caught him in the road, and they took his money and they killed him there.  ELI: So my great-grandfather– RACHEL: He was very young. ELI: She's speaking of, in 1929 there were riots in Israel, in Palestine. In 1929 my great-grandfather went to the market, and at that point … so . . . a riot had started, and as my mother had described, he was attacked. And he was knifed. And he made it not very far away, all the other Jews in the market fled. Some were killed, and he was not fortunate enough to escape. Of course, all his things were stolen, and it looked like a major robbery of the Jews in the market. It gave the opportunity to do so, but he was buried nearby there in a Jewish cemetery in the Atlas Mountains. So he was not buried closer to his own town. I went to visit that place. MANYA: In the mid-1930s, both Amram and Rachel's families moved to the mellah in Casablanca where Amram's father was a rabbi. Rachel's family ran a bathhouse. Shortly after Amram was born, his mother died, leaving his father to raise three children.  Though France still considered Morocco one of its protectorates, it left Morocco's Sultan Mohammad V as the country's figurehead. When Nazis occupied France during World War II and the Vichy regime instructed the sultan to deport Morocco's Jews to Nazi death camps, he reportedly refused, saving thousands of lives. But Amram's grandmother did not trust that Morocco would protect its Jews. Following the Second Battle of El Alamein in Egypt, the Axis Powers' second attempt to invade North Africa, she returned to the Atlas Mountains with Amran and his siblings and stayed until they returned to Casablanca at the end of the war.  ELI: There was a fear that the Nazis were going to enter Morocco. My father, his grandmother, took him from Casablanca with two other children and went back to Aslim in the mountains, because she said we can better hide there. We can better hide in the Atlas Mountains. And so my father returned, basically went from Casablanca to the Atlas Mountains to hide from the coming Nazis. MANYA:  In 1947, at the age of 10, Amram went from Casablanca to an Orthodox yeshiva in England. Another destination for Jews also had emerged. Until then, no one had wanted to move to British-controlled Palestine where the political landscape and economic conditions were more unstable.  The British restricted Jewish immigration making the process difficult, even dangerous. Additionally, French Moroccan authorities worked to curb the Zionist movement that was spreading throughout Europe. But Rachel's father saw the writing on the wall and took on a new vocation. RACHEL: His name is Moshe Lev and he was working with people to send to Eretz Yisrael. MANYA: A Zionist activist, Rachel's father worked for a clandestine movement to move children and eventually their families to what soon would become Israel. He wanted his children, including his 7-year-old daughter Rachel, to be the first. RACHEL: He worked there, and he sent everybody. Now our family were big, and they sent me, and then my sister went with my father and two brothers, and then my mom left by herself They flew us to Norvege [Norway].  MANYA: After a year in Norway, Rachel was taken to Villa Gaby in Marseille, France, a villa that became an accommodation center for Jews from France who wanted to join the new State of Israel. There, as she waited for a boat to take her across the Mediterranean to Israel, she spotted her brother from afar. Nissim, named for their late grandfather, was preparing to board his own boat. She pleaded to join him. RACHEL: So we're in Villa Gaby couple months. That time, I saw my brother, I get very emotional. They said ‘No, he's older. I told them ‘I will go with him.' They said ‘No, he's older and you are young, so he will go first. You are going to stay here.' He was already Bar Mitzvah, like 13 years.  I was waiting there. Then they took to us in the boat. I remember it was like six, seven months. We were sitting there in Villa Gaby. And then from Villa Gaby, we went to Israel. The boat, but the boat was quite ahead of time. And then they spoke with us, ‘You're going to go. Somebody will come and pick you up, and you are covered. If fish or something hurts you, you don't scream, you don't say nothing. You stay covered.  So one by one, a couple men they came. They took kids and out. Our foot was wet from the ocean, and here and there they was waiting for us, people with a hot blanket. I remember that. MANYA: Rachel landed at Kibbutz Kabri, then a way station for young newcomers in northern Israel. She waited there for years without her family – until one stormy day. RACHEL: One day. That's emotional. One day we were sitting in the living room, it was raining, pouring. We couldn't go to the rooms, so we were waiting. All of a sudden, a group of three men came in, and I heard my father was talking. His voice came to me. And I said to the teacher, taking care of us. I said ‘You know what? Let me tell you one thing. I think my father is here.' She said ‘No, you just imagination. Now let's go to the rooms to sleep.'  So we went there. And all of a sudden she came to me. She said, ‘You know what? You're right. He insists to come to see you. He will not wait till morning, he said. I wanted to see my daughter now. He was screaming. They didn't want him to be upset. He said we'll bring her because he said here's her picture. Here's her and everything. So I came and oh my god was a nice emotional. And we were there sitting two or three hours. My father said, Baruch Hashem. I got the kids. Some people, they couldn't find their kids, and I find my kids, thanks God. And that's it. It was from that time he wants to take us. They said, No, you live in the Ma'abara. Not comfortable for the kids. We cannot let you take the kids. The kids will stay in their place till you establish nicely. But it was close to Pesach. He said, we promise Pesach, we bring her, for Pesach to your house. You give us the address. Where are you? And we'll bring her, and we come pick her up. JESSICA: Really as everywhere else in the Middle East and North Africa, it was the Declaration of the Independence of Israel. And the war that started in 1947, that sort of set off a wave of migration, especially between ‘48 and ‘50. Those were the kind of highest numbers per year. MANYA: Moroccan Jews also were growing frustrated with how the French government continued to treat them, even after the end of World War II. When the state of Israel declared independence, Sultan Mohammad V assured Moroccan Jews that they would continue to be protected in Morocco. But it was clear that Moroccan Jew's outward expression of support for Israel would face new cultural and political scrutiny and violence.  Choosing to emigrate not only demonstrated solidarity, it indicated an effort to join the forces fighting to defend the Jewish state. In June 1948, 43 Jews were killed by local Muslims in Oujda, a departure point for Moroccan Jews seeking to migrate to Israel. Amram arrived in Israel in the early 1950s. He returned to Morocco to convince his father, stepmother, and brother to make aliyah as well. Together, they went to France, then Israel where his father opened the same synagogue he ran in the mellah of Casablanca. Meanwhile in Morocco, the Sultan's push for Moroccan independence landed him in exile for two years. But that didn't last long. The French left shortly after he returned and Morocco gained its independence in March 1956. CLIP - CASABLANCA 1956 NEWSREEL: North Africa, pomp and pageantry in Morocco as the Sultan Mohamed Ben Youssef made a state entry into Casablanca, his first visit to the city since his restoration last autumn. Aerial pictures reveal the extent of the acclamation given to the ruler whose return has of his hope brought more stable conditions for his people. MANYA: The situation of the Jews improved. For the first time in their history, they were granted equality with Muslims. Jews were appointed high-ranking positions in the first independent government. They became advisors and judges in Morocco's courts of law.  But Jewish emigration to Israel became illegal. The immigration department of the Jewish Agency that had operated inside Morocco since 1949 closed shop and representatives tasked with education about the Zionist movement and facilitating Aliyah were pressed to leave the country. JESSICA: The independent Moroccan state didn't want Jews emigrating to Israel, partly because of anti-Israeli, pro-Palestinian sentiment, and partly because they didn't want to lose well-educated, productive members of the State, of the new nation. MANYA: Correctly anticipating that Moroccan independence was imminent and all Zionist activity would be outlawed, Israel's foreign intelligence agency, the Mossad, created the Misgeret, which organized self-defense training for Jews across the Arab countries. Casablanca became its center in Morocco. Between November 1961 and the spring of 1964, the Mossad carried out Operation Yakhin, a secret mission to get nearly 100,000 Jews out of Morocco into Israel. JESSICA: There was clandestine migration during this period, and a very famous episode of a boat sinking, which killed a lot of people. And there was increasing pressure on the Moroccan state to open up emigration to Israel. Eventually, there were sort of secret accords between Israelis and the Moroccan King, which did involve a payment of money per Jew who was allowed to leave, from the Israelis to the Moroccans.  MANYA: But cooperation between Israel and Morocco reportedly did not end there. According to revelations by a former Israeli military intelligence chief in 2016, King Hassan II of Morocco provided the intelligence that helped Israel win the Six-Day War. In 1965, he shared recordings of a key meeting between Arab leaders held inside a Casablanca hotel to discuss whether they were prepared for war and unified against Israel. The recordings revealed that the group was not only divided but woefully ill-prepared. JESSICA: Only kind of after 1967, did the numbers really rise again. And 1967, again, was kind of a flashpoint. The war created a lot of anti-Zionist and often anti-Jewish sentiment across the region, including in Morocco, and there were some riots and there were, there was some violence, and there was, again, a kind of uptick in migration after that. For some people, they'll say, yes, there was antisemitism, but that wasn't what made me leave. And other people say yes, at a certain point, the antisemitism got really bad and it felt uncomfortable to be Jewish. I didn't feel safe. I didn't feel like I wanted to raise my children here.  For some people, they will say ‘No, I would have happily stayed, but my whole family had left, I didn't want to be alone.' And you know, there's definitely a sense of some Moroccan Jews who wanted to be part of the Zionist project. It wasn't that they were escaping Morocco. It was that they wanted to build a Jewish state, they wanted to be in the Holy Land. ELI: Jews in Morocco fared better than Jews in other Arab countries. There is no question about that. MANYA: Eli Gabay is grateful to the government for restoring many of the sites where his ancestors are buried or called home. The current king, Mohammed VI, grandson of Mohammed V, has played a significant role in promoting Jewish heritage in Morocco. In 2011, a year after the massive cemetery restoration, a new constitution was approved that recognized the rights of religious minorities, including the Jewish community.  It is the only constitution besides Israel's to recognize the country's Hebraic roots. In 2016, the King attended the rededication ceremony of the Ettedgui Synagogue in Casablanca.  The rededication of the synagogue followed the re-opening of the El Mellah Museum, which chronicles the history of Moroccan Jewry. Other Jewish museums and Jewish cultural centers have opened across the country, including in Essaouira, Fes, and Tangier. Not to mention–the king relies on the same senior advisor as his father did, Andre Azoulay, who is Jewish.  ELI: It is an incredible example. We love and revere the king of Morocco. We loved and revered the king before him, his father, who was a tremendous lover of the Jews. And I can tell you that in Aslim, the cemetery was encircled with a wall and well maintained at the cost, at the pay of the King of Morocco in a small, little town, and he did so across Morocco, preserved all the Jewish sites. Synagogues, cemeteries, etc.  Today's Morocco is a prime example of what a great peaceful coexistence and international cooperation can be with an Arab country. MANYA: Eli is certainly not naïve about the hatred that Jews face around the world. In 1985, the remains of Josef Mengele, known as the Nazis' Angel of Death, were exhumed from a grave outside Sao Paulo, Brazil. Eli was part of a team of experts from four countries who worked to confirm it was indeed the Nazi German doctor who conducted horrific experiments on Jews at Auschwitz. Later that decade, Eli served on the team with Israel's Ministry of Justice that prosecuted John Ivan Demjanjuk, a retired Cleveland auto worker accused of being the notorious Nazi death camp guard known as “Ivan the Terrible.” Demjanjuk was accused of being a Nazi collaborator who murdered Jews in the gas chambers at the Treblinka death camp in Nazi-occupied Poland during World War II. In fact, Eli is featured prominently in a Netflix documentary series about the case called The Devil Next Door. CLIP - ‘THE DEVIL NEXT DOOR' TRAILER: …Nazi death camp guard named Ivan the Terrible. The crimes that he was accused of were horrid.  The Israeli government is seeking his extradition as a war criminal. And that's where the drama begins.  MANYA: Demjanjuk was convicted and sentenced to death, but the verdict was later overturned. U.S. prosecutors later extradited him to Germany on charges of being an accessory to the murder of about 28,000 Jews at Sobibor. He was again convicted but died before the outcome of his appeal. ELI: Going back to Israel and standing in court and saying ‘on behalf of the State of Israel' were the proudest words of my life. It was very meaningful to serve as a prosecutor. It was very meaningful to serve in the IDF. These were highlights in my life.  They represented my core identity: as a Jew, as a Sephardic Jew, as an Israeli Sephardic Jew. These are the tenets of my life. I am proud to serve today as the president of the longest running synagogue in America. MANYA: Eli has encountered hatred in America too. In May 2000 congregants arriving for Shabbat morning prayers at Philadelphia's Beit Harambam Congregation where Eli was first president were greeted by police and firefighters in front of a burned-out shell of a building. Torah scrolls and prayer books were ruined. When Rachel opened her store 36 years ago, it became the target of vandals who shattered her windows. But she doesn't like to talk about that. She has always preferred to focus on the positive. Her daughter Sima Shepard, Eli's sister, says her mother's optimism and resilience are also family traditions. SIMA SHEPARD: Yeah, my mom speaks about the fact that she left Morocco, she is in Israel, she comes to the U.S. And yet consistently, you see one thing: the gift of following tradition. And it's not just again religiously, it's in the way the house is Moroccan, the house is Israeli. Everything that we do touches on previous generations. I'm a little taken that there are people who don't know that there are Jews in Arab lands. They might not know what they did, because European Jews came to America first. They came to Israel first. However, however – we've lived among the Arab countries, proudly so, for so many years. MANYA: Moroccan Jews are just one of the many Jewish communities who, in the last century, left Arab countries to forge new lives for themselves and future generations.  Join us next week as we share another untold story of The Forgotten Exodus. Many thanks to Eli, Rachel and Sima for sharing their family's story.  Too many times during my reporting, I encountered children and grandchildren who didn't have the answers to my questions because they'd never asked. That's why one of the goals of this project is to encourage you to ask those questions. Find your stories. Atara Lakritz is our producer. T.K. Broderick is our sound engineer. Special thanks to Jon Schweitzer, Nicole Mazur, Sean Savage, and Madeleine Stern, and so many of our colleagues, too many to name really, for making this series possible.  You can subscribe to The Forgotten Exodus on Apple Podcasts, Spotify, or wherever you listen to podcasts, and you can learn more at AJC.org/theforgottenexodus.  The views and opinions of our guests don't necessarily reflect the positions of AJC.  You can reach us at theforgottenexodus@ajc.org. If you've enjoyed this episode, please be sure to spread the word, and hop onto Apple Podcasts or Spotify to rate us and write a review to help more listeners find us.

Reality Life with Kate Casey
Ep. - 802 - WHAT TO WATCH THIS WEEK WITH KATE CASEY

Reality Life with Kate Casey

Play Episode Listen Later Oct 16, 2023 12:47


Kate discusses what to watch this week including The Devil on Trial (Netflix), AKA Mr. Chow (HBO), F Boy Island (CW), The Insurrectionist Next Door (HBO), and CRUSH (Paramount+). Reality Life with Kate CaseyMust Watch List: https://katecasey.substack.comPatreon: http://www.patreon.com/katecaseyTwitter: https://twitter.com/katecaseyInstagram: http://www.instagram.com/katecaseycaTik Tok: http://www.tiktok.com/itskatecaseyFacebook Group: https://www.facebook.com/groups/113157919338245Amazon.com: www.amazon.com/shop/katecaseySee Privacy Policy at https://art19.com/privacy and California Privacy Notice at https://art19.com/privacy#do-not-sell-my-info.

Court in the Act
The Devil Next Door with Shannon Hampton

Court in the Act

Play Episode Listen Later Oct 5, 2023 31:57


Some killers are pathetic. Some are genuinely sorry. And then there are a few – rare but always memorable – that are truly evil.  To the outside world, he was a young, urbane, university educated qualified psychologist.  A nice boy, and a good next-door neighbour. When in fact, he was the devil next door. Over Easter weekend 2021 Luke David Fawcett murdered his next door neighbour Maree Collins and her brother Wayne Johnson for no apparent reason. The details of their murders, and the things he did during, in between and after the crimes sent shivers up the spine of everyone in the courtroom. The West Australian's Police Editor Shannon Hampton was inside the courtroom. She joins host Tim Clarke as they go through the details of the chilling crimes. **WARNING: This case is very graphic and contains details which may disturb some listeners ***  For all the latest on courts and crime visit thewest.com.au. If you have a question for the team, please get in touch. Email courtintheact@wanews.com.au See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.

Murder In America
S2 Ep132: PENNSYLVANIA - The Devil Next Door: The Murder of Ann Hoover

Murder In America

Play Episode Listen Later Sep 29, 2023 44:03


In the 90's, a shocking crime rocked the city of Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania. A neighborhood feud had spiraled out of control, and a woman was now dead... but the brutal details of this crime and of exactly what had transpired inside of that home were about to make national headlines. This is the story of the death of Ann Hoover, and you're listening to Murder in America. - Stay Connected: Join the Murder in America fam in our free Facebook Community for a behind-the-scenes look, more insights and current events in the true crime world: https://www.facebook.com/groups/4365229996855701 If you want even more Murder in America bonus content, including ad-free episodes, come join us on Patreon: https://www.patreon.com/murderinamerica Instagram: http://instagram.com/murderinamerica/ Facebook:https://www.facebook.com/people/Murder-in-America-Podcast/100086268848682/ Twitter: https://twitter.com/MurderInAmerica TikTok: https://www.tiktok.com/@theparanormalfiles and https://www.tiktok.com/@courtneybrowen Feeling spooky? Follow Colin as he travels state to state (and even country to country!) investigating claims of extreme paranormal activity and visiting famous haunted locations on The Paranormal Files Official Channel: https://www.youtube.com/c/TheParanormalFilesOfficialChannel - (c) BLOOD IN THE SINK PRODUCTIONS 2023

Reality Life with Kate Casey
Ep. - 786 - DIRECTOR OF 72 SECONDS IN RITTENHOUSE SQUARE

Reality Life with Kate Casey

Play Episode Listen Later Sep 27, 2023 27:20


Kate discusses two true crime docuseries to watch, American Murder Mystery on Apple TV+ and The Devil Next Door on Netflix. The series cover the presents the confounding case of Kathleen Peterson, who in 2001 was found dead at the bottom of a staircase in her North Carolina home, and questions about John Demjanjuk — an auto worker from Cleveland who was convicted of serving as a Nazi guard at a concentration camp during World War II. An interview with Tigre Hill, director of 72 Seconds in Rittenhouse Square on Paramount+. The docuseries series unravels the complex and nuanced story of two strangers, Sean Schellenger and Michael White, whose lives intersected in Philadelphia's Rittenhouse Square on July 12, 2018. Reality Life with Kate CaseyPatreon: http://www.patreon.com/katecaseyTwitter: https://twitter.com/katecaseyInstagram: http://www.instagram.com/katecaseycaTik Tok: http://www.tiktok.com/itskatecaseyCameo: https://cameo.com/katecaseyFacebook Group: https://www.facebook.com/groups/113157919338245Amazon.com: www.amazon.com/shop/katecaseySee Privacy Policy at https://art19.com/privacy and California Privacy Notice at https://art19.com/privacy#do-not-sell-my-info.

Rysarpodden
103 - The Devil Next Door: Chester Turner

Rysarpodden

Play Episode Listen Later Sep 10, 2023 26:31


Under 1987 och ett decennium framåt så hittade man kroppar i området South Side i Los Angeles. Kropparna tillhörde utsatta kvinnor i prostitution och missbruk. Kvinnorna hade blivit våldtagna, strypta och dumpade. Även om morden inte fick särskilt stor uppmärksamhet i Los Angeles då så insåg man att morden kunde vara sammankopplade och att man kanske hade med en seriemördare att göra. Ingen trodde att mannen man sökte var deras egna granne, som valde att våldta och mörda i sitt eget bostadsområde.Instagram:https://www.instagram.com/rysarpodden/Facebook:https://www.facebook.com/rysarpoddenMail:rysarpodden@gmail.com Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.

The Book of the Dead
Chapter 30: Luke Fawcett-The Devil Next Door

The Book of the Dead

Play Episode Listen Later Mar 5, 2023 46:35


66 year old Maree Collins was a kind woman who would do anything for everyone, including offering a room to her struggling neighbor, 27 year old psychologist, Luke Fawcett. In repayment, Luke would commit a crime so horrific, Western Australia would give him one of the harshest sentences they've ever handed down. Don't forget to rate, review, and share, and, for our Australian listeners, let us know if we did this story justice. We'd love to hear from you. 9News Staff. (2020, April 14). Sister and brother killed in same unit “died 24 hours apart”, police say. Breaking Australian and World News Headlines - 9News. https://www.9news.com.au/national/brother-sister-killed-perth-died-24-hours-apart-police-say/de901ecc-2436-489f-91b0-55f1fff0b18bBalakrishnan, A. (2023, February 2). Psychologist Turned Murderer: The Disturbing Case of Luke Fawcett. Medium. https://medium.com/crimopedia/psychologist-turned-murderer-the-disturbing-case-of-luke-fawcett-fc376157ba64Brown, J. (2022, February 5). Double killer Luke Fawcett filmed himself rehearsing stabbing while wearing a black rubber suit. WSTPost. https://wstpost.com/double-killer-luke-fawcett-filmed-himself-rehearsing-stabbing-while-wearing-a-black-rubber-suit/Christmass, P. (2021, September 13). Luke Fawcett ‘wore latex in video and rehearsed' before alleged murder of WA siblings. 7NEWS. https://7news.com.au/news/crime/luke-fawcett-wore-latex-in-video-and-rehearsed-before-alleged-murder-of-wa-siblings-c-3953502Menagh, J. (2021a, September 21). Black suit video an “audition for couple with role-play fantasy”, Victoria Park murder accused Luke Fawcett claims. ABC News. https://www.abc.net.au/news/2021-09-21/fawcett-denies-recording-rehearsal-video-or-double-murder/100478548Menagh, J. (2021b, September 24). Luke Fawcett guilty of murdering neighbour and her brother in frenzied Victoria Park knife attack. ABC News. https://www.abc.net.au/news/2021-09-23/luke-fawcett-guilty-of-victoria-park-double-murder-of-siblings/100484274Menagh, J. (2022, February 5). Luke Fawcett gets life sentence for murder of Marie Collins and Wayne Johnson in Victoria Park. ABC News. https://www.abc.net.au/news/2022-02-04/luke-fawcett-life-sentence-murder-of-marie-collins-wayne-johnson/100803894NCA NewsWire. (2021a, September 14). Neighbour's photo of man accused of horror double murder released by court. The Great Southern Herald. https://www.gsherald.com.au/news/double-murder-trial-hears-of-terrifying-noise-c-3961867NCA NewsWire. (2021b, September 14). Victoria Park double murder case: Neighbour recounts ‘muffled male scream' at Luke Fawcett's double murder trial. PerthNow. https://www.perthnow.com.au/news/double-murder-trial-hears-of-terrifying-noise-c-3961862Parsons, L. (2022, February 6). Double murderer Luke Fawcett filmed himself rehearsing stabbing while wearing a black latex suit. Mail Online. https://www.dailymail.co.uk/news/article-10479311/Double-murderer-Luke-Fawcett-filmed-rehearsing-stabbing-wearing-black-latex-suit.htmlPerthNow. (2020, April 18). Man charged with double murder of Victoria Park siblings. https://www.perthnow.com.au/news/wa/man-charged-with-double-murder-of-victoria-park-siblings-ng-b881523137zThe PsychCrime Database - PsychCrime.org. (n.d.). http://www.psychcrime.org/news/index.php?vd=3504Support the showIf you enjoyed learning about this case, check out our Instagram @bookofthedeadpodShoot us an email with a case suggestions or just say "hi" at bookofthedeadpod@gmail.comAnd don't forget to rate and review and share with your friendsMuch Love-Courtney and Lisa

Bed Crime Stories
Pazuzu Algarad – The Devil Next Door

Bed Crime Stories

Play Episode Listen Later Aug 11, 2022 35:57


This is Bed Crime Stories - a weekly True Crime Podcast where your hosts pour themselves a drink and take turns telling one another the stories that keep them up at night!  In this new episode of Bed Crime Stories, Charlie tells the story of Pazuzu Algarad - a self-declared Satanist responsible for two murders in his small town of Clemmons, NC. True Crime and comedy... Sounds crazy, we know. We add humor to cope with the harsh reality of the stories we tell and alleviate some of the heaviness for our listeners. No one here at Bed Crime Stories are experts, just lifelong fans of all-things true crime. Music credit Industrial Music Box by Kevin MacLeod Link: https://incompetech.filmmusic.io/song/3910-industrial-music-box License: http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/

Booked Bagged and Tagged
Ivan The Terrible | EP 43

Booked Bagged and Tagged

Play Episode Listen Later Jul 29, 2022 69:12


John Demjanjuk was a POW who immigrated to the United States in 1952, it wasnt until 1975 that his dark past caught up with him. Could he be the man known as Ivan the Terrible who flipped the switch on over 800,000 Jewish lives during the Holocaust?? Tune in and find out!Netflix documentary: The Devil Next Door 

The Questions Worth Answering Podcast
Episode 133: Do You Have a Devil Next Door?

The Questions Worth Answering Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Jul 5, 2022 3:04


Every weekday, Pastor John explores a question worth asking in this three-minute devotional podcast.Today's question: Do You Have a Devil Next Door?References: Ezra 1:1; Proverbs 21:1; Romans 8:28

I'M THAT
Danna Stern, Producer

I'M THAT

Play Episode Listen Later Apr 25, 2022 61:49


As the founder of the Israeli-based "yes Studios" Stern created a distribution and development content powerhouse, focused on delivering premium content for international platforms. She has been credited with helping bring Israeli content to global audiences and is responsible for the successful launches of numerous titles including “Fauda", "Shtisel", “The Devil Next Door” and “On the Spectrum”. In addition, Stern spearheaded the adaptation of Israeli formats in multiple territories including “Your Honor" (originally ‘Kvodo”) which has become one the bestselling scripted global formats of recent years; the multiple award winning series "On the Spectrum" (as Amazon Prime Video “As We See It”), “68 Whiskey” (Paramount +) , “The Good Cop” (Netflix) etc..Stern is an international television veteran, having managed all aspects of programming, content acquisitions, channel creation and branding in her previous role at yesTV. Stern has been selected twice as one of Variety Magazine's “top 500 global media leaders”. She is a journalist by trade with extensive content development and production experience as well as acute business acumen.  She holds a BA in English Literature from Tel-Aviv University and a MBA from Kellogg-Recanati. 

Art of the Cut
Art of the Cut, Ep. 149: "Roadrunner: A Film About Anthony Bourdain" Editors Eileen Meyer and Aaron Wickenden, ACE

Art of the Cut

Play Episode Listen Later Feb 2, 2022 51:08


Today, we're speaking with the editors of the fantastic documentary, Roadrunner: A Film About Anthony Bourdain, which examines the life and death of the world-famous chef and author. The film was directed by Morgan Neville, who also directed the Fred Rogers documentary, Won't You Be My Neighbor? The editors of Roadrunner are Eileen Meyer and Aaron Wickenden, and I've had them both on Art of the Cut in the past—Eileen for Crip Camp, and Aaron for a doc called Hail Satan. Eileen's other editing work includes Best of Enemies: Buckley vs. Vidal, Alabama Bound, and Television Event. And she was an additional editor on Clive Davis: The Soundtrack of Our Lives. Her TV work includes an episode of The First 48 and the documentary mini-series The Devil Next Door. Aaron's worked with Eileen before on both Best of Enemies and Television Event. His filmography also includes The Trials of Muhammad Ali, the Orson Welles documentary They'll Love Me When I'm Dead, the aforementioned Fred Rogers documentary Won't You Be My Neighbor? and the Michelle Obama documentary Becoming. Also episodes of Frontline and POV. Thanks to Frame.io for their support of Art of the Cut and their pledge to keep this content coming your way. Click here to read this interview along with extra content at blog.frame.io, where you'll also find expert guides, tutorials, and insights from veteran filmmakers across the film and TV industry.

Live From Detroit: The Jeff Dwoskin Show
Crossing The Streams To Get To You (Bonus Ep9)

Live From Detroit: The Jeff Dwoskin Show

Play Episode Listen Later Jan 27, 2022 32:41


Need TV binge suggestions? You've come to the right place. We've got you covered. Crossing the Streams originated on this podcast in episodes 8 and 15. My idea was to record friends freely discussing TV shows (and movies) they binge on one of the many, many streaming services we all subscribe to. Jeff Dwoskin, Howard Rosner, Ron Lippitt, Bob Philips, and Sal Demilio are your co-hosts and we're joined weekly by special guests. The assignment? We each come to the show with a TV binge suggestion. It might be a series, movie, or documentary but we'll give you the scoop so you can decide for yourself whether or not to dive in. In this bonus episode we discuss a few great binge suggestions: The Devil Next Door (from live ep 47) Grace and Frankie (from live ep 29) Malice at the Palace (from live ep 39) Each segment is pulled from a show and shared as is in all its LIVE goodness. Full past live episodes: https://www.youtube.com/c/thejeffdwoskinshow/null Also, you can join us live every week at 9:30 PM ET on YouTube or join us on the Fireside app and join the show live (https://f.chat/iWwH) Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices

Cutting Class
CC_S01_EP08_EileenMeyer_AaronWickenden

Cutting Class

Play Episode Listen Later Jan 12, 2022 72:02


Eileen Meyer and Aaron Wickenden are two outstanding editors who have collaborated on three major documentaries: Roadrunner: A Film About Anthony Bourdain, Television Event and Best of Enemies: Buckley vs. Vidal. They're also prolific individually: Eileen previously co-edited the Oscar-nominated/Sundance Audience award winning doc, Crip Camp, and cut on the Netflix doc series The Devil Next Door; while Aaron has also cut or collaborated on such very notable docs as Becoming, Feels Good Man, They'll Love Me When I'm Dead, Finding Vivian Maier and a personal favorite of mine: Won't You Be My Neighbor. Together, they've been nominated for this year's CinemaEye Honors award for best editing. In this episode we discuss: -Collaboration and ownership -Layering emotion and humor -Doc narrative structure -Utilizing silence --- Support this podcast: https://anchor.fm/cuttingclass/support

Crime Time Cafe
Episode 10- John Demjanjuk

Crime Time Cafe

Play Episode Listen Later Dec 14, 2021 50:15


Episode 10 is Amanda telling the story of John Demjanjuk. John was living a simple life in America when all of a sudden 40 years after the holocaust ended he was on trial in Israel for being Ivan the Terrible. Was he really just a simple family man, or was he the monster in charge of the gas chambers in the death camp Treblinka that holocaust survivors claimed him to be? This story follows the Netflix mini series The Devil Next Door. Come hang out with us as we discuss the evidence, the lack of evidence, and holocaust survivors testimonies.

The Niche Guys
17. Molkking the Fascism Tightrope

The Niche Guys

Play Episode Listen Later Dec 6, 2021 141:44


The Niche Guys' latest episode is here for you to debate with your friends about, on whether OG Niche guys or Niche Guys Fractured Sisterhood is better. In this episode Alex gives us his strangest and most European pick yet and is emotionally targeted and destroyed by one of Henry's. Henry shares his disappointment over the latest live-action anime adaptation and later makes a noise Alex never wants to hear ever again. And the boys both bring Facsists to the the table and teach how they can be evil but also fun???   Media discussed and timestamps: Video Games: Uncharted: The Lost Legacy (22:06) / Transistor (33:46) TV/Movies: Jojo Rabbit (51:23) / The Devil Next Door (1:01:45) Anime/Manga: Fullmetal Alchemist OG & Brotherhood (1:13:16) / Talentless Nana (1:30:54) Music: Beabadoobee - Fake It Flowers (1:43:33) / Joji - Nectar (1:51:13) Miscellaneous: Molkky (2:01:35) / 88 Rising (2:06:58)   Email for recommendations and questions - askthenicheguys@gmail.com Social media Twitter - @nicheguys Instagram - @thenicheguyspodcast   Intro music is 'I Used To Love Hip-Hop' by Audiobinger. Transition music is 'Passing Time' by BoxCat Games. Outro music is 'Enthusiast' by Tours. Logo Artwork by Diana Perrera @deepeearts

FILMES LIVROS ETC FILMS BOOKS ETC SHARE! TKS FOR LISTENING!
#SÉRIE - O monstro mora ao lado - The devil next door - documentário

FILMES LIVROS ETC FILMS BOOKS ETC SHARE! TKS FOR LISTENING!

Play Episode Listen Later May 28, 2021 3:43


#oqueachei #serie #spoilers #documentario #netflix #holocausto

FILMES LIVROS ETC FILMS BOOKS ETC SHARE! TKS FOR LISTENING!
#SERIES - The devil next door - documentary

FILMES LIVROS ETC FILMS BOOKS ETC SHARE! TKS FOR LISTENING!

Play Episode Listen Later May 28, 2021 4:51


#myopinion #spoilers #WWII #series #documentary #netflix #holocaust

Five's A Crowd Podcast
Ted Bundy: The Devil Next Door | Ep.22

Five's A Crowd Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Feb 16, 2021 89:16


From 1974 to 1978, serial killer Ted Bundy killed at least an estimated 30 women and girls across six states. He slinked into basement apartments, stalked beaches and preyed on college campuses. Today the crowd delves into the true crimes of Ted Bundy. The Devil that plagued our very own communities. *May not be suitable for all ages.* AVAILABLE ON ALL PLATFORMS Anchor - http://bit.ly/FivesACrowd Apple Podcast - https://bit.ly/FivesACrowdOnApple Google Podcasts - https://bit.ly/FivesACrowdOnGoogle Spotify - https://bit.ly/FivesACrowdOnSpotify Amazon Music - http://bit.ly/FivesACrowdOnAmazon FOLLOW THE CROWD Austin - https://allmylinks.com/austinspomer Cam - https://www.instagram.com/effinburch/ Chris - https://www.instagram.com/thechrishummel/ Tony - https://www.instagram.com/tony.c.7917/ Zach - https://www.instagram.com/zvanbeekum/ --- Send in a voice message: https://anchor.fm/fivesacrowdpodcast/message Support this podcast: https://anchor.fm/fivesacrowdpodcast/support

The Ryan Kelley Morning After
07-15-20 Segment 2 Doug will be the next guest on Biff & Show

The Ryan Kelley Morning After

Play Episode Listen Later Jul 15, 2020 55:07


Strode Cast. Iggy laments his FPCC losses. Bart calls in briefly. Dukes is going to supply Iggy with the ingredients for his next video. Golf is a classy game. No room for jeans or fake Adidas shoes. Yugoslavian Blind Bruiser calls in. The Devil Next Door is a good doc on Netflee. Palm Swings. Doug will be on the next Biff & Show. Iggy was close to working in Vegas. Next NBA city?

The Ryan Kelley Morning After
07-15-20 Segment 2 Doug will be the next guest on Biff & Show

The Ryan Kelley Morning After

Play Episode Listen Later Jul 15, 2020 55:07


Strode Cast. Iggy laments his FPCC losses. Bart calls in briefly. Dukes is going to supply Iggy with the ingredients for his next video. Golf is a classy game. No room for jeans or fake Adidas shoes. Yugoslavian Blind Bruiser calls in. The Devil Next Door is a good doc on Netflee. Palm Swings. Doug will be on the next Biff & Show. Iggy was close to working in Vegas. Next NBA city?

Me Kassa
Ep 26 | There's a Devil On My Shoulder, It's Looking Like... Terry Crews

Me Kassa

Play Episode Listen Later Jun 22, 2020 43:38


Mayu and Bat discuss Noname, the Devil Next Door, and Aaron Kyro (professional skateboarder from the San Francisco Bay area) | New episodes every week, thanks for listening! | Subscribe on Apple Podcasts, follow on Spotify/Socials: https://linktr.ee/mekassa --- This episode is sponsored by · Anchor: The easiest way to make a podcast. https://anchor.fm/app

WEEK POINTS
Hunters, Devil Next Door, Holey Moley

WEEK POINTS

Play Episode Listen Later Jun 11, 2020 102:57


A broad spectrum of viewing this week as Nick takes us through Hunters, documentary The Devil Next Door and the final episode of Sky original, The Gangs of London.   Rich had some condiderably lighter watching with Holey Moley although he did have The Last Days of American Crime and another episode of Lincoln Rhyme to contend with. Send your feedback and suggestions to weekpointspodcast@gmail.com or our Instagram weekpointspodcast

The Brain Candy Podcast
EP418: Nazis Next Door, Pimple Popping, & Drive-By Jokes

The Brain Candy Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later May 11, 2020 56:06


Today we hear why Sarah was shocked by the OJ Simpson movie. Hear about the time we went to a charity event & Sarah made a celebrity faux paus to a famous comedian. Susie talks about the docuseries, The Devil Next Door, & why one Ohio man might be Ivan the Terrible. We talk about our first historical memories. Sarah talks about a little boy who came up w/ a creative way to spread happiness, she describes a "muckbang," and they debate whether it's the same as the pimple popping phenomenon.

The Insulting Firm
Episode 7: #fuckyouimnotimpressed

The Insulting Firm

Play Episode Listen Later Feb 6, 2020 62:03


This episode we talk about Eminem's new album. Our Netflix pick of the week was “The Devil Next Door”. Also we debuted our new segment “The Black List” and had our insulting consultant Mr Black back on the show --- Send in a voice message: https://anchor.fm/the-insulting-firm/message Support this podcast: https://anchor.fm/the-insulting-firm/support

3BeersAndAMovie
Episode 126 - Le Mans Runs A Marathon With Aeronauts

3BeersAndAMovie

Play Episode Listen Later Nov 22, 2019 65:28


This weeks podcast we gather in The Raven and discuss movies we watched this week. Le Mans 66, Brittany Runs A Marathon, The Aeronauts, The Kindergarten, Little Monsters, and Netflix show The Devil Next Door

The Nerds You're Looking For | TV/Film Podcast
Our Nazi Episode | Disney Plus Review - JoJo Rabbit, The Devil Next Door

The Nerds You're Looking For | TV/Film Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Nov 21, 2019 85:12


Episode 265: Our Nazi Episode: Tyler starts off the episode by discussing the new Taika Waititi film JoJo Rabbit. Pat gives his thoughts on the Netflix true-crime docuseries The Devil Next Door. Tyler leads the discussion of the latest Nerd News (including a discussion of the new Sonic trailer). The Nerds then recap their experience with Disney Plus! They end the episode with a Nerd Favorite...Rick and Morty episode! Timestamps: -What We are Into: 11:47-26:45 -Nerd News: 26:45-44:50 -Disney Plus Review: 44:50-1:19 -Nerd Favorite: 1:19-1:24 Like us on Facebook! Follow us on Twitter! Follow us on Instagram! Vote for us for "Podcast of the Month" on Podcast Land!

The Blotter Presents
121: The Devil Next Door and two crowd-solving longreads

The Blotter Presents

Play Episode Listen Later Nov 20, 2019 51:23


Stephanie Green is back to discuss Netflix's latest original docuseries, The Devil Next Door, in which John Demjanjuk may or may not have been a Nazi extermination camp's Ivan The Terrible...and his true identity may or may not have been the point of the series. How is trauma "remembered"? Why did the U.S. consider some war criminals "useful"? And what did Demjanjuk really do between 1942 and 1952? Later, we talk about two different takes on crowd-solving cold cases: CrimeCon's "true crime experience," CrowdSolve; and the Vidocq Society. The Crime Report's piece on the former raised more questions than it answered, but The Telegraph's 2009 overview of the latter had me and Stephanie wondering if a hybrid isn't advisable. The panel will not be taking questions on Jack The Ripper; it's The Blotter Presents, Episode 121. SHOW NOTES  The Devil Next Door: https://www.netflix.com/title/80201488 Netflix to amend docuseries following complaints from Polish government: https://www.theguardian.com/tv-and-radio/2019/nov/15/netflix-to-amend-holocaust-documentary-after-complaints-from-polish-government "My Weekend As An Amateur Cold Case Detective": https://thecrimereport.org/2019/11/12/my-weekend-as-an-amature-cold-case-detective/ "The Vidocq Society: Murder on the menu": https://www.telegraph.co.uk/news/worldnews/northamerica/usa/3489805/The-Vidocq-Society-Murder-on-the-menu.html "Crowdsourcing Criminal Investigations in the Digital Age": https://www.wbur.org/onpoint/2014/07/01/cold-cases-criminal-investigations Stephanie Early Green's site: http://stephanieearlygreen.com The Blotter Presents's sponsor, Zola: zola.com/blotter

The Ron and Brian Podcast
Epstein Didn't Kill Himself

The Ron and Brian Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Nov 20, 2019 66:27


Unlike the man himself, the Epstein story just won't die. Prince Andrew had a cringe-worthy interview about Epstein, and the guards that were supposed to be watching over him were arrested this week. Our NFL Locks of the Week continue to be perfect, we review the Netflix documentary series "Devil Next Door", and Ron sees if Brian can Guess That Singer. Ron hates gambling, Brian hates being told to go F himself, and, oh yeah, there's the whole Impeachment thing that's going on.

Netflix 'N Swill Classic
Bojack Horseman season 6: Sad Dog Meme

Netflix 'N Swill Classic

Play Episode Listen Later Nov 19, 2019


This week, there's a bit of Pokemon talk, Disney+ is a real thing now, Bojack Horseman is coming to an end, and Julio gets us to review The Lake House.00:00:45 Intro00:05:10 News00:26:57 Downstream00:30:53 Quick Hits: The Highwaymen, The Devil Next Door, Seis Manos, The Toys That Made Us00:41:54 Feature Review: Bojack Horseman season 600:46:41 Bojack Horseman season 6 spoilers01:15:50 Patreon Review: The Lake HouseLet us know what you think of this week's show by contacting us on social media: Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/netflixnswill/Twitter: https://twitter.com/netflixnswillEmail: netflixnswill@gmail.comWebsite: https://www.netflixnswill.com/Patreon: https://www.patreon.com/netflixnswillApple Podcasts: https://itunes.apple.com/us/podcast/netflix-n-swill/id1142744188?mt=2

/Film Daily
Water Cooler: The Mandalorian, Parasite, The Irishman, Honey Boy, Charlie's Angels, Dark Waters, Waves, Hobbs and Shaw, Funko & More

/Film Daily

Play Episode Listen Later Nov 14, 2019 83:21


On the November 14, 2019 episode of /Film Daily, /Film editor-in-chief Peter Sciretta is joined by /Film managing editor Jacob Hall, weekend editor Brad Oman, senior writer Ben Pearson and writers Hoai-Tran Bui and Chris Evangelista to discuss what they've been up to at the Water Cooler.   Opening Banter: This is the last time we'll hear from HT for a while.   At The Water Cooler: What we've been Doing:Peter attended the grand opening of Funko's new Hollywood store. He also celebrated his birthday at El Coyote. Jacob set up his Christmas tree. Brad is mad because we already had a winter storm. Hoai-Tran is not prepared for her trip to Vietnam. What we've been Reading:Jacob read Blockade Billy by Stephen King. What we've been Watching:Peter and Brad watched Parasite. Jacob and Chris and Ben watched episode one of The Mandalorian. Peter attended The Mandalorian world premiere and saw chapter two and three of the series.  Peter watched Pixar in Real Life and Encore on Disney+, he also found Disneyland Around The Seasons on the service. Brad went to see Jojo Rabbit. Watched Let It Snow on Netflix.  Chris watched Hobbs and Shaw, The Kitchen, and The Devil Next Door.  Jacob saw The Irishman and watched The Imagineering Story, Frozen, and Star Wars: The Force Awakens. Ben watched Honey Boy, Waves, The Good Liar, and Ford v Ferrari. Hoai-Tran watched Charlie's Angels, Dark Waters, White Snake, Master Z: The Ip Man Legacy, One Child Nation, saw a special midnight screening of The Host at The Metrograph. What we've been Eating:Peter went to the Festival of Holidays at Disney California Adventure and ate every food item. Brad tried Candy Cane Milano cookies What we've been Playing:Chris got a Nintendo Switch and played Untitled Goose Game. Jacob is hooked on Ring-Fit Adventure on the Nintendo Switch.   Other Articles Mentioned:   All the other stuff you need to know: You can find more about all the stories we mentioned on today's show at slashfilm.com, and linked inside the show notes. /Film Daily is published every weekday, bringing you the most exciting news from the world of movies and television as well as deeper dives into the great features from slashfilm.com.  You can subscribe to /Film Daily on iTunes, Google Podcasts, Overcast, Spotify and all the popular podcast apps (RSS).  Send your feedback, questions, comments and concerns to us at peter@slashfilm.com. Please leave your name and general geographic location in case we mention the e-mail on the air. Please rate and review the podcast on iTunes, tell your friends and spread the word!  Thanks to Sam Hume for our logo.

The Classic Metal Show
The Devil Next Door - A Review

The Classic Metal Show

Play Episode Listen Later Nov 14, 2019 59:12


Neeley and Chris discuss the Netflix documentary "The Devil Next Door". GET THE NEW CMS APP to keep up with THE CLASSIC METAL SHOW. Available on Android and iOS! https://www.theclassicmetalshow.com/get-the-cms-app/ NOTE: Due to YouTube Censorship, all In Studio Cam videos of the entire week's edition of THE CLASSIC METAL SHOW are uploaded to: https://www.vimeo.com/ondemand/cmsstudio WANT TO COMMENT? Use Dissenter - https://www.dissenter.com Catch THE CLASSIC METAL SHOW Saturdays from 9pm to 3am EST at www.theclassicmetalshow.com. SHOW/SOCIALS: WEBSITE: https://www.theclassicmetalshow.com CHATROOM: https://www.chatandkill.com GAB: https://www.gab.com/theclassicmetalshow MINDS: https://www.minds.com/ClassicMetalShow REDDIT: https://www.reddit.com/r/classicmetalshow VIDEO: VIMEO: https://vimeo.com/classicmetalshow BITCHUTE: https://www.bitchute.com/channel/classicmetalshow DAILYMOTION: https://www.dailymotion.com/theclassicmetalshow PODCAST: SPREAKER: https://www.spreaker.com/user/cmsrocks iTUNES: https://itunes.apple.com/us/podcast/classic-metal-show-best-podcast/id295946198 LAUNCHPAD (PODCASTONE): https://www.launchpaddm.com/pd/The-Classic-Metal-Show SPOTIFY: https://open.spotify.com/show/5B6g73ONnQskxRk79KAJ9I GOOGLE PLAY: https://play.google.com/music/listen?u=0#/ps/Ilolxypla5l5zk7diswqfm2zae4 TUNEIN: https://tunein.com/podcasts/Talk-Show-Replays/The-Classic-Metal-Show-p587552/ STITCHER: https://www.stitcher.com/podcast/the-classic-metal-show SUPPORT THE CMS: BUY A T-SHIRT: https://www.theclassicmetalshow.com/cms-shirts/ BUY GENERAL MERCH: https://www.zazzle.com/store/cmsmerch CHRIS' BOOK CAUSE & EFFECT MOTLEY CRUE: https://amzn.to/2WuK2El CHRIS' BOOK CAUSE & EFFECT METALLICA: https://amzn.to/2WS0zkY CHRIS' BOOK CAUSE & EFFECT JUDAS PRIEST: https://amzn.to/2Myr8I8 CHRIS' BOOK LITTLE VICTORIES: https://amzn.to/2MucPE7 CHRIS' BOOK CALL ME CHRIS: https://amzn.to/2EXb1gJ BULLSHIT CENSORED MEDIA: FACEBOOK: https://www.facebook.com/thecms TWITTER: https://www.twitter.com/cmsrocks INSTAGRAM: https://www.instagram.com/classicmetalshow YOUTUBE: https://www.youtube.com/user/CMSClassicMetalShow/

The Eric Zane Show Podcast
220: Eric Zane Show Podcast - Roll Tide Bleep You

The Eric Zane Show Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Nov 11, 2019 63:03


*Topics: ** *This week in muppity limb breakage in sports* ( https://ericzaneshow.com/2019/11/11/its-the-muppet-show-latest-flippity/ ) * *A bad weekend for me at the hockey games. ** *Local bad ass uses tree saw to free two, antler-tangled bucks.* ( https://ericzaneshow.com/2019/11/11/local-bad-ass-uses-tree-saw-to-free-two-antler-tangled-bucks/ ) * ** *More gender reveal idiocy.* ( https://ericzaneshow.com/2019/11/11/more-gender-reveal-idiocy/ ) * ** *Netflix documentary "The Devil Next Door."* ( https://ericzaneshow.com/2019/11/11/netflix-documentary-the-devil-next-door/ ) **LSU beats Alabama and coach Ed Orgeron is forever a legend.* ( https://ericzaneshow.com/2019/11/11/lsu-beats-alabama-and-coach-ed-orgeron-is-forever-a-legend/ ) *Sponsors: * *TerryTown RV* ( https://www.terrytownrv.com/ ) *,* *Kreeps With Kids* ( https://www.ticketweb.com/event/kreeps-with-kids-comedy-tour-emerald-theatre-tickets/10007265 ) , *Back Alley Comedy Club* ( http://backalleycomedyclub.com/ ) *,* *Blue Frost IT* ( https://www.bluefrostit.com/ ) *,* *Hudsonville Fit Body Boot Camp* ( https://fitbodybootcamp.com/9446-hudsonville-mi/ ) *,* *The Steffes Group* ( https://www.thesteffesgroup.com/ ) *, Events we can hang out at:* Tues, Nov 19 6-9 PM EZSP TC Paintball War 5. Wed, Nov 20 1-4 PM *WOOD Radio Turkey Drop* ( https://woodradio.iheart.com/calendar/event/5d6530531bba7856e17b0199/ ) *Thur, Nov 21 Muskegon Tonight Live! With Andy O'Riley* ( https://www.eventbrite.com/e/muskegon-tonight-live-november-21st-tickets-77936296561 ) * * *Hire me on Cameo!* ( https://www.cameo.com/ericzane ) *Tickets for Kreeps With Kids* ( https://www.ticketweb.com/event/kreeps-with-kids-comedy-tour-emerald-theatre-tickets/10007265 ) * * *Tshirts available here* ( https://twistedbat.com/collections/eric-zane-show ) *Please subscribe, rate & write a review on Apple Podcasts* ** ( http://patreon.com/ericzane ) *patreon.com/ericzane ( http://patreon.com/ericzane )* *Twitter: @ericzaneshow* ** ( http://facebook.com/ericzanefanpage ) *Facebook.com/ericzanefanpage ( http://Facebook.com/ericzanefanpage )*

即将上映 Coming Soon (podcast)
The Devil Next Door 19.11.04 NETFLIX

即将上映 Coming Soon (podcast)

Play Episode Listen Later Nov 4, 2019 1:32


声音预告片 wb: @预告片bot

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即将上映 Coming Soon (podcast)
The Devil Next Door 19.11.04 NETFLIX

即将上映 Coming Soon (podcast)

Play Episode Listen Later Nov 4, 2019 1:32


声音预告片 wb: @预告片bot

netflix devil nextdoor devil next door
即将上映 Coming Soon (podcast)
The Devil Next Door 19.11.04 NETFLIX

即将上映 Coming Soon (podcast)

Play Episode Listen Later Nov 4, 2019 1:32


声音预告片 wb: @预告片bot

netflix devil nextdoor devil next door