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The Juice on Jewcy: Nanny Mishegas

On our sister site, rabbinical superheroes, lots of rainbows, dating no-nos, and, of course, a Mao Zedong skirt

by
Gabriela Geselowitz
June 29, 2017
Jemal Countess/Getty Images for WebMD
Fran Drescher in New York City, November 5, 2015.Jemal Countess/Getty Images for WebMD
Jemal Countess/Getty Images for WebMD
Fran Drescher in New York City, November 5, 2015.Jemal Countess/Getty Images for WebMD
Drescher’s apparent politics, in sartorial form.
Drescher’s apparent politics, in sartorial form.

These days, it seems that truth can be stranger than fiction. Well, OK, fiction can be pretty strange, too. Take Zohar, the minor Marvel supervillain who’s the Kabbalah-charged alter ego of a Chicago rabbi who goes kind of meshuggeneh. At least that isn’t happening for real.

What is happening for real is that the Nanny has become an icon of the queer radical left. Yes, it turns out that Fran Drescher is a radical anti-capitalist. I knew something was up when she wore that skirt on The Nanny that was just a print of Chariman Mao’s face (see: right).

Or, if you just want to enjoy the rest of Pride Month and nosh and not think about politics, we have a fun semi-serious list of rainbow Jewish foods. OK, so it’s also a little bit political, but not, like, Fran Drescher levels of political.

Finally, have some unsolicited Jewish online dating advice, with many a GIF to punctuate the point. The piece is written from a straight perspective, but its message is universal: No one of any gender or orientation should write a dating profile in only emojis.

If you need me over the July 4th weekend, I’ll be rewriting the lyrics of Hamilton to make them about Haym Salomon, the Jewish patriot who helped finance the Revolutionary War: How was a Polish, Sephardi, son of a rabbi, broker, dropped in the middle of a forgotten spot out there in Poland, eventually, impoverished, in squalor, the one to fund the founding fathers?

No, this is not a good idea. Please don’t run with this, anyone.

Gabriela Geselowitz is a writer and the former editor of Jewcy.com.