Mishpucha, Wedding, Hot for God

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Sarah wants to see more elderly homes with child daycares attached. Plus, she offers tips to a woman nervous about her wedding day, explains why she stepped away from roasting, and tests one’s “openness” to God.

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Transcript

SPEAKERS

Hannah, Byron Jones, Sender 2, Sender 8, Sarah Silverman, Brianna, Amy, Andy, Sender 4, Melissa, Devin

Sarah Silverman  00:00

Hey, hi everybody, it’s your old pal, Sarah. And you know, I saw one of these online, and I really hope it takes off, because I just think it could change the world. There is a daycare, like, it’s a nursery school or kindergarten or daycare, or something like that, and it’s on the bottom floor of a nursing home. And it’s amazing. It was an experiment done. I don’t know where I saw this on Instagram. I’m sorry I don’t have more details, but it totally worked, and was great. It’s great for the kids. It’s great for the people in the nursing home. You know, if they feel like it, they go down to the bottom floor and they just play with the kids. And it is unbelievable. And it’s probably, you know, it’s not like you’re paying the grandparents, you’re not paying the but it’s their joy. It’s like, it works for both entities so well. And I just think, man, that could really change the world. And I just think there should be, like a Craigslist of free grandparents looking to match with grandkids and kids. I, you know, it’s like my sister’s program second nurture. A lot of what they do. It’s in foster care, and it’s community based. And there’s, I could go on and on about it, but one thing they do is, you know, people will get their children taken away sometimes for being poor, like it because they don’t have, like, a refrigerator. And there’s a giant community of people that can go like, oh, my God, you just need a refrigerator. I’ll buy, I’ll buy them a refrigerator, let them keep their kids you know, there are so many people that would love to help out in all of these ways. They just need to be connected. And and little kids need the elderly in their life. And and older kids and young adults need mentors. You know, my dad was in a program called guardian ad litem, and he met our basically like common law brother that way, like he he never got adopted. It’s just a program that matches adults with kids who aged out of orphanages to foster care, and then they’re in a group home, and then they’re just on their own. People need parents. People need mentors, at least mishpoka, you know, the family you make and and that was my dad and Rudy. And, I mean, you know now he’s a grown man with a wife and three unbelievable kids. And we need that. We need we need mentors. We need parents. We need gestures of care and there and then there are older people that that want to be that, for people that have the space and the desire and the need to be that for someone, it’s just matchmaking we need, like a Craigslist for adult children, grandkids, grandparents. You know, mishbukais Yiddish for family, and it usually it tends to mean the family you make, and maybe that’s what it should be called, mishbuka, wouldn’t that be great? Let’s take some calls.

 

Hannah  04:01

Hi, Sarah, it’s Hannah from New Jersey. I just want to tell you a little story in my life that involves you. So for some context, I’m Jewish. I go to a Jewish school, and I had a class called, What if God was one of us? About God’s various depictions and personifications throughout just Jewish texts and that, you know, elevator pitch of a class, honestly, to me, would sound really interesting and engaging, and I think has the potential to be. But it was not, I was not particularly interesting. It was a lot of translating Bible verses, not the most interesting. But I thought back to your question about God coming in people’s mouths, I thought that was actually really relevant to the class, and really interesting about like, personifying God and our like, intimate relationship with him, and like, what we would allow in terms of our closeness and vulnerability. So I brought it up, and I quote directly in front of the class. I was sitting in the front talking to the teacher. It was her first year, by the way, first time teaching ever, and I asked the question about if God would come in your mouth with context, saying it was quoting you. But it didn’t go over well. But honestly, I think it’s an interesting question, and I’m glad that I heard it, because it has increased my closeness to spirituality.

 

Sarah Silverman  05:28

I don’t, I don’t, I don’t know what to say. I don’t know that, you know, I mean, listen, I my first instinct is, like you said that to, you know, be a little troublemaker in class, but I guess that’s why I said it, too. So, you know, I barely, I don’t barely, I don’t remember exactly what it was. It was a couple specials ago, but I think I I found a straight man who believed in God in the audience, which I was very worried, worried, would seem bully, ish, you know. But I somehow, I can’t remember how it happened. And then I asked him, um, if he would let God come in his mouth. Because I, I’m always very fascinated by the the God is all powerful, and God is my Savior, and I do everything God says in compared to the level of homophobia in that same world, you know, but you know, as maybe a little bully ish within my audience, but I tried not to make it that way, you know, I don’t know.

 

Amy  06:39

What did the guy say?

 

Sarah Silverman  06:41

What did he say? Amy, well, I think he said no, and I said, the answer is, Yes. Shouldn’t it be? You know, I can’t remember, right, maybe 1% of the time the guy would say yes, but I can’t remember the thing I say from it, I once the special is done, I have to empty it out of my brain, because even though I only probably use 10% of my brain, I have a very limited space, still. Does that make sense? All right, what else?

 

Sender 2  07:17

Hey, Sarah, wondering if I could get your advice, I’ve been in a very committed, loving relationship for a while, easily the best one I’ve ever had. We we know we want to get married in the next few years, but there is a catch. I feel embarrassed and ashamed of his family, no other way to say it. I come from a Jewish family. I have at least three gay family members, and then many, many more gay friends who I would want to be at our wedding. And my boyfriend’s family are very Christian, very homophobic, and his dad is straight up anti semitic. Gay people are frequently the butt of their jokes. For one of his brothers, it goes beyond joking to just complaining, which makes me think he’s in the closet for sure. But I don’t it’s, it’s, I don’t think his family would say anything or like anything rude or inappropriate on our wedding day, but the thought, just the thought of both of these groups being in the same place, makes me so nervous. How would you handle it? Also, elopement is not an option, just so you know, thank you.

 

Sarah Silverman  08:44

Oh, boy, I think the thing I’m actually most worried about is the stress of this ruining your wedding day for you. So you’ve got to do whatever you can to protect your mindset on that day, and a lot of that is going to be your worry about your friends and your family getting hurt or offended by your new in laws and extended family. I mean, I don’t know. I wonder if you can send an email or have a zoom with your your closest friends and family to prepare them. Just kind of prepare them, and to have them help you through this dress. Let them opt out, if they need to. I don’t think any of them will. I always kind of see this as an opportunity, because nothing melts away fear and prejudice like love and kindness. And I know that sounds so hippy dippy, but needless to say, your non bigoted friends and family have the upper hand in. Life, the bigots don’t have the upper hand here. They don’t, and they don’t because they’re limited and fear based and ignorant. So I’m coming from a place of emotional power I feel when I say as a Jew, I would be totally psyched, because I would not leave there until your bigoted father in law fucking loved me, but that’s my fucked up self. I mean, comics, you know what? We want strangers to love us. We want people that hate us without knowing us to love us. I mean, it’s, it’s a fucked up thing about me, I guess, but the thing that kills prejudice, I believe, is exposure homophobic people are not exposed to the gay community. They just like hear about it on whatever Fox News or whatever but as people in public eye started living more and more authentically and out, so did so many people in North Dakota or Iowa or Florida or wherever the fuck so now it’s a little harder, but I see not impossible to find homophobic bigots, because for the most part, everyone has an out gay family member that they adore. It’s Exposure, exposure can really kill hate, but it has to be a choice. So warn your friends and family and tell them to do what’s best for their mental health. My guess is they’re going to want to show up for you, and it might be a pretty amazing day. There’s something to having your expectations of people be really low, because then they can only impress you. But there’s also something about having high expectations of people and letting them rise to the occasion. I don’t know. I mean, I’m talking out of my ass. These are my knee jerk feelings. But please, please call back and tell me how it went. I don’t think your wedding is even scheduled yet. You said it’s just in the future, in the next couple of years, but boy, if we’re all still here, will you please call back? I want to hear how it went. All right, what else?

 

Melissa  08:44

Hi, Sarah. This is your friend, Melissa. And I have recently gotten a puppy who is about eight months old now, is adorable. He’s part pit bull and like Chihuahua and Pekingese, so like a miniature, adorable snuggle bug. The issue is he seems to have no boundaries when it comes to interfering with sexual activity. So I have been, you know, hardcore making out with my fiance in my bed, and he just comes right up in there and starts licking my face like he’s joining like he’s a part of this. And I am having trouble figuring out how to keep the boundaries and separation with this pup, and I don’t want to just shut him out of the room, but I do not want him to participate in that part of my life. So I was wondering if you ever experienced that with your dogs, and if you had any suggestions for for how I can approach it. Thanks.

 

Sarah Silverman  13:24

I know exactly what you’re talking about. Rory and I, every time we’re kissing, Siby comes in like, if we’re standing like, you know, if we’re not in the bedroom, but like we’re standing in the kitchen or whatever, and kissing Siby wedges her giant body between the two of us and cries, and she just, she can’t bear not being in the middle of it. But as the dogs have gotten older, we would put the if they’re if they’re getting in the way, we just put them outside of the bedroom. They can handle it. They’re fine. They’re just, they’ll figure something else to do. And if they don’t, then they lay outside the bedroom door and then reopen the door after and they come in. But lately, they just, I think they’re just older now, they just, they’re in their beds, and they don’t even, they have no interest, luckily. But give them a bone when you’re gonna bone put that on a t shirt, sew that on a pillow.

 

Sender 4  14:30

Hi, Sarah, how are you?

 

Sarah Silverman  14:32

I’m, well,

 

Sender 4  14:32

Um, I’m just hanging out today. I’ve been, you know, not so busy recently, having a lot of time to myself, and I find it hard to kind of take care of myself and be the person that I want to be when I’m alone. You know, just taking care of things and spending time on my hobbies and really getting into a book, or really getting into a movie or spending time with my dog, and so I’m listening to your podcast. I’m cleaning the house, I’m spending lots of time with my dog today. I have a nice like to do list and everything, and I was just wondering if you ever feel like you have trouble taking care of yourself when you’re alone or just in your day to day life, doing the things that you want to do, spending your time how you want to and feeling good about it, and what kind of tips you have and what helps you with that? I love you, I hope you have a great day, bye.

 

Sarah Silverman  15:45

I totally relate to this. It’s funny when I have nothing to do, it’s like it feels impossible to get just one thing done, but when I’m very busy, I tend to cram so many other things in and get so much more done. And that has to be a common phenomenon. I don’t understand it, but it’s it. I would think that it’s probably a thing. What helps me is making a list, a detailed list, of everything I want to get done, because every time I can cross something off that list, it feels amazing. You know, it’s like a there’s a dopamine rush to it, it’s and, you know, what makes it almost easier is if you can be mindless about it. I know that sounds not right, but, you know, we’re always trying to be mindful. I think it’s really helpful in these cases to be mindless about getting things done just like with working out. You know, like it’s so easy to find a million reasons why maybe it’s better if I don’t exercise today. Don’t let yourself come up with these reasons. Just mindlessly put on your sneakers and go. You will 100% the time be glad that you did. I’m not perfect at it, but that’s what helps me put music on, put your favorite podcast on, and just go, go, go. The other side of of taking care of yourself when you’re alone is taking that opportunity to do fucking nothing at all. I guess I what I mean is, on the other hand, you know, that’s that’s taking care of yourself too. You know, I kept going back to sleep on Sunday, and I did not get out of bed until 2pm and I’m really working on feeling fine about that, or even great about that, you know, I said to myself, whoa, I must have needed that, you know, but there still is that pain, because I I grew up with massive guilt over any kind of laziness or perceived laziness. You know, my mom was was in bed a lot, and, you know, looking back, she clearly had depression, and we didn’t understand that then. And even, you know, my father was openly disgusted by it and very concerned that his daughters would inherit that. And I have a massive hang up about it. Straight up, I’m working on it, and I realized, in my best moments, I realized that I am doing my best work at being human and being happy just by being still. This is the other side of of that the coin, you know, it’s like, I actually think it’s harder and harder for people to just be still, stillness. And I really, um, I really think getting comfortable with that is a great and important practice. So what’s my final answer? I don’t know. It’s a balance. Be kind get shit done, but also doing nothing is kind of getting shit done. Stillness, stillness, stillness is hard to say. The L to the n, stillness. All right, what else?

 

Devin  19:09

Hi, Sarah, this is Devin, and I’m wondering what’s a random thought that pops in your mind almost daily? I noticed for me randomly, what pops in my mind sometimes is this bumper sticker I saw a few months ago. And the bumper sticker, all it said was, I’m not in your hurry. And I love that so much. I think about it so much. It’s perfect language with boundaries. You can apply it to everything. Yeah.

 

Sarah Silverman  19:46

I love that.

 

Devin  19:46

So just wondering if you have something that your mind likes to think about almost every day that just pops in there and you’re like, Oh, I’m thinking about this again. All right, love ya, bye.

 

Sarah Silverman  19:56

I love that bumper sticker. I’m not in your hurry, really. Gets me because it’s so true. I mean, when I first moved out here, I was always late, always in a desperate hurry in my car, Honk, honk, honk, honk, honk, fucking go. That was the person I was. You know how you cannot be that person leave early, or just, if you’re going to be late, text the person fuck I’m I’m going to be late, I’ll be there at this time. You know, go to your GPS, see what it says, and say when you’ll be there, and then don’t rush. I mean, it’s just, it’s that rush mentality, like moving here from New York, driving I was just like, Honk, honk, honk, honk, honk, honk, honk, and it, you know, that changes someone else’s day. You know, it’s the whole energy thing. It’s like you get honked at, and someone, like, drives by you and like, flips you off, or goes like, what the fuck it’s like. You take on that stress. You can’t help it, it’s so hard not to take that on. And actually, when people do that to me, and when they do it to me, it’s usually because I did something stupid driving. And when they come around to pass me, and I know they’re about to, like, do you know, have rage, I always have a look on my face and mouth, like, I’m so sorry, and it always softens them, you know, like, it makes it so I don’t get their bad day, I don’t catch their bad day, and hopefully they catch not my good day, but at least my remorse. Like just seeing remorse on someone’s face, doesn’t it make it so much better when you’re pissed at them, you know, like, or I’ll roll my window down, you know, put my window down and be like, I’m so sorry. I’m the worst, you know, and it’s everything it really like, makes everything better, like, it’s just there they feel better. I don’t have to take on their their shit. I’m not really giving you an answer to things that pop into my head randomly, which that really happens to me, I’ll just start repeating, like, a lyric from a song or, you know, and it, it just gets in there. And sometimes for like, I mean, for probably four years, I was singing, my baby takes the morning train. He works from nine to five and then, and it drove my boyfriend, at the time, fucking insane. And then that hurt me, because it’s like, one, I can’t help it, but I guess I can. I tried to stop it, but I don’t like when, like creative, like, even if it’s a creative kind of tick, or it’s someone else’s art, or it’s a song or something, I like that. Like that, just it feeds my creativity. Sometimes I’m repeating something, or I’m I have something in my head, and I don’t like that being squelched, but I get that it might drive people crazy, you know, when you’re sharing a space. Anyway, what else?

 

Brianna  23:02

Hey, Sarah, it’s your friend, Brianna from Houston, Texas. I’m hoping you can give me some advice. My mom is in an abusive relationship with my stepdad. My parents divorced when I was about eight years old. I was an only child. Custody battle was awful. My dad initiated phony CPS investigations. Police were involved. It was really bad. He was trying to take me away from my mom to get out of paying child support, basically. But my mom won custody of me in the end. And fast forward to 2020. I’m 20 years old. My mom’s about 40. She’s now married to my stepdad, who she knows is insane and abusive, mostly verbally and emotionally, but I suspect physically, she’s never confirmed. She keeps digging herself deeper with this guy. She had a baby with him in 2020 and another one in 2023, so now I have two little brothers, and I’m watching history repeat itself. Since having my brothers, the abuse has escalated. Her mental health is declining. She’s afraid to leave. She doesn’t want him to try to take the kids away from her. There’s been recent threats to make her choose between me and my brothers, because he’s a fucking fuckbag, and I’m tired of begging her to leave. I just want to remove myself from the equation, but I feel responsible for my mom and my brothers. I don’t know what to do, and I know you don’t have all the answers, but I’m just hoping to get your take on this.

 

Sarah Silverman  24:28

I can’t imagine how hard this is. I know that feeling, that desperate feeling of wanting to figure out, that magic combination of words that will get through to her. But you can’t change your mother, she’s she’s the only one that can do that, and I’m so glad you see it, because I. This can oftentimes be repeated in children and their lives as they grow into adults. And abuse is something that victims of abuse are drawn to, not because they want abuse, but because we’re naturally drawn to what’s familiar, and until we can see that and break that, that’s what we do. But you know, with your mom, if she can’t see it, if she doesn’t see it, there’s only so much you can do. And I feel you’ve probably said it all, the only thing you really can do is, if she complains to you about it, say, Oh God, what are you going to do about it? Because then it puts her in a position where she has to think about what she’s going to do about it. And you know, the answer is probably going to be nothing. And you as impossible as it is, because you love her and you love your new brothers or your little brothers, only, she can make these changes, but at least if she brings it up to you, I think that’s got to be the answer. Oh, wow, what are you going to do about it? Because it’s it has to be her choice, and she’s got to, she’s got to make that decision and And besides that, try your best to live your best life. And the gift she gave you is that you see it, you can see it, and you can make sure you’re not repeating it, you know. And good luck, and I’m sorry, and that’s sucks. It’s hard to watch people put themselves in danger repeatedly, and even though she’s your mom, ultimately, not your monkey, not your circus, not to be cold, but you know, it’s like when someone’s drowning, they you can save them if they let you, but if, if they’re flailing around and pulling you down with them, yeah, I gotta let them go. I’m not saying let her go. I’m just saying, Here’s a tool. When she says something, say, what are you going to do about it? At least it’s a question she has to answer.

 

Andy  27:27

Hi, Sarah, this is Andy. Have been a big fan of your podcast. I heard on your last episode that you stated you were retired from roasting. And I was just curious why you would retire from that. It seems like a great comedy medium, and you always roast the ones you love. So I just was curious what your reasoning, or any comedian’s reason, would be to not do that if you were invited to the roast of somebody you really felt was great. Thanks a lot, bye.

 

Sarah Silverman  28:04

I mean, never say never, but I think I get so much joy out of watching the roast. I get so much joy out of hearing my friends jokes as they prepare for the roasts. And I did get so much joy out of being on the roast, but I got less joy from it. I don’t know I the last time I did it, I had a great time, but I also, like, I was a little bit hurt, and so I took myself out of it, because it’s so unfair to be it’s, it’s, on one hand, I feel very like it’s very unfair to be hurt if you’re participating in roast because I was murdering everyone around me, and if you dish it out, you got to be able to take it and it, you know, of course, I laughed and, and I have harbor no ill will, but I did have that little, you know. And I think everybody at a roast needs, like, a day to recuperate afterwards and like, remember, their self esteem, but I, you know, I would probably do it again watching the Tom Brady roast. It was so well done. It was so brilliantly directed. I mean, that was live, but anyway, I just it was so fun to watch. And I just, I don’t know why I get maybe more pleasure out of watching it than being on it, but I don’t know. I’d probably be on one again if it was the right person, the right time, or whatever, and I it is with love. And I was surprised, you know, I’m used to the jokes being about about me, being like, I’m a whore, I’m hairy, and none of those things bothered me at all. Like, you know, they were like, kind of safe places where you could write hard jokes. And. It’s not gonna hurt my feelings. And I got, like, Sarah’s old jokes, and it it’s I was stunned. This was years ago too, by the way, and I was by not the oldest one on the dais by far, but maybe woman wise, I don’t know, but now I don’t care at all, and it’s funny, but I was just so not expecting it. And I know a lot of the 60 something year old writers who wrote those jokes for these actors, and I felt mad at them, because I was just like, Fuck you, but at the same time, that’s not fair. I’m saying ridiculously mean things to all these people. That’s what a roast is. So I’ll probably do it again sometime, but I just feel like I’m gonna take a indefinite break from it, because I just, I get, I get the same amount of joy from watching. And maybe that’s, you know, your downfall after a while, when you’re kind of feel you have less to prove. Though, as I get older, I feel like I have more to prove, because you have to kind of keep proving yourself. You know, with specialism, with stand up and stuff that said, I don’t have the anxiety of it. I don’t feel much of the anxiety of it. For the most part. I’m sure I have my moments, but I’m just at a different place, and you know, we’re like on a rock in outer space. It nothing matters. So I don’t know, good question, not a great answer, but what else?

 

Sender 8  31:37

Hey, Sarah, got a question for you about criticism. I work at a prestigious nonprofit, and I am responsible for supporting staff in a couple of different ways. I’m a pretty junior employee, but what I’m finding is I’m really struggling with feeling like I’m being judged, and maybe not like, sometimes it’s personal, sometimes it’s my work, but it’s to the point where I feel like, if I’m not perfect, every like my efforts are, are just going to be disengaging for others, and people are just looking for flaws. And like, even when I speak, I feel like I have to be almost robotic, because if I say something in and I use the wrong word, like, if I say have to, instead of required, I like, that has an implication that I what it sounds like is I’m saying one thing, even though I mean something else, so like, it’s just so in intense like that, and exercise is a part of my brain that like I don’t it just makes me feel like I can’t be a human. And I just feel like I’m under a microscope all the time so.

 

Sarah Silverman  33:11

I don’t know what to say, um, because I, I don’t really know, um, the specifics, I you know, it kind of sounds like one example you gave is like you have to, kind of you have to, you’re required, maybe to take on new language, um, because oftentimes, with a nonprofit, they need to always be using the most inclusive language, the most recent kind of progressive language, to make sure that they’re being inclusive. And so it may feel very nitpicky, but that’s what learning is. And when you get notes at work, you know, it’s wonderful if they include the good stuff, like, hey, you’re killing it here, you’re doing great here. But can you do this? Not everyone is great at doing that. Try to not take it personally. A lot of what you feel is self generated and and I’m not saying that what you feel isn’t real, but I will say that self consciousness does come from within, and you don’t have to take on what you think people might be thinking about you. Most people have this problem and do it all the time and are riddled with insecurity. It’s not what makes you unique, it’s what makes you human. But what could help your happiness is to give yourself leeway if somebody corrects you, thank them, and practice incorporating that into your language, at least at work. And don’t be afraid afraid of criticism. Don’t be afraid of being corrected. That’s an opportunity. Nobody is born knowing all the stuff. So when you learn it, you just learned it. I mean, there’s stuff that missed me that Rory can’t believe how ignorant I am in certain areas, but I just am until I’m not. That’s okay. It’s fine. It’s called learning, and it never should stop. So if you’re working in a nonprofit and they do things a certain way, you have to learn that certain way. And if someone corrects you, thank them. And if they correct you again because you forgot. Go, oh god, thank you, you know, but being vulnerable and being human is not anything you have to feel badly about. You’re right on the money. You’re a human being, figuring things out, making mistakes and correcting them, and I think you can have a certain confidence in that, you know, like I can tell you, I promise I will fuck up. I’ll do my best, and I’ll fuck up less and less, probably at things, but I’m never gonna not fuck up anymore, is my guess. And I think that’s a great place to come from, you know, be open. You’re working in a world that is not of your design, and part of that work is incorporating the language that they use, you know. And that’s the only example you you gave me, so that’s what I’m working off of. So I hope that was helpful. And if it’s just people being mean, like, get another job, I guess, or something. I mean, you know, but a lot of energy that comes at you comes from you, and good luck. All right, what else?

 

Byron Jones  36:59

Hey, Sarah, it’s your friend, Byron Jones.

 

Sarah Silverman  37:02

Oh my gosh.

 

Byron Jones  37:02

From Columbus, Ohio.

 

Sarah Silverman  37:04

He’s called a couple times.

 

Byron Jones  37:06

I gotta tell you this joke I made up.

 

Sarah Silverman  37:10

Okay.

 

Byron Jones  37:11

And, um, you, you create it. You can do whatever you want with it. Okay, here you go. I’m not an oxymoron. I’m on oxy, you moron. And um, shout out to Rory. I hope you like my joke, bye.

 

CREDITS  37:34

I do like that joke. I think that’s good. I’m not an oxymoron. I’m on oxy, you moron. Is that what he said? I mean, there could certainly maybe be a setup to it or not. Could see it as a meme, but I think it’s very clever. Very, very clever. Thanks for calling. I love hearing your voice. Byron Jones and dad, we are winding down. This is the part of the podcast. When I say, send me your questions. Go to speakpipe.com/theSarahSilvermanpodcast. That’s speakpipe.com/theSarahSilvermanpodcast. Subscribe, rate and review wherever you listen to your podcast. That helps us out when you do that, and maybe your review can include some words of wisdom you learned on the pod, or a dick joke you found a way to incorporate into your latest dinner party. And there’s more of the Sarah Silverman podcast with Lemonada Premium subscribers get exclusive access to bonus questions like one about sticking up for your friends. Subscribe now in Apple podcasts. Thank you for listening to the Sarah Silverman podcast. We are a production of Lemonada media. Katherine Barnes and Isabella Kulkarni produce our show. Our mixes by James Sparber. The show is recorded at the Invisible Studios in West Hollywood. Charles Carroll is a recording engineer. Additional Lemonada support from Steve Nelson Stephanie Wittels Wachs and Jessica Cordova Kramer. Our theme was composed by Ben Folds. You can find me at @SarahKateSilverman on Instagram. Follow the Sarah Silverman podcast, wherever you get your podcasts, or listen ad free on Amazon music with your Prime membership.

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