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April 7, 2025

Comedian Daniel Lobell Turns Passover Classic “Chad Gadya” Into a Blues Song

After the Seder, sometime around midnightwhen everyone has said the grace after meals, the singing begins. People break out tunes like, “Echad Mi Yodea (Who Knows One)” and “Let My People Go.”

For years, comedian Daniel Lobell has sung a bluesy version of the song, “Chad Gadya,” about a kid goat who gets eaten by a cat, thus setting off a chain of events that culminates in Hashem showing us that He runs the world.

“I always loved ‘Chad Gadya,’” Daniel said. “It’s my favorite one of the Passover songs, and I have fun with it.”

“I always loved ‘Chad Gadya.’”

Every year, the other people at the Seder enjoy Daniel’s rendition of it; he belts out his own improvised lyrics to the familiar tune in the style of an old blues singer.

“It’s my party trick at our Passover seders,” Daniel said.

No two performances are exactly alike—some lyrics change from one seder to the next—but the rhythm and spirit remain the same.

After every Passover, Daniel’s wife, Kylie Ora Lobell, would tell him that he needed to record the song.

“And then, after the holiday, I’d forget about it until the following year, but it would be too late,” Daniel said.

This year, however, Kylie didn’t wait until seder night to urge her husband to record his fun “Chad Gadya.” A few weeks before Passover, she pushed him to take action. Daniel was hesitant—he had never sung professionally— but Kylie took matters into her own hands. She made a few calls, reached out to musicians and booked a recording session with producer Shmuel Levy LevYatan. There was no backing out now.

“At that point, I didn’t even have the song written down,” Daniel said. “As the recording session got closer, I knew I had to get moving. I had already paid and didn’t want to waste money or time, so I locked myself in a room for seven hours and wrote it.”

LevYatan, an accomplished musician, composed the music for the song, which features playful lines like:

“Then came the ox, he was a thirsty old soul.
He drank up the water, yeah, he finished the whole bowl.
He left it all dry and he left it all bare.
You wouldn’t even know that there was ever water there.”

“I was a little self-conscious,” Daniel said. “Everyone always told me I should record and that I have a great voice, but I’d never recorded anything before. I usually just sing in the shower.”

The recording has culminated in an epic 11-minute music video, created and edited by local musician Levi Paris. Daniel sings on a microphone as LevYatan plays instruments in the background and footage of a goat, cat, dog, stick and all the other imagery from “Chad Gadya” flash on the screen.

“I’m really proud of it,” Daniel said. “Passover is a very special holiday for me, since I was born right before it and brought home just in time for the first seder.”

Daniel, who does stand-up comedy all over the world and Passover programs every year, often explores themes of Jewish culture and faith in his work. He also co-hosts the podcast “We Think It’s Funny” with comedian Mark Schiff, where they discuss current events and the world at large with today’s top entertainers including Jay Leno, Caroline Rhea, Jon Lovitz and Brian Regan.

Now that he’s discovered a new talent, Daniel is open to recording more songs. “I wrote a few country songs in my twenties, so I might make them next,” he said.

This “Chad Gadya” rendition could just follow in the footsteps of Adam Sandler’s classic “The Chanukah Song”—becoming a festive favorite that everyone looks forward to every year.

Come Seder night, instead of just keeping sleepy guests awake by singing solo, Daniel might have them singing along to the “Chad Gadya” blues.

Daniel said, “To have my fingerprints in any way on people’s Passover seder would be a huge honor.”

You can watch the “Chad Gadya” video on Daniel’s YouTube channel: youtube.com/dannylobell

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The Meaningless Motives Within Donald Trump

All throughout the Biden presidency, and especially since the election in November, I have observed a certain degree of moral confusion among some of my readers and friends. (I will leave the unbashful gaggle of haters aside, for the moment.)

A supposition has been made about my apparent incapacity to size a person up, to intuit the makeup of their soul, to appreciate what lies within their heart, to wise up to their insidious, selfish motivations.

And that person of ill-disguised ill-repute is, of course, Donald Trump. All sorts of people—mostly mere strangers, but also close friends, faithful colleagues, and even former professors—seem surprised not so much that I abandoned the Democratic Party and registered as an Independent, but that I have somehow allowed myself to be deceived by President Trump.

Far worse than party affiliation, my essays are, apparently, dead giveaways. In digital black and white, I am charged with applauding Trump’s handling of the antisemitic plague that has descended over the United States. I have dared to note, favorably, a dramatic foreign policy shift in America’s commitment to Israel. But it is undeniably true: The Jewish state is now being treated as a strategic ally that shares the same democratic values and maniacal enemies as the United States.

Breaking with Biden’s progressives within the Democratic Party, Trump has made short order of the slander that Israel is a genocidal, settler-colonial state that stole Arab land. As anyone who knows history and can resist the odious charms of antisemitism is aware, Israel is a widely diverse, openly liberal society. Jewish nationhood began 1,500 years before the birth of Islam. And no Arab nation ever existed on the land now called Israel.

Moreover, Israel no longer serves as a pawn to appease Iran, the purveyors of political correctness, and the growing Islamist fiefdoms within the United States like in Patterson, New Jersey and Dearborn, Michigan.

There are many examples of Trump’s fealty to Jews, for which he regularly fails to receive either the credit he deserves, or the votes of Jews themselves. Dating back to his first administration, he moved America’s embassy in Israel to its capital in Jerusalem. He recognized Israel’s annexation of the Golan Heights. Trump decertified the Iran Deal and reimposed sanctions. He unveiled the Abraham Accords. Perhaps most importantly, he assessed Palestinians honestly and concluded that they are far more interested in seeking Israel’s destruction than in building their own state.

There are many examples of Trump’s fealty to Jews, for which he regularly fails to receive either the credit he deserves, or the votes of Jews themselves.

Now we come to his second term, and he seems to be doubling down. He has directed resources to combat antisemitism on city streets and at college campuses. He is safeguarding the civil rights of Jews through Title VI defunding. He has quelled pro-Hamas intimidation by punishing antisemitic practices on campuses. Glorifying terrorists, blocking Jewish students from attending classes, obstructing the entrances of synagogues, vandalizing Jewish businesses—all now come with consequences.

And jihadists on student visas are being sent home without a diploma—as if sheepskin was the trophy they came for in the first instance.

Regardless of how one feels about Trump, he has an outstanding resume of civic accomplishment on behalf of Jews. And, yet, during all three of his elections, Democrats referred to him as the second coming of Hitler. Does anyone recall what the first coming looked like? Now we are being told that his White House staff and inner circle, featuring Elon Musk, are operating pursuant to the Third Reich’s playbook.

That’s why, I suppose, despite the bounty of benefits to American Jews and Israelis, some are mystified how I apparently missed the darker reality: Trump has no real affection for Jews. He has not a single Semitic, humanistic bone in his body. Everything he does is to advance an agenda of self-aggrandizement, personal wealth and political power.

Even if true, so what?

It is no secret that Trump is terribly flawed— hopelessly impulsive, undisciplined, reckless and vindictive. He’s also not completely sold on representative democracy.

And, yet, at this time in history, I am not ashamed to thank him for protecting the Jewish people. When it comes right down to it, I would like to see fewer dead Jews. And reassurances that Israeli teenagers won’t be gangraped by Islamist savages would be nice, too.

Saving Jewish blood is my thing. For others, pickleball is a priority. Looks like a fabulous game, but I am sticking with a safer environment for Jews and the certainty that the United States has Israel’s back.

Saving Jewish blood is my thing. For others, pickleball is a priority.

I couldn’t care less whether Trump actually likes Jews. Jews don’t like Jews. Is there any better evidence of that self-hatred than the political careers of Bernie Sanders, Chuck Schumer and Adam Schiff?

You want to support Jewish Americans at home and Zionism in the Middle East? Cast your votes for John Fetterman, Lindsey Graham, Ted Cruz and Tim Scott. I suspect none are circumcised. And they managed to get this far in life without a bar mitzvah. But for now, as a registered Independent who cares about Jewish existence, they get my vote.

As for Trump’s Master Race of advisors, I will be the first to object the moment Auschwitz is reconstructed beside an existing Tesla plant. If such an improbable cabal of Nazis are truly lying in wait in the West Wing, then Trump must have already made peace that the Jews in his family, which include three grandchildren, and the many who serve him faithfully in the administration, are in store for the Final Solution, Take Two.

Trump’s financial motive is irrelevant to me. Where is the progressive cynicism that Barack Obama, a man who never had a real job before running for public office, now possesses one of the largest estates on Martha’s Vineyard?

How did an avowed socialist like Bernie Sanders acquire a net worth of $15 million? Elizabeth Warren is sitting on an $82 million stock portfolio. We hear these nouveau rich legislators loudly lambast capitalist excesses and social inequities. Are they planning to redistribute their wealth among the poor in their constituencies? Apparently, having mixed motivations is not necessarily disqualifying or presumptively evil.

All politicians have personal motives. But few achieve tangible results for the electorate they serve.

All politicians have personal motives. But few achieve tangible results for the electorate they serve. The Kennedy brothers were motivated by sleeping with Marilyn Monroe. Somehow that didn’t subvert more worthy aspirations, like bringing civil rights to the Deep South and keeping the Cold War below temperature.

As things are looking so far, expect me to book a room at the Trump Mediterranean Hotel and Casino in Gaza the moment it opens.


Thane Rosenbaum is a novelist, essayist, law professor and Distinguished University Professor at Touro University, where he directs the Forum on Life, Culture & Society. He is the legal analyst for CBS News Radio. His most recent book is titled “Saving Free Speech … From Itself,” and his forthcoming book is titled, “Beyond Proportionality: Israel’s Just War in Gaza.

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