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Tag: Mayim Bialik

  • Mayim Bialik Fired As 'Jeopardy!' Host After Voicing Support For Israel

    Mayim Bialik Fired As 'Jeopardy!' Host After Voicing Support For Israel

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    Source: Screenshot Jeopardy! YouTube

    Mayim Bialik announced on Friday that she has been fired as one of the hosts of the “Jeopardy!” In the days since then, the game show has been accused of antisemitism due to the fact that Bialik’s firing came after she became an outspoken supporter of Israel in the wake of the October 7 Hamas terrorist attacks.

    Bialik Fired

    “As the holiday break begins in Hollywood, I have some ‘Jeopardy!’ news,” Bialik said in a statement. “Sony has informed that I will no longer be hosting the syndicated version of ‘Jeopardy!’”

    “I am incredibly honored to have been nominated for a Primetime Emmy for hosting this year and I am deeply grateful for the opportunity to have been a part of the ‘Jeopardy!’ family,” she continued. “For all of you who have supported me through this incredible journey and to the fans, contestants, writers, staff and crew of America’s Favorite Quiz Show, thank you.”

    The official “Jeopardy!” Instagram account responded by saying that Bialik “has announced she will no longer be hosting the syndicated version of Jeopardy!

    “We made the decision to have one host of the syndicated show next season to maintain continuity for our viewers, and Ken Jennings will be the sole host for syndicated ‘Jeopardy!,’” the show’s statement added, going on to say that the program’s executives “are truly grateful for all of Mayim’s contributions to ‘Jeopardy!,’ and we hope to continue to work with her on primetime specials.”

    Related: ‘Jeopardy’ Host Mayim Bialik Defends Israel As Her ‘Homeland’ – Slams Alma Mater UCLA For Anti-Semitism

    Social Media Users Fire Back

    Newsweek reported that social media users have since responded by accusing “Jeopardy!” of antisemitism, as many believe Bialik’s recent support of Israel may have something to do with her firing.

    “Antisemitism is not a good look on you. Mayim is Jewish and she have every right to defend her people without losing her job,” one social media user commented, with another adding, “Seriously?! Now that Jewish people need your support more than ever, you decide to fire her for standing up against antisemitism during one of the hardest times for Jewish people in history? SHAME on you!”

    “Category: Jew hate. Clue: firing someone talented because she against terror,” a third user wrote, with a fourth commenting, “She was the only reason to watch your show anyway. So much easier to say goodbye, understanding you’re anti Jewish. We support you Mayim.”

    Related: 700 Hollywood Stars Sign Open Letter In Support Of Israel

    Bialik’s Support Of Israel

    Bialik, who formerly starred on the sitcom “The Big Bang Theory,” has been outspoken about her support for Israel in recent months.

    “My heart is big. My heart can hold love for Israel, the homeland of the Jewish people,” she wrote on social media after the October 7 attacks. “My heart feels the immense pain and horror the Israeli people are experiencing and I share that pain. My heart feels fear because of the anti-Semitism moving through this world with no end in sight.”

    “My heart feels rage for the lack of unanimous global support for a swift return of the hostages taken by Hamas, the terrorist organization terrorizing Israelis and Palestinians alike,” she continued. “My heart can hold all of this. Can yours?”

    Weeks later, Bialik posted a video to social media in which she blasted her alma mater UCLA, claiming that the school isn’t doing enough to fight rampant antisemitism on its campus.

    “It is clear that there is a strain of antisemitism that is alive and well,” she said. “It is thriving at my Alma Mater (UCLA) where the chant ‘We want a Jewish genocide’ was echoed in the quad in front of Royce Hall.”

    “There is no excuse for calling for a genocide of an entire people. Period. Full stop,” Bialik added. “I’m no longer afraid to draw comparisons to the global attempt at an elimination of the Jewish people, which my grandparents escaped eastern Europe to flee.”

    “I’ve always believed that Israel was my homeland, and now I understand it more deeply than ever before,” Bialik concluded, ending her video by thanking those who have been supporting Jewish people.

    While there is no definitive proof that “Jeopardy!” fired Bialik because of her support of Israel, the timing of this certainly does seem suspect. What do you think about this? Let us know in the comments section.

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    James Conrad

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  • Mayim Bialik Calls Out ‘SNL’ For Once Using ‘Jewface’ To Mock Her As A Teen

    Mayim Bialik Calls Out ‘SNL’ For Once Using ‘Jewface’ To Mock Her As A Teen

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    Mayim Bialik has complicated feelings about “Saturday Night Live.”

    The “Big Bang Theory” alum published an essay for Variety on Wednesday as part of the magazine’s “Antisemitism and Hollywood package” in which she remembered a 1994 “SNL” sketch that mocked her for having what she called an “undeniably Jewish” nose.

    The 1994 skit was a parody of “Blossom,” an NBC sitcom in which Bialik starred as the titular character, a role she scored at just 14 years old. The “SNL” parody’s focus was on mocking the show’s saccharine storylines about teenage sex and Bialik’s co-star Joey Lawrence’s obnoxious catchphrase of “Whoa!” — but the skit also added an unnecessary detail for no other reason than to point out that Bialik was indeed Jewish.

    “The actress portraying me was dancing and mugging for the camera and she was hilarious,” Bialik wrote in the Variety essay of former “SNL” cast member Melanie Hutsell. “But. She wore a prosthetic nose. In order to truly convey that she was ‘Blossom,’ she wore a fake, big nose.”

    Mayim Bialik and Joey Lawrence pose for “Blossom” promotional photos in 1994.

    Touchstone Pictures via Getty Images

    “SNL” did not immediately respond to HuffPost’s request for comment about the sketch.

    Earlier in her essay, Bialik noted that she was a fan of “SNL” her “entire life” and was excited to see how the long-running sketch show would skewer her sitcom. But after watching the skit, Bialik wrote, she was “confused” because the prosthetic struck her as “odd.”

    “No one else on the show was parodied for their features,” Bialik noted.

    “I never thought to talk about it and mostly I tried to forget it,” she wrote. “I hoped no one noticed. All of my friends at high school watched ‘SNL.’ It wasn’t subtle. They would all see it and I felt ashamed.”

    The former “Jeopardy!” co-host said that when actor Bradley Cooper was accused of wearing “Jewface” because he used a prosthetic nose to play legendary composer Leonard Bernstein, it triggered this dark memory for her.

    “And I started scrutinizing the photos of Bradley and Leonard and wondering if it was necessary,” Bialik admitted. “I don’t know how I feel.”

    But it does seem that Bialik cares about how young girls who looked up to her during her “Blossom” days felt about being criticized for “features I inherited from my mixed Eastern European-Ashkenazi past.”

    “Girls all over the world used to tell me that they had never seen a Jewish girl like me on TV before they saw me on ‘Blossom,’” Bialik wrote. “Many said they knew I was Jewish and it made them proud to be. That was so touching to me, and it still is.”

    She added: “I wonder how those girls felt when they saw an actress playing me with a comically prosthetic nose.”

    Bialik admitted that she has “not always loved” her nose. “But I also have never wanted to change it.”

    “I have come to see my face as distinctly mine as given to me from G-d,” she wrote. “My genetic makeup is mine alone, and also, it is the combination of cultures shoved together after the Holocaust spilled so many of us out on the shores of Ellis Island. My nose is undeniably Jewish, and I am as well. Is it because of my nose? Perhaps. But I don’t have to know because we will always be one and the same.”

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  • Mayim Bialik Just Wants to Talk

    Mayim Bialik Just Wants to Talk

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    Mayim Bialik has three decades of steady success on screens big and small, a neuroscience PhD, an adorable family with two teenaged boys, a sweet gig hosting Jeopardy! alongside Ken Jennings, and a hunky Canadian partner—both personal and professional—in Jonathan Cohen, with whom she makes her popular pandemic-born podcast, Mayim Bialiks Breakdown. She is not, however, actually having a breakdown. (As the catchy theme song by Barenaked Ladies’ Ed Robertson goes, “She’s gonna break it down for you, ’cause you know she knows a thing or two.”)

    The podcast is what we’re talking about today since the 47-year-old Blossom and Big Bang Theory star is a strong supporter of the SAG-AFTRA and WGA strikes—last May, in fact, she was among the first celebrities to take an overt stand by declining to host Jeopardy’s new season until the writers got a fair deal. (Which they did, just this week.)

    The four-time Emmy nominee could have put her head down and feet up in the meantime, but instead, she’s doubled down on Breakdown. Bialik’s guests mostly fall into one of two camps: doctors, scientists, and psychologists discussing neurobiology, mindfulness, meditation, and mental health, or Hollywood types she’s invited for a casual chat about “where they are mental health wise.” As Bialik discloses her own anxieties and traumas, so too do her guests. Ricki Lake has dished on her menstrual cycle, Nikki Glaser on losing her virginity, and Chelsea Handler on repressed grief following her brother’s death. Hard science, new age wellness, and celebrity disclosures blend together to make a show that’s like eavesdropping on someone else’s therapy session.

    How does Bialik have the nerve to ask Dustin Hoffman about his distant father, or Ben Stiller about the struggles in his marriage? I called her up to discuss the unique perils of being a child actor, her fervent support of the SAG strike, and whether she ever gets starstruck.

    Vanity Fair: I’m a bit nervous to chat because of the SAG strike, which I know you’re a big supporter of, so please yell if I break a rule.

    Mayim Bialik: There’s a lot of complexity to this, but my general statement is always that I come from a union family. My grandparents were immigrants who worked in sweatshops, and my parents were public school teachers. While it’s not for me to personally judge anyone else’s decision, for me, I am a union supporter—pretty much all unions and what they fight for. I believe in that system even if it’s not perfect. I believe in getting educated about why people strike and what they’re striking for.

    Let’s talk about the podcast. Many of your guests are child stars—Jeanette McCurdy, Mara Wilson, Jodie Sweetin, Jenna von Oy. Is this your posse in real life, or are you particularly interested in that journey?

    Our initial goal was to have experts and specialists on the show. We started during Covid, when a lot of people were feeling a spike in things like anticipatory anxiety—the entire world, really, to some extent. We initially leaned on people in my circle, like Wil Wheaton, who really inspires me to be open about mental health challenges. We asked people if they’d talk to us about where they came from and where they are in terms of mental wellness. Lots of celebrities have come on the podcast and shared their struggles, which I don’t think they have because they live publicly but because living publicly tends to highlight or exacerbate the issues that we all deal with.

    It is hard to convince people to come on and spill their guts?

    So far, not really. We’ve had everyone from spiritual psychologist Matthew Singer to Matthew McConaughey to Ben Stiller. Leslie Jordan talked so openly about crystal meth and what it was like to come out as gay. One of the things we most hear people say is, “I’ve never told anyone this!” Maybe there’s something about the way Jonathan and I talk to people that makes them want to talk to us. We’re not trying to get dirt or be gossipy, but I think more and more people are realizing the more we talk about this, the better we’ll all be.

    Maybe you missed your calling as a therapist. Is there anyone you really want to get on the podcast but can’t?

    Hah, yes! I’ve been trying to get Weird Al. He says he doesn’t have anything to talk about, but my feeling is everyone has something. We’re very happy to talk to people just about their journey. To them, we say, we’re not looking to dredge up dirt or make anyone uncomfortable. But once we start talking, they are comfortable, so they trust us. When I’m vulnerable, when Jonathan’s vulnerable, people seem to open up. I’m not a therapist, but I’ve sure sat in a lot of therapist’s rooms.

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    Rosemary Counter

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  • Mayim Bialik Shares Selfies From Her Colonoscopy: ‘It’s Not Terribly Fun Getting Older’

    Mayim Bialik Shares Selfies From Her Colonoscopy: ‘It’s Not Terribly Fun Getting Older’

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    By Brent Furdyk.

    Mayim Bialik has a message for people in her age group: get a colonoscopy!

    The 47-year-old “Big Bang Theory” alum posted a video and a few selfies on Instagram, in which she’s wearing a hospital gown about to undergo a colonoscopy.

    “It’s not terribly fun getting older. Especially when you have to get a routine colonoscopy and really wish you didn’t have to,” she wrote.


    READ MORE:
    Ken Jennings Crosses Picket Line To Host ‘Jeopardy!’ As Mayim Bialik Stands With WGA Strikers

    “Well, I’m sharing this because: 1. Let’s remove the stigma of routine things that we really should not have problems as a society talking about – ignoring things doesn’t make them go away! Also let’s not be Puritanical about colonoscopies. It’s a thing. 2. It wasn’t bad at all. 3. I have tips to share another time to help you not have it be so bad. 4. Please don’t put off taking care of your body. It’s connected with your mind and your mental and emotional well-being. Be proactive,” she added.

    She then shared a followup video to let her followers know how it all went.

    “Okay, I am home. I have survived the colonoscopy,” she shared, but admitted that “the prep can be daunting.”


    READ MORE:
    Mayim Bialik, Ken Jennings Have Only Met Twice In Person Since Joining ‘Jeopardy!’

    “This is one of those things a lot of people put off,” she added. “And I highly recommend you do not put it off if you are of the age they recommend a colonoscopy… preventative care in this arena is very important.”

    She concluded by saying, “It’s not as scary as you anticipate. I survived and you can, too.”

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    Brent Furdyk

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