Video deep dive ยท culture_comparisonNA ยท NA

Hasidic Jews' Views on Intimate Relationships & Modern Culture | NYC ๐Ÿ‡บ๐Ÿ‡ธ (Ep.3)

The Brief

A YouTube creator out-documented every mainstream media outlet on Hasidic Judaism by simply walking into three Brooklyn neighborhoods and letting insiders talk.

The top comment, with 3,526 likes, declares it 'the best channel I've found in years' โ€” the highest single-comment endorsement in the dataset, beating the next by 400 likes.

The format does the work: no narration overlay, no expert commentary, no agenda framing โ€” just insiders on their own turf explaining their own lives in real time.

Watch outThe menstrual impurity debate (7.0% of comments) and critiques of religious control (7.1%) are the friction points that could resurface if a critical outlet picks up the series.

When respectful access journalism reliably beats institutional media, what happens to the community's willingness to keep that access open?

Summary

This is the third and final episode of a documentary series in which the creator visits Hasidic Jewish neighborhoods in Brooklyn, NYC. The episode covers internal differences between Hasidic sects, views on technology and gender separation, marital intimacy practices rooted in religious law, and genetic testing customs for prospective couples. The creator guides viewers through Borough Park, Williamsburg, and Crown Heights, interviewing community members who explain their practices and beliefs in their own words.

  • ยทA Hasidic man describes smartphones as neutral tools โ€” positive or negative depending on use โ€” and says heavy social media consumption signals a void or lack of connection in one's life.
  • ยทThe creator notes there are differing opinions within Hasidic Judaism about technology, but community members prefer the term 'difference of opinions' over 'clash.'
  • ยทGender separation in synagogue is explained as a practical measure to avoid distraction during prayer, not as a statement about women; basic respectful interaction in public settings is described as normal and expected.
  • ยทThe creator distinguishes three neighborhoods visited across the series: Borough Park (largest Hasidic area, ~105,000 residents, a mix of many sects), Williamsburg (dominated by the Satmar sect, described as among the most Ultra-Orthodox and conservative), and Crown Heights (dominated by Chabad-Lubavitch).
  • ยทThere are approximately 200 Hasidic sects, according to one interviewee.
  • ยทChabad-Lubavitch is characterized as focused on outreach to Jews worldwide, operating thousands of centers in over 100 countries, and its members are described as particularly articulate in explaining their practices to outsiders.
  • ยทA Hasidic man explains the Jewish holiday of Sukkot, comparing it to having 'Thanksgiving every six or seven days,' with emphasis on family togetherness and gratitude.
  • ยทThe episode covers the practice of taharat hamishpacha (family purity laws): married couples observe a period of physical separation during and after menstruation, after which the wife visits a mikveh (ritual bath facility), and intimacy resumes.
  • ยทOne interviewee describes this monthly cycle as renewing attraction in marriage, saying his wife feels like 'a new bride' each time they reunite after the separation period.
  • ยทA female community member says she does not feel oppressed by the synagogue's women's section and expresses empathy for women who lack a dedicated spiritual space.
  • ยทThe practice of genetic testing for teens is described: young people receive blood tests and are assigned ID numbers; prospective couples are only permitted to date if their genetic profiles are compatible, with the stated goal of preventing hereditary genetic diseases.
  • ยทThe creator visits Crown Heights as the final stop in the series, and a community guide accompanies him throughout, helping facilitate introductions and explanations.
  • ยทThe creator closes the episode by thanking his guide Shalomi for participating, describing the day as 'one of the most culturally stimulating' of his life, and mentions a Patreon page for behind-the-scenes content.
Views
2.2M
2,168,354 total
Likes
43k
2.00% like rate
Comments
3.4k
0.16% comment rate
Hasidic Jews' Views on Intimate Relationships & Modern Culture | NYC ๐Ÿ‡บ๐Ÿ‡ธ (Ep.3)
Comment deep diveExplore all 3,380 comments โ†’filter by sentiment ยท theme ยท superfans ยท questions ยท what to fix
ยง01

Summary

The third episode of a three-part series moves through Boro Park, Williamsburg, and Crown Heights, using neighborhood geography to show how radically different Hasidic sects can be โ€” Satmar as the most ultra-conservative, Lubavitch as the most outward-facing. A Crown Heights rabbi explains gender separation and the monthly abstinence-and-mikveh cycle in marital life, speaking in a lowered voice with children nearby. The episode closes on the community's genetic testing system for betrothal matching, which a top commenter clarifies is Tay-Sachs carrier screening, not eugenics.

Content pillars
hasidic_judaisminterfaith_dialoguecommunity_valuesintimate_relationships
ยง02

Engagement vs the rest of the channel

How this video's like-and-comment rate compares to this channel's running average.

Engagement vs channel avgโ–ฒ 2.16pp
2.16% this video
0.00% avg
Like rate
2.00%
of viewers tap like
Comment rate
0.16%
of viewers leave a comment
ยง03

The hook

medium

Opening 15 seconds โ€” the bit that decides whether a viewer keeps watching.

โ€œ

[0:01] 'Is that a tough topic? No, it's not a tough topic โ€” it's a big topic. I just honestly feel bad for anyone who doesn't have that open space synagogue as a woman. I'm saying this: I don't feel pushed down... it's Thanksgiving every seven day, every six days.'

Assessment

The cold-open into interview dialogue creates immediate character presence and a provocative framing around intimate topics, but drops the viewer mid-conversation with no contextual anchor โ€” the 'Thanksgiving every six days' line is arresting but arrives without explanation, leaving curiosity unresolved rather than structured. Compared to Peter Santenello's strongest hooks (Pakistan series), this one is warmer but less purposefully constructed.

Hook quality
medium
Call-to-action
present
Archetype
scene
Composite score
5.3/10
Hook score ยท 6 dimensions
character presence
8/10
clarity
4/10
curiosity
7/10
specificity
5/10
stakes
4/10
time to payoff
4/10
Anti-patterns detected
slow contextvague tease
ยง03b

Hook rewrites

Three alternative openings, each in a different archetype. Each is under 40 words โ€” completable in 15 seconds.

Rewrite โ„–1 ยท investigatortechnique: lead_with_outcome

โ€œI spent three days inside NYC's most secretive Hasidic neighborhoods asking questions most outsiders never get to ask โ€” about marriage, intimacy, and the monthly ritual that keeps couples together for life.โ€

WhyFrames the creator as the guide, signals access and depth upfront, and teases the marriage renewal concept that drove the most emotional comments.

Rewrite โ„–2 ยท contrariantechnique: flip_declarative_to_stake

โ€œEveryone thinks Hasidic women are oppressed. I asked them directly โ€” and what they said about marriage, intimacy, and monthly separation stopped me cold.โ€

WhyActivates the 11.6% 'gratitude for respectful documentary' cluster and the 7.1% 'critiques of religious control' cluster simultaneously โ€” tension that drives clicks.

Rewrite โ„–3 ยท stakeholdertechnique: identity_callout

โ€œIf your relationship has gone stale, a Hasidic rabbi in Brooklyn has a two-week rule that might fix it โ€” and the women in his community swear by it.โ€

WhyConverts the widely praised 'new bride every month' revelation into a viewer-benefit frame; mirrors the 8.7% 'appreciation for community values' cluster that dominated comments.

ยง03c

Title gap & rewrites

Gap 58 ยท undersell

The title's 'Views on Intimate Relationships' is accurate but generic โ€” the comments reveal specific, viral revelations (the monthly marital separation/mikveh cycle producing a 'new bride' feeling, genetic DNA matching before dating, menstruation purity laws, Shabbat as weekly Thanksgiving) that the title doesn't surface. '& Modern Culture' is too broad to signal anything; the smartphone and social-media exchange that produced a widely-quoted line is invisible from the title.

What commenters actually quoted
  • ยท 'like a new bride' / 'new bride every month' (referenced in ~15 comments)
  • ยท 'Thanksgiving every six days' / 'Thanksgiving every week' (referenced in ~12 comments)
  • ยท 'if you're on social media a lot, you have a problem in your life' โ€” Shloime (referenced in ~8 comments)
Anti-patterns in current title
generic emotionvague identity
Thumbnail recommendation

Show the whispering rabbi mid-conversation with a text overlay of a single provocative quote ('Like a new bride, every month') โ€” comments show this specific moment drove the deepest emotional responses, and the intimate, hushed body language is visually distinctive.

3 title rewrites
  1. 01 ยท Why Hasidic Couples Treat Every Month Like a New Marriage | NYC
    curiosity gap
    Surfaces the single most emotionally resonant reveal (comment: 'Brought tears to my eyes when the guy talked about his wife being like a new bride every month') while keeping the curiosity loop open.
  2. 02 ยท Hasidic Jews on Sex, Marriage & Technology: What They Actually Think
    specificity
    Names the three debate clusters driving 22% of comments (intimacy laws, community values, modern-culture friction) and removes the vague 'Views on' framing.
  3. 03 ยท Inside Hasidic Marriage Rules That Outsiders Never See | Brooklyn NYC
    authority
    Activates the 11.6% 'gratitude for respectful documentary' cluster with an access/insider frame while grounding it geographically, matching the high engagement from non-NYC viewers discovering the community.
ยง04

What viewers said

Explore all โ†’

3,380 comments analysed and clustered into themes.

Sentiment breakdown

Mostly positive

positive 61%neutral 28%negative 11%
Real breakdown over 3380 of 3380 root comments โ€” every comment analysed, not sampled.

The series triggered an outpouring from people who said it changed or challenged a prior negative view: 'I honestly had pent up some antisemitic ideas in my head over the years and this exposure has really re-routed my view.' The marital abstinence explanation drove the most emotional response โ€” 'Brought tears to my eyes when the guy talked about his wife being like a new bride every month.' Cross-faith viewers dominated the top comments; Muslim, Christian, African American, and atheist viewers all used near-identical language: 'As a [identity], Iโ€ฆ' โ€” a format that signals the video broke through identity silos and prompted personal reflection rather than passive consumption.

Top comment themes

10 clusters surfaced

  1. 01
    Humorous reactions to whispered marital/menstruation explanation (~240 mentions, 15.8%) โ€” Naftali's lowered voice became a running joke
  2. 02
    Gratitude for respectful, non-judgmental documentary style (~160 mentions, 11.6%) โ€” repeated phrase: 'this is how people learn about other groups'
  3. 03
    Cross-faith solidarity: Muslim, Christian, African American, atheist viewers sharing personal resonance (~140 mentions across Muslim 4% + Christian/other threads)
  4. 04
    Personal connections โ€” Brooklyn locals, people who grew up near Hasidic communities, ex-neighbors sharing memories (~130 mentions, 9.4%)
  5. 05
    Admiration for the marital abstinence/mikveh cycle as relationship wisdom (~120 mentions) โ€” 'absence makes the heart grow fonder' framing
ยง04a

Audience pulse

How the audience feels โ€” a Net Sentiment mood score, how split the room is, and an early churn signal. All from the comments, not YouTube analytics.

+50Warmly receivedmood ยท โˆ’100 to +100
Mood (raw)
+50
before channel-norm adjust
Polarization
0.82
0 = uniform, 1 = spread
Divisiveness
0.22
is the room split?
Warmth
40%
warm / emotional tone
Analysed
3380
comments (confidence)
Churn signalnormal89 comments flagged dissatisfaction (2.6% โ€” channel norm 4.0%)
Emotional tone breakdown
  1. Warm
    39%
  2. Curious
    17%
  3. Excited
    13%
  4. Neutral
    11%
  5. Funny
    6%
  6. Angry
    5%
  7. Sarcastic
    4%
  8. Concerned
    3%

Net Sentiment Score over 3380 analysed comments; headline adjusted toward the channel norm (Bayesian, C=20). Polarization = normalised entropy. Comment-derived โ€” not YouTube analytics.

ยง04a

Audience composition

โ˜… algo-friendly ยท +50

Who actually showed up in the comments โ€” psychographic, topical and language mix. Computed deterministically from 3380 labeled root comments.

Identity signals

Who they are

  1. Devoted fan
    10%
  2. Debating
    9%
  3. Sharing a story
    8%
  4. Relating personally
    6%
  5. Found inspiring
    4%
  6. Mentions subscribing
    1%
Topic mix

What they talked about

  1. Culture
    48%
  2. Other
    35%
  3. politics
    4%
  4. relationships
    4%
  5. Travel
    3%
  6. Identity
    2%
  7. Food
    1%
  8. Language
    1%
Language mix

In which languages

  1. English
    96%
  2. other
    4%
Algorithm signal ยท proxy

How YouTubeโ€™s satisfaction model likely reads this

โ˜… algo-friendly ยท +50

YouTubeโ€™s 2025 discovery shift now weights satisfaction signals โ€” comment sentiment, tone, and depth. We canโ€™t see the model, but we can estimate its inputs. Directional only.

Positive ratio
61%
share of comments labelled positive
Curiosity share
57%
curious / nostalgic / warm tones
Critical share
4%
critical / sarcastic tones
Net satisfaction
+50
pos% โˆ’ crit%, โˆ’100..+100
ยง04b

Moments that landed

Key transcript moments โ€” tap a timestamp to jump to that point in the video.

0:52Interviewee's smartphone philosophy โ€” 'if you use it for positive things it's a positive thing' โ€” became a standalone quote comment with 186 likes.1:15Shloime's line 'if you're on social media a lot, you have a problem in your life' landed as a screenshot-worthy pull quote in the comments.2:00The gender separation in synagogue is explained not as a rule imposed from above but as a practical focus mechanism โ€” a reframe that defused a lot of incoming criticism.2:26The three-neighborhood taxonomy (Boro Park melting pot, Williamsburg/Satmar ultra-conservative, Crown Heights/Lubavitch outreach-focused) gives the episode its structural spine.15:33Host's closing line โ€” 'one of the most culturally stimulating days of my life' โ€” signals genuine affect rather than performed enthusiasm, which the comments reward heavily.16:08The genetic testing revelation lands as the episode's most contested moment, splitting comments between eugenics concern and Tay-Sachs clarification.
ยง04c

What viewers reacted to

Each comment theme mapped to the transcript moment that sparked it.

Humorous observations and reactions

At 0:20 the host says 'I need to try that sometime with my wife' about Shabbat; separately, Naftali's whispered explanation of the menstrual cycle and marital relations (in the skipped middle section) became the primary comedy moment โ€” comment #58 quotes him directly and #26 calls him 'so funny' for the whisper.

โ–ถ 0:20โ–ถ 1:07
Gratitude for respectful documentary

The host's own line โ€” 'one of the most culturally stimulating days of my life' โ€” signaled sincerity to viewers and was cited as evidence the creator wasn't performing neutrality.

โ–ถ 15:33
Personal connections to Hasidic culture

The neighborhood breakdown (Boro Park, Williamsburg, Crown Heights) gave Brooklyn locals specific anchors to connect personal memories; African American commenter with 1687 likes references Crown Heights directly.

โ–ถ 2:28โ–ถ 2:59
General positive feedback

Peter's 'wow blown away' outro cued short-form praise responses from viewers who mirrored his affect.

โ–ถ 15:44
Appreciation for community values

The 'Thanksgiving every six days' Shabbat framing at 0:13 was quoted or paraphrased in multiple comments as the single line that reframed the lifestyle most powerfully for secular viewers.

โ–ถ 0:13
Admiration for Jewish lifestyle

The Shabbat description and Shlomi's 'if you're on social media a lot, you have a problem in your life' line at ~1:07โ€“1:19 drove admiration among viewers who felt modern life was missing this structure.

โ–ถ 0:13โ–ถ 1:19
Praise for the series

The closing 'thank you for being brave' sign-off cued series-level reflection; viewers who had binge-watched all three episodes used this moment to post cumulative praise.

โ–ถ 15:46
High praise for documentary quality

Peter pulling the guide physically into frame ('get in here guys') and the informal warmth of the Crown Heights wrap telegraphed access-journalism quality that viewers contrasted explicitly with mainstream media.

โ–ถ 15:36
Critiques of religious control

The gender-separation explanation โ€” 'there's just no social interaction between men and women' at 2:15 โ€” was the primary trigger for critiques, though most commenters tempered disagreement with overall respect for the series.

โ–ถ 1:40โ–ถ 2:00
Debate on menstrual impurity

The ritual impurity framing (referenced in the skipped middle section, set up by the marital separation discussion around 1:40โ€“2:00) generated the most corrective comment thread โ€” Jewish viewers explaining the ritual vs. hygienic distinction, non-Jewish viewers pushing back on the word 'impure'.

โ–ถ 1:40
Muslim viewers noting similarities

The Shabbat description and the gender-separation practice both prompted Muslim viewers to note near-identical customs in Islam, making these the anchor moments for the interfaith solidarity thread.

โ–ถ 0:13โ–ถ 1:58
Concerns about genetic testing

The Dor Yeshorim explanation at 16:08โ€“16:27 ('each have ID number to make sure that the genetics match') was ambiguously phrased and immediately generated a clarification thread; the top corrective comment (300 likes) explaining Tay-Sachs disease became a secondary educational resource within the comments.

โ–ถ 16:08โ–ถ 16:25
ยง05

Friction points

All criticism โ†’

Severity ร— frequency โ€” ranked. Each point has an evidence quote and a concrete before/after suggestion.

Episode (and series) is too short โ€” strongest recurring demand is simply for moresev 2/5 ยท 6 mentions
โ€œThe only horrible thing about this videos is that they are too short, I love this seriesโ€โ†— view
FixEpisodes run ~16 min; viewers repeatedly ask for 5+ more and monthly cadence. Plan longer cuts or a recurring NYC-communities series rather than a closed 3-part run.
The 'spa' mischaracterization of the mikveh spread โ€” multiple viewers internalized the ritual bath as a literal spa/pampering daysev 2/5 ยท 5 mentions
โ€œI'm honestly kind of into the separation during your period. I would love for my partner to leave me alone for two weeks then go to a spa ๐Ÿ˜‚โ€โ†— view
FixA single corrective caption when the word 'spa' is used would prevent the recurring jokey misunderstanding of a religious ritual.
Critiques of gender roles / restrictions on choice โ€” a minority read the lifestyle as controlling or oppressivesev 2/5 ยท 4 mentions
โ€œto me it is quite ironic when people say they are oppressedโ€โ†— view
FixAsk a woman interviewee directly about choice/agency on camera so the 'oppression' read is answered in-frame rather than left to the comments.
Menstrual 'impurity' wording confused viewers โ€” 'impure' was heard as 'dirty' rather than 'ritually impure'sev 2/5 ยท 2 mentions
โ€œThe word "impure" means *ritually* impure, not impure like they're dirty. Also, men are also considered ritually impure if they have a seminal emission.โ€โ†— view
FixAdd a one-line lower-third defining 'ritual impurity (tumah)' when the term is first used, and note it applies to men too โ€” defuses the recurring menstruation debate.
On-camera factual errors went uncorrected โ€” interviewee mischaracterized the genetic-carrier screening (Dor Yeshorim) as 'DNA matching' and the mikveh as a 'spa' with an hour of soakingsev 3/5 ยท 1 mentions
โ€œwhat the guy at the end was saying about DNA testing and "matches," that's not what he meant... I don't know why he said that women who go to the monthly mikveh (it's not a "spa") spend an hour soaking before they do the ritual bath. Untrue.โ€โ†— view
FixAdd an on-screen text correction / pinned note for the genetic-screening and mikveh segments so the inaccurate 'DNA match' and 'spa' framings don't propagate (they already did โ€” see the spa jokes below).
No closed captions on Ep.3 (Eps.1 and 2 had them) โ€” locks out deaf/HoH viewerssev 3/5 ยท 1 mentions
โ€œWhy no closed captioning? It does have on first espiode and second espidode. Not this third?... I'm deaf. So I can understand what you guys were talking about.โ€โ†— view
FixUpload the SRT/CC track for Ep.3 to match Eps.1โ€“2; make CC a standard publish-checklist item for every episode.
ยงSp

Sponsor fit

Ready to pitch ยท 88/100

What a brand or agency would see evaluating this video โ€” which sponsors to pitch, why, what to charge, and what's safe.

This is a deeply loyal, trust-soaked audience: the top comment ('best channel I've found in years', 3,526 likes) and dozens like it (#1, #14, #72, #84, #100) signal parasocial devotion, and multiple viewers announce travel intent off the back of the video ('next time I visit Brooklyn I want to do the same' #29, 'look forward to visit Brooklyn' #52, 'I want to do one of these monthly' #97). They explicitly trust Peter's word over mainstream media ('more informative than any media outlet I've ever seen' #14), which means a host-read recommendation carries unusual weight. Ad tolerance is high โ€” this is long-form documentary, not snackable content, and the audience treats Peter as an authority, not an entertainer.

Integration rate
$32,000โ€“$48,000
60-90s mid-roll
Dedicated video
$52,000โ€“$78,000
full sponsored video
Basis: View count wasn't supplied, so this is anchored to the 3,380 comments โ€” for a channel of this size that maps to roughly 1.3โ€“1.6 million views, which is what the fee is built on (we value reach at about $25 per 1,000 viewers, the going rate for a host-read sponsor mention, which is higher than what plain ads pay because the host's personal endorsement converts far better). We then nudge the number up about 30% because this audience is exceptionally loyal and engaged โ€” the top comment alone has 3,526 likes and viewers are begging for more episodes โ€” and loyal viewers act on a recommendation far more than casual ones, so each view is worth more to a brand. In plain terms: a brand is paying for ~1.5 million highly-trusting people to hear Peter personally vouch for them, which is why an in-video mention lands around $32kโ€“$48k and a whole video built around the brand lands around $52kโ€“$78k.
Brands to pitch
โ˜… Ground Newsnews comparison appThe audience's headline sentiment is media distrust: 'more informative than any media outlet I've ever seen' (#14, 300 likes), 'how people learn... not just judging and by tv shows' (#2, 3,105 likes), 'not the movie' (#98). Ground News's entire pitch is 'see past biased media' โ€” this is its exact target buyer.
Incognidata-removal / privacyStandard sponsor for large explanatory/doc channels at this scale; the audience is privacy-conscious and admires the Hasidic 'create don't consume' digital-discipline theme (#35, #40, transcript 1:18) โ€” a privacy product aligns with that values frame.
NordVPNVPN / online securityThe default category sponsor for million-view documentary channels; broad-appeal, brand-safe, and the global audience (Morocco #22, Pakistan #117, UAE #6, Australia #8) maps to NordVPN's worldwide buyer base.
Saily (or Airalo)travel eSIMPeter is fundamentally a travel creator and viewers state cross-border travel intent ('next time I visit Brooklyn' #29, #33, #52); eSIM is the #1 travel-niche YouTube sponsor and fits a geographically scattered, mobile audience.
MasterClassonline learningThis audience self-identifies as learners โ€” 'one of the most culturally stimulating days of my life' (15:33), 'I'm always curious and intrigued by different cultures' (#84), 'educational' recurs across the 8.1% high-praise cluster. An education product matches their stated motivation.
Wisecross-border money transferThe comment base is strikingly international (UK, Morocco, Pakistan, UAE, Australia, Israel, Melbourne) โ€” a globally distributed audience that moves money across borders is Wise's core demographic.
Avoid
  • โœ• dating apps (Tinder/Hinge)The video's most-loved theme is intentional abstinence and anti-hookup culture; a viewer literally praises 'no porn, no... tinder' (#35, 201 likes) โ€” a dating app would directly insult the values the audience came to admire.
  • โœ• alcohol / gambling / sports bettingAn overtly faith-and-family audience (Muslim, Christian, Jewish, plus 'PG' family viewers) explicitly celebrating wholesome living would reject vice categories, and it risks the brand-safe halo.
  • โœ• crypto / get-rich-quick / hustle appsAudience venerates modesty, community and 'create don't consume' โ€” a greed-coded product clashes with the whole emotional premise of the video.
  • โœ• partisan / political advocacy brandsGiven live antisemitism and Israel-Gaza sensitivity in the comments ('scared for them because of recent events' #57, 'Free Palestine' #109), any politically-coded sponsor invites a comment-section firestorm.
How to integrate

Mid-roll host-read at a natural chapter break (e.g. between the Williamsburg and Crown Heights segments) โ€” this is a patient long-form audience that won't bounce on an integration, but a dedicated/full sponsor video only suits a values-aligned brand given the reverent tone.

Brand safety
Toxicity
Clean โ€” across 120 surfaced comments there is no profanity or hate; tone is overwhelmingly respectful, cross-faith ('love and peace for all and hatred for none' #4).
Controversy
Some โ€” the subject matter sits near live antisemitism/Israel-Gaza tension ('scared for them because of recent events' #57, 'Free Palestine' #109) and one off-topic conspiracy spam comment (#112); no FTC/disclosure or copyright-strike signals detected.
Audience conduct
Very on-topic โ€” ~95% of comments engage the actual content (gratitude, personal stories, theological clarifications); troll/spam rate is negligible (1โ€“2 stray political comments).
Sponsor evidence quotes
โ€œI've watched youtube for years and I think this is the kinda of content we need on this platform... Your channel is the best channel I've found in yearsโ€
โ€” 3,526-like top comment = peak parasocial trust, the asset a sponsor is actually rentingโ†— view
โ€œThis youtuber just made a more informative series than any media outlet I've ever seen.โ€
โ€” explicit media-distrust = direct buy signal for Ground Newsโ†— view
โ€œnext time I visit Brooklyn, I want to do the same and talk to them and find out moreโ€
โ€” stated real-world travel intent โ†’ eSIM/travel and VPN relevanceโ†— view
Algorithm read ยท what to do next 14 days

Push Hard Now ยท score 91/100

breakout
The next 14 days
  1. Day 1 (0-24h)
    Pin Historian212's clarification (#28) on the 'impure'/menstruation language and the genetic-carrier testing (Tay-Sachs), and add the missing closed captions to this episode.
    Directly defuses the two biggest debate clusters (menstrual impurity 7.0%, genetic testing 2.7%) and fixes the accessibility gap a deaf viewer flagged (#62).
    WatchReply volume on the menstruation/genetics threads โ€” should cool; CC view-through on first 48h.
  2. Day 2-3
    Post a Community tab poll asking which NYC community to cover next, seeding the top organic request ('Next do Arab New York' #73).
    Converts the loud 'more please' demand (#97 'monthly', #74 'hang out with Schlomi more') into a committed next-video audience.
    WatchPoll vote count and comment requests naming specific communities.
  3. Day 4-7
    Cut a Short/Reel from the marriage-abstinence segment (the 'every six days it's Thanksgiving' / mikveh explanation) and link back to this video.
    That single theme drew the most-liked specific reactions (#10, #19, #21, #30, #63, #66) โ€” it's the proven viral hook of the episode.
    WatchShortโ†’long-form click-through and the long-form's 7-day view bump.
  4. Day 7-14
    Drive the proven superfans to Patreon with a 'behind-the-scenes from the Hasidic series' post (pitched at 15:52), and tease a follow-up episode.
    Loyalty is exceptional ('best channel in years') and viewers explicitly want more โ€” monetize and re-engage them before the series goodwill cools.
    WatchNew Patreon conversions in the window and returning-viewer rate on the next upload.
Why it could lift
  • +Overwhelmingly positive sentiment (>85% of surfaced comments are praise/gratitude; the 11.6% 'respectful documentary' + 8.1% 'best on YouTube' clusters dominate)
  • +Extreme like-depth on top comments (3,526 / 3,105 / 1,687) signals high watch satisfaction the algorithm reads as a quality proxy
  • +Strong save/share intent โ€” viewers call it 'the best docu-series on YouTube' (#100) and binge all 3 episodes (#72, #79), driving session time
  • +Curiosity/educational framing (15.8% humor + heavy 'eye-opening/enlightening' language) keeps comment threads generative
  • +Series completion behaviour ('just binge watched all 3', #72, #79) lifts the whole playlist, not just this video
Why it might stall
  • โˆ’This is Ep.3 / the finale of a closed series โ€” multiple viewers note 'very sad this is the last one' (#113), so it lacks a forward hook into a next episode
  • โˆ’Length complaints recur ('the only horrible thing is that they are too short' #8, #80, #81) โ€” possible shorter watch-time ceiling than the demand implies
  • โˆ’Missing closed captions on this episode (#62) suppresses accessibility-driven retention that Eps 1 & 2 had
  • โˆ’Sensitive subject matter near live geopolitical tension could trigger uneven advertiser/recommendation treatment
  • โˆ’A few unanswered factual debates (menstrual 'impurity' 7.0%, genetic testing 2.7%) left uncorrected can spawn argumentative threads

Algorithm Signal is a proxy. YouTubeโ€™s satisfaction scores arenโ€™t public. Directional, not predictive.

ยง05

The audience asked & asked for

All questions โ†’

Unanswered questions and explicit requests from the comment thread โ€” fuel for the next upload.

Questions

14 unanswered

  • ?Can Hasidic Jews marry someone outside the religion or outside their sect? (~15 mentions, direct question repeated)
  • ?What actually happens at the mikveh โ€” is it really like a spa, what's the ritual, who attends? (~25 mentions after the whispered explanation)
  • ?What happens if someone wants to leave the community โ€” socially, financially, with children? (~20 mentions)
  • ?How does the Dor Yeshorim genetic testing program work exactly โ€” who runs it, what diseases, what if you're a carrier? (~18 mentions, many confused it with eugenics)
  • ?What are the real differences between Satmar (Williamsburg) and Chabad (Crown Heights) in daily practice? (~15 mentions)
  • ?How do Hasidic children handle secular education requirements โ€” do they go to public school at all? (~12 mentions)
  • ?How do Hasidic communities handle antisemitism and rising hate crimes โ€” do they feel safe? (~10 mentions, especially post-Oct 7 references)
  • ?What is the economic structure inside Hasidic communities โ€” how do people support large families? (~9 mentions)
  • ?Is there any path for outsiders to convert and join the Hasidic community? (~8 mentions)
  • ?How do younger Hasidic people feel about smartphones and internet โ€” is the divide generational? (~7 mentions, building on Shlomi's answer)
  • ?What role do women play in religious leadership or community decisions? (~7 mentions)
  • ?What happens during the two weeks of abstinence โ€” do couples sleep separately, is physical contact allowed at all? (~6 mentions)
  • ?Are there ~200 Hasidic sects as mentioned โ€” what distinguishes the main ones beyond Satmar and Chabad? (~5 mentions)
  • ?How does Chabad's global outreach program actually work โ€” who funds thousands of centers in 100+ countries? (~5 mentions)
Requests

8 explicit asks

  • askContinue the series โ€” more episodes, at minimum a Part 4 (~80 mentions; 'I demand one monthly', 'episodes are too short', 'I would watch 5 more')
  • askDo a similar series on Arab/Muslim communities in NYC (~20 mentions, top comment: 'Next do Arab New York!!')
  • askMore time with Shlomi specifically โ€” viewers felt his content was inexhaustible (~10 mentions: 'you need to hang out with Shlomi more')
  • askA women-only episode: interview Hasidic women about their daily lives, the mikveh, how they feel about gender roles (~9 mentions)
  • askGo deeper into Williamsburg/Satmar โ€” the more ultra-Orthodox sect got less screen time (~7 mentions)
  • askFollow up with the people already interviewed โ€” especially the young couple/Rivty, Naftali (~6 mentions)
  • askAdd closed captions to this episode โ€” the third episode lacked them unlike ep1 and ep2 (~1 direct request from deaf viewer)
  • askDo similar documentaries: Amish, Mennonite, other insular communities in the US (~6 mentions referencing the Amish series)
ยง06

What to make next

Three video ideas pulled directly from what the comments asked for.

โ„–01

Inside the mikveh โ€” interview Hasidic women about the ritual bath practice, the two-week cycle, how they actually experience it

TitleWhat Actually Happens at the Mikveh | Hasidic Jewish Women Explain
HookThe most misunderstood ritual in Judaism โ€” I went to find out what really happens
Why nowThe whispered marital explanation in Ep.3 generated more comment volume than any other moment and left dozens of specific questions unanswered; the audience is primed and the curiosity is acute.
โ„–02

Arab NYC โ€” same street-interview documentary style applied to Arab Muslim communities in Brooklyn or Dearborn

TitleArab Americans' Views on Family, Faith & Modern Life | NYC ๐Ÿ‡บ๐Ÿ‡ธ
HookI did three episodes on Hasidic Jews. Now I'm going to their cousins.
Why nowThe top comment with 53 likes is literally 'Next do Arab New York!!' and Muslim viewers were among the most engaged commenters, repeatedly noting how similar the values felt โ€” the demand is explicit and the bridge is already built.
โ„–03

A day inside Williamsburg's Satmar community โ€” the most ultra-Orthodox sect, which the guide called 'the most conservative group' but got the least screen time

TitleInside Williamsburg's Most Closed Hasidic Community | NYC ๐Ÿ‡บ๐Ÿ‡ธ
HookThe Hasidic sect that almost no outsider gets to see โ€” I got in
Why nowShlomi explicitly contrasted Satmar vs. Chabad and the audience noticed; multiple commenters asked about the difference, and the contrast with the more outreach-focused Chabad gives a built-in narrative arc.
โ„–04

Interfaith dialogue episode โ€” bring a Muslim and a Jewish person together on screen to explore the commonalities their communities flagged in comments

TitleJewish & Muslim New Yorkers Meet and Discuss What They Have in Common
HookEveryone in the comments said 'we're basically the same' โ€” so I put them in a room
Why nowMuslim viewers were the most prominent non-Jewish demographic in the comments and the 'so many similarities' theme hit 4% of all comments โ€” there's a ready audience on both sides and the emotional setup is already done.
โ„–05

Follow-up with people who left Hasidic communities โ€” what the decision looks like, the social cost, how they feel now

TitleWhy They Left | Former Hasidic Jews Speak Out
HookI spent three episodes showing why people stay. Now I wanted to understand why people leave.
Why nowCritiques of religious control were the 9th-largest topic cluster (7.1%); viewers who admired the community still asked 'but what happens if you want to leave' โ€” this is the shadow question hanging over the whole series.
โ„–06

Shabbat from the inside โ€” spend an entire Friday sundown to Saturday sundown embedded with a Hasidic family

TitleI Observed Shabbat with a Hasidic Family in Brooklyn | What I Learned
HookNo phone, no work, no internet โ€” I did Shabbat for 25 hours
Why nowThe 'Thanksgiving every six days' line generated a wave of 'I need to try that' comments; framing it as a personal challenge/immersion taps the format that drives the highest watch time and is a natural evolution from interview documentary.
ยง07

Creator action items

Concrete, testable changes for the next upload. Each cites a timestamp, a comment quote, or a metric โ€” and names what to watch.

Do 01

Add closed captions to Episode 3 (Eps 1 & 2 already have them).

Evidence#62 @ChocolatePeachCouple: 'Why no closed captioning? It does have on first... and second... Not this third? ...I'm deaf.'
Watch forCC usage rate and watch-time from accessibility viewers within 7 days; the complaint thread resolves.
Do 02

Pin a clarifying comment (or use #28) correcting 'impure' = *ritually* impure and that 'DNA matching' is genetic-carrier screening (e.g. Tay-Sachs), not eugenics.

EvidenceDebate clusters: menstrual impurity 7.0% and genetic-testing concerns 2.7%; #28 already drafts the correction (300 likes).
Watch forDrop in argumentative replies on those two threads; like-ratio on the pinned correction.
Do 03

Greenlight a 4th/follow-up episode in this community โ€” the series shouldn't end at Ep.3.

Evidence#97 'I demand you do one of these episodes monthly'; #29 'I would watch 5 more episodes'; #113 'very sad this is the last one'; three separate 'too short' complaints (#8, #80, #81).
Watch forNext-episode CTR and first-48h views vs. this episode.
Do 04

Build the next video around the marital-abstinence / mikveh theme (or feature that 'charming, well-spoken' guest again).

EvidenceMost-liked specific reactions all cluster on this topic: #10 (605), #19 (394), #21 (389), #30 (263), #63, #66; #60 calls the guest charming and well-spoken.
Watch forEngagement rate on the dedicated segment vs. episode average.
Do 05

Feature Schlomi/Shloime more โ€” viewers want extended time with that interviewee.

Evidence#74 'you need to hang out with schlomi more... so much more content there'; #40 quotes him as the standout line.
Watch forComment sentiment mentioning the guest by name on the next upload.
Do 06

Launch an 'Arab New York' episode as the next NYC community installment.

Evidence#73 'Next do Arab New York !!' (53 likes) โ€” explicit, well-liked content request.
Watch forPre-release request volume and the new episode's opening-day views.
Do 07

Offer an extended / longer cut (or Patreon-exclusive long version) to satisfy length demand.

EvidenceThree 'too short' complaints: #8 (702), #80 (49), #81 (49) โ€” unusually high-liked for a complaint.
Watch forAverage view duration on the longer cut; Patreon conversions if gated.
Do 08

Cut 2-3 Shorts from the series' best lines (e.g. 'every six days it's Thanksgiving', the whispered marital-relations bit) to recirculate the finale.

Evidence#32 (233) and #26/#58 highlight these exact moments as memorable; humor cluster is 15.8%.
Watch forShortโ†’long click-through and the back-catalog view lift over 14 days.
Do 09

Pin or heart the many in-community Jewish 'thank you for portraying us accurately' comments to reinforce authenticity for new viewers.

Evidence#5, #12, #39, #43, #49, #59, #71 โ€” insiders validating accuracy is the strongest trust signal for newcomers; gratitude cluster 11.6%.
Watch forNew-subscriber rate from this video over 14 days.
Do 10

Replicate the working title formula ('[Community]'s Views on [Intimate Topic] | NYC') for future community deep-dives.

EvidenceSeries framing drew 'best docu-series on YouTube' (#100) and binge behaviour (#72, #79) โ€” the format is validated.
Watch forCTR of the next title using the same structure vs. baseline.
Do 11

Add a chapter for the genetic-screening explanation so it isn't misread as eugenics.

Evidence2.7% of comments raise eugenics/incest fears; #28 shows the topic is widely misunderstood.
Watch forReduction in eugenics-themed comments on re-uploads/next episode.
Do 12

Surface a soft Patreon CTA earlier than the very end (currently at 15:52).

EvidencePatreon pitch lands only in the outro at 15:52, yet superfan intent is huge ('best channel in years' #1, 'gained a new fan today' #72).
Watch forPatreon sign-ups attributed to this video over 14 days.
ยงR1

Reply queue

Who to reply to first โ€” ranked by impact, with a ready-to-send draft in your voice.

@ChocolatePeachCouple ยท highโ†— view

Why no closed captioning? It does have on first espiode and second espidode. Not this third? I found your videos interesting and use closed captioning because I'm deaf. So I can understand what you guys were talking about.

Why: Accessibility complaint with a practical fix โ€” replying publicly shows you care about all viewers, and auto-captions can be enabled retroactively in Studio
Draft reply

Really sorry about that โ€” I just turned on auto-captions for this episode. If they're still not showing for you, let me know and I'll look into adding a manual SRT file.

@cadicorniche ยท highโ†— view

I am an African American man, who was raised in Crown Heights - my mother lived there until the day she died, at the age of 92. This video made me very emotional because I saw my 'friends' opening their hearts and homes and culture to the Internet world. Thank you, everyone.

Why: 1687 likes, deeply personal and emotionally resonant โ€” a reply here cements the cross-community thread that defines the whole series
Draft reply

This comment genuinely got me. Crown Heights neighbors for life โ€” your mother sounds like she was part of something really special there. Thank you for sharing this.

@nia.d33 ยท highโ†— view

I honestly had pent up some anti semetic ideas in my head over the years and this exposure to the people and culture has really re-routed my view. Think id have like to be born into this community , it seems wonderful.

Why: Exactly the impact these videos are meant to have โ€” calling it out publicly is both genuine and algorithmically viral; threads like this build channel reputation fast
Draft reply

This is literally why I make these videos. Honest comments like yours mean more than any like count โ€” thank you for being open enough to say it.

@Historian212 ยท highโ†— view

Thank you for making these videos. A couple of clarifications: what the guy at the end was saying about DNA testing and "matches," that's not what he meant. They're testing for carriers of certain genetic diseases that developed among some European Jewish groups because they lived in segregated communities for centuries. They want to make sure that both members of a couple aren't carrying mutations that might result in children who have these illnesses (for example, one is called Tay-Sachs disease).

Why: 300 likes and contains factual context that many viewers clearly needed โ€” acknowledging it publicly preempts misinformation spreading in the comments
Draft reply

This is a really important clarification โ€” thank you for taking the time. The Tay-Sachs context completely changes the picture and I wish we'd had more time to explain it in the video itself.

@fitpotato2081 ยท mediumโ†— view

Can Hasidic Jews marry outside of their religion?

Why: Unanswered direct question that dozens of people are probably wondering โ€” a short answer drives comments and watch time on the broader series
Draft reply

Generally no โ€” it's very rare and strongly discouraged in Hasidic communities. The whole social structure, from the matchmaking system to community ties, is built around marrying within. Worth a deeper episode though!

@lizzyjeanne ยท mediumโ†— view

Thank you for doing this. I am not Chassidish, but I am an Orthodox Jew and I live in Brooklyn. My family thinks I'm crazy for having become religious in my 30's. They don't understand what this world is like from the inside. They only know the Secular way of life. They don't understand that we really are like a big family.

Why: Personal story from an insider who became observant as an adult โ€” her perspective is rare and replying could spark a whole thread that drives series views
Draft reply

The "big family" thing comes through in every conversation I had โ€” you can feel it just walking around Crown Heights. Your story of finding it in your 30s honestly sounds like great documentary material.

@chaimrochlitz8523 ยท mediumโ†— view

Beautiful series, very well done!! I'm from the Hasidic community in Williamsburg and I have to say, you did an amazing job capturing the atmosphere and spirit from our town in a positive way.

Why: Community member from Williamsburg specifically validating the portrayal โ€” pinning or replying signals to other Hasidic viewers that the series has their approval
Draft reply

Coming from someone actually in Williamsburg, this means everything. Thank you for writing all of that out โ€” I learned things from your comment I didn't know going in.

@Dekets890 ยท mediumโ†— view

Next do Arab New York !!

Why: 53 likes on a short content request โ€” a quick reply keeps the 'NYC communities' series energy alive and seeds future video demand
Draft reply

It's on the list โ€” Astoria, Bay Ridge... NYC is full of these worlds within worlds and I've only scratched the surface.

@openbob6656 ยท mediumโ†— view

you you need to hang out with schlomi more i feel like there is so much more content there that needs to be told.

Why: Shloime was clearly a fan favorite โ€” acknowledging this publicly validates the connection and could tease a follow-up video
Draft reply

Shloime is one of a kind โ€” I felt the same way leaving that conversation. Might have to go back.

@goldyberkowitz5773 ยท lowโ†— view

As a Jewish women I just want to thank you so much for all your videos about us. The positivity in the comments are just amazing thank you to every kind person here!

Why: 577 likes from a Jewish woman directly thanking the creator โ€” a reply here closes the loop and makes the community feel seen
Draft reply

Thank you โ€” and honestly, the comment section on this series restored a lot of my faith in people. You should all be proud of how this community showed up.

@TheRj1986 ยท lowโ†— view

I have to complain about this episode.. It was to short!!

Why: Funny, relatable complaint โ€” a quick playful reply humanizes the creator and gets likes, low effort
Draft reply

This is both the nicest and most annoying complaint I've gotten ๐Ÿ˜… โ€” noted, working on it.

@_.Username.Not.Found._1 ยท lowโ†— view

I demand you do one of these episodes monthly

Why: Humorous demand with clear audience appetite for more โ€” a casual reply doubles as a subscribe/bell nudge
Draft reply

Demand received and being processed ๐Ÿ™ โ€” subscribe so you actually see it when it drops because the algorithm is chaotic.

ยงR2

Promo pull-quotes

Shareable social-proof quotes โ€” ready for thumbnails, community posts, or a sponsor deck.

โ€œI've watched youtube for years and I think this is the kinda of content we need on this platform, original and feels very realistic. Your channel is the best channel I've found in yearsโ€

@uttralcaroo6543 ยท sponsor deckโ†— view

โ€œThis youtuber just made a more informative series than any media outlet I've ever seen. This was truly interestingโ€

@GiDD504 ยท community postโ†— view

โ€œThis was a great series. This is how people learn about other groups by actually talking to people, not just judging and by tv showsโ€

@scarface416 ยท pinned commentโ†— view

โ€œI honestly had pent up some anti semetic ideas in my head over the years and this exposure to the people and culture has really re-routed my view.โ€

@nia.d33 ยท community postโ†— view

โ€œI am blown away by this series. I believe this is one of the very best things I have seen on the internet ever.โ€

@kemt411 ยท sponsor deckโ†— view

โ€œJust binge watched all 3 episodes, I have to say your way of interacting with the people you interview is impressive. Its so free-flowing and non presurred unlike most documentarys.โ€

@alexc812 ยท sponsor deckโ†— view

โ€œThat two weeks of abstention from physical contact between spouses each month, I gotta say, that's some genius level stuff right there for keeping the attraction in a marriage.โ€

@paxnorth7304 ยท thumbnailโ†— view

โ€œThis is literally the best docu-series on you tube! More please!โ€

@joshhand8498 ยท community postโ†— view
ยงR3

Clip & Shorts finder

Moments worth cutting into Shorts โ€” each with a title and a ready hook line. Timestamps link to the video.

[0:41] โ†—Hasidic man's take on social media addiction~45s
Hook"If you're on social media a lot, you have a problem in your life."
Shloime's smartphone philosophy cuts straight to a mainstream cultural nerve โ€” the @StonedSpagooter comment quoting this line verbatim got 186 likes, showing it resonated hard; feeds the digital detox conversation that's already trending
[1:40] โ†—Why men and women sit separately in synagogue~40s
Hook"If a man was sitting and praying and all of a sudden a pretty woman walks right past him..."
The separation-of-sexes explanation is one of the most discussed topics in comments; the candid, human framing ('human nature is human nature') is disarming and likely to spark debate in Shorts comments
[2:26] โ†—The 3 Hasidic neighborhoods of NYC explained~60s
Hook"So there's a big difference between the first neighborhood we started at and the second one..."
Compact geography lesson that functions as a teaser for all three episodes โ€” ideal for viewers who haven't seen the series and are deciding whether to watch
[0:13] โ†—Thanksgiving every 6 days โ€” the Shabbat pitch~30s
Hook"It's Thanksgiving every seven days, every six days."
The Shabbat-as-weekly-Thanksgiving framing is quotable, surprising, and warm โ€” comments show viewers universally responded to this concept; makes a perfect hook for reaching non-Jewish audiences
[15:33] โ†—"One of the most culturally stimulating days of my life"~25s
Hook"That's a one of the most culturally stimulating days of my life โ€” get in here guys."
Peter's genuine closing reaction is the emotional payoff of the whole series โ€” works as a standalone reaction clip and as a series trailer hook; authentic energy is hard to fake and viewers feel it
[16:08] โ†—Why Hasidic Jews do genetic blood testing before dating~50s
Hook"All the girls when they get to high school and all the boys โ€” they all get a blood testing."
The genetic matching explanation was the second-most debated comment topic (2.7% of all comments on 'concerns about genetic testing') โ€” a Short can surface the real medical reason (Tay-Sachs) that the @Historian212 clarification explains, turning controversy into education
The marriage reset โ€” why Hasidic couples stay attracted~45s
Hook"When she comes back it's like a new bride that you just married every month."
The @amymarie7403 comment about this (394 likes) and @paxnorth7304 'genius level stuff' (605 likes) show this is the single most emotionally resonant moment for outside viewers โ€” absence-makes-the-heart-grow-fonder framing plays across every algorithm
Muslim viewers react: 'We're basically the same'~35s
HookPull together Muslim viewer comment reactions over B-roll of the Crown Heights streets
4% of comments (Muslim viewers noting similarities) form an organic interfaith moment โ€” comments from @alib7651, @aminanoor6337, @mikaelchad, and @sherazhaider2577 all make the same point independently; a reaction-style Short tapping this thread would travel in both Muslim and Jewish communities
ยง08

Top comments

Explore all 3,380 comments โ†’

Verbatim โ€” the 5 most representative comments from the thread.

uttralcaroo6543โ™ฅ 3,526 ยท positiveโ†— view

I've watched youtube for years and I think this is the kinda of content we need on this platform, original and feels very realistic. Your channel is the best channel I've found in years

Why picked: highest-liked comment on the video โ€” names channel as best on platform
scarface416โ™ฅ 3,105 ยท positiveโ†— view

This was a great series. This is how people learn about other groups by actually talking to people, not just judging and by tv shows

Why picked: 2nd-highest โ€” articulates the documentary's core value proposition vs. media
cadicornicheโ™ฅ 1,687 ยท positiveโ†— view

I am an African American man, who was raised in Crown Heights - my mother lived there until the day she died, at the age of 92. This video made me very emotional because I saw my 'friends' opening their hearts and homes and culture to the Internet world. Thank you, everyone.

Why picked: highest-liked personal-connection comment โ€” local insider validation of authenticity
alib7651โ™ฅ 1,618 ยท positiveโ†— view

Being a Muslim and lived for a while near utrecht Brooklyn a place designated to orthodox jews, I really respect them following their ideological beliefs. What I most respectful about them is the remembrance of God. Love and peace for all and hatred for none.

Why picked: top Muslim-viewer comment โ€” the interfaith-bridge theme that runs through the thread
Historian212โ™ฅ 300 ยท mixedโ†— view

Thank you for making these videos. A couple of clarifications: what the guy at the end was saying about DNA testing and "matches," that's not what he meant. They're testing for carriers of certain genetic diseases that developed among some European Jewish groups because they lived in segregated communities for centuries... Another point: when the guy was describing the rules around married couples, he talked about women being impure if they're menstruating. The word "impure" means *ritually* impure, not impure like they're dirty... I don't know why he said that women who go to the monthly mikveh (it's not a "spa") spend an hour soaking. Untrue.

Why picked: the load-bearing correction โ€” fixes three factual claims the interviewees got wrong on camera
ยง08

Threads that sparked discussion

Explore all 3,380 comments โ†’

Top reply-magnet comments โ€” where the real debate happened. 0 replies across 0 roots ยท max chain 1 deep ยท creator replied to 0%

โ„–01 ยท @uttralcaroo65430 replies ยท โ™ฅ 3,526โ†— view

Iโ€™ve watched youtube for years and I think this is the kinda of content we need on this platform, original and feels very realistic. Your channel is the best channel Iโ€™ve found in years

โ„–02 ยท @scarface4160 replies ยท โ™ฅ 3,105โ†— view

This was a great series. This is how people learn about other groups by actually talking to people, not just judging and by tv shows

โ„–03 ยท @cadicorniche0 replies ยท โ™ฅ 1,687โ†— view

I am an African American man, who was raised in Crown Heights - my mother lived there until the day she died, at the age of 92. This video made me very emotional because I saw my โ€˜friendsโ€™ opening their hearts and homes and culture to the Internet world. Thank you, everyone.

โ„–04 ยท @alib76510 replies ยท โ™ฅ 1,618โ†— view

Being a Muslim and lived for a while near utrecht Brooklyn a place designated to orthodox jews, I really respect them following their ideological beliefs. What I most respectful about them is the remembrance of God. Love and peace for all and hatred for none.

โ„–05 ยท @tzipporahshmurak81670 replies ยท โ™ฅ 1,073โ†— view

As an orthodox jew, I am so amazed that there is someone willing to spread truth and love. Thank you! I really enjoyed these videos

ยง09

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โ„–08 ยท travel

DRIVING OVER THE PAMIR MOUNTAINS IN TAJIKISTAN ๐Ÿ‡น๐Ÿ‡ฏ

28k
views
344
likes
1.3%
engagement
17 years ago
Afghan Who Created Propaganda For USA ๐Ÿ‡บ๐Ÿ‡ธ๐Ÿ‡ฆ๐Ÿ‡ซ
โ„–09 ยท interview

Afghan Who Created Propaganda For USA ๐Ÿ‡บ๐Ÿ‡ธ๐Ÿ‡ฆ๐Ÿ‡ซ

77k
views
2.5k
likes
3.8%
engagement
4 years ago
America's Underdog City ๐Ÿ‡บ๐Ÿ‡ธ
โ„–10 ยท travel

America's Underdog City ๐Ÿ‡บ๐Ÿ‡ธ

1.9M
views
32k
likes
1.9%
engagement
2 years ago
Syrian/Ukrainian Refugee Finds Her Place in Kyiv, Ukraine (#4) ๐Ÿ‡บ๐Ÿ‡ฆ
โ„–11 ยท interview

Syrian/Ukrainian Refugee Finds Her Place in Kyiv, Ukraine (#4) ๐Ÿ‡บ๐Ÿ‡ฆ

31k
views
1.3k
likes
4.6%
engagement
8 years ago
American Moving To Ukrainian Village ๐Ÿ‡บ๐Ÿ‡ฆ
โ„–12 ยท travel

American Moving To Ukrainian Village ๐Ÿ‡บ๐Ÿ‡ฆ

167k
views
5.1k
likes
3.3%
engagement
8 years ago
What INDIA'S CHILDREN Can TEACH YOU ๐Ÿ‡ฎ๐Ÿ‡ณ
โ„–13 ยท interview

What INDIA'S CHILDREN Can TEACH YOU ๐Ÿ‡ฎ๐Ÿ‡ณ

75k
views
2.3k
likes
3.2%
engagement
6 years ago
Foreigner's Thoughts About IRAN ๐Ÿ‡ฎ๐Ÿ‡ท
โ„–14 ยท travel

Foreigner's Thoughts About IRAN ๐Ÿ‡ฎ๐Ÿ‡ท

61k
views
1.9k
likes
3.7%
engagement
7 years ago
BLM in the Whitest State in America - Vermont ๐Ÿ‡บ๐Ÿ‡ธ
โ„–15 ยท interview

BLM in the Whitest State in America - Vermont ๐Ÿ‡บ๐Ÿ‡ธ

488k
views
12k
likes
3.2%
engagement
NA
MY FIRST HOUR IN IRAN ๐Ÿ‡ฎ๐Ÿ‡ท
โ„–16 ยท travel

MY FIRST HOUR IN IRAN ๐Ÿ‡ฎ๐Ÿ‡ท

43k
views
782
likes
1.9%
engagement
NA
Living Off the Grid in Arizona Desert ๐Ÿ‡บ๐Ÿ‡ธ
โ„–17 ยท interview

Living Off the Grid in Arizona Desert ๐Ÿ‡บ๐Ÿ‡ธ

6.1M
views
78k
likes
1.3%
engagement
NA
The Most Underrated City | Kharkiv, Ukraine ๐Ÿ‡บ๐Ÿ‡ฆ(ัƒะบั€ะฐั—ะฝััŒะบั– ััƒะฑั‚ะธั‚ั€ะธ)
โ„–18 ยท travel

The Most Underrated City | Kharkiv, Ukraine ๐Ÿ‡บ๐Ÿ‡ฆ(ัƒะบั€ะฐั—ะฝััŒะบั– ััƒะฑั‚ะธั‚ั€ะธ)

497k
views
22k
likes
4.9%
engagement
7 years ago
The Mormon Settlers of Rural Arizona ๐Ÿ‡บ๐Ÿ‡ธ
โ„–19 ยท interview

The Mormon Settlers of Rural Arizona ๐Ÿ‡บ๐Ÿ‡ธ

876k
views
17k
likes
2.0%
engagement
NA
The Florida Nobody Knows ๐Ÿ‡บ๐Ÿ‡ธ
โ„–20 ยท travel

The Florida Nobody Knows ๐Ÿ‡บ๐Ÿ‡ธ

6.1M
views
94k
likes
1.6%
engagement
NA
Exploring New Orleans - America's Wildest City ๐Ÿ‡บ๐Ÿ‡ธ
โ„–21 ยท travel

Exploring New Orleans - America's Wildest City ๐Ÿ‡บ๐Ÿ‡ธ

2.9M
views
46k
likes
1.7%
engagement
NA
How These Hasidic Jews Can Save Your Life ๐Ÿ‡บ๐Ÿ‡ธ
โ„–22 ยท vlog

How These Hasidic Jews Can Save Your Life ๐Ÿ‡บ๐Ÿ‡ธ

675k
views
18k
likes
3.0%
engagement
NA
New York Cityโ€™s Hidden Corruption ๐Ÿ‡บ๐Ÿ‡ธ
โ„–23 ยท interview

New York Cityโ€™s Hidden Corruption ๐Ÿ‡บ๐Ÿ‡ธ

1.1M
views
24k
likes
2.2%
engagement
NA
Solution To Poverty In USA ๐Ÿ‡บ๐Ÿ‡ธ
โ„–24 ยท interview

Solution To Poverty In USA ๐Ÿ‡บ๐Ÿ‡ธ

317k
views
13k
likes
4.6%
engagement
NA
Meeting The Amish - First Impressions ๐Ÿ‡บ๐Ÿ‡ธ
โ„–25 ยท travel

Meeting The Amish - First Impressions ๐Ÿ‡บ๐Ÿ‡ธ

2.1M
views
42k
likes
2.3%
engagement
5 years ago
San Francisco โ€“ Whatโ€™s It Really Like Now? ๐Ÿ‡บ๐Ÿ‡ธ
โ„–26 ยท interview

San Francisco โ€“ Whatโ€™s It Really Like Now? ๐Ÿ‡บ๐Ÿ‡ธ

5.2M
views
87k
likes
1.8%
engagement
NA
Why Would You TRAVEL To "UNPOPULAR" COUNTRIES?
โ„–27 ยท personal_story

Why Would You TRAVEL To "UNPOPULAR" COUNTRIES?

15k
views
900
likes
7.2%
engagement
6 years ago
Life on the Edge of the Everglades ๐Ÿ‡บ๐Ÿ‡ธ
โ„–28 ยท travel

Life on the Edge of the Everglades ๐Ÿ‡บ๐Ÿ‡ธ

4.8M
views
53k
likes
1.2%
engagement
NA
MINSK, BELARUS Metro ๐Ÿ‡ง๐Ÿ‡พ(ั€ัƒััะบะธะต ััƒะฑั‚ะธั‚ั€ั‹)
โ„–29 ยท travel

MINSK, BELARUS Metro ๐Ÿ‡ง๐Ÿ‡พ(ั€ัƒััะบะธะต ััƒะฑั‚ะธั‚ั€ั‹)

149k
views
4.0k
likes
3.1%
engagement
6 years ago
THOUGHTS ON IRAN ๐Ÿ‡ฎ๐Ÿ‡ท
โ„–30 ยท travel

THOUGHTS ON IRAN ๐Ÿ‡ฎ๐Ÿ‡ท

34k
views
1.2k
likes
3.8%
engagement
10 years ago
Being A Muslim Woman In America ๐Ÿ‡บ๐Ÿ‡ธ
โ„–31 ยท interview

Being A Muslim Woman In America ๐Ÿ‡บ๐Ÿ‡ธ

422k
views
9.9k
likes
2.9%
engagement
4 years ago
Inside Chicana Lowrider Culture - LA ๐Ÿ‡บ๐Ÿ‡ธ๐Ÿ‡ฒ๐Ÿ‡ฝ
โ„–32 ยท interview

Inside Chicana Lowrider Culture - LA ๐Ÿ‡บ๐Ÿ‡ธ๐Ÿ‡ฒ๐Ÿ‡ฝ

6.0M
views
68k
likes
1.2%
engagement
4 years ago
The City Split Between Two Countries ๐Ÿ‡บ๐Ÿ‡ธ๐Ÿ‡จ๐Ÿ‡ฆ
โ„–33 ยท culture_comparison

The City Split Between Two Countries ๐Ÿ‡บ๐Ÿ‡ธ๐Ÿ‡จ๐Ÿ‡ฆ

2.8M
views
49k
likes
2.0%
engagement
9 months ago
Hanging With The Sikh Motorcycle Club Of America ๐Ÿ‡บ๐Ÿ‡ธ ๐Ÿ‡ฎ๐Ÿ‡ณ
โ„–34 ยท interview

Hanging With The Sikh Motorcycle Club Of America ๐Ÿ‡บ๐Ÿ‡ธ ๐Ÿ‡ฎ๐Ÿ‡ณ

1.4M
views
33k
likes
2.6%
engagement
4 years ago
Jodhpur, INDIA - What Tourists Don't See ๐Ÿ‡ฎ๐Ÿ‡ณ
โ„–35 ยท travel

Jodhpur, INDIA - What Tourists Don't See ๐Ÿ‡ฎ๐Ÿ‡ณ

134k
views
3.0k
likes
2.4%
engagement
6 years ago
Inside Biggest Cuban City In USA ๐Ÿ‡จ๐Ÿ‡บ๐Ÿ‡บ๐Ÿ‡ธ
โ„–36 ยท culture_comparison

Inside Biggest Cuban City In USA ๐Ÿ‡จ๐Ÿ‡บ๐Ÿ‡บ๐Ÿ‡ธ

272k
views
7.5k
likes
3.2%
engagement
5 years ago