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Episode #146

#146 - Ari Shaffir

October 13, 20112:28:40
Ari Shaffir
Ari Shaffir

Ari Shaffir (born February 12, 1974) is an American stand-up comedian, podcaster, actor, writer, and producer recognized for his provocative humor that frequently examines taboo subjects, personal vices, and societal hypocrisies through a skeptical lens. After growing up in an Orthodox Jewish family and studying at a yeshiva in Israel, Shaffir graduated from the University of Maryland with a degree in English and moved to Los Angeles to launch his comedy career, initially working as a doorman at The Comedy Store. He gained prominence through stand-up specials such as Passive Aggressive (2013), Double Negative (2017), Jew (2022), and America's Sweetheart (2024), alongside hosting the storytelling series This Is Not Happening on Comedy Central. From 2011 to 2023, Shaffir produced and hosted Ari Shaffir's Skeptic Tank , a podcast featuring interviews with experts and individuals to probe human motivations, pseudoscience, and experiential narratives. Shaffir's unapologetic approach has sparked controversies, including a 2020 video on social media deriding the death of Kobe Bryant, which prompted backlash from celebrities and fans but was upheld by Shaffir as emblematic of his boundary-pushing style unbound by public mourning rituals. Ari Shaffir was born in New York City to parents of Romanian Jewish descent, with his father, Nat Shaffir (born Nathan Spitzer in 1936), a Holocaust survivor who lost 32 family members and emigrated to Israel before settling in the United States in 1961. The family initially adhered to Conservative Jewish practices during his infancy and early years in Greensboro, North Carolina . At around age nine, the Shaffirs relocated to Silver Spring, Maryland , where they adopted Orthodox Jewish observance, transitioning from a more lenient approach to stricter adherence to halakha (Jewish law). This move immersed Shaffir in a Modern Orthodox environment, characterized by daily Torah study , Shabbat observance, and communal isolation from non-religious influences to preserve piety. The Orthodox framework emphasized ritual discipline and ethical rigor, fostering a worldview centered on divine covenant and moral absolutism , though it also highlighted tensions with broader American secular culture evident in Maryland's diverse suburbs. Shaffir grew up in an Orthodox Jewish family in Kemp Mill, Maryland, part of Montgomery County, after earlier relocations from New York City and Greensboro, North Carolina . He attended Jewish day schools and Hebrew academy during his formative years, immersing him in religious observance and community traditions. He completed high school in nearby Rockville, where exposure to broader social dynamics began introducing tensions between his insulated upbringing and external influences. Following high school, Shaffir studied briefly at Yeshiva University , adhering to strict religious study, before transferring during his sophomore year to the University of Maryland, College Park . There, he earned a bachelor's degree in English literature in 1999, shifting focus to arts courses including screenwriting . This transition marked a pivotal departure from religious orthodoxy, as the secular campus environment—characterized by diverse ideologies and personal experimentation, such as marijuana use—clashed sharply with his prior god-fearing lifestyle, prompting initial doubts about inherited doctrines. At the university, Shaffir engaged with prevailing campus subcultures, including leftist-leaning activism and intellectual debates, but these encounters fueled rather than reinforced dogmatic adherence. Assigned initially to political science coursework, he observed ideological rigidities akin to those in his religious background, leading him to question unchallenged assumptions across spectrums.

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Joe sits down with Ari Shaffir.

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