This week, we try to understand an experience that 74% of Americans routinely report having. The first of many conversations (perhaps?). This one, an interview with Zvika Krieger. Support the show: searchengine.show To learn more about listener data and our privacy practices visit: https://www.audacyinc.com/privacy-policy Learn more about your ad choices. Visit https://podcastchoices.com/adchoices
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Go to viore.com slash pjsearch and discover the versatility of Viore clothing. When I was a kid, I believed in God, the Christian big guy in the sky God. My family wasn't hardcore about it, but we went to church on Sundays. When we kids resisted, we were bribed with donuts. I found Sunday school to be mainly confusing.
I understood the concepts of God and Jesus, but I remember having a lot of questions about the Holy Ghost, this character whose backstory the teachers never seemed to want to fill in. But I believed in God. I prayed every night. I prayed for a long list of everyone I hoped God would protect. Really, everyone I knew. My family, my friends, relatives, the souls of pets who had died.
I couldn't fall asleep until I had prayed. Always the same prayer, every night, until I turned 15. When I was 15, something terrible happened to someone I loved. After that, I only prayed that this one person would be safe. A month later, the same terrible thing happened to them again. And after that, I mostly stopped praying. At first, I think I was pretty angry, but the anger went away.
And then when it was gone, it just felt easier for me to live in a world where everything didn't happen for a reason. A world where when someone I knew got hurt, I didn't have to look for a lesson in it or imagine it as part of a plan. I kept getting older. I didn't think about God very much. But a couple years ago, I had a funny experience.
I was in the desert with a friend, and I had this feeling I'd never had before. It lasted for about a minute. Just this sense, like a physical sense, that the world might just be a shadow of a different world. a place that was more real or more true. It lasted for about one full minute, and then it passed. I did not rush off to start a new religion or join an old one.
I took what had happened with a grain of salt, but I also didn't discard it. It just left me with new questions. I know I'm not allowed to do a podcast called Is God Real? But I did want to try to understand what faith feels like to the people who have it. That question has really been sticking with me. I think I'll probably ask it a lot in the future to different people of different faiths.
But recently, I found one person who would let me pester them about it. Do you want headphones or no headphones? I don't think I need headphones. I might do no headphones too, Shruti. Is that okay with you?
Yeah, I'm listening. Tell me what you have.
For breakfast today, I had a smoked salmon avocado toast. This is Vika Krieger.
How do I describe this person? We met recently. He leads a progressive Jewish spiritual community in Berkeley called Chokmah Halev.
I really enjoyed talking to him, and I got the sense I could ask him a bunch of invasive questions about his faith, that I could ask him about God like I was a kid who'd never smoked weed, who wanted to know what weed was like, and that these questions would not offend him. So I invited him to search engine headquarters to ask one of those no questions too big.
So my plan today, like the sort of roadmap I'm imagining for this conversation, I want to talk about your early life. I want to ask you about what your relationship to faith has been like, how it's changed, how you were dragged kicking and screaming into rabbidom, rabbidom. Rabbidant. Rabbidant.
And then I want to see if I can get a sense of like how it feels to believe as someone who doesn't particularly believe.
I brought one of my favorite books on the topic.
Oh, really?
So that you can see the title.
Like Catching Water in a Net. It's a book about how to describe God. Oh, really? Yeah, so it's like, this is the title. That's great. Okay, so we're doing something impossible today. Yeah. Okay, so can you just tell me about your life before you decided to become a rabbi? Like even as a kid, did you believe in God?
Well, so I grew up in Los Angeles primarily. And I would say I definitely believed in a version of God as a kid, for sure. That sounds not too different from the version of God that you described growing up, even though I grew up Jewish. And so I grew up Orthodox Jewish. which means on the very observant and very traditional end of the Jewish spectrum.
My parents got married when they were very young, like 19, early 20s, and divorced a year later. I was born in that one-year period. Wow. My mom stayed in LA and my dad moved out and eventually landed in Israel. And so my mom is what maybe you would just call like regular Orthodox or like centrist Orthodox.
And my dad is ultra Orthodox or you call like Haredi or Hasidic, like where they with the hat and the beard and the garb and all of that. And so. So like Williamsburg Orthodox.
Oh, yeah. Yeah, exactly.
And so, I mean, there's nuances, but, you know, lost on people.
What are the nuances?
Well, I think there's like different, like the garb may look the same, but I think there's like different theologies around it within those communities, but subtle. And so I grew up primarily in LA. And when I was younger, I would go back and forth between that LA Orthodox world and then the ultra-Orthodox world with my dad.
Those were the formative experiences of my childhood, particularly when it came to religion, but my life was religion because I lived in this insular Orthodox community.
So you're in Los Angeles, but it's like a very strict upbringing, like a strict religious upbringing.
Yeah, like, you know, only eat kosher food, which means that like you can only eat in restaurants that are like certified kosher. I don't think I knew a non-Jewish person until I went to college. Oh, wow. Like I, you know, kept strict Shabbat, which means for one day out of the week, no electricity, no money, no phones, no screens, no driving. So like, you know, borderline Amish, I would say.
And is it like, I want to say excuse my ignorance, but if I say that, I'm going to have to say it so many times in this interview. So just as a blanket consideration, please excuse my ignorance. Like, you know, I said like Williamsburg Orthodox, like in Brooklyn where I live, it's sort of this thing that people always find remarkable when they move here that
Williamsburg, Brooklyn, which has a reputation as being both a hipster neighborhood but also an expensive neighborhood, there's one portion of Williamsburg that is just Orthodox Jewish. And when you are driving, all of a sudden you just hit it. And it's like a lot of people... in the same community, living the same way.
Was it like that in Los Angeles where you're in a distinct community where everyone's following practices or is it more dispersed?
I would say it's a little bit more dispersed, but there's a couple of neighborhoods where you're driving through Beverly Hills, you're on Rodeo Drive, you're passing by Prada, And then you take a left turn onto Pico, and then all of a sudden, all the storefronts are in Hebrew. All the women are walking around with wigs and long skirts.
So it's got that Williamsburg-esque vibe, but it's a little bit less in your face. And I would say, and I would say this is probably pretty formative to who I am, is that people are like, oh, my God, you grew up Orthodox. And I say, yeah, but I grew up L.A. Orthodox. And what does that mean? So I think there was like a little bit more permeability, right?
Like in Williamsburg, you'd think like if a kid grew up in Williamsburg, it's like, oh, they've got this kind of like super austere Orthodox upbringing, but you got hipsters, you got clubs and coffee shops. You'd think that some of that would permeate in. But in Williamsburg and other of these like ultra Orthodox neighborhoods in New York,
the gates are pretty high like you don't really get much of that culture in whereas where i grew up like i definitely you know by the time i got to high school i would go out to like punk shows on hollywood boulevard i would go to raves out in like the deserts around la i would go surfing on weekends with my friends and so none of that would happen if i grew up in williamsburg
And when you're experiencing punk shows and raves, particularly like, was that okay? Or was it like you're sort of like stepping out?
You know, when it comes to Orthodox Judaism, maybe religion more broadly, there's sort of two pieces. There's like the letter of the law, like what are you allowed to do? What are you not allowed to do? And then there's like the cultural pieces of like what is culturally acceptable and culturally layered on top of it. And so
There's nothing wrong with going to a punk show, according to the laws of Orthodox Judaism, but it may be frowned upon from like a culturally conservative perspective. And I think in LA, you know, there's still a lot of that judginess, but there's a little bit more of an acceptance of, okay, like you can sort of play in both worlds.
So like I would go to a punk show, but I'd always keep my head covered. Probably didn't wear a yarmulke to a punk show, but like wear a baseball hat or a beanie or something like that. Or like, I wouldn't eat anything there because the food there wasn't kosher.
Or if I was out all night partying at a rave, like I would make sure to be back in time for sunrise so that I could pray the like morning prayers.
And did you feel like you were moving between worlds? Did those things feel cohesive to you?
I think that I definitely had a little bit of a sense of subversion, like, oh, look at me, I'm a badass. I'm like doing these things. But I also, I don't know, I can't quite put my finger on why, but I felt a sense of integration. I was just like, okay, like there's no paradox here between like doing this, you know, going to a rave and being an Orthodox Jew.
And I kind of reveled in my ability to move between those worlds and not feel attention.
I've realized a question I meant to ask you really is like, and you've answered it, but was, did you feel ashamed? And it sounds like you didn't feel ashamed. It felt like exciting or normal or correct.
I mean, I think that, I mean, I definitely was like a type A overachiever in high school. And I think that part of my ability to move between those worlds is like... I was really hardcore on the Jewish front, right? And so I was super into everything. I was in the top Talmud class, studying the best freaking ancient Aramaic legal codes that you can imagine. I was like,
valedictorian of my school and, like, all of that. And I was, like, bleached hair and baggy JNCO jeans and, like, you know, as one does in the 90s. And, like, I think there were people whose system would overload at the contradictions and, like, would look at me and be like, I can't fit this guy in a box. And I was just kind of like...
whatever, like I like doing all these things and there's nothing mutually exclusive. And I think there's something also interesting about like growing up Orthodox in that I, you know, I learned fluent Hebrew from the time I was a kid. I learned Aramaic and I was studying the text, the Torah, all the legal codes. from a young age in a way that I had direct access to them.
I didn't need a gatekeeper. Someone could be like, you're not allowed to do that. I'll be like, show me where it says that in the text, or I'm going to open up the Talmud and find the place where it talks about this and be like, well, it doesn't say that in here. I think that for a lot of people who don't have that direct access, they need it mediated through a gatekeeper.
Generally, those gatekeepers have a culturally conservative agenda. And so like, oh, no, you're not allowed to do that. And I'm like, well, it doesn't say it in there. So I'm going to do it.
Right.
So there's kind of there's this quote, I think is Audre Lorde, who said, you can't dismantle the master's house with the master's tools. I'm gonna be really embarrassed if it's not. I think that's right. And like, I kind of was like, well, like, I guess maybe sometimes you can add the tools. The masters gave me the tools to dismantle the house.
And so, okay, so at this point, you're like, you're able to live in different worlds. And the god that you're imagining is the sort of like... classic God, like God in the sky watching.
Yeah, old man on a throne in the sky, long beard, kind of wagging his finger at you, recording all of your good and bad deeds in a book, and you're praying to this person just like you were sharing. And so, yeah, that was definitely the God that I believed in as a kid.
And what was your relationship like to that God?
You know, it's funny because people assume that if you're Orthodox or if you grow up really religious, you have a very close relationship with God. Yeah. And that was not my experience growing up because there was so many rules about what it meant to be an observant Jew, right, in terms of ethics. Everything about what you eat, literally how you get out of bed, which shoe you put on first.
First, it's the right foot and then it's the left foot. And there's like all these things. Well, this is like, you know, the Jewish version of it. And now as an adult, I can see how much of it is based in like post-Holocaust trauma, OCD. I remember always growing up being like, this feels like OCD. And now I'm just like, oh, yeah, that's like not a coincidence.
Like, when people spend so much of their life having their agency taken away from them and, like, being abused and traumatized, the way they deal with that is by creating these incredibly specific rituals for every aspect of your life. You've got to wake up, and before you do anything, you have to wash your hands, and there's a certain way that you do it.
Two scoops on the left, two scoops on the right, and then there's a prayer that you say before you do anything, and then which shirt sleeve do you put on first? Which pant leg do you put on first? And so, like... And it's for every part of your day, like literally every step you take, you're thinking about, okay, what's the Jewishly prescribed way of doing this?
And it's almost like there's no room for God. And like, yes, in theory, you're doing all these things because you think that that's what God commanded you to do and that's what's going to make God happy. But you almost forget about that because like you're just so focused on all the rules that you're keeping. And so my life was deeply infused with Judaism.
Like every moment of my day was infused with Judaism. But God was weirdly absent, except for this hovering background figure that's keeping a tally of, did I put the right foot off the bed when I woke up in the morning?
When you said college is when you start to split somewhat from the exact rituals and beliefs of your childhood?
You know, I think it was like a slow progression. Like I'd say to this day, I'm still quite traditionally observant. And a lot of the rituals that I kept back then, I still keep today. For example, like I keep a pretty strict Shabbat from sundown Friday to sundown Saturday. Like I don't use my phone. I don't use the internet. I don't drive. I don't use electricity. I don't use money.
So I do a lot of things regularly. from when I was growing up, but the intentionality behind it is much different. And the relationship of that act to God is very different. And definitely going to college was a big part of that. I mean, I grew up in this insular world.
Then there's like sort of tradition in my community that after you go to high school, you go spend a gap year in Israel studying in Yeshiva, a Jewish school. study, school, institution, seminary. I went to Israel for a year and I just literally from 7.30 in the morning till 10 o'clock at night, I just studied Talmud all day long, which is obscure Jewish Aramaic legal codes.
I can't imagine studying anything that much.
It was when I started drinking coffee for the first time, for sure. But like, I mean, it does boggle my mind when I look back to being like, holy shit, how did I spend so many hours a day studying what these, you know, first century, second, third century rabbis were saying about your ox gored my ox and who pays who what under what conditions? I was like, As like an 18-year-old.
And what were you getting out of it? Like as an 18-year-old you, like what is happening in your mind while you're doing that?
I think part of it was like it was just what was done in my community. It is very intellectually stimulating.
How come?
We all have those friends that graduated college and were so excited to go to law school because they wanted to study torts. I don't even know what they're called, but those weird leather-bound books that have all the legal theories in them. That's probably the closest parallel where you basically, the Talmud is basically a transcription of esoteric debates and arguments between rabbis.
And one rabbi will put forward a position, another will argue it, and they're basically using the Torah as like a proof test. Like, well, I think the Torah says this. It's like, no, I'd interpret the Torah this way. And so there's something kind of intellectually satisfying about like deconstructing an argument, following a debate.
and also doing it in ancient Aramaic in a book that has no punctuation. And so, like, there's something cool almost about, like, decoding these texts.
That makes sense. So it's, like, it's very intellectually stimulating, and it's, like, the Netflix algorithm of experiences would be, like, four fans of debate club and arguing.
Absolutely. Yeah, totally. Yes, that's exactly right. But I will say that, for me, and I don't want to judge other people, but, like, for me, there was exactly zero spiritual fulfillment in that task. But, like... This idea of spiritual fulfillment, that wasn't really part of my vocabulary growing up.
I mean, it's probably not part of most teenagers' vocabularies, but this idea that religion would be nourishing in some way, that wasn't why we did it. And so going to college, leaving my world, all of a sudden being surrounded by other kinds of Judaism, more mystical versions of Judaism, more embodied forms of Judaism, I was just kind of like... huh, okay, like that is interesting to me.
And like being able to pause and ask questions of like, why are we doing this? And who are we doing this for? And like, definitely the questioning started then and continued well into my twenties. what does that period of questioning look like? Yeah, I mean, college again was like this interesting time.
I went to Yale, which was like a total mindfuck for me, being this cloistered Orthodox Jewish boy who went to only Orthodox Jewish schools, basically only knew Orthodox Jewish people, all of a sudden to a college campus where I was like, You know, and in my community, highbrow secular reading was People magazine. People didn't have like the New Yorker. Oh, hell no.
I never heard of the New Yorker until I went to college.
But that's so weird. I mean, just to say, like, whatever, different transmissions reach different people and places and mean different things. But why People magazine?
Stars just like us. That was my favorite part of People Magazine. Like the highbrow families had Newsweek. Okay. But yeah, it was just like not a very intellectual milieu. And so like anything that I learned was like books that I had read on my own. And... Then I went to college, and it was so embarrassing because there were so many words that I had never heard said out loud.
And so, like, I'd only read them, and I'd be in seminars with kids who went to, like, Exeter and Tote and, you know, all these, like, fancy prep schools. And I would, like, mispronounce words all the time, and people would always laugh at me.
I always feel like just to defend people that mispronounce words, I'm always like, all that means is that you read a lot. Totally.
But I think there's like something about like growing up in a cultural milieu where like people have intellectual conversations.
Yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah.
Like I thought the word panacea and panache were the same word.
I can imagine that getting you embarrassed at Yale.
Yeah. And so but but, you know, it was definitely like my intellectual horizons were like totally broadened. But like I still prayed three times a day. I still studied Talmud with a friend like two hours a day. I still kept Shabbat and kosher. So like I had this sort of cultural mind blowing moment. But then I also like kind of kept doing my thing.
Yeah. And it didn't, again, it was like you were able, I'm so used to hearing stories where the, a very familiar arc of a very familiar story for me is person grows up in cloistered, intense, religious community. And then, you know, it's almost like, Every culture loves a conversion story into itself.
And so like, as a progressive intellectual type, we love the story of like, I was very religious, but then I read The New Yorker and I blah, blah, blah, blah. But your story, the way you tell it is, I was very religious, I found more experiences, I found more things to read and think about, but I was able to bring with me where I came from in a way that didn't feel painful or confusing.
Yeah. And like maybe partially attributed to my upbringing in L.A. where there wasn't this like strict binary of like either you're this way or you're this way. But it was the sense of like if these practices are meaningful, you can keep doing them and do other things that don't conflict with those practices. Right. But have you ever heard of the concept called the second naivete?
No.
It's this like French philosopher, Paul Ricoeur. He kind of like traces a version of that arc that you just traced, but it's got a slightly different twist to it, which is like the first naivete is like you grow up and you learn about the God in the sky and you pray to this God to do good things for you, da-da-da-da-da-da.
And then there's, like, a second phase, which is, like, it all comes crashing down. And you have this realization or you learn, like, holy shit, like, all this is bullshit. Religion is constructed by all these people with nefarious agendas. Like, screw this. Then he has this thing called the second naivete, which is, like, okay, like... Yes, religion is invented by people.
Yes, there is no old man in the sky. And there's still value in a lot of this stuff, right? And I'm going to choose to believe a lot of this stuff in a way that is more suited to a grown-up sensibility of what exists and what doesn't exist. But I'm not going to throw the baby out with the bathwater. There's a way that you can opt in to that world that sort of meets you post-crash.
Right. Like a way to not become one of those like internet atheists that's like constantly being like, oh, the flying spaghetti monster or whatever. They can't imagine that the human desire for belief in something larger or a spiritual existence is anything but like a dumb trick played on dumb people by the people who would manipulate them.
That there might be something valuable or real about that impulse, even if you don't sign on to it. whatever you grew up with.
Totally. And like a lot of my 20s and 30s was about like updating my conception of God and then looking back on my life and the practices and the way I kind of live my life as an observant Jew and saying, okay, like which of these still resonate, which of these don't resonate and like what aligns with this conception. And actually like a lot of it does align.
It's funny as you talk about this stuff, one of the things that makes me realize is that In my existence, as the identity categories I belong to or don't belong to or flit in between, I'll have days where, I don't know, in the last few years, I feel like I spend not a lot of time, but some amount of time being like,
you know, like, progressive, liberal, like, left, whatever, where I'm like, where do I fit in here? Where don't I fit in here? Like, how much does it matter to know where I fit in here? Like, how much is a tribal question versus an intellectual one versus values one? You've had to do that sort of internal maneuvering with faith.
Totally. Yeah. There's a famous rabbi who said like, the people I socialize with, I can't pray with and the people I pray with, I can't socialize with.
And you relate to that.
Yeah. And I think that I definitely relate to that. And I think that that's like to the extent that I quote unquote left orthodoxy, though I like to pretend that I haven't really left orthodoxy. But to the extent that I've left, it was actually more for like social reasons and that like the people in those communities tended to be more socially conservative and that's politically conservative.
And just like not into the kind of stuff that I was into and tended not to be like particularly interested in the world, particularly interested in things beyond their sort of parochial bucket list. bowl that they lived in. And then like, I'd go hang out with like my cool friends who were like into all the things I was into, but they're just like, oh, religion? Like, that's weird.
Like, why are you keeping Shabbat? God? And so I'd say that like that tension in my 20s is what kind of led me down into this spiritual leadership route, because I was just like, I mean, there was still a long ways to go until I got there. But it was a sense of like, well, I don't fit in here. I don't fit in there. I guess I kind of got to create for myself what I want.
Coming up after the break, before Zvika becomes ordained as a rabbi, we chart how being both spiritual and unusual can lead someone to perhaps the strangest professional path I've ever heard a person describe. That's after some maths. Search Engine is brought to you by Rosetta Stone. There's a lot of reasons to learn a new language.
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Terms and restrictions apply. See site for details. I don't even know how to handle this in the context of an interview. Like, one of the things I have to do is, like, take complicated lives and simplify them in a way that is not untrue but is legible.
And you've had such an interesting, like, life path that I'm not... Like, can you give me, what is your quickest, dirtiest pencil sketch of your professional life from college to rabbi?
Yeah, I mean, I'd say probably, like, the headline is ADHD. LAUGHTER But, okay, the quickest, dirtiest sketch is, you know, graduate college, become a journalist, work in Newsweek in New York. Because I spoke Arabic, they send me to the Middle East. I become their Middle East correspondent, lived in Egypt and Lebanon for a couple years.
move to DC for the first time, work at the New Republic for a couple years, work at the Atlantic for a couple years, work as a writer, editor, all sorts of different things, work at a Middle East think tank, work in the Defense Department, work at the State Department.
And then John Kerry, who was the Secretary of State at the time, was like, hey, like, all this stuff is happening in Silicon Valley. And like, it's like really affecting policy. And we don't have anyone whose job it is to like, Build relationships with Silicon Valley. And I was running the innovation lab at the time at the State Department.
Okay.
for Trump. And so I taught at Stanford. So I studied design as an undergrad. So I went back and I taught in the design school at Stanford. And then I got hired by the World Economic Forum, like the Davos people, to set up a hub for them in the Bay Area focused on ethical tech, responsible tech. So I did that for a couple of years.
And then Facebook hired me to be their first ever head of ethics, director of responsible innovation. What was that one like? You know, it's definitely the job title that gets the most snickers. And when they reached out to me, like when the recruiter first reached out to me, he referred to the job as chief ethics officer at Facebook. And I just, and I burst out laughing.
And I was like, this sounds like an Onion article. But, you know, eventually what, and I spent a lot of time like talking to like all the people I'd be working with. I was like, okay, like this actually sounds like it's legit. But I love the job, you know, despite all the sort of snickers of people. I didn't like, they're like, oh, you did a really good job. Yeah. And I was like, yeah, okay, fair.
I didn't totally transform the business model there and zero out any harm that was being caused in the product. But I built a 40-person team there, and we reviewed hundreds of products before they were released, actually pretty early in the product development process. And we were able to sort of figure out or like anticipate like how might these products harm people.
And like I found the engineers and the product managers to be quite like well-meaning and being like, oh, wow, like we hadn't thought about this, right? It's not their job to think about or it's not their mindset to think about. Like you don't wake up every morning being like, how is this thing that I'm working on going to harm people, right?
Yeah.
So like having a team that is their job, like it actually made it a lot easier.
And did you – Again, forgive me this naive question, but you're in a job that involves thinking through ethics and morality. The part of you that you would consult when you're trying to solve a problem there, was it just like you yourself? Were you thinking about, you know, Talmudic disputes about ox scoring in Aramaic for many centuries ago?
How did your faith and your job doing moral reasoning for a tech company, were they involved with each other?
Yeah, I'd just walk into a meeting with Mark Zuckerberg, open my Talmud, and just be like, Mark, it says it right here in the Talmud. You've got to change the newsfeed algorithm. No, I mean, it's interesting because I think actually when they recruited me, I'm just like, first of all, I just want to let you guys know that I'm not a very ethical person. We're like, that's okay. Even better.
But I'm not like a conceptual ethicist. I have no professional background in ethics. Right. I don't come with like frameworks for like ethical reasoning and things like that. But basically, like the first thing that I really tried to impart to people was like, number one, like it's generally not right versus wrong.
Like generally, it's not like, you know, either we launch this product and it brings us lots of revenue and more clicks, but it might cause a genocide in Myanmar. You know, like it's not like those types of trade-offs. It's more like, hey, like we could do end-to-end encryption for all of our messaging, which is great for privacy and everybody's like really being the drum on privacy.
But that means we don't have access to any of the content in those messages. And there might be proliferation of all, you know, human trafficking and child pornography and terrorist extremist groups. So it's like, that's a trade-off, like optimize for privacy or optimize for safety.
Yeah.
And like, being able to surface that and sort of frame it in a way where it's like, what are we going to optimize for? And so it wasn't really my job to tell people what the right answer was, even though most people wanted me to just tell them, they're like, what should we do?
And I'm just like, well, like, let's actually frame up what the tradeoffs are and help you make an intentional decision about what you're going to prioritize.
But it's funny, I mean, that does sort of sound like I have not often sought spiritual guidance in my life. I'm not trying to say you were a spiritual leader at Facebook, although that's like a great movie idea, but more like you were doing what I've found people do, which is like they, rather than being like, here's what you should do, they'll say, here's what you might consider.
Well, it's interesting, because of course, I had to be like, very careful, like not to like bring religion into the room with, you know, like, I'm not going to like proselytize people, you know, but like, I think there was this sense that it was spiritual work. And like, people would often like jokingly call me like Facebook rabbi.
You know, they would just be like, hey, Rabbi, I need some advice, you know, on this stuff. And so, and I do think there is like a link between how I practice now as a rabbi and how I practiced like the responsible innovation work I did at Facebook, which is like, even now, like in a spiritual leadership role, people come to me all the time and they're like, what should I do?
You know, my husband's having dementia and I want to put him in a nursing home because I still want to live my life. Like, what should I do? And I'm like, it's not my job actually to tell you what the right thing to do is. It's like, I can help you frame up what values are at play here.
Yeah.
I will walk beside you and give you some tools, give you the confidence to trust your own moral compass, but I'm not going to like loan you my moral compass.
Yeah. But people want that.
Oh, totally, yeah. And especially engineers. They're just like, dude, we got lines of code to write. Yes or no, what should we do?
Did you ever just give them a straight yes or no? No. No.
But I think maybe it's also just something that is... part of my constitution in that I just grew up around so many rabbis who just constantly told people what to do that I'm just like, it's not my jam. I'm not here to tell people what to do. Okay, so Facebook ethicist. Yeah.
then what happens so like i had these two i like praying with these people i like to socializing with these people but like i feel like there's nowhere where i can like pray and be spiritual with the people who i actually like so i just like started like doing a lot of my own like pop-up stuff you know like putting together like prayer services like in my living room in my backyard just kind of like experimenting and i'm like i grew up orthodox i know how to do this shit you know like
It's funny. It's also you're taking the ethos of DIY scenes like punk and raves. You're like, we can just throw a show. We don't need an organization here.
And like a lot of it, because also I spent a lot of my time in my 20s. I took like a little detour. I never like left Judaism, but like meditation and mindfulness became really important to me.
because as I mentioned I have very severe ADHD it's not just like my career is ADHD I have very severe ADHD and like the only and like medication did not work for me it gave me like horrendous headaches and so the only thing that really worked for me was meditation and so I got like really into meditation in my 20s and like mindfulness was really important to me and like embodiment
became really important for me. I know that's kind of like a buzzword. What do you mean when you say embodiment? Yeah, it's kind of like a new agey phrase. I live in Berkeley, so I need to like translate. Yeah, I got to translate like some of the lexicon. But like, I don't know. I'm guessing you can relate to this. But like, I spent a lot of time in my brain
A lot of time like thinking and mulling things over and like intellectually is like the way that I engage with the world mostly. And I just like at a certain point realized that like that wasn't really serving me and that like I needed not that I should stop doing that as if that's even possible. But I need to spend more time like in my body.
not just thinking all the time, but just experiencing and being and moving. And so meditation was really helpful for that. But I got really into dancing, which had always been part of my life, starting with the like mosh pits in the punk scene and then moving into like the electronic music. All these embodiment things started just being a really important part of like my spiritual practice.
But then I realized like, hey, I want to like fuse all of this together. Like I've got the traditional parts of Judaism that still really speak to me, the ritual, the practices, the liturgy. And then I've got mindfulness and meditation and I've got embodiment. Like how can we bring that all together? And part of it was also this learning journey that actually Judaism itself
I mean, and by the way, so does Christianity and Islam. Like, they have these ancient embodiment mindfulness traditions that have been sort of sanitized in a post-enlightenment sort of rationalist Western European world for Judaism and Christianity in particular. So I just kind of wanted to bring all these things together. And so I was like, oh, like, I'm going to like...
do stuff like this, you know, in my living room. And like, I think there are like a lot of people who like grow up more progressive and they're kind of wary to do sort of radical things in a religious space because they're like, oh, well, that's not authentic and that's not real or that's not okay. And I'm just like... dude, I grew up in the Orthodox world.
I know the emperor has no clothes like over there also, right? Orthodox Judaism is just as constructed as whatever we could construct as well. And so I think there is this conception, especially from people who grew up outside the Orthodox world, Moses got the Torah at Mount Sinai and then, like, passed it down and, like, basically was living as an Orthodox Jew.
Like, Moses had those, like, side locks and a black hat and a beard, you know. And then, like, Judaism had been practiced like that all the way down to Orthodox Jews today. And anything more progressive was, like, a deviation. But, like, I guarantee you if Moses came alive today and walked into an Orthodox synagogue, he'd be like, what the fuck is this?
Like, what religion is this?
This is not the religion I got at Sinai. Right.
A few years ago, Zvika started attending rabbinical school. His time there coincided with a chapter of personal crisis in his life, a divorce, burnout. He took a break from full-time work to focus on parenting his child. And ultimately, he'd end up in the job he has now, leading services for a Jewish spiritual community in Berkeley.
Basically, there was this community in Berkeley that was started 30 years ago. It's called Chochmat Halev, which means wisdom of the heart. And it started as a Jewish meditation center.
Okay.
And it was a bunch of what we call boo-Jews. Buddhist Jewish people? Yes. Okay. Which there's a sizable population of Bujus, of Jews who were just like, oh, Judaism's really not spiritual enough for me. I'm going to go to Eastern religion. Which was like, even though Judaism has a pretty long lineage of meditation and mindfulness practice, it was never mainstream in Judaism.
It's certainly not in modern history. But there are practices that you can go back to. And so there was this movement of folks who wanted to reclaim mindfulness and meditation and contemplative practices. And so they created this center. But it's been around for about 30 years and it's slowly evolved into like being more of like a traditional synagogue. Don't tell anyone.
Where they have like prayer services and bar mitzvahs and weddings and like things like that.
So you ended up in a place where even though you didn't want to be a rabbi in a synagogue, you're a spiritual leader who has now graduated rabbinical school in a spiritual community that has synagogue like tendencies.
Yeah, synagogue adjacent. Yeah.
But you feel like you have a practice that fits with your own contradictions or things that maybe don't feel like contradictions anymore, but perhaps once did.
Well, yes. And like what I, I promised myself when I, when I went to rabbinical school, but even more so when I took on this job, I promised myself that I would not have a rabbi persona, that I would not have like my rabbi persona and my like friend persona or like private persona. I know so many people who are in spiritual leadership who live sort of these double lives.
Yeah.
I was like, I don't want to do that. And I don't have the energy for that. And like, I don't think it's good for people. Like, I don't think it's good for the people in the community and it's not good for me. So I was just like, I'm just going to be myself. Warts and all.
And like, if anything, like I would like to be a role model for people to be like, hey, look, that guy who's up there on the stage, like giving the sermon, like look how flawed he is. And he's up there on the stage, like being a spiritual leader. That means he's like valuable and worthy as a person. And so if he can be up there doing that, like I can also be lovable.
because of all my flaws and all the ways in which I fall short and I'm still a work in progress and have not figured things out at all.
But isn't it strange? I mean, look, I'm on the side of flawed people, honesty, uncertainty. But even to me, it's surprising that People often go to spiritual places for answers. When people are showing up with questions and you're like, the answer is, I don't know.
It's not just that I don't know, it's that it is okay to have those questions. You don't actually need the answer to that question. It is okay to be living in this place of uncertainty and confusion and not knowing, and I want to validate you for that. That is actually, I think, often more powerful than giving people the answers.
You're saying that a question can be as valuable as an answer.
Yeah. And like not knowing, like, I mean, so much of my personal practice has been releasing the expectation of knowing. And it's just like, oh, like you're confused. That means you're right. Like certainty is actually the wrong place to be. And like, listen, I'm exaggerating a little bit. There is Jewish wisdom out there on a lot of questions.
And I do have access to a lot of that wisdom because of the like decades I spent studying all these ancient texts. And so I do try to sprinkle in things from the texts. But I will say like there is a lot of Jewish wisdom about not knowing and mystery and surrendering control. I was reading your sermons. I was struck by a couple things.
I'm so excited to hear what you have to say because, like, generally I'm, like, preaching to the converted.
I'm not the converted.
Yeah, and so I'm so curious, like, because I don't write them in my, like, people who are, like, wouldn't be kind of, like, a captive audience. And so I'm so curious what comes out.
Well, the first thing, and I was, like, perhaps this is just my boundless narcissism, but I was surprised reading some of what you'd written because I thought, oh... Part of the job you're doing is less far away from the job that I try to do than I thought, where it's like you're telling stories, you're choosing stories that already exist, you're trying to contextualize
the experiences people are having and give them something that might help them make meaning out of it. Like, there was a sermon where you were talking about it was as simple as, hey, like, everyone's going home for the holidays. People are going to have difficult conversations with family members.
You were relating an experience you'd had where you'd, like, made comments that were, like, about Israel-Palestine that were sympathetic to Palestinians, and you had, like, more hardcore, like, pro-Israel people who had said hurtful things to you. And I thought, like... oh, this is a kind of sense-making and meaning-making that I understand. And that surprised me.
I mean, that is like when people ask me what is the role of being a rabbi, I'm not just saying this because you said it. Like the number one answer I say is meaning making. Like it is helping people make meaning. It's like helping them as they're like navigating their lives with a certain level of unconsciousness.
It's like helping them pause and be like, how do I make something that feels mundane feel meaningful? And it can be through a teaching. It can be through a prayer experience. It can be through rituals. Totally meaning making is my job.
But then there was another type of sermon, and this is where I was like, oh, religion requires a level of familiarity with texts that I don't have, where it would just be about, you know, stories from the past, stories from Scripture. That's the part that I can never... It always feels impenetrable to me. It always feels like a TV show that is on its 15,000th season.
And everybody's like, oh, season one, this thing happened. And everybody says it means this, but I think it means this. And I understand the pleasures of textual analysis, and I understand the pleasures of looking at a story and trying to see it differently. But that was the part where I thought, oh, this is just a culture that's not my own.
Yeah, I mean, it is interesting how much I take for granted people's familiarity with like just the general contours of the Torah or the Bible. You know, just the other day I was just like, oh, that's going to story of like the binding of Isaac. And someone's like, what's that? I'm like, you don't know the story where like Abraham was commanded by God to like sacrifice his only child, you know?
And they're like, no, I've never heard that story before. I'm like, right. Yeah. I live in this, like, little bubble. Like, of course, The Binding of Isaac.
But... Well, and do you... Okay, The Binding of Isaac, which is a story that, as you start to describe it, I do know that story. When you're making a decision in your life or confronting something confusing or painful that's happened, are you, like... Oh, the Binding of Isaac.
Does it? Right. I mean, I think that, I don't know if this is the question behind your question, but it's the question that I'm hearing is why am I returning to the Torah as this like book of wisdom, right? Like, and, you know, the traditional answer to that question is the Torah was written by God.
right and so like if you want to you know and like a kind of the way it's often talked about in jewish tradition is it's like it's like a blueprint for the world and like a sort of instruction manual for how to live your life and there are parts of the torah that are very much instructions like eat this don't eat this wear this don't wear this so that that stuff's kind of clear if you believe in it but then there's like lots of stories like the binding of isaac or like the exodus story or whatever and it's like well what are why are those in there at the very least
These are stories that have been passed down from generation to generation, and they are like in the DNA of anyone who's in the world of Western civilization and including Christianity and Islam. So like, first of all, the fact that they have been passed down, like there's this kind of buzzword these days of like ancestral wisdom.
And it's just like, yeah, this book has been around for like a really long time. So even if you don't believe God wrote it, like there's something there, you know? So I think it's like worth exploring. Then even if you don't think that it's inherently valuable, it has shaped our society. That you can't disagree with. So looking back at it with a critical eye and being like, what is here?
What is this text and what wisdom can be mined from it? It feels like a worthwhile endeavor.
Yeah. It's funny, I had a moment in my life where things were more challenging than usual. It was the only time where I found that when I read or thought about stories from the Bible I'd grown up with as a kid, I found myself more attracted to them and it wasn't because I felt more faith or less faith.
I think it was the feeling of like people in the past lived lives that were harder to make meaning out of because death was everywhere and things were more senseless. And the stories that those people had used to survive then might be more valuable because I don't know, making sense of modernity can feel hard, but it's not hard like plague is hard. You know what I mean?
Totally, totally. Yeah. And I think that, first of all, I think that's an important context for like when that book was written, right? But I also think the core tension, right, of being a quote unquote religious person is like the God that is portrayed in these religious texts is like not a very appealing God.
It's just kind of like, you have a God who gets angry, you have a God who gets jealous, you have a God who feels kind of petty, actually, in the Torah, and you're just like, how is this supposed to be the bedrock of a faith? This is God that's actually such an unappealing character. It's like going to see a play where the main character is really unappealing.
It's kind of how I feel about White Lotus. I kind of hate that show. I'm just like, there's no appealing character in this whole show. So the Torah is kind of like White Lotus in that way.
But it's also the text that you have to use.
Right, well, the way that I navigate that is that the God of the Torah is not God. The God of the Torah is a character. It's a God character that was like created by humans, but it's not God.
And I would say that there's an inherent contradiction, and I'll say in Judaism, it may be true in other religions, I'm just less of an expert in other religions, that like Judaism has these sort of two paradoxical sort of truths, which is that like... We have the God of the Torah that is very much a human-like figure that has feelings and does things.
But then there's like it's very clear in the Jewish sort of tradition, the Jewish law, whatever, that like you are not allowed to personify God. You are not allowed to anthropomorphize God. Like God is not a person.
Right.
God is not a being, God is not separate from us in any way. It's this paradox of like, wait, this resonates. I think for a lot of modern people, this idea that God is not a person or a sentient being in any ways is like, okay, that can square that with the world as I see it. But then what the fuck is this very human like God in the Torah or the Bible or in the Koran or whatever? Right?
And the only way to really square that circle is like, that is actually like a God projection. That is actually like a human creation of God that is not God. Right. It's a God character.
Right. It's like we've made something in our image rather than something making us in its image.
Right. You know, and it's like a useful jumping off point to have a conversation about God, but it's not, that is not God because you can't, God does not have human form. So like, how can you talk about God in that way?
Coming up after one more short break, we get to the question that brought us here today. Okay, what does it actually feel like to believe in God? At least for this one person. That's after some ads for companies. Search Engine is brought to you by NetSuite. What does the future hold for business? Ask nine experts and you'll get 10 answers. Bull market, bear market, rates will rise or fall.
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Portfolios managed by Fort Washington Investment Advisors, Inc., custodial services provided by Apex Clearing Corporation. All investing is subject to risk. Terms apply. Learn more at meetfabric.com. So what is it like for you to just live everyday life with a belief in God? How are you having a different experience than me?
So I was joking with you before that there's this book that I love that talks about the challenge of like explaining the experience of God. And it's called Catching Water in a Net, which is like it's so hard to talk about. So I'm going to try to talk about it. I appreciate it. And so the first thing I want to say is like I don't spend all day every day thinking about God.
Okay.
Right? And in the Jewish sort of spiritual tradition, like, that's okay. There is this practice called dveikut, which literally means like cleaving or connecting. And it's like, we always want to be deepening our awareness and our connection to God. But like, that's something that you drop in and out of. Probably the best analogy is mindfulness.
Yes, you could be a Buddha on a mountaintop somewhere and just be fully mindful 24-7. But actually, for most people, it's like, I strive to have moments of mindfulness in my life. And those moments kind of inform the rest of my life, but I'm not just sitting in lotus position all day.
But sometimes you are, in this analogy... there's times where you do feel like you're getting a clear connection or a clear signal.
And so to answer this question, I kind of have to tell you like what I think God is. That's fine. I'm going to come out of the closet and tell you what I think God is. You know, so like in Jewish spiritual tradition, God is like, it's going to be so hard to say things that don't sound like completely woo and sort of out there. You have blanket permission. Permission to be woo. Yes.
So in Jewish tradition, the shortest way to sum it up is like God is oneness. That like everything that ever was, is, and will be, the sum total of all of those things is God.
Okay, so it's like an immolation of self as part of it.
Absolutely. And this concept of dvekud, of cleaving, is like when you feel totally subsumed in the oneness. That's the sort of goal, right? And God is an English word and a Christian word. It's not a Jewish word. And the word for God in the Jewish lineage, it's a four-letter word that you can't pronounce. Some people call it the ineffable name. And it's like some people...
clumsily pronounce it in english yahweh i don't know if you've heard that yeah yeah because those are the it's it's the like four letters they're like all vowels and like you can't really pronounce them but like first of all there's something cool about having a name of god that you can't pronounce which like really gets at the fact that it's this kind of like intangible mystery and not like a person yeah like a being
But the word for God, which I can't pronounce, is actually an amalgamation of the Hebrew words for was, is, and will be. If you mush all those words together, it'll create the word for God. So God is essentially like everything that is, was, and will be. So when you ask me, like, how do I experience God? How do I connect with God?
To me, it's how can I plug into that awareness that everything is one, that we are all connected, not just like we all people, but like everything in existence is connected and not just like everything currently in existence, but like everything that was in existence, everything that is and everything that will be is like one. All of that is connected.
You can either think of it as like there is a life force that flows through all those things or just like all of those things mushed together are God.
And when you're describing that awareness, is it an intellectual idea, an emotional idea, a physical feeling? Like at a peak experience of that awareness, what is happening inside your mind or inside your heart?
Yeah, it's a great question. And, like, I remember asking this question to one of my Spirochips teachers because she was like, okay, your homework for this month is every day I want you to spend 10 minutes meditating on the oneness of existence. Sure. And, like, when I heard the assignment, I was like, okay. And then, like, I sat down on my first day. I'm just like...
okay, like, what do I do now? Like, one, okay, everything is one. Everything is one. Everything is one. And then, like, of course, like, I went to that intellectual place. I'm like, what does that mean, everything is one? Does that mean that we're, like, literally connected? Like, glue? Like, is it something flows through all of us?
And so, like, there is, like, a way in which you can grapple with that intellectually. But for me, once I sort of moved past that intellectual piece of it, there is a felt experience of it. If we are all part of, like, one entity that is God, we always all belong.
And there is just this, like, beautiful sense of peace for me that just kind of, like, descends on my body when I'm feeling kind of on the outs or sort of, you know, not belonging, this sense of, like... Oh, we're all part of this. Like we're all in this together. All the sort of distinctions kind of fall apart.
That's like one way in which I definitely like experience God is when I allow myself to relax into that awareness.
And so it's the way you're describing it. It's like a place you can go sometimes with stillness and contemplation.
Yeah. That's kind of how I experience it.
Yeah. Yeah. That's really beautiful. I mean, it's like, I feel like people talk about oneness and unity and like trying to get away from the self. And I understand those things. But I guess I hadn't connected it to a feeling of belonging.
Totally. Yeah. And it's so core in the Jewish teachings, or at least in like the mystical, spiritual teachings that like I've really gravitated towards. It's funny because people ask me, where do you encounter God most in the world? I've really thought about that. Honestly, the place where I most encounter God is on the dance floor.
Really?
Yeah. And it was like kind of cheesy, but like there's this moment when you're dancing and like, I don't know, I particularly like electronic music. I don't know if it's true in other genres of music where you're just like on the dance floor and you were just like feeling the music.
Like it is just like vibrating inside of you and then you just look around and everyone else is just feeling it, right? Because you're all dancing to the same beat. You might be dancing in different ways and some people are like more subtle and some people are bigger movements and that, but you're all dancing to the same beat and it's just like...
ooh, like I feel connected to everyone on this dance floor because we are all in it and we are all feeling it. That's oneness. So that's the place where I most feel connected to God. Maybe the other place is like when I'm surfing.
Really?
Yeah. I generally go surf at sunrise and there's this moment where like, the world is all dark and then you see the beginning glimmers. I'm on the West Coast, the sun does not rise over the ocean, but you just see the glimmers of the morning light sparkling over the water. I actually don't feel connected to God when I catch a wave.
I feel when I'm just kind of like floating and you kind of like the waves kind of come and it almost feels kind of like the heartbeat of the earth. And it's just like, oh, there's just this kind of like steady presence connected to something bigger that I can just relax into. So those are like maybe, as I think about it, like two places where I definitely feel God.
I'm always encountering studies suggesting that Basically, if you can believe in God, in many ways, you're likely to be happier. And it's like, well, that's great. But like, it's not the type of thing you could rationally persuade yourself into doing. It's like, what advice would you have for someone who doesn't believe in God?
Like, what are the things from your practice that you think a non-believer could still benefit from?
I was talking to my friend Adina this week, who's a spiritual leader here in Brooklyn. And we were talking about this whole idea of like believers versus non-believers. And we were saying how that doesn't feel like the right way to divide the world between like atheists and believers or like people who believe in God and people who don't believe in God.
It's people who think about the nature of existence and people who don't. you know, a lot of people ask like, do you believe in God? My version of that question is I start with, what do you believe in? you know, in every spiritual tradition, there are hundreds, if not thousands of ways to define God.
And I think that in essence, you can find a definition of God in some spiritual tradition that resonates with what you believe in, in terms of the nature of existence. But that means you have to be like curious about like the nature of existence. Why are we here? What's happening in the world beyond what can be explained by science? You have to be interested in asking those questions.
It's funny, I mean, I know your bent is towards not being prescriptive, but I do think the advice I would take from that or what I take from that is that perhaps more important than whether somebody has faith or doesn't have faith or what they have faith in, I do think it's pretty important to wrestle with larger questions.
Because I think if you don't, you end up just being stuck with the small ones. Like your life just kind of becomes, am I happy today? Was I happy yesterday? Will I be happier tomorrow? Will I get this? Will I lose this? And sometimes things go really well and sometimes they go really poorly.
But it's almost like there's larger questions about existence or refuge because they give you a larger timescale of meaning than whatever's happening right now.
Totally. Yeah. I mean, like, people ask me, like, well, like, why do you believe in God? And I'm like, because I like to. It nourishes me. It gives my life meaning. It gives me an impetus to sort of grapple with these questions, right? I don't believe in God because I feel like I have to. It actually brings meaning to my life.
Yeah.
But I also, like, I don't want to just punt on your question because I can give a more specific answer of, like, what I recommend. Like, I'm a big fan of prayer. And you might be like, wait, what? Like, if someone doesn't believe in God, the prescription you're going to give them is prayer.
And, you know, to me, like, I like to say, you know, there's that phrase, like, dance like nobody's watching or whatever. So I like to say, like, pray like nobody's listening. Yeah. So there's two parts of it. One is just stating what you want, like verbalizing and allowing those words to come out of your mouth actually has a positive impact.
People who verbalize what they want feel more of a sense of hope. Yeah. Then number two is I really do find a lot of power in this idea of surrender. Yeah. Just like, oh, there's something I really want and one solution is to just work my ass off and grasp and really try and get that thing. Then there's another strategy, which actually in the strategies are not mutually exclusive.
You can say, actually, this is totally not within my control to get and I'm going to surrender my ability to make this thing happen. And there is something perhaps counterintuitively really helpful, for me at least, to just be like, yeah, I'm going to just put this out there and surrender my sort of exclusive control around making this happen. And so prayer to me has those...
two components to it. And that's one genre of prayer, which is wanting things to happen. There's also a whole other genre of prayer, which is around gratitude, which I find really powerful. And if you're a more traditional person, you're thanking God for giving you these things. But then if you don't think of God as a person that gives and doesn't give things, there's still a value in being like,
I'm so grateful for, you know, for all the things that I have in my life and to get specific about it and to, on a daily basis, connect with gratitude. So, you know, it can take on a different flavor depending on what your conception of God is, but I think that anyone can benefit from a prayer practice. That's not what I expected you to say and I like it.
I also just like, it's funny, this year we've sort of been collecting advice from people and I would not have predicted at the beginning that where we would be sort of a year in is like, consider prayer and surrender.
The world is so fucked that the only thing left to do is just surrender. It's a piece of the equation. It's not the whole recipe, but I think it's an important practice. Zvika, thank you for talking to me about this.
Thanks so much for having me. When I spoke to Zvika, I was having a nice week. The week after was more challenging. And I found this conversation playing back in my head. During the tough week, I had this feeling that I forgot I have sometimes, which was a little jealous of people who are able to believe. It's a funny kind of jealousy.
There are so many things you get to choose, how to behave, who to spend your time with. But if you choose to believe in something, I'm not sure what you have really is belief, or if it's belief, it's not the kind of belief I'm jealous of. But Zvika had told me the two things someone like me might take from someone like him were prayer and surrender.
You could try saying what you hoped would happen, or you could try letting go of your ability to control it. Sometimes I think, for those of us who don't believe, we make this mistake, that if no one's in control, we have to be. Maybe that's wrong. This week, I'm trying to surrender. I'll let you know how it goes. Search Engine is a presentation of Odyssey and Jigsaw Productions.
Search Engine was created by me, PJ Vogt, and Shruthi Pinamaneni, and is produced by Garrett Graham and Noah John. Fact-checking this week by Holly Patton. Theme, original composition, and mixing by Armin Bazarian. Our executive producers are Jenna Weiss-Berman and Leah Reese-Dennis. Thanks to the team at Jigsaw, Alex Gibney, Rich Perrello, and John Schmidt, and to the team at Odyssey, J.D.
Crowley, Rob Morandi, Craig Cox, Eric Donnelly, Kate Hutchison, Matt Casey, Maura Curran, Josefina Francis, Court Courtney, and Hilary Schaaf. Our agent is Oren Rosenbaum at UTA. Follow and listen to Search Engine with PJ Vogt now for free on the Odyssey app or wherever you get your podcasts. Thank you for listening. We'll see you next week.
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