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Celebrity attorney Jeffrey W. Steinberger is the founder and senior partner of The Law Offices of Jeffrey W. Steinberger in Beverly Hills that handles personal injury and employment law issues. His firm was the largest litigator in the landmark $50 billion dollar Mass Tort Vioxx trial, the $4.9 Billion Breast Implant trial and the $3.9 Billon Fen-Phen trial, the three most significant litigation's in United States history.
Jeffrey W. Steinberger is a Hard-Hitting Legal Analyst who does not hesitate to get to the core of the issue at hand. His articulate and aggressive manner has made him a sought after T.V. Legal Analyst and Commentator for all the major network news shows (i.e. CNN, FOX, MSNBC, CBS, NBC, ABC, CNBC, Showbiz Tonight, Entertainment Tonight, Access Hollywood, Inside Edition).
Jeffrey W. Steinberger has garnered World-Renowned Media Attention for his personal accomplishments, as well.
The son of a Jewish history professor and grandson of a Jewish political icon grapples with his identity in a pre- and post-October 7 world.
A blisteringly honest, laugh-through-the-pain one-person show, Jew, Interrupted returns to Los Angeles after its acclaimed run at the Hollywood Fringe Festival last June. Ethan Stanislawski returns to bring audiences a no-holds-barred personal journey through mental health, family legacy, cultural contradiction, and what it means to be Jewish both before and after October 7.
Jew, Interrupted unfolds in seven raw, riveting chapters that delve into everything from post-Holocaust trauma to psychiatric malpractice, from sibling rivalry and chaos during a childhood trip Israel to finding unusual methods of processing grief— all stitched together with biting wit, intellectual rigor, and emotional vulnerability.
Part memoir, part cultural critique, the 60-minute solo performance journeys from Ethan’s old world legacies of his pioneering Boston politician grandfather and his father, a Professor of Jewish History at Columbia University. It covers an Upper West Side childhood fraught with privilege and pills, upending his expectations going to college in the Midwest, emotional breakdowns and familial clashes in his early 20s, and ideological reckonings in a post-October 7 world.
What emerges is a deeply personal yet universal story about inherited beliefs, cultural contradictions, and the search for an identity untethered from family myth and societal expectations.
“I was more afraid of being called a self-hating Jew than being called an anti-Semitic slur,” Ethan quips at one point — a line that captures the show’s heart: irreverent, devastating, and unafraid to sit in discomfort.
Jew, Interrupted offers a searing and often hilarious lens on what happens when progressive ideals collide with inherited dogma, and how trauma — personal, cultural, historical — shapes the way we love, fight, and grieve.
No event schedules available
Los Angeles, CA
23.38
On this months tour we will be exploring more historical Jewish religious and Yiddish cultural sites of the Los Angeles Eastside. Many of my guests love my lengthier walking tours. You have asked for a more extensive and intensive tour, to see some lesser known sites; so this tour will be about 3.5-miles circuit in total. Are you ready?
This sites we will be focusing on will not just be the religious Jewish history of Boyle Heights, we will even be exploring the old labor and leftist political sites of the Yiddishists in the hills of City Terrace.
On this special tour we will discuss the layered spiritual and cultural heritage of our local sites. We will see some examples of how some of these old Jewish sites have found new life serving the Latino community. We will also discuss the challenges locals are facing in preserving the character of these historical sites which are precious to Latinos and Jews alike.
No event schedules available
Los Angeles, CA
28.52
New music written by or about Jews no longer abides by exoticisms, national paraphernalia, or the prestige of “art music.” Instead, growing disillusioned with (or disinterested in) ideological apparatuses and tropes of Otherness, composers navigate through signs associated with Judaism while introducing new ethnographies in the form of fieldwork recordings, simulations of their oral behavioral patterns, or their entextualizing. With this they steadily undo the modernist divide between ethnography and art. The talk will situate the proliferation of contemporary Jewish art music in the ecosystem of new music, focusing on works by Chaya Czernowin, Heiner Goebbels, and Olga Neuwirth while considering the historiographical impact of the recordings released by the Milken Archive.
This event is made possible by the Lowell Milken Center for Music of American Jewish Experience at the UCLA Herb Alpert School of Music