(en) While numbers are inevitably fuzzy, Paul Chance, reviewing Lawrence Epstein's The Haunted Smile: The Story Of Jewish Comedians In America (Psychology Today, Jan-Feb, 2002) wrote "While Jews make up only about 3 percent of the U.S. population, 80 percent of professional comics are Jewish." Accessed onlineArchivováno 24. 9. 2015 na Wayback Machine. 25 March 2007. Comedian Mark Schiff, reviewing the same book on Jewlarious.comArchivováno 28. 10. 2020 na Wayback Machine., writes "Most of the comedians that made us all laugh in the 1950s, '60s and '70s were Jewish." Similarly, Drew Friedman (author of Old Jewish Comedians), in a March 22, 2007 interview on Fridays with Mr. MediaArchivováno 21. 6. 2007 na Wayback Machine.: "Somebody said, 'You could do an Old Protestant Comedian book,' and I said, 'Well, that would be a pamphlet, wouldn’t it?'"
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(en) While numbers are inevitably fuzzy, Paul Chance, reviewing Lawrence Epstein's The Haunted Smile: The Story Of Jewish Comedians In America (Psychology Today, Jan-Feb, 2002) wrote "While Jews make up only about 3 percent of the U.S. population, 80 percent of professional comics are Jewish." Accessed onlineArchivováno 24. 9. 2015 na Wayback Machine. 25 March 2007. Comedian Mark Schiff, reviewing the same book on Jewlarious.comArchivováno 28. 10. 2020 na Wayback Machine., writes "Most of the comedians that made us all laugh in the 1950s, '60s and '70s were Jewish." Similarly, Drew Friedman (author of Old Jewish Comedians), in a March 22, 2007 interview on Fridays with Mr. MediaArchivováno 21. 6. 2007 na Wayback Machine.: "Somebody said, 'You could do an Old Protestant Comedian book,' and I said, 'Well, that would be a pamphlet, wouldn’t it?'"
(en) While numbers are inevitably fuzzy, Paul Chance, reviewing Lawrence Epstein's The Haunted Smile: The Story Of Jewish Comedians In America (Psychology Today, Jan-Feb, 2002) wrote "While Jews make up only about 3 percent of the U.S. population, 80 percent of professional comics are Jewish." Accessed onlineArchivováno 24. 9. 2015 na Wayback Machine. 25 March 2007. Comedian Mark Schiff, reviewing the same book on Jewlarious.comArchivováno 28. 10. 2020 na Wayback Machine., writes "Most of the comedians that made us all laugh in the 1950s, '60s and '70s were Jewish." Similarly, Drew Friedman (author of Old Jewish Comedians), in a March 22, 2007 interview on Fridays with Mr. MediaArchivováno 21. 6. 2007 na Wayback Machine.: "Somebody said, 'You could do an Old Protestant Comedian book,' and I said, 'Well, that would be a pamphlet, wouldn’t it?'"
web.archive.org
(en) While numbers are inevitably fuzzy, Paul Chance, reviewing Lawrence Epstein's The Haunted Smile: The Story Of Jewish Comedians In America (Psychology Today, Jan-Feb, 2002) wrote "While Jews make up only about 3 percent of the U.S. population, 80 percent of professional comics are Jewish." Accessed onlineArchivováno 24. 9. 2015 na Wayback Machine. 25 March 2007. Comedian Mark Schiff, reviewing the same book on Jewlarious.comArchivováno 28. 10. 2020 na Wayback Machine., writes "Most of the comedians that made us all laugh in the 1950s, '60s and '70s were Jewish." Similarly, Drew Friedman (author of Old Jewish Comedians), in a March 22, 2007 interview on Fridays with Mr. MediaArchivováno 21. 6. 2007 na Wayback Machine.: "Somebody said, 'You could do an Old Protestant Comedian book,' and I said, 'Well, that would be a pamphlet, wouldn’t it?'"