On this episode of The Mael Time Podcast, Elkana Federman—the head of security at the Nova Music Festival—recounts his harrowing experience on October 7. Federman walks through the security preparations before the event, the moment he realized the attack unfolding was far beyond anything anticipated, and the life-or-death decisions he made to evacuate unarmed staff and festival-goers under fire. He reflects on the chaos, the losses, and the trauma he carries, while also speaking with raw honesty about accountability, leadership failures, and the political reckoning he believes Israel desperately needs. His story is both a personal testimony of survival and a call for a stronger, clearer Jewish voice in the country’s future.
This conversation offers a rare, unfiltered look at how Hamas supporters inside Gaza justify violence, reject peaceful solutions, and deny the basic facts of the conflict. Rather than acknowledge Hamas’ role in triggering wars, using civilians as shields, or holding innocent hostages, Motasem Dalloul doubles down on the same narratives that have kept Gaza trapped for decades. The interview lays bare the central obstacle to peace: a worldview that frames terror as “resistance,” dismisses Israeli attempts at coexistence, and insists that liberation can only come through violence. For anyone trying to understand why the conflict persists, this is a revealing—and deeply troubling—glimpse into the ideological machinery that sustains Hamas’ grip on Gaza.
On this episode of the Mael Time Podcast, Jonathan Pollard breaks down his recent meeting with Ambassador Mike Huckabee, reflecting on Huckabee’s support during his imprisonment and the political meaning people are now reading into their conversation. Pollard addresses long-standing myths about his case — including the false accusation of treason — and calls out Tucker Carlson and others for spreading misinformation. He offers a stark assessment of the CIA’s role in shaping U.S.–Israel relations, criticizes American pressure on Israeli decision-making, and argues that Israeli leaders have become too willing to defer to Washington. From Trump’s peace plan to the push for judicial reform to the need for Israel to become militarily self-sufficient, Pollard delivers a wide-ranging and provocative look at the crossroads of American and Israeli politics.
Part 1 of an analysis on what Nick Fuentes and Dave Smith misunderstand about America.
Megyn Kelly’s shift from fearless journalist to Tucker Carlson’s unofficial damage-control operation has become impossible to ignore. In this episode, Daniel Mael breaks down how her evasions around the Carlson controversy—especially on questions of anti-Semitism and political accountability—signal a deeper collapse of integrity inside parts of conservative media. The conversation explores Tucker’s radicalization, JD Vance’s silence, and the broader danger when prominent figures use their platforms to escalate rhetoric instead of elevating discourse. It’s a sharp look at how guilt-by-association gets selectively applied, how media voices have traded curiosity for tribal loyalty, and why Megyn Kelly’s transformation marks a troubling moment for anyone who still believes journalism should tell the truth even when it’s inconvenient.
On today’s Mael Time Podcast, we go inside Magen David Adom, Israel’s national emergency medical service and the backbone of the country’s blood supply. Uri Shacham joins us for a rare, unfiltered conversation about how MDA predicts emergency calls in real time, deploys lifesaving teams within minutes, and navigated the overwhelming chaos of the October 7th attacks. He tackles public misconceptions, explains the organization’s legal obligations and commitment to transparency, and highlights how community support keeps Israel’s medical response system functioning under immense pressure. This episode is a gripping look at the people and systems that keep Israel alive when every second counts.
On this episode of The Mael Time Podcast, Daniel Mael is joined by Mannie Fabian of The Times of Israel for the inside scoop on the October 7th investigations. Together they unpack how years of overlooked intelligence, structural weaknesses, and leadership misjudgments created the conditions for Hamas’s devastating attack. Drawing on Fabian’s reporting and Mael’s analysis, the conversation exposes what investigators uncovered, what remains unanswered, and why meaningful accountability is still so hard to find. This episode offers a clear, unflinching look at the systemic failures that led to one of the darkest days in Israel’s history.
The episode unpacks how Tucker Carlson’s growing influence has thrown the Heritage Foundation—and much of the conservative movement—into a full-blown identity crisis. Daniel Mael and Mike Warren explore how Kevin Roberts’ embrace of Carlson has alienated traditional conservatives, empowered bad-faith actors like Nick Fuentes, and blurred the line between serious political thought and entertainment spectacle. They trace how populism, fueled by Trump-era incentives and the monetization of outrage, is reshaping conservative institutions from the inside out—leaving the Republican Party struggling to articulate clear principles, appeal to a broader audience, and push back against extremist rhetoric.
On the latest episode of The Mael Time Podcast, Amiad Cohen delivers a blunt wake-up call: Israel will never achieve true sovereignty until it stops treating American foreign aid as a lifeline and starts acting like the regional power it already is. Cohen breaks down how U.S. influence distorts Israeli politics, why a new generation of leaders is ready to chart an independent course, and how Israel’s booming economy makes that shift not only possible but urgent. This is the conversation the conservative movement has been avoiding — and the one that will define Israel’s future.
Megyn Kelly’s latest clash with Ben Shapiro didn’t just ignite another media feud—it exposed a deeper fracture inside today’s conservative movement. Her reflexive defense of Tucker Carlson and her willingness to indulge conspiratorial narratives reflect a broader identity crisis gripping the GOP, where principle is often sacrificed for clicks, outrage, and factional loyalty. As internal conflicts over bigotry, antisemitism, and the movement’s moral direction intensify, Kelly’s commentary has become a symbol of how far the conservative base has drifted from the values it claims to defend.
In this episode of The Mael Time Podcast, Lizzy Savetsky addresses accusations that she was paid by the Israeli government, firmly denying the claims and explaining how misinformation has affected her personally and professionally. She discusses the broader impact of defamation within the Jewish community, the challenges of confronting anti-Semitism from both the far right and left, and the importance of transparency for public figures. Lizzy also reflects on her work empowering Jewish students and her belief that authenticity is essential to meaningful activism.
In this episode of Mael Time, Daniel Mael takes aim at Jonah Platt’s podcast Being Jewish, arguing that Platt’s defense of Rabbi Angela Buchdahl reveals a deeper moral and intellectual crisis within progressive Judaism. Mael contends that Platt’s response to the controversy surrounding Buchdahl’s political engagement at Central Synagogue avoids serious theological questions in favor of emotional posturing and identity-driven rhetoric. Rather than confronting whether clergy should use the pulpit for partisan messaging, Platt reduces legitimate criticism to alleged bigotry. Mael challenges that framing as both dishonest and destructive, insisting that Jewish discourse demands courage, not conformity — and that true “being Jewish” means standing for ideas, not slogans.
In this explosive episode of The Mael Time Podcast, Congressman Randy Fine unleashes a blistering critique of Tucker Carlson, accusing him of betraying American values and “crossing the Rubicon into lunacy.” Fine doesn’t hold back—calling Carlson “dangerous” for spreading misinformation, twisting facts about Israel, and turning conservatives against truth itself. From fake war photos to false genocide claims, Fine exposes how lazy, reckless narratives have poisoned America’s discourse. He also takes direct aim at the Heritage Foundation, saying its leadership has “irreparably damaged” the institution by aligning with Carlson’s rhetoric. This is Randy Fine unfiltered—furious, factual, and fed up with what he calls the new face of moral cowardice in American media.
Discussing the latest back and forth about Shabbat dinner and the Heritage Foundation.
Kevin Roberts' "clarification" only made the situation worse.
In this wide-ranging conversation, Liel Leibovitz confronts the moral and ideological crossroads facing both American conservatism and the global Jewish community. From the hollow language of “belonging” to the failures of modern Jewish leadership, he challenges listeners to reject performative politics and return to principle. Liel argues that Jewish and Western survival hinge on moral clarity — in faith, in warfare, and in the courage to lead. He dissects how DEI culture has diluted Judaism’s ethical core, critiques the erosion of conviction in U.S.–Israel relations, and calls for a renewed understanding of identity rooted not in victimhood but in purpose and victory.
In this episode of the Mael Time Podcast, Daniel Mael examines how Rabbi Angela Buchdahl of Central Synagogue finally addressed Zohran Mamdani’s anti-Semitism—but only after a wave of public outrage and social media pressure forced her hand. For weeks, Buchdahl avoided naming or condemning Mamdani, despite his open hostility toward Israel and the Jewish community. Mael argues that her belated response exposes a deeper crisis of moral leadership within progressive Judaism, where public perception often replaces principle. The episode challenges the notion of “apolitical integrity” and asks what happens when rabbis find their conscience only after the crowd demands it.
In this episode of The Mael Time Podcast, Daniel Mael exposes the contradictions in Rabbi Angela Buchdahl’s stance on nationalism and political engagement. While Buchdahl condemns Jewish nationalism as dangerous and exclusionary, she openly champions progressive political causes—until those causes become inconvenient. Mael highlights her recent claim that she couldn’t comment on New York City’s mayoral race because Central Synagogue is apolitical, a statement that rings hollow given her history of political sermons and public advocacy. Through a sharp analysis of her rhetoric, Mael explores the double standards that pervade liberal religious leadership, the moral posturing that disguises political bias, and the deeper question of whether faith leaders can credibly invoke neutrality while preaching ideology from the bimah.
In this episode of the Mael Time Podcast, Daniel Mael examines Rabbi Angela Buchdahl’s speech through the lens of Jewish identity, moral clarity, and the uneasy fusion of politics and religion. The discussion unpacks how American Jewish leaders like Buchdahl navigate political activism, particularly regarding Israeli politics and figures such as Zohran Mamdani, whose rhetoric often blurs the line between criticism and hostility. Mael challenges the conflation of Jewish faith with partisan agendas, warning that silence in the face of anti-Semitism — whether from extremists or political allies — is itself a moral failure. The conversation ultimately calls for a return to authentic Jewish values grounded in tradition rather than political fashion.
Israel’s fate may no longer be decided in Jerusalem — but in Washington. In this episode of The Mael Time Podcast, former Israeli Consul General Alon Pincus breaks down the uneasy marriage between Trump and Netanyahu, exposing how U.S. pressure, military aid, and political leverage now shape every Israeli move — from the fragile ceasefire to the hostage crisis. As Trump reenters the global stage and Israel fights for its autonomy, the question isn’t just what America will do for Israel, but what it will demand in return.