Culture ‘Knuckles’ Is the Show Jews Need Right Now—Seriously - As antisemitism flourishes online, and religion is weaponized and politicized, it’s a “Sonic the Hedgehog” show (?!?!) that lights the prayer candle we need.

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Paramount+

Knuckles is one of the most surprising new shows of the year—yes, really. I know what you’re thinking: How could a spinoff of the incredibly popular Sonic the Hedgehog movies starring one of the franchise’s most popular characters be “surprising?” In fact, Knuckles is something of a Trojan Horse. While it presents itself as an action-packed show about Knuckles (voiced by Idris Elba), the no-nonsense red echidna, it’s really about his friendship with a goofy human, Wade Whipple (Adam Pally). More than that, over the course of the six-episode Paramount+ series, Knuckles mentors Wade as he competes in a major bowling tournament—see, I told you it’s surprising!

It’s not totally absent from the typical Sonic the Hedgehog hijinks, of course. Along the way, they run into dastardly foes determined to kidnap Knuckles. But in response, Wade decides to take his new bestie somewhere the bad guys would never think to look: his mother’s house. That leads to what is this series’ most special installment: a glorious, emotional, and poignant episode about a Shabbat dinner. Yes, I’m serious—the third episode (titled “The Shabbat Dinner”) of what is seemingly a big-budget action series about Knuckles from Sonic the Hedgehog is all about the weekly Jewish tradition of Shabbat.

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Knuckles in “Shabbat Dinner“.
Paramount+


For those unfamiliar with Shabbat, Wade’s mother, Wendy (played by Stockard Channing, instantly entering the pantheon of great Jewish TV moms), explains it perfectly to Knuckles: “Shabbat is the day of rest. It’s about home.” Basically, according to Judaism, God created the world in six days, so on the seventh, he rested. For modern Jews, like myself, Shabbat is an opportunity to connect with family and spend time together without distraction. It’s one of those family things that you can’t stand doing as a kid, but the older you get, the more special and valuable it feels.

In-depth portrayals of Judaism on screen are so rare, and when they do appear, the focus is largely kept on bigger holidays, like Hanukkah or Passover. Rarely do we see media give time to the religion’s more regular, intimate traditions, and it’s remarkable that a show about an alien echidna has devoted an entire half hour to exploring exactly that.

Family traditions aren’t all sweet and tender, of course. Wade didn’t realize he was rocking up to his mother’s home on Shabbat, and he has largely unpleasant memories of the occasion—his father abandoned his family when Wade was young, so most of his Shabbats involved meals gone horribly wrong, fighting with his sister, and mishaps with farm animals. For Wade, Shabbat does not conjure warm feelings; instead, it’s a crushing reminder that he’s from a broken home.

Channing as the Whipple matriarch delivers a warm and inspired performance. The details are delightful. She’s devoted to calling Knuckles “Knuchles,” with a hearty emphasis on the “ch” sound, she’s a former Krav Maga instructor, and like many wonderful Jewish mothers, family and family tradition are paramount.

At the dinner table, Wendy and Knuckles connect when talking about the history of their people. Knuckles reveals that the echidnas were wiped out by a fleet of giant owls and that he is the last of his tribe. “Our tribe has been through some tough times too,” she responds, adding, “minus the giant owls. He’s basically Jewish!”

While Wendy bonds with Knuckles, Wade and his sister Wanda (Edi Patterson), an FBI agent, are constantly bickering, rehashing their lifelong sibling rivalry. Annoyed that Wade has caught her in a lie, Wanda retaliates by stabbing Wade with a fork. Wade justifiably freaks out, but it’s Wendy’s reaction that is most telling. She stares blankly, hand on her cheek, looking exhausted. Despite her best efforts, including cooking all of Wade’s favorites from various Jewish holidays, it’s clear that this Shabbat is set up to be a disappointment, just like every other. And there are few things more heartbreaking than a Jewish mother’s disappointment.

Later that night, Knuckles finds Wendy alone, watching Pretty Woman. She shares how the Whipples’ Friday night tradition was to have Shabbat dinner, then sit together with an old movie, basking in the warm glow of the television screen and the joy of each other’s company. Now an empty nester, Wendy cooks a whole Shabbat dinner every week, desserts and all, regardless of if her family will come or not; she just tries to keep a semblance of tradition alive. It’s a level of poignancy you wouldn’t expect from a show like Knuckles, but “The Shabbat Dinner” is nothing if not unexpected.

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Knuckles
Adam Pally as Wade Whipple, Stockard Channing as Wendy Whipple and Edi Patterson as Wanda Whipple come together to defend Shabbat in Knuckles.


At the end of the episode, Knuckles reminds us that it’s supposed to be an action show, delivering a brilliant set piece to wrap things up. The baddies have found Knuckles, and they launch an assault on the Whipple house to capture him.

“Knuchles, protect the candles at all costs,” Wendy tells Knuckles before the fight breaks loose. Set to “Hava Nagila”—an iconic Jewish folk song often performed during celebrations—the camera swirls slowly around the kitchen island as Wendy and Knuckles work together to take down the invaders. Knuckles uses his physical prowess, while Wendy cleverly uses what’s available to her—dinner plates and frying pans—to keep the enemies at bay. But the whole time, the action is almost secondary to the Shabbat candles, which are always centered in the frame. The candles are important, of course, but what they represent is doubly so. Shabbat candles are a symbol of the family, of the division of light versus darkness. I cannot pretend that this funny fight scene didn’t make me cry, because tears were definitely streaming watching Wendy and Knuckles fight to protect the Shabbat candles.

They succeed, and Wade and Wanda come to the kitchen after fighting other assailants that broke into the house. The Whipple siblings expect their mother to be devastated over the destruction brought to her house, but Wendy stands quietly with a big smile on her face. Their family, which had drifted apart, is now standing together, united. Eventually, she says, fighting back tears of joy, “My kids finally came home for Shabbat… this is the best damn Shabbat dinner we’ve ever had.” Watching this family bond together as the Shabbat candles go down is honestly one of the most emotionally cathartic experiences I’ll have this year.

It’s no secret that 2024 has been a tough one for everyone, including people of Jewish faith. In recent months, antisemitism has flourished online and in the news, and religion has been frequently weaponized and politicized. A powerful, earnest celebration of the Jewish faith and the power of Shabbat feels like exactly the kind of healing that we need right now—especially during Passover, which began just days before Knuckles premiered. And this moment of beauty comes from, of all places, a show about a Sonic the Hedgehog character.

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“Knuchles, protect the candles at all costs,” Wendy tells Knuckles before the fight breaks loose. Set to “Hava Nagila”—an iconic Jewish folk song often performed during celebrations—the camera swirls slowly around the kitchen island as Wendy and Knuckles work together to take down the invaders. Knuckles uses his physical prowess, while Wendy cleverly uses what’s available to her—dinner plates and frying pans—to keep the enemies at bay. But the whole time, the action is almost secondary to the Shabbat candles, which are always centered in the frame. The candles are important, of course, but what they represent is doubly so. Shabbat candles are a symbol of the family, of the division of light versus darkness. I cannot pretend that this funny fight scene didn’t make me cry, because tears were definitely streaming watching Wendy and Knuckles fight to protect the Shabbat candles.
Here is the clip of the fight scene being mentioned here.

 
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I don't think the Echidnas in the Sonic universe were supposed to be like Jews. Quite the opposite.
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Yeah, but don’t forget about the Lost Tribe arc. They were wandering around for forty (?) generations before they found Albion.

With Ken Penders’ help, we can conclude echidnas are Jewish-Incan-Jamaican-Australian-Germans, native to Britain.
 
How is Cary Elwes though?
I love how Stockard Channing magically transformed her hair in the fight scene.
 
While Wendy bonds with Knuckles, Wade and his sister Wanda (Edi Patterson), an FBI agent, are constantly bickering, rehashing their lifelong sibling rivalry. Annoyed that Wade has caught her in a lie, Wanda retaliates by stabbing Wade with a fork. Wade justifiably freaks out, but it’s Wendy’s reaction that is most telling. She stares blankly, hand on her cheek, looking exhausted.
I like that she doesn't care that her son was just stabbed by his own sibling. Not even the least bit of concern. i also like that it's the one that's an FBI agent that resorts to something petty like that.

I cannot pretend that this funny fight scene didn’t make me cry, because tears were definitely streaming watching Wendy and Knuckles fight to protect the Shabbat candles.
Faggot.
 
Along the way, they run into dastardly foes determined to kidnap Knuckles. But in response, Wade decides to take his new bestie somewhere the bad guys would never think to look: his mother’s house. That leads to what is this series’ most special installment: a glorious, emotional, and poignant episode about a Shabbat dinner. Yes, I’m serious—the third episode (titled “The Shabbat Dinner”) of what is seemingly a big-budget action series about Knuckles from Sonic the Hedgehog is all about the weekly Jewish tradition of Shabbat.
Channing as the Whipple matriarch delivers a warm and inspired performance. The details are delightful. She’s devoted to calling Knuckles “Knuchles,” with a hearty emphasis on the “ch” sound, she’s a former Krav Maga instructor,
“Our tribe has been through some tough times too,” she responds, adding, “minus the giant owls. He’s basically Jewish!”
“Knuchles, protect the candles at all costs,” Wendy tells Knuckles before the fight breaks loose. Set to “Hava Nagila”—an iconic Jewish folk song often performed during celebrations—the camera swirls slowly around the kitchen island as Wendy and Knuckles work together to take down the invaders. [...] But the whole time, the action is almost secondary to the Shabbat candles, which are always centered in the frame. [...] I cannot pretend that this funny fight scene didn’t make me cry, because tears were definitely streaming watching Wendy and Knuckles fight to protect the Shabbat candles.
A powerful, earnest celebration of the Jewish faith and the power of Shabbat feels like exactly the kind of healing that we need right now—especially during Passover, which began just days before Knuckles premiered. And this moment of beauty comes from, of all places, a show about a Sonic the Hedgehog character.

I had to triple check the article URL to make sure this wasn't a high-effort shitpost. "clown world" isn't enough to cover the absurdity of this shit. I don't even know what to fucking say, man. what's next? Deadpool defends the Jerusalem Day parade from mutant Hamas militants? the Minions celebrate Passover? Ghost Rider brings 3000 years of tribal vengeance down on the Arabs during Yom Kippur?

Here is the clip of the fight scene being mentioned here.

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good fucking lord
 
Huh. Well I guess the K in Knuckles stands for Kike.

I didn't know Echidnas were god's chosen people.

I guess Jews will associate with any fictional creature that hoards valuable gemstones.

I mean I guess I can see it. Robotnik enslaved his people. Then Knuckles freed them from their prisons and internment camps. Then he led them through the desert of Sandapolis Zone for 40 years due to getting stuck on the infinite slide. Knuckles is literally the Messiah.

Who knew the hair hanging from Knuckles head was meant to be the devil's curls?
 
As antisemitism flourishes online, and religion is weaponized and politicized, it’s a “Sonic the Hedgehog” show (?!?!) that lights the prayer candle we need.

can we all just take a minute to appreciate the fucking absurdity of Jews needing "a moment of healing" because people are mad online about the Israel-Palestine thing? especially coming from one of these fucking overpaid columnists who literally get to make their living by whining about their mentions on an international platform. yeah dude anti-Semitism is so rampant that a bunch of college campuses are openly punishing students for demonstrating sympathy with Palestine, in a far-off conflict that has nothing to do with any American college student, retards waving signs saying "cease fire now" have literally no effect on either side of the conflict and they're getting thrown out of school and having scholarships cancelled and shit. it's gotten so bad that literally the entire media sector as well as the federal government are openly scolding people for being upset that money that could be used to rebuild infrastructure or really just solve literally any domestic problem is instead being used to fund a genocide. Jews have it so bad that I can't even enjoy making a high six figure income bitching about how Jews have it so bad without people telling me I'm a retard online. good thing we have Knuckles. it's a borderline federal crime to even think anything bad about Israel, but these anonymous online trolls keep saying muh six gorillion or whatever and my feely-feels are hurt. so it really cheered me up when this gay TV show about a computer animated cartoon animal person from a fantastical world full of legendary heroes and dastardly villains, detoured their entire series narrative into far left field just so they could have a story where he learns to appreciate Jewish culture. thanks, billion-dollar production company, for using your internationally broadcasted show to remind everyone that Jews Rock!™. that was really nice of you. something needs to be done about all this Jew hate though. like firing them all from their jobs, maybe.
 
You know how there are a bunch of offshoots of Judaism that recognize whatever person as the messiah? I’m just waiting for there to be one that worships Chris Chan as the true and honest Blue CPU messiah.
...That would be peak Clownworld. When Klaus and Fink invite Chris over to their WEF meetings and make him the official speaker for that rich boy club. Afterwards, you can expect him to make CWCville real. And at that point, the farms is gonna take on a completely different beast of censorship as well too.
 
Sonic autists, is this canon?
No, it's purely shit they made up for this show

The Echidna race in the official games were wiped out by Perfect Chaos due to Pachacamac being a dick and going against his daughter's (Tikal) wishes and pleads to stop being a dick and leave the chaos emeralds alone.
 
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