Marc returns from another heartbreaking Saturday night at Hostage Square, where hope has turned to despair. Last week, there was widespread belief that Netanyahu's trip to the US would finally bring a hostage deal—but once again, the goalposts have moved.
In this deeply personal episode, Marc examines the devastating pattern revealed in recent New York Times reporting: how Netanyahu has repeatedly torpedoed ceasefire negotiations when they get close to success. From the Philadelphia Corridor to the newly invented "Morag Corridor," each excuse seems designed to avoid ending a war that 82% of Israelis want to see concluded.
Marc shares the emotional weight of seeing Hadar Goldin's father speak at the rally—a man whose son's body has been held by Hamas for 4,000 days. He reflects on the impossible burden placed on exhausted soldiers being told their service is extended another year, and the growing disconnect between a war-weary public and a government seemingly determined to continue fighting.
The episode also tackles the ultra-Orthodox draft crisis, where fundamental questions of shared sacrifice remain unresolved, and touches on the complex dynamics with Iran as Putin surprisingly backs US positions on nuclear enrichment.
In a striking shift, Marc explores his personal encounter with Google's new AI video technology—creating a moving image of his long-deceased grandfather—and grapples with what this means for truth and reality in an age where anything can be fabricated with a simple text prompt.
Raw, frustrated, and deeply human, this episode captures the exhaustion of a nation caught between hope and despair.
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