(RNS) — Despite its name, “Nobody Wants This,” a new Netflix rom-com, has been met with enthusiasm: Since its debut Sept. 26, the show, in which a relatable young rabbi falls in love with a non-Jewish sex-and-relationship podcaster, has generated tremendous buzz. Viewers — me included — are enjoying the humor, reality and chemistry of the romantic leads. The New York Times praised the “smooth rom-com fluency, and the feeling it inspires.”
In the show, Joanne (played by Kristen Bell) learns about Judaism and dating, while Rabbi Noah Roklov’s already emotionally intelligent “Hot Rabbi” (Adam Brody) gleans from her podcast further lessons in being vulnerable.
But there are problems from the very first episode, and it precisely has to do with the “Hot Rabbi” trope that “Nobody Wants This” patterns after the Catholic “Hot Priest” who smote the heart of the lead character in the British comedy series “Fleabag.” Desirable male clergy characters have been all the rage in TV and film ever since. The recent movie “Between the Temples,” about a luckless cantor, revolves around his intimate relationships, even if he’s not portrayed as conventionally handsome.
(Hollywood, it should be said, has not discriminated on the basis of gender when it comes to sexualized rabbis. A few years ago, on “Transparent,” Rabbi Raquel made out with one of her congregants in the mikveh, a Jewish ritual bath.)
I’m not a TV critic, but I am a rabbi preparing to lead my community in the Jewish High Holidays, a sacred time of individual and communal reflection on our ethical behavior over the past year. I’m conscious that real-life rabbis and clergy of other faith traditions have erred when it comes to sexual ethics. In the wake of the #MeToo reckoning, which hit media as well as the Jewish world, I hardly need to point out that, given the authority of a rabbi, power dynamics make it harder for congregants to share if they’re uncomfortable when boundaries of intimacy have been crossed.
Sexualizing a male rabbi exacerbates these dynamics. While Brody’s Rabbi Roklov doesn’t flagrantly violate rabbinic ethics like Rabbi Raquel — despite the apparent wishes of the women in his congregation who desperately introduce him to their daughters and other relatives — Roklov does struggle with the degrees to which it is appropriate to be intimate with congregants.
In an early episode, the fictitious rabbi proudly tells Joanne how he recounted his own relationship troubles in a marital counseling session to help a couple open up. While our own experiences do inform how we show up for others, we rabbis need to be reflective about when and why we self-disclose to avoid unwanted intimacy or boundary violations. In this case, Roklov’s disclosures to congregants seemed to be far more about his emotional growth than theirs.
Roklov is right about one thing: It’s important for clergy to be vulnerable. Yet there are different ways to be vulnerable, and clergy must never risk complicating the boundaries essential for healthy clergy-congregant relationships.
“Nobody Wants This” also entrenches some other damaging stereotypes. Much has been written in the few days since its debut about how the show reifies the notion of the “nice Jewish boy” as exemplary and the Jewish woman as, well, downright difficult.
But Rabbi Roklov’s charm, relative to his mother, sister-in-law and ex-fiancee, does more than that: It normalizes the idea that a religious leader’s abilities hinge on attractiveness and charisma, overshadowing and jeopardizing the sanctity of their religious leadership.
It’s not Hollywood’s fault that we have to worry about such things. In the past, lists of the “sexiest rabbis” (of all genders) have made the rounds in Jewish social media. The sometimes sex-forward culture in Jewish youth programming has been widely discussed as harmful.
But it doesn’t help when, on “Nobody Wants This,” Joanne hears a group of synagogue teenagers call him “Hot Rabbi,” and Roklov is amused and more flattered than uncomfortable.
Failing to shut this down, the rabbi blurs the lines between fostering a rapport with adolescents and tolerating flirtation, and degrades the seriousness of his role as a spiritual leader. The interaction confuses sex positivity for hypersexualization.
On the positive side, I was pleased to hear Brody, in a recent podcast, saying he thinks #MeToo has led to a healthier work environment on movie and TV sets, with much less tolerance for misconduct. I only wish “Nobody Wants This” reflected that evolution, rather than falling into tired and insidious characterizations of dynamic, pined-after male clergy and difficult Jewish women.
In this Jewish season of reflection, we acknowledge that missteps are human. How we fix them is what matters most. Therefore, creative team, if you’re reading this, know that this rabbi is here to help make Season 2 just as funny but a whole lot less cringey. It’s on all of us — clergy, congregants and, yes, Hollywood — to do the work to create healthier religious communities.
(Rabbi Talia Kaplan, one of the clergy at Congregation Beth Shalom in Overland Park, Kansas, holds a master’s degree in Jewish gender and women’s studies and a certificate in pastoral care and counseling. The views expressed in this commentary do not necessarily reflect those of RNS.)