Raanan Hershberg
๐ค SpeakerAppearances Over Time
Podcast Appearances
No, that's a good point. What I used to drink, I would tell people I love them. Now I'm sober, I don't tell anyone I love them. Now I'm sober. I'm more sober.
So my girlfriend, speaking of drugs, she's on like serious blood thinners because she just had a stroke. Oh, Jesus Christ. How old is she? Like a couple weeks ago. She's 85. Wow. No, so when we started dating two and a half years ago, she was about to get open heart surgery. Yeah, like she told me that on our first date. Oh my God. Yeah. Is this like something she was born with?
So my girlfriend, speaking of drugs, she's on like serious blood thinners because she just had a stroke. Oh, Jesus Christ. How old is she? Like a couple weeks ago. She's 85. Wow. No, so when we started dating two and a half years ago, she was about to get open heart surgery. Yeah, like she told me that on our first date. Oh my God. Yeah. Is this like something she was born with?
So my girlfriend, speaking of drugs, she's on like serious blood thinners because she just had a stroke. Oh, Jesus Christ. How old is she? Like a couple weeks ago. She's 85. Wow. No, so when we started dating two and a half years ago, she was about to get open heart surgery. Yeah, like she told me that on our first date. Oh my God. Yeah. Is this like something she was born with?
It was a congenitive heart thing, mitral valve. She had a mitral valve leak. Oh Jesus. And she found it out. She's 37. And so four months into our dating, she got open heart surgery. Oh my God.
It was a congenitive heart thing, mitral valve. She had a mitral valve leak. Oh Jesus. And she found it out. She's 37. And so four months into our dating, she got open heart surgery. Oh my God.
It was a congenitive heart thing, mitral valve. She had a mitral valve leak. Oh Jesus. And she found it out. She's 37. And so four months into our dating, she got open heart surgery. Oh my God.
Yeah, and then everything was going well, and then like, this was like this month, like, I don't even, maybe a month ago, I'm going to see a screening of my friend's movie, this really great comic, Isabella Hagen had funded her own movie, I'm going to see it, we're going to meet, and she calls me and she says her, she can't see out of her left eye, she's on the subway.
Yeah, and then everything was going well, and then like, this was like this month, like, I don't even, maybe a month ago, I'm going to see a screening of my friend's movie, this really great comic, Isabella Hagen had funded her own movie, I'm going to see it, we're going to meet, and she calls me and she says her, she can't see out of her left eye, she's on the subway.
Yeah, and then everything was going well, and then like, this was like this month, like, I don't even, maybe a month ago, I'm going to see a screening of my friend's movie, this really great comic, Isabella Hagen had funded her own movie, I'm going to see it, we're going to meet, and she calls me and she says her, she can't see out of her left eye, she's on the subway.
And we had to, like, call an ambulance and, like, rush to the hospital. And, like, the crazy thing is the ambulance did not take us right away. Like, we got in there and they, like, had to make her fill out her insurance.
And we had to, like, call an ambulance and, like, rush to the hospital. And, like, the crazy thing is the ambulance did not take us right away. Like, we got in there and they, like, had to make her fill out her insurance.
And we had to, like, call an ambulance and, like, rush to the hospital. And, like, the crazy thing is the ambulance did not take us right away. Like, we got in there and they, like, had to make her fill out her insurance.
For, like, 20 minutes. Oh, my God. That's so crazy. With one eye. With one eye. Oh, my God. That's so crazy. I thought an ambulance just goes.
For, like, 20 minutes. Oh, my God. That's so crazy. With one eye. With one eye. Oh, my God. That's so crazy. I thought an ambulance just goes.
For, like, 20 minutes. Oh, my God. That's so crazy. With one eye. With one eye. Oh, my God. That's so crazy. I thought an ambulance just goes.
They were, like, getting the insurance. She's, like, dying. They're, like, what's your group member ID number? Oh, my God. And then they finally went and there was no siren. We just had the ambulance without the siren. Which was pointless. So ambulance and traffic. Ambulance and traffic. We get to this ER type place. They think she's having a stroke. And we had a person on TV.
They were, like, getting the insurance. She's, like, dying. They're, like, what's your group member ID number? Oh, my God. And then they finally went and there was no siren. We just had the ambulance without the siren. Which was pointless. So ambulance and traffic. Ambulance and traffic. We get to this ER type place. They think she's having a stroke. And we had a person on TV.
They were, like, getting the insurance. She's, like, dying. They're, like, what's your group member ID number? Oh, my God. And then they finally went and there was no siren. We just had the ambulance without the siren. Which was pointless. So ambulance and traffic. Ambulance and traffic. We get to this ER type place. They think she's having a stroke. And we had a person on TV.
It was like Black Mirror. They got some neurologist who was on vacation. They brought the TV in, like a TV, and she was on the video. The camera was moving around the room looking at people. It was so bizarre. And she said if it's a stroke, she had to go on really intense blood thinners for the day. And they were so intense that if she even bumped her head, she could get bleeding in the brain.