Laugh Out Loud Funny
If Spotify Wrapped Had Shabbos Mode | WATCH
Reggie Torah Shorts is proof that you can keep it fun, faithful, and fresh. Follow him for more, and who knows? Maybe next year's Wrapped will inspire even wilder parodies. Shabbat shalom and happy streaming.

If you're anything like me, the end of the year means one thing: diving into your Spotify Wrapped like it's a treasure chest of musical memories. But what if that annual audio recap got a kosher makeover?
Enter Mendel Richter, better known as Reggie from Torah Shorts – the Chabad yeshiva student who's blending Jewish humor with everyday vibes in ways that have over 86,000 Instagram followers cracking up.
Let's break it down: who this guy is, what Spotify Wrapped actually entails, and why his latest reel is the perfect pre-Shabbat laugh.
What's the Deal with Spotify Wrapped?
Okay, quick detour for the uninitiated: Spotify Wrapped is that magical end-of-year gift from the streaming giant that turns your listening habits into a personalized story. Launched annually (usually in early December), it's Spotify's way of saying "thanks" to users, artists, podcasters, and more by recapping your audio adventures.Think: your top five artists, songs, and genres from the past year, plus quirky stats like how many minutes you jammed out or what your "audio aura" says about you.
For 2025, Wrapped got even more layered, with deeper stories, connections, and personalized experiences for everyone from listeners to creators. It's designed to be accurate, fair, and a bit mysterious, like peeking into your own sound soul. People share their Wrappeds like badges of honor (or embarrassment, looking at you, guilty pleasure playlists), and it's become a cultural phenomenon that sparks memes, debates, and endless social media buzz.
Reggie's latest reel is a spot-on parody imagining Spotify Wrapped with a "Shabbat mode" and we can't stop laughing. It's brilliant, as usual and we're not surprised after enjoying many of his reels.
It's classic Reggie: taking a modern trend like Wrapped and infusing it with Jewish positivity, making you chuckle while nodding along to the cultural nods. If you're prepping for Shabbat or just need a quick pick-me-up, hit play, it's the kind of content that reminds us why humor and heritage go hand-in-hand.