Rabbi Noach Oelbaum’s Video
Rabbi Noach Oelbaum’s Brachos Video. Brachos from Gedolim that would have otherwise ending up on the cutting room floor.
About this project:
The Weight of Getting It Right
When you’re asked to create a video honoring someone who’s been compared to Rav Moshe Feinstein, you don’t sleep well.
This wasn’t a corporate testimonial project. This was 8.5 minutes to capture 50 years of leadership from a man who somehow manages to be everything at once. Lamdan. Posek. Darshan. Manhig. Respected across every part of the Jewish spectrum.
Rabbi Noach Isaac Oelbaum has set the standard. When Roshei Yeshiva from Lakewood to Darchei Torah to Chofetz Chaim all speak about the same person with that kind of reverence, you know you’re not working on just another project.
The Challenge Nobody Talks About
Here’s what made this impossible.
The best stories couldn’t be told yet.
Off camera, people shared moments that would’ve made this video unforgettable. Transformative stories. Life-changing interactions. The kind of material that shows who someone really is when nobody’s watching.
But those stories weren’t ready. Too personal. Situations still unfolding. Would mean more later than they do now.
So you’re left trying to do justice to someone’s legacy while knowing the most powerful evidence is off-limits.
That’s the real creative challenge when you’re documenting a Gadol. The public version is always incomplete. Not because you did something wrong. Because the most meaningful impact happens privately. Quiet conversations. Moments that can’t be broadcast to 400 people at a dinner.
Finding the Structure
We broke it down into three sections: Torah, Relationships, and Impact.
That framework helped construct the story. It gave us a way to organize voices that were all saying similar things but from different angles. The scholarly depth. The personal accessibility. The reach across organizations and communities.
Without that structure, 8.5 minutes of “he’s incredible” would blur together. With it, you can see the different dimensions of 50 years.
What You Can Show
What you CAN show matters.
Rabbi Yaakov Bender saying “since Rav Moshe we haven’t had such a person.”
Mendy Reiner explaining how Rabbi Oelbaum guides Renewal through the most complex medical Halacha questions.
The consistent theme from every Rosh Yeshiva: this is someone who combines everything we thought you couldn’t combine anymore.
The video includes voices from across the yeshiva world. Chofetz Chaim. Ohr Chaim. Darchei Torah. BMG Lakewood. Not because we were collecting names. Because Rabbi Oelbaum genuinely has that reach.
Chassidish and Litvish. Sephardic and Ashkenaz. Organizations and individuals. Everyone sees their Chelek in him because he actually has every Chelek.
The Incomplete Story
Eight and a half minutes feels simultaneously too long and nowhere near enough.
Too long because you’re asking 400 people to sit still when they’d rather be talking to the man himself.
Not enough because you know there’s more.
You KNOW there are deeper layers. Stories that would land harder. Moments that would make people understand why this person matters beyond the titles and accomplishments.
That tension never goes away.
You make choices. You find the throughline. You let the people who know him best tell the story.
But you finish the edit knowing it’s not complete. It’s just what can be told right now.
Maybe that’s appropriate. The full story of 50 years of leadership shouldn’t fit neatly into a dinner video. The impact should be bigger than what we can capture on camera.
But you still lose sleep over it.
Because when you’re trusted to tell someone’s story, someone who actually deserves the superlatives people throw around, you want to get it right.