19.99 (album)

[2] Tigay remarked to The Daily Breeze that the duo frequently draw comparisons to 2 Live Jews; but for him and Rosenthal, the album was not meant to be a parody of hip hop.

"Oh God, Get a Job", for example, features one of the artist's mothers on the track repeating the title as an admonishment, as well as a "punked-out" version of traditional Jewish tune "Hava Nagila".

[3] John Carmen of Variety compared the band to 2 Live Jews, complimenting their brand of humor and quipping that the duo were doing their level best to kill the hip hop genre.

[5] Marc Weisblott of The Village Voice characterized the album as dated and "half-witted", even for its time, and referred to the tracks as neither particularly exciting nor "schnorrers".

[4] Daniel Balasco of The Jewish Journal of Greater Los Angeles characterized the album as a "proudly derivative" riff on hip hop tropes.

[5] At a concert full of music industry attendees at Canter's Kibitz Room,[2] a local Jewish deli, Corey Levitan of the Daily Breeze wrote that the duo had them "behaving unprofessionally".