Sarah Silverman performs her daily cheer for emergency workers battling COVID-19

Sarah Silverman performs her daily cheer for emergency workers battling COVID-19

Sarah Silverman returned to her balcony to make some news for emergency workers battling COVID-19 on Sunday.

The 49-year-old Wreck-It-Ralph star, who was once again joined by her assistant Annie Segal, looked joyful, as she banged on a pot from her apartment balcony in New York City.  

For the past week, the comedian and her assistant have been cheering those on the frontline during the 7 PM shift change.

Sarah Silverman returned to her balcony to make some news for emergency workers battling COVID-19 on Sunday

For her daily cheer, she styled her dark tresses under a black beanie and flaunted her slender frame in a pair of denim bottoms. 

Silverman’s ‘quarantine partner’ wore a grey graphic t-shirt, black sweats and a baseball cap, while also enthusiastically bursting into applause

On Saturday night, the stand-up comic praised Segal, while sharing a snap of them playing video games in bed. 

The 49-year-old Wreck-It-Ralph star, who was once again joined by her assistant Annie Segal, looked joyful, as she banged on a pot from her apartment balcony in New York City

The 49-year-old Wreck-It-Ralph star, who was once again joined by her assistant Annie Segal, looked joyful, as she banged on a pot from her apartment balcony in New York City

‘She gets the Bronze star every time. I’m so goddamn proud of her,’ she gushed, while they wore matching headsets. 

The pair have been urging other New Yorkers to publicly display their gratitude since last Tuesday. 

‘Everyday at 7pm in nyc, people open their window or stand on their fire escapes and bang pots and pans and howl and cheer on appreciation for our health care workers, grocery store workers and delivery people,’ Battle of the Sexes star wrote on Instagram. 

Noisy: The pair have been urging other New Yorkers to publicly display their gratitude since last Tuesday

Noisy: The pair have been urging other New Yorkers to publicly display their gratitude since last Tuesday

‘It makes us feel connected and that we aren’t alone. I live for ever 7-7:03pm,’ she added in her recent post.

She shared another video from the cheer a few days later, recorded on video by Segal, where she used a green megaphone to speak to everyone outside.

 ‘Wash your hands. Do not forget to floss. Death creeps in through the gums,’ Silverman said through the megaphone.

Having fun: On Saturday night, the stand-up comic praised Segal, while sharing a snap of them playing video games in bed

Having fun: On Saturday night, the stand-up comic praised Segal, while sharing a snap of them playing video games in bed

Last Sunday, she tried a similar experiment, after all of the cheering died down during shift change.

‘Today as the clanging and howling and cheering died down I took a chance and played a song (through my phone into a Bluetooth speaker held up to a toy bullhorn I got online) and whatdoyaknow it got quiet, and then the pots and pans, they were like instruments,’ she said.

The song she played for the New York City masses was Bein’ Green by Frank Sinatra, as she watched and listened to her fellow New Yorkers.