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Noy Alooshe

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Origin
  
Tel Aviv, Israel

Name
  
Noy Alooshe

Website
  
noy-a.com


Associated acts
  
Chovevei Tzion

Role
  
Journalist

Noy Alooshe

Genres
  
Hip hop music, Electronic dance music

Similar People
  
Zenga Zenga, Uri Fineman, Yehuda Saado, Alma Zohar, Chen Aharoni

Profiles


Occupation(s)
  
Musician, journalist

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Noy Alooshe (Hebrew: נוי אלוש‎‎; born 13 August 1979) is an Israeli journalist and musician of Tunisian Jewish descent best known outside Israel for his Zenga Zenga spoof song on Muammar Gaddafi. He lives in Tel Aviv and is a member of the Israeli techno group Chovevei Tzion ("Lovers of Zion"), best known for its hit song "Rotze Banot" ("I Want Girls"), a Hebrew remix of the Swedish dance song "Boten Anna."

Contents

Noy Alooshe Noy Alooshe Wikipedia

As a result of his success from the video "Zenga Zenga", Alooshe shared that he received many commercial offers: "These days are crazy because advertisers are calling me and wanting me to do productions for them; music companies want to sell the song on iTunes." In 2001, he said he had also received antisemitic death threats, though he was not too concerned since "at the moment they remain on the Internet."

Apart from Zenga Zenga, his by far best known work, he also spoofed Benjamin Netanyahu's speech to the United States Congress to the tune of "We No Speak Americano" as "Bi Bi pro Americano". He also wrote Dvir Bar's song "Livni Boy," one of Israel's first political YouTube hits. Alooshe worked for Tzipi Livni's Hatnuah campaign in 2013.

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References

Noy Alooshe Wikipedia


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