Israeli-American musician, comedian and YouTuber (born 1987)
"Rucka Rucka" redirects here. Not to be confused with RackaRacka.
Rucka Rucka Ali
Also known as
ItsRucka, DJ Not Nice, Toby Queef, Seymour Schwartz, Fredrique Shampoo, Jack The Supreme, Ricola Volvos, Boris Anastasha, Jihad Joe, Mr Sheen, "Wierd Ali" Ruckavich
Rucka Rucka Ali (born January 27, 1987) is an Israeli-American rapper, singer, radio personality, comedian, YouTuber, and parodist. He is best known for his dark humor, political and topical song parodies on YouTube. Much of his content pokes fun at ethnic, racial, and religious stereotypes.[2] As of 2024, he has amassed 450+ million views and about 1.76 million subscribers on his music channel on YouTube.[3] He has released eight independent studio albums, four of which have charted in the BillboardTop Comedy Albums.[4]
Early life
Rucka Rucka Ali was born in Jerusalem on January 27, 1987, to an Orthodox Jewish family, though he has stated that he moved away from that lifestyle as he grew up.[5]
In June 2010, three British students were reprimanded after publicly showing Rucka Rucka Ali's music video for his hit parody "Ima Korean" to their class while studying different countries' musical traditions. One South Korean student was "devastated, upset, very offended, and feeling very lonely", being the only East-Asian child in the class. An assistant headteacher, Len Idle, said the song was "probably racist". Rucka Rucka Ali subsequently picked the quote as the title of his next album, Probably Racist[11] replying in kind within the music video "We're All Asian", sarcastically thanking Idle for his opinion, before mockingly stating that "he [Idle] was probably gay with AIDS".[12]
On July 24, 2013, Rucka Rucka Ali released the song "Zayn Did 9/11" (a parody of Selena Gomez's "Come & Get It") to YouTube which mocked then One Direction member Zayn Malik, jokingly saying he committed the September 11 terrorist attacks, a reference to his British-Pakistani background. The single-cover features a silhouette of Malik in front of the Twin Towers of the World Trade Center as they were attacked.[13] The song, along with an accompanying music video released several days later, angered One Direction fans and others.[14]Business Standard called the song "offensive" and a "racist attack" on Malik.[15]
In the end of November 2013, he was involved in another controversy after his song "Only 17", a parody of "Just a Dream" by Nelly, was accidentally played uncensored over the speakers at a McDonald's company in Wales.[16][17] Subsequently, McDonald's issued an apology to the offended customers.[18] That same week, Rucka Rucka Ali responded to the controversy on his YouTube channel by jokingly demanding a personal apology from the restaurant.[19]
At the end of the music video for his parody song "Life is over" (a parody of "Closer"), released in October 2016, Rucka Rucka Ali revealed that he had attempted suicide in the summer of 2006. Noting that his death would have prevented the success of his later music career, he wished to send others "a message of hope".[21]