Maklid/a takes audience through a kaleidoscope of Israeli urban life
Jerusalem Post
Kook inhabits two terrifically funny characters. The first is a gay man who texts a would-be-lover (Oryan) with awful, auto-corrected Hebrew.
Understanding current events through the lenses of the past and future.
Jerusalem Post
Kook inhabits two terrifically funny characters. The first is a gay man who texts a would-be-lover (Oryan) with awful, auto-corrected Hebrew.