Adam Saleh | |
---|---|
Adam Saleh at stage in Oslo in 2016
|
|
Born |
Adam Mohsin Yehya Saleh 4 June 1993 New York City, New York, United States |
Alma mater | John Jay College of Criminal Justice |
Occupation | |
Years active | 2012–present |
Website | www |
Musical career | |
Genres | |
Instruments |
|
Years active | 2012–present |
Associated acts |
|
Adam Mohsin Yehya Saleh (born 4 June 1993) is an American YouTube personality, vlogger, actor and rapper from New York City, best known for his YouTube videos. He has been described by multiple sources as a prankster, a description he uses himself.
Adam Saleh was born in New York City to Yemeni parents. He first attended Central Park East High School and then John Jay College of Criminal Justice. He started making YouTube videos in 2012 as a part of his YouTube channel "TrueStoryASA" with his college friends Sheikh Akbar and Abdullah Ghuman.
Saleh became part of another collaborative channel "3MH" with Sheikh Akbar, Karim Metwaly and Slim Albaher. TrueStoryASA and 3MH split up in May 2015. Since then he has created many videos as a solo YouTuber. He has also appeared in the American buddy cop comedy-drama action film American Sharia. Saleh first released the single "Diamond Girl" on May 3, 2015 featuring Sheikh Akbar and Mumzy Stranger as a part of TrueStoryASA. On 16 August 2015 he released his debut solo single "Tears" featuring Zack Knight as a tribute to his cousin. Later on during that year, he released another single, " Survivor", on October 18, 2015. Saleh released his third single "Tomorrow's Another Day" on December 4, 2015.
A staged video titled "Racial Profiling Experiment'" uploaded on Saleh's YouTube channel in October 2014 became viral around the world. In the video Saleh and Sheikh Akbar argued with each other in front of a police officer wearing western outfits but the cop ignored them. Shortly thereafter, they fight again while dressed in Muslim clothes but this time the cop stops them and behaves rudely with them. The video received more than 200,000 views on YouTube and it was also picked up by media. Public reaction to the video was against the police officer. Later Saleh admitted that the video was staged to recreate "previous events that occurred". The New York chapter of the Council on American–Islamic Relations (CAIR), which had previously tweeted out the video as an example of discrimination against Muslims, demanded an apology from Saleh and Akbar stating "Muslims are already under the microscope and to do this just to gain some cheap publicity is totally unacceptable. There should be no attempt to justify it; they should just apologize and ask people to forgive them for their irresponsible actions."