Saudi YouTube star Naz sheds light on his daily grind

Naz is famous for his social experiments, street questions and reaction videos. (Supplied)
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Updated 04 February 2020
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Saudi YouTube star Naz sheds light on his daily grind

  • The 25-year-old, who has over eight million subscribers on YouTube, revealed to Arab News the reality of being a YouTuber

DUBAI: Saudi content creator Nasser Khaled, who goes by the name Naz online, is coming to the UAE’s first VidCon event in Abu Dhabi, set to take place from March 25 to 28. 

VidCon is the world’s largest event for fans, creators, executives and brands who are passionate about online video. Naz, along with 12 other international content creators, will attend panels, fan meet and greets, gaming challenges, musical performances, and much more. 

The 25-year-old, who has over eight million subscribers on YouTube, revealed to Arab News the reality of being a YouTuber. 

 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 

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A post shared by Naz - ناز (@nazkld) on

It may seem like a laid-back job, but it takes a lot of time and effort to upload daily content. Naz, who has over 500 videos on YouTube, starts his day with coming up with ideas for his channel. He then records, edits and posts online. 

“It is super hard to keep consistent and actually work everyday,” he explained. “Somedays you wake up either sick or you have something to do that is super urgent and so, I have to cope with that and also being consistent in recording, uploading, editing.” However, Naz said he still enjoys doing his job. 

He is famous for his social experiments, street questions and reaction videos that are usually requested by his fans. His favorite videos to shoot are social experiments, he told Arab News.

“You never know how the other side would react or what they will do depending on the subject you are experimenting,” he said. 

The content creator, who is based in Saudi Arabia, does not find it challenging to film in the streets of the Kingdom. “You just have to get the agreement of the particular face you are going to do your experiment on. Anywhere you go in the world you have to go by the rules,” he explained. 

Naz believes consistency in finding interesting stories over the world and sharing them with his fans is the key driver to his success as a full-time creator. “When I started this career I did not expect this success. I worried whether I would succeed or not, but I worked hard and, thank God, I am here and I am not ready to stop.”


Sotheby’s ‘Origins II’: Local heroes go under the hammer 

Updated 15 January 2026
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Sotheby’s ‘Origins II’: Local heroes go under the hammer 

  • Regional highlights from Sotheby’s ‘Origins II’ auction, which takes place Jan. 31 in Diriyah 

DUBAI: Here are some of the regional highlights from Sotheby’s ‘Origins II’ auction, which takes place Jan. 31 in Diriyah.

Mohamed Siam 

‘Untitled (Camel Race)’ 

Siam is described by Sotheby’s as “one of the most significant voices of the Kingdom’s second generation of modern artists.” His “highly discernible visual aesthetic,” the auction catalogue states, references European cubists and Italian Futurism, using “multiple overlapping planes to create an endless sense of movement” — an approach that “fragments visual reality, enabling the viewer to experience multiple viewpoints simultaneously.” This work from the late 1980s “shrewdly captures through a fractured, shifting perspective two camel riders in an enthralling, head-to-head race.” It marks Siam’s auction debut and is expected to fetch between $70,000 and $90,000.  

 

Abdulhalim Radwi 

‘Untitled (Hajj Arafah)’ 

The Makkah-born artist is one of Saudi modernism’s most significant figures. His “multifaceted practice was shaped by a profound engagement with regional heritage and the evolving aesthetic currents of the 20th century,” the catalogue notes. This 1967 oil painting is hailed by Sotheby’s as “a vibrant example of Radwi’s practice (at the time), depicting a bustling arrangement of tented structures rendered in his characteristic Cubist-inflected idiom. The tightly interlocking forms, rhythmic repetitions, and cool, airy palette evoke the temporal architecture of the Hajj pilgrimage, distilled into a kaleidoscopic composition that celebrates the textures and visual poetry of life in Makkah.” 

 

Mohammed Al-Saleem 

‘Untitled’ 

Another of the Kingdom’s modern-art pioneers, Al-Saleem was born in 1939 in Al-Marat province. His work, Sotheby’s says, “is celebrated for its distinct visual language, a style which the artist coined ‘Horizonism.’ Drawing inspiration from the shifting sands and gradating skyline of Riyadh as seen from the desert, as well as the intensity of the Saudi sun, Al-Saleem reimagined his beloved landscape through the prism of abstraction.” In works such as this 1989 oil painting, he “replaced the traditional horizon line with stylized forms resembling organic forms and Arabic calligraphy … a fusion of modernist abstraction and cultural identity.” 

 

Taha Al-Sabban  

‘Untitled’ 

This mixed-media-on-canvas work from 2005 typifies the Makkah-born artist’s modernist approach, which, Sotheby’s states “has been described as both an act of conservation and a homage to the nature and culture of his homeland.” The artist “used expressive color and form to preserve local memory — palm groves, open waters, and traditional architecture — while transforming the traditional cityscape into ascending, abstracted rhythms.” His work is often described as “nostalgic,” but the Al-Sabban is quoted by the Al-Mansouria Foundation as saying: “Although I am acutely aware of the passage of time, my aim is not nostalgia; instead I seek to capture the moment and reveal the life in the world.” 

 

Zeinab Abd El-Hamid 

 

‘Untitled (Shisha Shop)’ 

This 1987 watercolor is the work of one of Egypt’s most significant female artists of the modern era who belonged, Sotheby’s says “to a generation of artists who came of age during the cultural reawakening that followed Egypt’s independence.” Abd El-Hamid, the catalogue states, “painted with a refined sensibility, grounded in her belief in humanity’s ability to transcend hardship. She did not seek to romanticize the past, but to distill its forms and emotions into something enduring. Her work carries a sense of nostalgia for a rhythm of life rooted in shared dignity and poetic structure … rooftops, cafés, and courtyards become vessels of memory, harmony, and inner light.” 

 

Samia Halaby 

‘Copper’ 

Central to the Palestinian artist’s practice was the belief that “abstraction, like any visual language, is shaped by social forces and reflects the movements of working people and revolutionary ideas,” Sotheby’s states. This 1976 oil painting combines Halaby’s exploration of the diagonal as “a dynamic formal element” and of the reflective properties of metals. The work “eschews traditional linear perspective in favor of a compositional strategy that flattens and destabilizes the viewer’s gaze. Halaby achieves a sense of spatial infinity — not through illusion, but through repetition and variation.” 

 

Mahmoud Sabri 

‘Demonstration’ 

The Iraqi painter’s career, Sotheby’s says, was unique among his peers in his homeland. “He simultaneously explored Arab and European cultures, studied the history of painting, and created his own unique art language and style.” That language arrived after this particular oil painting from the early Sixties, a time in which “Sabri often returned to the subject of revolutionary martyrdom and probably referring to the events of the 1963 coup d’état.” In the foreground, a group of women surround a bereaved mother, who is weeping for her murdered son.