Nimrod Kamer is a satirist, comedy writer/performer and journalist based in London.
Kamers' public career started in Israel in 2005, as the Sudoku tutor known as "Captain Sudoku". In 2006, he started writing for the Hebrew-language financial newspaper Globes under editor Roy Arad. He contributed to the first edition of Maayan, an Israeli arts magazine edited by Roy Arad and Joshua Simon. In 2009, Kamer became social media manager of BIP, a comedy channel owned by Keshet Broadcasting. Under that channel he eventually created comedy shows Michael and I and Jobless Nimrod.
Moving to London in 2011, Kamer started publishing periodically in film and written form on BBC Newsnight,VICE Magazine,The Guardian, WIRED magazine,The Huffington Post,London Evening Standard, GQ, and the The Daily Dot. In 2012 he began appearing as himself on UK's Channel 4 show Random Acts alongside Heydon Prowse, as well as on Russia Today news. In September 2013 he presented a Guardian show titled #Thinkfluencer in association with Arte Channel.
As of November 2016, Kamer is an art columnist for British GQ magazine. He has interviewed Takashi Murakami, Svetlana Marich, Kamiar Maleki and Adrian Cheng, and featured numerous graduate artists from Manchester School of Art and Goldsmiths, University of London.
Kamer has made several adversarial news films alongside satirical reporting.
In 2006, he visited Egypt and made a documentary titled Girls at the Cairo National Stadium, on female spectators at the Cairo International Stadium, during one of the matches of the Africa Cup of Nations. In the film he focused on the girls in the crowd, which caused the Daily News Egypt to write an article called "Filming Gone Too Far?", about the ethics of filming Egyptian lady fans without permission.