Raz Gal-Or


Raz Gal-Or is an Israeli internet businessperson in China.
Gal-Or, the son of Amir Gal-Or, originated from a community near Tel Aviv, and moved to Hong Kong at age 13; at the time Gal-Or lacked fluency in English, and he also lacked fluency in any variety of Chinese. Frank Tang of the South China Morning Post wrote that "his China journey was driven by the ambitions of his father". He is an alumnus of Peking University, where he studied international relations. He first gained media exposure in China when he got a single apparance on television.
Tang stated that by 2017 Gal-Or was embedded in a Chinese lifestyle and that his Mandarin was "fluent".
he lived in Beijing.

Foreigner Research Institute China

Gal-Or operates the , also known as Y-Platform, a social media group which documents lives of foreigners in China. It is headquartered in Zhongguancun, Haidian District, Beijing.
The name is a pun as "crooked nut" sounds similar to that to the word "foreigner". The organization had been established in 2016 by Gal-Or and his Chinese co-founder Fang Yedun, who Gal-Or met in university and originated from Zhejiang. The series, which as of October 2017 had fifty episodes, has accounts on Bilibili, Sina Weibo, and Youku. Several of Gal-Or's social media profiles are under the name Ychina. Infinity Group, owned by Amir Gal-Or, and Will Hunting Capital had given Gal-Or's production company a 10 million yuan investment. By October 2017 the series, which began in December 2016, had over five million subscribers in its social media platforms. About 70% of the viewers, as of 2017, were female. The initial video, by that month, had over four million views. Tang stated in 2017 that multiple advertisers began using the series.
Coco Liu of the South China Morning Post wrote that FRI "helped to grow the online profiles of many expatriates." Tang wrote that the series "propelled to nationwide fame". Charles Liu, a senior blogger of The Beijinger, characterized some of the videos produced by the FRI as "predictable responses expected of foreignness, which in turn is predictably well-received by the Chinese public."