Have you heard of Pooja Tripathi? Unless you’ve been living under a rock, she is the Indian-American actor and writer behind Brooklyn Coffee Shop, the viral Instagram and YouTube sketch series that has turned the familiar ritual of ordering coffee into a weekly theatre of taste, status, self-delusion and moral collapses.It’s 31 degrees in London when I speak to Tripathi, who is in Brooklyn, where the weather has also been behaving with similar dramatic flair. It’s the sort of small-talk opening that could, in another context, become the premise of an episode at the fictional Brooklyn café where she plays Thyme, a barista of immense disdain, alongside DJ Daughtry as Kale, her much taller, equally terrifying co-worker. Together, they serve customers who arrive bearing the spiritual baggage of modern city life, one absurd order at a time.Brooklyn Coffee Shop is satire, certainly, but it is also one of the more persuasive arguments for the phone screen as a serious comic stage. Each episode of the series — which recently won the 2026 Webby Award in Video & Film, Comedy — runs for about a minute, but it has the rhythm of a sitcom, the texture of a meme and the polish of a small television production.
Pooja Tripathi, too cool for coffee orders at Brooklyn Coffee Shop
Discover Pooja Tripathi's viral series, Brooklyn Coffee Shop, blending comedy and urban life through sharp satire on social media.















