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HomeOpinionSharp EdgeRanveer Allahbadia fought Left cancel culture. And yet, the Right came after...

Ranveer Allahbadia fought Left cancel culture. And yet, the Right came after him

These hypocrites give comedy a bad name, but no Indian citizen should have the full weight of the state used against them over a joke, no matter how crass.

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This Beer Biceps Guy saga gets worse and worse. I did a column about it last week and, in any case, you probably know the story so far. But even so, here is some background to refresh your memory.

Ranveer Allahbadia, who calls himself The Beer Biceps Guy, has become public enemy number one for Right-wing (or Hindutva-supporting) social media activists and is the target of various police forces (mostly from BJP-ruled states) for comments made on an odious YouTube show called India’s Got Latent.

There are many ironies to this. For a start, Beer Biceps has been an enthusiastic bootlicker of this government, prostrating himself before powerful figures while conducting “interviews” (using the term in its loosest sense) with them. He has been so eager to ingratiate himself with the establishment that he has asked Right-wing types the sorts of questions that only vile rabble-rousers ask: “Who are the people you would like to see thrown out of the country?”

India’s Got Latent is a show that tries to be edgy and cool. We have some idea of how deluded its creators are because its main man, a guy called Samay Raina, once tweeted: “Fear of cancellation from the Left is why we don’t have comics like Andrew Schulz, Jimmy Carr, Dave Chappelle, and Ricky Gervais on the Indian comedy scene. Don’t worry, I am here to change that! Janta saath hai. Yeh log kuchh nahin ukhad sakte hain (The public is with me. These people can’t do anything).”

Famous last words.

Like many hypocritical Right-wing “comedians” who function in a society where the Right is totally in control and calls all the shots, he pretended that he was bravely defying throngs of imaginary Left-wing activists powerful enough to cancel people like him. Turns out, his own side came for him.


Also Read: Ranveer Allahbadia’s relief from arrest comes with an earful from SC over ‘perverted’ language


Licking boots to getting kicked

So eager was this self-styled courageous champion of edgy comedy to follow in the footsteps of foreign comics that he and his pals decided the best way to be like them was to steal their jokes. I guess they thought it wasn’t plagiarism if they used cruder Hindi translations.

For instance, after the Roe v. Wade judgment in the US, Raina took inspiration from Right-wing American comedians and made fun of women who wanted abortions. He joked, “If I asked my girlfriend to get an abortion tomorrow, she shouldn’t say ‘my body, my choice’.”

Abortion is not even an issue in India. The joke had no context, and it was clear where this faux-valiant activist against the forces of the Left was actually stealing his material from. He got away with this misogynistic, woman-demeaning garbage because his fans (presumably those on the Right, since he was battling the Left) thought he was funny.

All went well until his show plagiarised a joke about watching your parents have sex and possibly joining them. I thought the joke was disgusting, but then I am also nauseated by many of the other things these professional brown-nosers of the government routinely say. Beer Biceps’ interviews, for example, were mostly puke-inducing.

But then something strange happened. The very Right wing these guys so proudly identified with suddenly kicked them in the face—even as they were licking its toes. Not only was there a huge social media campaign against them, but they now face prosecution and persecution.

I wrote last week that this could be due to four possible reasons. One: the outrage was spontaneous and not part of any orchestrated campaign. (Ha!)

The other three explanations were more plausible. Perhaps Beer Biceps and his pals had fallen out with the government for some reason. Or maybe the government needed a distraction from the bad news breaking all around us, including the latest stampede.

And the fourth, which I found the most plausible, was that the outrage was manufactured to give the government a justification for imposing stricter controls on digital media and the internet.

Free speech on trial

If tightening the screws on free speech was indeed the intention, then things are going very well for those in power.

Allahbadia approached the Supreme Court to ask for the many FIRs filed against him across India to be merged into one case and to seek protection from arrest.

The court said yes to both. But in its oral remarks, it went full Angry Uncle on him.

I yield to nobody in my respect for the Supreme Court and am conscious that it remains one of the last hopes for liberty and the protection of our Rights. But I don’t think it greatly helps the cause of free expression when the court says things like, “There is something dirty in his mind” and “Why should the court entertain such a person?”

The court went on: “Just because somebody says, ‘I am popular’, I can speak anything? Can he take society for granted? The entire society will feel ashamed! The perversion you and your henchmen have exhibited!”

Most worryingly, it asked the government whether it planned to impose a legal framework for regulating YouTube channels and social media content because it had become “a complete nuisance”. It added, “If the Government of India is willing to do it, very well. But we make it clear that we want something done… Something has to be done, and we will do it. We are not going to leave it like that.”

If my suspicion last week was accurate—that this entire controversy was engineered to give the government grounds for further crackdowns on free speech and greater control over digital media—then those in charge have much to celebrate. The Supreme Court would have said exactly what the government wanted it to.


Also Read: Forbes to FIRs—Ranveer Allahbadia was flying high. Now he’s tasting what downfall looks like


The State vs jokes 

So, what happens to Beer Biceps and to who the Supreme Court calls his henchmen?

Well, Allahbadia has been barred from making any more comedy shows, which may be a relief for lovers of quality comedy, but it is still an unjustified interference in his right to make a living. None of the others have secured protection from the Supreme Court yet, so it’s possible they will be hounded, raided, and arrested.

As you can tell, I hold no brief for these humbugs, hypocrites, and sycophants. They give comedy a bad name with their imaginary battle against non-existent Leftist forces out to cancel them.

But two points need to be made. No Indian citizen should have the full weight of the state used against them over a joke, no matter how crass or distasteful. You don’t have to like these guys—let alone laugh at their jokes—to stand up for their rights as citizens.

Besides, the individuals are not the important part of the story. The principle of free speech is what matters. And it has not been a good week for freedom of expression.

These setbacks to our freedom affect all Indians, not just the bubonic plagiarists who have disgusted us all and served the government’s purposes so well.

When it comes to free speech, Indian citizens expect much more in the way of protection of our Rights from both, the government and the Supreme Court.

Vir Sanghvi is a print and television journalist, and talk show host. He tweets @virsanghvi. Views are personal.

(Edited by Asavari Singh)

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1 COMMENT

  1. For deluded individuals fighting against the imaginary monster of authoritarianism, every single thing on earth has to be interpreted in political terms. And even in politics, everything is a game of quid pro quo for them.
    Ranveer Allahbadia or Samay Raina have never identified with or championed the cause of any political party or ideology. They took potshots against every single political party and leader. They targeted every ideology and exposed the hollowness of each one if them. For example, Allahbadia tweeted extensively about his love for beef and exhorted fellow Hindus to consume beef.
    But for people like Vir Sanghvi, anyone who sits down with a BJP leader and has a chat or, God forbid, interviews a right-wing politician, is a bootlicker of the incumbent government.
    Just because someone does not conform to Mr. Sanghvi’s idea of politics and ideology, he gets labelled as a “vile rabble-rouser”.

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