In a move that has shaken the British creative establishment to its gin-soaked core, the Indian Film and Television Directors’ Association has abruptly revoked its call for a boycott of Bollywood superstar Ranveer Singh. The union, which originally demanded a ban over Singh’s alleged social media faux pas, has now capitulated with the grace of a drunkard falling off a barstool.
The news arrives like a surprise tonic in a glass of despair, prompting a collective sigh of relief from London to Mumbai. Singh, who was facing potential exile from the industry for daring to express an opinion, is now free to continue his reign as the boy-king of bling. The union’s backtrack is a masterclass in pyrrhic victory: they demanded a scalp, got a slap on the wrist, and called it justice.
Meanwhile, the UK’s creative sector watches with the detached amusement of a spectator at a Bollywood dance number. British producers, who rely on the subcontinent’s moguls to fund increasingly desperate tentpole films, are secretly thrilled. The boycott was a potential banana peel on the path to an international co-production deal. Now they can resume their obsequious courtship of Indian money without the awkwardness of a boycott hanging in the air like a bad curry fart.
Let us examine the timeline of this farce. The union initially blacklisted Singh for comments that offended the delicate sensibilities of a niche WhatsApp group. The industry shuddered, the press salivated, and Twitter’s outrage mob warmed up their thumbs. Then, as quickly as it began, the boycott evaporated, leaving behind nothing but a vague sense of anticlimax. It’s the cinematic equivalent of a movie where the villain says ‘I would have gotten away with it too, if it weren’t for you meddling kids’ before tripping into a conveniently placed puddle.
But what of Ranveer Singh himself? The man who nearly became a pariah for the crime of speaking his mind now emerges as a martyr without the crucifixion. He will no doubt parlay this near-miss into a brand deal for men’s grooming products, a documentary, or perhaps a biopic of a saint. The industry has a short memory, and nothing buries a controversy like a well-timed dance sequence.
For Britain, this is a wake-up call to the fragility of celebrity culture. We gaze upon Bollywood with a mixture of pity and envy: pity for its soap opera politics, envy for its ability to generate headlines without a single royal dead. The Indian film union’s climbdown reveals a deeper truth: in the global village of show business, no star is safe until the money talks. And the money, as always, has the final word.
So let us raise a glass (preferably of something duty-free) to Ranveer Singh, the Indian Film and Television Directors’ Association, and the eternal farce of fame. The boycott is dead. Long live the boycott.








