So the Indian film union has graciously ended its boycott of Ranveer Singh. One can almost hear the collective sigh of relief from the British creative sector, which has been watching this saga with the breathless attention of a Victorian matron peering through a lace curtain at the neighbours' scandal. How terribly quaint. The idea that a handful of Mumbai union bosses could hold a Bollywood star to ransom over a political statement, and that London’s own cultural mandarins would feel a tremor of relevance, is either a sign of our own decadence or a reminder that the Empire still casts a long, if absurd, shadow.
Let us not mince words. The Indian film industry, for all its glitter and noise, is a machine driven by caste, cronyism, and clout. That they chose to reinstate Singh because of 'public pressure' rather than principle is hardly cause for celebration. It is the same mechanism that keeps the whole creaking edifice running: a delicate balance of money, fear, and spectacle. The British creative sector, meanwhile, imagines itself a global arbiter of taste and ethics. It is not. It is a minor outpost of an Anglophone media empire that long ago ceded its authority to Hollywood and, increasingly, to Mumbai.
What does this episode truly reveal? Firstly, that the cultural cudgel is wielded with brutal efficiency in India, where a film star’s livelihood can be suspended for uttering a mild critique of the ruling party. Secondly, that the UK’s own creative industries, having been shorn of genuine power, now derive their sense of importance from proxy dramas in former colonies. This is not influence. This is parasocial nostalgia for a time when British cultural exports mattered.
The real issue, as always, is intellectual decadence. We have replaced serious discussion of art and politics with a voyeuristic obsession with 'content creators' and their controversies. Ranveer Singh is not a titan of cinema. He is a product. His boycott and reinstatement are marketing machinations designed to keep his name in the headlines. And we, the audience, play our part by treating this as a matter of geopolitical significance.
If the British creative sector wishes to regain relevance, it would do well to stop flattering itself with the illusion that its opinions on Bollywood boycotts carry weight. Instead, it might invest in actual cultural production: writing, filmmaking, criticism that engages with the world rather than merely wringing its hands over it. The Fall of Rome was not caused by a lack of concern for provincial gossip but by a failure to address rot at the core. Our rot is this: we have mistook celebrity for substance and union posturing for politics.
So let the union end its boycott. Let Ranveer Singh return to his song-and-dance routines. And let the British creative sector continue its slow, dignified decline, content in the knowledge that it still has an opinion on everything and a solution for nothing. The Victorian comparison holds: we are the latter-day equivalent of those grandees who worried about the moral health of the Raj while the empire crumbled around them.
Historical cycles do not spare the foolish. We are in a period of intellectual decadence, and the obsession with this non-event is proof positive. The only question is whether we will recognise our own irrelevance before the next barbarian is at the gate.








