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Media & EntertainmentSunday, June 28, 2026

The Unverified Kiss, the Anonymous Accusation: How Rumour Sustains Global Celebrity Culture

From Mumbai podcast studios to Buenos Aires nightclubs, unverified claims about public figures spread rapidly, shaping perceptions before any fact emerges.

In a podcast studio in Mumbai, a journalist leaned into the microphone and delivered a claim that would reverberate for years. Simi Chandoke recalled the filming of a 2014 Bollywood dark comedy, Revolver Rani, in which actress and now parliamentarian Kangana Ranaut was required to kiss co-star Vir Das deeply for a scene. According to Chandoke, when the director called ‘cut,’ Ranaut did not stop; she continued until she had bitten Das’s lip and drawn blood. The allegation, based solely on Chandoke’s memory, has been neither verified nor acknowledged by the two actors, and when it first circulated in 2023 Ranaut dismissed it on Instagram with a string of laughing and facepalm emojis. Yet this spring the story resurfaced, racing across social media platforms with the force of something that feels true.

Similar unverified narratives are blooming in celebrity ecosystems far from Bollywood. In Buenos Aires, a social-media user accused Ekaterina Ojeda—a young woman who had herself recently made headlines by alleging that footballer Mauro Icardi tried to seduce her in a nightclub—of repeatedly harassing the user’s boyfriend, described as a streamer and singer, to the point where she would wait for the girlfriend to leave for the bathroom before approaching. The accuser told an entertainment panelist that she had held back from reacting because Ojeda appeared intoxicated. No formal complaint or corroboration has emerged, but the story has already been folded into Argentina’s feverish celebrity discourse.

In Indonesia, influencer Larissa Chou took to Instagram Threads to plead that old rumours about infidelity be decoupled from her current divorce, accusing an unnamed person with ‘NPD’ of deploying online buzzers to weaponise her past. Across continents, the dynamic is consistent: a public appetite for intimate drama meets an information ecosystem in which a claim, once posted, becomes archival fact. Fans of Nollywood actors Timini Egbuson and Bimbo Ademoye have, for months, constructed an elaborate romance from the pair’s on-screen chemistry and playful social-media exchanges, urging them to ‘make it official’ while both remain silent. In India, television star Akansha Chamolo chose a reality show, Lock Upp, to announce that she and her husband Gaurav Khanna had been living separately for a year, citing divergent views on the future; Khanna, who is competing on another reality series, has not responded, leaving viewers to mine past interviews for clues.

The architecture of modern celebrity allows rumour to function as a parallel narrative, often more vivid than the verified one. Ranaut’s mocking emojis, the Buenos Aires accuser’s detailed timing, and Chou’s exasperated plea all represent attempts to push back against stories that have already lodged in the public imagination. Yet the algorithms that surface such content have no memory for retractions; they reheat and re-serve, turning a decade-old anecdote from a podcast into a fresh cycle of outrage and fascination. The unverified kiss, the anonymous accusation, the fan-fuelled romance—these become the permanent backdrop against which public figures perform, long after the director has called cut.

How the same story is told elsewhere.

2 editorial groups · 2 languages

38%
ToneTemperatureFocusPositioningHorizon
Indian & South Asian pressSub-Saharan African press
Indian & South Asian press
SkepticismDetachment

An unverified allegation about a Bollywood kiss scene resurfaces online; the claim remains unproven, and the controversy illustrates how old rumors fuel celebrity gossip culture.

Sub-Saharan African press/ Anglophone
IronyPragmatism

Persistent romance rumors about two Nollywood stars refuse to fade, driven by their on-screen chemistry and public appearances; the speculation entertains fans and keeps the gossip mill turning.

Broaden your view

Read more
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Upd. 05:14 PM2 languages · 3 outlets
PreviousMedia & EntertainmentNext
3 outlets|2 languages|3 min read
Sunday, June 28, 2026

The Unverified Kiss, the Anonymous Accusation: How Rumour Sustains Global Celebrity Culture

From Mumbai podcast studios to Buenos Aires nightclubs, unverified claims about public figures spread rapidly, shaping perceptions before any fact emerges.

In a podcast studio in Mumbai, a journalist leaned into the microphone and delivered a claim that would reverberate for years. Simi Chandoke recalled the filming of a 2014 Bollywood dark comedy, Revolver Rani, in which actress and now parliamentarian Kangana Ranaut was required to kiss co-star Vir Das deeply for a scene. According to Chandoke, when the director called ‘cut,’ Ranaut did not stop; she continued until she had bitten Das’s lip and drawn blood. The allegation, based solely on Chandoke’s memory, has been neither verified nor acknowledged by the two actors, and when it first circulated in 2023 Ranaut dismissed it on Instagram with a string of laughing and facepalm emojis. Yet this spring the story resurfaced, racing across social media platforms with the force of something that feels true.

Similar unverified narratives are blooming in celebrity ecosystems far from Bollywood. In Buenos Aires, a social-media user accused Ekaterina Ojeda—a young woman who had herself recently made headlines by alleging that footballer Mauro Icardi tried to seduce her in a nightclub—of repeatedly harassing the user’s boyfriend, described as a streamer and singer, to the point where she would wait for the girlfriend to leave for the bathroom before approaching. The accuser told an entertainment panelist that she had held back from reacting because Ojeda appeared intoxicated. No formal complaint or corroboration has emerged, but the story has already been folded into Argentina’s feverish celebrity discourse.

In Indonesia, influencer Larissa Chou took to Instagram Threads to plead that old rumours about infidelity be decoupled from her current divorce, accusing an unnamed person with ‘NPD’ of deploying online buzzers to weaponise her past. Across continents, the dynamic is consistent: a public appetite for intimate drama meets an information ecosystem in which a claim, once posted, becomes archival fact. Fans of Nollywood actors Timini Egbuson and Bimbo Ademoye have, for months, constructed an elaborate romance from the pair’s on-screen chemistry and playful social-media exchanges, urging them to ‘make it official’ while both remain silent. In India, television star Akansha Chamolo chose a reality show, Lock Upp, to announce that she and her husband Gaurav Khanna had been living separately for a year, citing divergent views on the future; Khanna, who is competing on another reality series, has not responded, leaving viewers to mine past interviews for clues.

The architecture of modern celebrity allows rumour to function as a parallel narrative, often more vivid than the verified one. Ranaut’s mocking emojis, the Buenos Aires accuser’s detailed timing, and Chou’s exasperated plea all represent attempts to push back against stories that have already lodged in the public imagination. Yet the algorithms that surface such content have no memory for retractions; they reheat and re-serve, turning a decade-old anecdote from a podcast into a fresh cycle of outrage and fascination. The unverified kiss, the anonymous accusation, the fan-fuelled romance—these become the permanent backdrop against which public figures perform, long after the director has called cut.

Source divergence

Media & Entertainment · 3 outlets · 2 languages

38%Medium

How sources tell the same facts differently.

How They Split

Favorable25%
Critical75%

How the same story is told elsewhere.

2 editorial groups · 2 languages

ToneTemperatureFocusPositioningHorizon
Indian & South Asian pressSub-Saharan African press
Indian & South Asian press
SkepticismDetachment

An unverified allegation about a Bollywood kiss scene resurfaces online; the claim remains unproven, and the controversy illustrates how old rumors fuel celebrity gossip culture.

Sub-Saharan African press/ Anglophone
IronyPragmatism

Persistent romance rumors about two Nollywood stars refuse to fade, driven by their on-screen chemistry and public appearances; the speculation entertains fans and keeps the gossip mill turning.

This story appeared in

3 outlets · 2 languages

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