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Trump & Other Famous Names Mentioned – Hollywood Life
Hollywood

Trump & Other Famous Names Mentioned – Hollywood Life

by jummy84 November 12, 2025
written by jummy84

Image Credit: Getty Images

Jeffrey Epstein is long gone, but his files aren’t. Nearly six years after the convicted sex offender died in a Manhattan jail, public interest in the names tied to his network hasn’t faded. Portions of his files were unsealed in 2024 and again in 2025, prompting renewed speculation, particularly after U.S. Attorney General Pam Bondi announced earlier this year she would release materials under the direction of President Donald Trump.

Bondi implied that a revealing “list” would be made public, but a Justice Department memo released in July 2025 — first reported by Axios — stated that no official “Epstein client list” exists. Still, several high-profile names have appeared in Epstein’s contact logs and flight records. While there is no evidence that any of these celebrities were involved in Epstein’s crimes, public curiosity remains about how so many prominent figures ended up loosely connected to such a notorious individual.

Below, learn which celebrities had a passing connection with Epstein and whose names are mentioned in the notorious Epstein files.

When Will the Epstein List Be Released?

Attorney General Bondi said she planned to release the records on February 27, 2025. Days prior, she told Fox News in an interview, “I think tomorrow … you’re going to see some Epstein information being released by my office. There are well over — this will make you sick — 200 victims … over 250, actually. … So, we have to make sure that their identity is protected and their personal information, but other than that, I think tomorrow — you know, the personal information of victims — other than that, I think tomorrow, Jesse, breaking news, right now, you’re going to see some Epstein information being released by my office.”

That day, TIME reported that the files were released on February 27, 2025. Bondi and conservative influencers were seen walking out of the White House holding up binders that read, “The Epstein Files: Phase I.”

However, months later, Bondi claimed that no list exists, sparking extensive backlash from fellow Republicans.

What Is in the Epstein Files?

According to multiple outlets, the files likely include Epstein’s more than 200 victims with redactions of their names for privacy purposes. Additionally, the files reportedly include the flight logs of the deceased pedophile’s private plane.

In 2024, a federal court revealed records related to Epstein and his celebrity connections. The documents included around 200 names, including Donald Trump and Bill Clinton. However, neither Clinton nor Trump has been accused of wrongdoing in the investigation, and neither have most other celebrities who once knew Epstein. Trump and his wife, Melania Trump, were photographed with Epstein and his long-time associate, Ghislaine Maxwell, at Mar-A-Lago in 2000.

Celebrities Mentioned in the Epstein Files

According to Newsweek, the following names were mentioned to have had contact with Epstein at least for a short time — though they were not linked to any of Epstein’s crimes:

  • Donald Trump
  • Prince Andrew
  • Bill Clinton
  • Cate Blanchett
  • Stephen Hawking
  • Michael Jackson
  • Leonardo DiCaprio
  • Kevin Spacey
  • Al Gore
  • George Lucas
  • Naomi Campbell
  • Bruce Willis
  • Cameron Diaz
  • Alec Baldwin
  • Mick Jagger

Trump’s former ally, Elon Musk, even tweeted that the president is mentioned in the files by taking to X in June 2025.

“@RealDonaldTrump is in the Epstein files,” Musk tweeted. “That is the real reason they have not been made public. Have a nice day, DJT!”

In July 2025, it was revealed that AG Bondi told Trump his name was mentioned in the Epstein files, according to multiple reports.

If you or anyone you know has been sexually abused, call the National Sexual Assault Hotline at 1-800-656-HOPE (4673). A trained staff member will provide confidential, judgment-free support as well as local resources to assist in healing, recovering and more.

If you or someone you know is in emotional distress or considering suicide, call the National Suicide Prevention Lifeline at 1-800-273-TALK (8255).

November 12, 2025 0 comments
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Apple Martin says famous parents didn't let her 'feel entitled to anything'
Celebrity News

Apple Martin says famous parents didn’t let her ‘feel entitled to anything’

by jummy84 October 15, 2025
written by jummy84

15 October 2025

Chris Martin and Gwyneth Paltrow made sure daughter Apple doesn’t feel “entitled to anything”.

Apple Martin has played down nepo baby claims

The Coldplay singer and his Goop founder ex-wife – who have Apple, 21, and son Moses, 19, together – made sure to raise their children with a strong work ethic, which has made them “grateful” for opportunities in life.

Speaking to the Daily Telegraph newspaper, Apple said: “I constantly remind myself how grateful I am to have these opportunities.

“I know this is not a normal way to grow up by any means.

“But my parents did a really good job of instilling in me that I shouldn’t be entitled to anything. I have to work.”

Apple – who is studying law, history and society at Vanderbilt University in Tennessee – has joined Self Portrait for a new fashion campaign, having appeared for Chanel at Paris Fashion Week and posed with her Hollywood star mother for GapStudio.

However, by the time she turned 16 she had already started working in a clothes shop.

Back in 2020, her dad Chris told Ellen DeGeneres: “It’s her first job, and she’s about to be 16 and she’s making her way in the world and I’m so proud of her.”

Now, Apple has admitted she is doing what she can to have “a normal college experience”.

She told the newspaper: “Hanging out with my friends and trying to have a normal college experience makes me feel more normal.

“That’s how I like to unwind. We’ll sit down and do little guitar playing sessions, one person will play and the others will sing.

“I also love watching reality TV with my friends. There was one day we spent five hours on the couch and just watched old episodes of America’s Next Top Model.”




October 15, 2025 0 comments
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'You Should Be Ashamed', Aneet Padda Trolled For Her Old Video of Singing And Rapping A Famous Urdu Poem
Bollywood

‘You Should Be Ashamed’, Aneet Padda Trolled For Her Old Video of Singing And Rapping A Famous Urdu Poem

by jummy84 October 11, 2025
written by jummy84

Aneet Padda, the rising star who made waves with her breakout film Saiyaara earlier this year, is now at the center of a social media controversy. An old video of the actress, showing her singing and rapping the famous Urdu poem Lab Pe Aati Hai Dua, has resurfaced online, triggering strong reactions from netizens. In the viral video, Aneet is seen performing the iconic prayer, Lab Pe Aati Hai Dua, a beloved children’s poem written by Muhammad Iqbal.

Aneet Padda

Aneet Padda Did Rap

While the prayer is often recited in schools across the subcontinent, especially by young children, some social media users were quick to accuse the actress of mocking the Muslim community. They argued that her performance was disrespectful and rude. One user commented, “Is there a shortage of songs in the world, so why are you singing this?” Another added, “This is very bad. You should be ashamed.” Some critics even questioned her understanding of the poem’s meaning, suggesting that her actions were a result of ignorance.

Aneet Padda

Also Read: Rajinikanth Seen Meditating In A Cave After Visiting Mahavatar Babaji’s Cave In Uttarakhand, Deets Inside

However, Aneet’s supporters were quick to step in, defending her and clarifying the situation. Many fans pointed out that the actress was not mocking Muslims or the poem itself, but rather, simply having fun with the Bachche Ki Dua version, a poem that is widely sung by schoolchildren. One fan explained, “She’s not mocking Muslims. What Aneet and her friends are doing is rapping Muhammad Iqbal’s ‘Bachche Ki Dua,’ which is a type of prayer recited in most schools. There is no hate in her video.” Another wrote, “Don’t mislead, there’s no malice here. She was just having fun with a popular poem.”

Aneet Padda

Born in Amritsar, Punjab, in October 2002, Aneet Padda comes from a humble background and has been passionate about acting since her childhood. She earned a degree in Political Science from Jesus and Mary College, Delhi University, and attended Spring Dale Senior Secondary School before making her mark in Bollywood. Aneet made her film debut in 2022 with a small but praised role in the movie Salaam Venky, directed by Revathi. Despite the limited screen time, her performance garnered attention.

October 11, 2025 0 comments
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All Creatures Great and Small guest star has a very famous mum
TV & Streaming

All Creatures Great and Small guest star has a very famous mum

by jummy84 October 10, 2025
written by jummy84

In the latest episode, the pair both race to offer their equine insight to the daughter of General Beauvoir, “society beauty” Charlotte Beauvoir, who Anna Madeley described as “exuberant and proactive”.

Charlotte is expecting “Captain Farnon”, but her dad failed to specify which one, hence both of them turning up.

“Impressive,” she says, on greeting the siblings. “You ask for one and they provide a spare.”

What then ensues is a battle of wills as they seek to prove that they are the “marvel with horses” that the general was thinking of, before the next competition inevitably arrives, whatever that will be.

But in the midst of all of that, Tristan and Charlotte discover that it’s not just horses that they’re passionate about.

“Charlotte Beauvoir is a great addition,” said Callum Woodhouse. “Tristan is maturing, becoming more independent, and taking on more responsibility. I think he’s past that stage now where he’s jumping from girl to girl.

“So, is he ready for something more serious? It’s been really fun to play.”

Dame Emma Thompson, Gaia Wise and Greg Wise attend the UK Premiere of “Dead Of Winter” at Picturehouse Central on September 8, 2025 in London. Dave Benett/WireImage

Eagle-eyed viewers might remember Gaia Wise, the actor who plays Charlotte, from crime dramas The Chelsea Detective and Silent Witness, in which she had guest roles.

Her other credits include the films A Walk in the Woods – based on Bill Bryson’s book of the same name – and the suspense thriller Dead of Winter, both of which also star her mum, none other than Dame Emma Thompson. Her father is actor Greg Wise (Sense and Sensibility, The Crown).

Read more:

“Gaia Wise… is terrific,” said Samuel West. “There was one scene where I was walking alongside her, talking, and she looked so like her mum. I did two films with Emma in the early ’90s [Howards End and Carrington], so that was really weird. It was like suddenly being 30 or 35 years younger.

“And because Gaia’s really terrific – her mannerisms, or something she did, or some look she gave the ground – just took me back. It was very odd indeed. She’s terrific, and I hope we stick with her.”

Tristan will no doubt be hoping for just that…

All Creatures Great and Small continues on Thursdays at 9pm. You can order James Herriot’s All Creatures Great and Small from Amazon.

If you’re looking for something else to watch, visit our TV Guide or take a look at the rest of our Drama coverage. For more TV recommendations and reviews, listen to The Radio Times Podcast.

October 10, 2025 0 comments
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The 7 Most Famous Midnight Movies Ever Made
TV & Streaming

The 7 Most Famous Midnight Movies Ever Made

by jummy84 October 4, 2025
written by jummy84

There’s probably a classier metaphor I could use to describe the feeling you get when you realize you’re watching a real midnight movie and not some cheap imitation. And yet, like the famous censorship decision passed down by the 1964 U.S. Supreme Court — a notoriously feckless group that was somehow still more fun than our current justice system — I must say, “I know it when I see it.” 

You can’t really tell someone they’re in a cult unless they’re ready to leave one, and you can’t really claim to have made a cult film until your movie behaves like that. From the ever-growing list of “genre” and “midnight” shorts competitions on the festival circuit, to the awe-inspiring grassroots campaigns that have followed feature indie triumphs like Mike Cheslik’s “Hundreds of Beavers,” bawdy counterculture has managed to stay explosive and hopeful even over the toughest times this year.

ANEMONE, from left: Daniel Day-Lewis, Sean Bean, 2025. © Focus Features / courtesy Everett Collection
Alejandro González Iñárritu at the 2025 Cannes Film Festival

More entertainers are pushing the envelope to match the extreme feel of daily life, and Hollywood’s top decision-makers are taking note of a trend IndieWire’s Dana Harris-Bridson is already reporting. In some cases, where and when filmmakers find their niche audiences is as important as how and why studios decide to distribute their art. Did you come with a party, or did you ask Hollywood to throw you one?

Think of it like an amateur open mic night, where novice comedians are required to sell tickets or buy a certain number of drinks if they want to perform. Some indie creatives say you’ve got a better shot at convincing the industry to give you multiple seats at the table for films with social scenes already attached — than they are inviting backers to dream up a culture with them on still-emerging IP. That’s easier said than done, of course, and playing a movie at midnight does not a midnight movie make. 

Listed in chronological order, these essential cult classics will guide you through the history of the format and teach you some of the most important lessons in theatrical buzz-building the art world has ever known. From the Pope of Trash and all that Divine goodness in 1972’s “Pink Flamingos” — to Tommy Wiseau’s melodramatic “The Room,” a so-bad-it’s-good gem that’s been tearing us apart since 2003, these are the timeless midnight masterpieces you’ve got to study if you want your film to hit after dark.

1. “Reefer Madness” (1936)

What a movie actually is  and how people experience it are two very different things. Released in 1936, this morality tale against marijuana was financed by a long-defunct church group called the Motion Picture Guild. Something like the cinematic Sinclair Broadcasting of its day, the footage from this public service announcement, originally titled “Tell Your Children,” was recut and redistributed under a slew of different names throughout the 1930s and 1940s. 

Weed wasn’t the brick-and-mortar phenomenon it is in some U.S. states today, and the drug’s popularity wouldn’t seriously grow among Americans until the 1960s. Thanks to producer Dwain Esper, the black-and-white exploitation flick was also known as “Love Madness,” “Dope Addict,” “The Burning Question,” and more self-righteous monikers that made it easy to mock during that dormant period. When versions of the film started appearing on roadside attractions and college campuses, word-of-mouth spread and the promise of seeing the footage out of context helped the eventized version of the project soar even higher. This isn’t really the first midnight movie in earnest — that’s up next — but the sideways journey it took laid essential groundwork.

REEFER MADNESS, 1936
“Reefer Madness” (1936)Courtesy Everett Collection

Legalization activist Keith Stroup eventually co-opted the public domain film and used it to rebelliously bolster his own movement. Directed by Louis J. Gasnier, “Tell Your Children” gained more popularity at charity screenings where flecks of the call-back comedy culture that would later define “The Rocky Horror Picture Show” widened the “Reefer Madness” appeal. It would come to be widely known by that name in part thanks to the musical stage adaptation from 1988. That was made into a Showtime special starring Alan Cumming and Kristen Bell in 2005, and “The Good Place” actress appeared in the live show in Los Angeles for the 25th anniversary last year.

2. “Night of the Living Dead” (1968)

George A. Romero’s “Night of the Living Dead” almost didn’t make this list. Still, there’s no denying that horror is integral to the midnight movie, and the late Father of Zombies is widely credited with giving both genres their progressive political reputations. (Plus, this thing whips in every way a movie can whip. It isn’t even a scary scene, but the line, “They’re coming to get you Barbara!” lives in my head rent free. Gimme an edit where the bass drops!) 

An unrated effort from 1968, Romero’s very first feature was a true-blue indie with a weak distro plan that he financed and shot himself. At first, it was marketed like a normal horror release. But after reports of some disastrous screenings, including one Chicago matinee attended by critic Roger Ebert and a pack of hysterical children, “Night of the Living Dead” was increasingly considered “too scary” to show during the day. That PR gold helped launch Romero as a beloved cult film director, although he rarely shared in the profits of the revolutionary works he made. Not yet bested today, the most exquisite zombie movie ever created demanded to be seen by more audiences, and using late-night slots at drive-in theaters and rep cinemas as a cheap way to build out its reputation was brilliant. 

NIGHT OF THE LIVING DEAD, Duane Jones, 1968
“Night of the Living Dead” (1968) Everett Collection / Everett Collection

Released against the backdrop of the Vietnam War, the terrifying existential statement Romero was making properly snaps into focus through the performance of Duane Jones. The Black actor was a revolutionary casting choice for Romero’s final guy, and the cutting indictment of racism in America blanketed the country only after nightfall. “Night of the Living Dead” served as a jangly prelude for the existential dread David Lynch would stir up in movie-goers with his debut, “Eraserhead,” less than a decade later.

3. “El Topo” (1970)

In light of “Reefer Madness,” it’s fun to imagine what the prudish Motion Picture Group might have said about the violent psychosexual odyssey that is “El Topo.” Maybe… “Oh, holy fuck!” 

Alejandro Jodorowsky was a Chilean-French filmmaker and the patron saint of acid cinema whose shoestring Western — shot over six harsh months in Mexico’s Chihuahuan Desert — brought unprecedented surrealism to cinema. He insisted on doing everything practically, dragging his team to remote locations and killing real animals for a “more truthful” effect on screen.  Commingling incendiary psychedelic imagery with the extreme conditions that impacted the “El Topo” cast and crew, the final viewing experience is transformative anywhere you see it. 

The poster for “El Topo” (1970)

You can almost feel the extreme heat and cold radiating off the screen as Jodorowsky, who also stars as the titular El Topo (translated to mean The Mole in English), wanders the white-hot landscape contending with the infinite paradoxes of personal philosophy. As he pursues enlightenment, the repeated clashes El Topo has with various enemies along his winding journey mount an existential lesson that caught the attention of John Lennon among others. 

Jodorowsky is frequently credited as the “father of the midnight movie,” and while he indeed made an extraordinary film, if anyone deserves that title for their work on “El Topo” it’s Ben Barenholtz. The owner of New York City’s Elgin Cinema made the historic decision to screen it when he did — establishing the very notion of midnight as a ritual worth having at the movies.

4. “Pink Flamingos” (1972)

Not only did John Waters and drag queen Divine help make midnight movies more queer, but they also bravely tested the limits of shock cinema and passed with flying, pastel, and dog shit-stained colors. Before Ben Barenholtz left the Elgin and began the next phase of his career as a producer (he’s credited on “Miller’s Crossing,” “Requiem for a Dream,” and more all-time releases throughout the years), he programmed “Pink Flamingos” and catapulted Waters’ reputation from challenging underground artist to internationally renowned provocateur. 

The best movies extract emotions from us, and watching the most objectionable material in Waters’ masterpiece from 1972 can feel like trying to hold puke back behind your eyeballs. But advertised as a transgressive “exercise in bad taste,” that’s what the Elgin was selling, and even despite themselves, audiences ate it up. If “El Topo” established the midnight format as assaulting and transformative, then “Pink Flamingos” anointed it a place of spectacle. The midnight screen became a no-holds-barred arena for freedom of expression through Waters — one that could turn trash into treasure and make filth feel at once frightening and fun. 

PINK FLAMINGOS, Divine, 1972
“Pink Flamingos” (1972) Courtesy Everett Collection

Also known as Harris Glenn Milstead, Divine should have monuments in every city. Fans could start by showing the late legend even more love in Baltimore, Maryland, where “Pink Flamingos” was made guerilla style and the notorious production gained its earliest reputation filming on the public street. The legendary porn movie “Deep Throat” came out that year too, but people loved Divine because she turned their judgment of her depravity into a source of joy. That megawatt charisma steered midnight movies deeper into the drag world. It also laid an essential foundation for the fearless Club Kids that would emerge around the time Divine died in 1988. 

In the film, the eventual “Hairspray!” star plays Babs Johnson, the “filthiest person alive.” That’s a more coveted title than you’d think living in her candy-colored trailer park, and Waters escalates the battle of depravity that follows through a list of gross-out gags including incest, cannibalism, and that oh-so-whimsical canine feces eating. “Pink Flamingos” never gained the popularity of the next major midnight movie to sweep the nation, “Rocky Horror,” but it put Divine in the running for mainstream cinema’s most impactful drag performer. That’s an accolade she’d no doubt hate, and to quote the queen herself, “The world of the heterosexual is a sick and boring life.” But the stunts got her and Waters talked about constantly — a trick that’s harder to pull off than it looks and cheap copycats fail at all the time.

5. “The Rocky Horror Picture Show” (1975)

A group of batshit musical theater kids hit Hollywood in 1975, and midnight was never the same. Having opened “The Rocky Horror Show” on the West End two years earlier, director Jim Sharman and writer Richard O’Brien dreamed a new version of their glam-rock musical — about a conservative couple with a flat tire, who ask for help from a sexy mad scientist in a castle down the road — that would dominate the silver screen for the next 50 years. Eventually. 

Up against “Jaws” and more obsession-worthy movies at the box office that summer, “The Rocky Horror Picture Show” had a hard time getting out of the gate. The story had been a smash hit on stage in London, and the cast and crew had delivered the fiendish nightmare they’d promised their backers. But finally unleashed on the mainstream American public, “The Rocky Horror Picture Show” took about a year to find its sea legs. Fox had already lost about $500,000 on the adaptation when executive Tim Deegan had the brilliant idea to “take the movie midnight,” a move that not only recouped the studio’s money but also made “Rocky Horror” the single longest-running theatrical release ever made.

ROCKY HORROR PICTURE SHOW, Tim Curry, Barry Bostwick, Susan Sarandon, 1975. TM and Copyright © 20th Century Fox Film Corp. All rights reserved. Courtesy: Everett Collection.
“The Rocky Horror Picture Show” (1975) ©20thCentFox/Courtesy Everett Collection

Known for its callbacks, prop comedy, shadow casts, and more, the result is a powerful pop culture institution that’s created a mighty network of midnight movie fans. Thousands of people have actively participated in interactive “Rocky Horror” screenings, and millions more have attended — finding solace and safety in the margins of a truly weird and wonderful community that’s still celebrated by Tim Curry, Susan Sarandon, Barry Bostwick, Nell Campbell, Patricia Quinn, and many more. The result has been called “the only good cult in the world,” and its legacy is the subject of several documentaries, including 2016’s “Rocky Horror Saved My Life” and the newly released “Strange Journey: The Story of Rocky Horror” directed by Linus O’Brien, the son of Richard who also played Riff-Raff. 

6. “Eraserhead” (1977)

Even in the warm embrace of an existentially challenged audience, “Eraserhead” was the haunting directorial debut that effectively demanded a hug from the entire midnight-loving world. Developed when he was still a student at AFI, David Lynch’s unconventional approach to filmmaking marked him an artistic talent to watch early but he had trouble distributing his soul-shaking first film.

ERASERHEAD, Jack Nance, 1976
The poster for “Eraserhead” (1977)Courtesy Everett Collection

The affection the arthouse creator had for the midnight format proved invaluable to his success. Boxed out of several locations by “The Rocky Horror Picture Show,” Lynch steadily pushed “Eraserhead” at select locations until it broke through thanks to key offerings at Cinema Village in New York City and the Landmark’s Nuart Theater in Los Angeles. As it grew, the buzz surrounding Lynch became a benchmark few could meet and midnights felt longer when he was alive with them.

Too much has been written about the late Lynch and the countless talents he had as a sensitive filmmaker and human. So, in lieu of any more serious criticism, I’ll take this time to remember him for his handsome ears. What fine lobes that man had! Bravo.

7. “The Room” (2003)

When “Reefer Madness” stopped circulating in the 1940s and 1950s, the early subculture that started to form around it went mostly dormant. The pearl-clutching folks over at the Motion Picture Guild never had a response to their film being used so brazenly, and that was true even as the footage was explicitly recontextualized for the opposite purpose it was intended.

Tommy Wiseau was not so quiet when it came to “The Room.” 

So-bad-it’s-good movies have been a thing for a long, long time. But that kind of rhetoric started to cause more of a stir among passionate genre fanbases when more of them felt empowered to argue both the outrageous art and the community experience they worshipped were extraordinary. Those debates rage on for some of the most vexing combinations of craft and camp — think “Showgirls,” “Striptease,” “Cats.” But “The Room” is a sincere and glorious work of dumb-assery that’s genius by mistake with a mystery at its center that’s still intoxicating today.  

The poster for “The Room” (2003)

How much Wiseau paid to cast himself in a bizarre melodrama about a love triangle has been debated for years, but half the fun when it came out was following the movie’s rise and witnessing the filmmaker’s strange evasiveness whenever he was asked about his background. Larger than life but fabulously incapable of acting, the leading man and self-flagellating auteur behind “The Room” became a kind of walking meme in the 2000s.

Peddling a highly quotable movie and rubbing shoulders with many of the top comedians in Los Angeles at the time, Wiseau went to significant lengths to make sure his movie was Oscars eligible before it was infamously labeled “The Citizen Kane of Bad Movies.” That’s an achievement in its own right, and the legacy of “The Room” lives on in a best-selling memoir about the production and that book’s film adaptation, each titled “The Disaster Artist.”

October 4, 2025 0 comments
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'Today I Am Very Nervous', Aryan Khan's Emotional Lines For His Mom Gauri Khan Winning Hearts On The Internet
Bollywood

‘People Become More Famous After Going Inside’, Aryan Khan Took A Dig At His Jail Days In His Ba***ds of Bollywood Show

by jummy84 August 23, 2025
written by jummy84

The preview of Aryan Khan’s debut series ‘Ba***ds of Bollywood’ was released recently, which made fans go crazy. There are many action packed scenes in the series, which are being praised by the fans alot, but one scene is in a lot of discussion, seeing which users are claiming that Aryan Khan has taken a dig at his jail days when he was arrested in drugs case.

Aryan Khan

Let us tell you that Aryan Khan has directed ‘Ba***ds of Bollywood’ and has also written its story himself. Fans were impressed after seeing the preview and are not tired of praising it. The teaser of ‘Ba***ds of Bollywood’ has a glimpse of many such moments, which will not let you blink even a moment. One such scene is the jail scene, which is making headlines on the internet. There is a scene in which Lakshya Lalwani’s character Aasman Singh is in jail.

Aryan Khan

Then a police officer goes to him and says, ‘Don’t take tension, people become more famous after going inside.’ Immediately after this scene, the title comes, ‘Written and Directed by Aryan Khan’. Seeing the way this dialogue and then Aryan Khan’s name comes on the screen, users are saying that Shahrukh’s son has taken a dig at his jail term. Users are praising this style of Aryan.

Aryan Khan

Sharing the screenshot from the ‘Ba***ds of Bollywood’ jail scene, a user wrote on X, ‘Powerful. I especially liked that scene, where Salman Khan is in one frame, the hero is inside the jail, the policeman says, ‘Don’t worry, everyone becomes famous after going inside. And then Aryan Khan’s name comes.’ One said that this scene from Aryan’s series will make the haters feel the chilli. A user has written, ‘People become even more famous after going inside and then Aryan Khan’s title card. Wow, whose idea was this?’ Another comment is, ‘Aryan Bhai you are killing the haters.’

 

August 23, 2025 0 comments
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