Sunil Pal Warns Shortcut Fame and Vulgar Content Misguide Youth

Veteran comedian Sunil Pal has strongly criticized the growing culture of "shortcut fame" on social media. He alleges that vulgar content, trolling, and irresponsible comedy are negatively influencing the younger generation. Pal expressed concern about creators gaining popularity through sensationalism rather than meaningful talent. He called for senior artists to take responsibility for guiding young audiences in the right direction.

Key Points: Sunil Pal Slams Vulgar Social Media, Shortcut Fame

  • Sunil Pal criticizes vulgar social media content
  • Shortcut fame misguiding youth
  • Creators use trolling and abuse for views
  • Clean comedy needed for family audiences
3 min read

Sunil Pal slams "vulgar" social media content, says shortcut fame is misguiding youth

Comedian Sunil Pal criticizes vulgar social media content and shortcut fame, saying it misguides youth. He highlights the need for clean comedy and responsible guidance.

"In the process of shortcuts, even number one becomes no one. - Sunil Pal"

Mumbai, May 14

Veteran comedian and actor Sunil Pal has strongly criticised the growing culture of "shortcut fame" on social media, alleging that vulgar content, trolling and irresponsible comedy are negatively influencing the younger generation.

Speaking to ANI, Pal expressed concern over the kind of content dominating digital platforms, claiming that many creators are gaining popularity through sensationalism rather than meaningful talent.

"There is no censor on YouTube, so such films and reels are being made. Many boys come in reels wearing very few clothes, others sit in cars and talk nonsense just to create trends," he said.

The comedian further alleged that online creators often encourage trolling and abuse to increase engagement and views.

"They hire trollers for views. If someone criticises them, they abuse that person and attack them online. Even when I say something positive like people should not abuse, I get targeted heavily," he added.

Pal said the obsession with overnight success is harming the mindset of young audiences.

"In the process of shortcuts, even number one becomes no one. If we write number one in shortcut, it becomes NO1," he remarked, using a wordplay to underline his point.

Highlighting his interactions with students during college performances and public events, Pal said Indian youth possess immense potential in fields ranging from sports and arts to education and nation-building.

"Our youth want to learn and achieve a lot. Their thinking is very good. But these shortcuts are taking them in the wrong direction," he said.

Referring to stand-up comedy and online entertainment trends, Pal criticised what he described as excessive use of abusive language, glorification of alcohol and drugs, and disrespect toward senior artists.

"In many stand-up acts, all they talk about is drinking, drugs and abusing people. They even casually take the names of legends like Amitabh Bachchan and Dharmendra without understanding their stature," he said.

Pal also expressed disappointment over what he called a lack of support from fellow comedians and artists from the industry.

Pal said many stand-up acts focus excessively on "abuse, alcohol" and offensive humour instead of creativity and family entertainment.

"In their 10-15 minute stand-up, all these things happen. They don't respect the elders," he said.

"When I speak against such things, people surround and troll me. But many senior and junior artists who privately agree with me remain silent. If they spoke up too, things could change," he said.

The actor further claimed that family audiences now specifically invite him because they associate his performances with clean comedy.

"Wherever I go for shows, people tell me, 'Sunil ji, you won't do vulgarity because you are family entertainment,'" he added.

Pal maintained that while social media has changed the entertainment landscape, creators and senior artists must take responsibility for guiding young audiences in the right direction.

"Our youth are ready to learn good things. They only need the right guidance," he said.

- ANI

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Reader Comments

P
Priya S
I agree with some points but Sunil Pal himself has been part of the same industry that creates content for views. It's easy to blame social media creators now, but hasn't he ever made a joke that went too far? We need more constructive solutions, not just criticism. 🤔
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Vikram M
The wordplay "NO1 = Number One" really hit home. 😂 Smart observation by Sunil ji! But I think the problem is deeper - it's about our education system that doesn't teach critical thinking, so youth fall for these flashy shortcuts. Parents need to guide kids more.
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James A
As someone who works in digital marketing, I see both sides. Sunil Pal's points about vulgar content and trolling are valid, but social media also gives opportunities to talented people who wouldn't have gotten a platform otherwise. The real issue is lack of content moderation, not the medium itself.
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Rohit P
Kya baat hai Sunil ji! 👏 But I think the problem is also that we as audience keep watching such content. If we stop giving views to vulgar reels and sh**ty content, these creators will automatically change. The industry follows the audience, not the other way around.
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Sarah B
Interesting perspective from Sunil Pal. Having grown up in India and now living abroad, I see the same trend everywhere - not just in India. The pressure to go viral overnight is global. However, I think his comments about "vulgarity" might be a bit conservative. Times change, and what's considered vulgar today might not be tomorrow.

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