01What happened
The story, straight
Gurugram Police have registered an FIR against comedian Pranit More and Himanshu Jangra over a viral video known as the '370 Biryani' controversy. The case was filed following a complaint by India's National Commission for Women (NCW), which alleged the content violated women's dignity. The FIR was lodged under the Information Technology Act and the Bharatiya Nyaya Sanhita (BNS). Notices have been issued to the accused and to social media platforms where the video circulated.
gurugram police filed an FIR against comedian pranit more and himanshu jangra over a viral '370 biryani' video after the national commission for women lodged a complaint. the case is under the IT Act and BNS for content allegedly violating women's dignity. both have publicly apologized, but notices are out to them and the platforms that hosted it.
02Spread timeline
Where it actually started
03Source receipts
Every claim, linked
04What's solid, what isn't
What's solid and what isn't
- Gurugram Police have registered an FIR against Pranit More and Himanshu Jangra.
- The complaint was filed by India's National Commission for Women (NCW).
- The case is lodged under the IT Act and Bharatiya Nyaya Sanhita (BNS).
- Notices have been issued to both the accused and to social media platforms.
- Both individuals have publicly apologised.
- The specific content of the '370 Biryani' video and what exactly it depicted.
- The exact number or identity of social media platforms served notices.
- Whether further legal action or arrests will follow from the FIR.
05Why it matters
The editorial take
The case marks another instance of Indian authorities using cybercrime and criminal law provisions to pursue content creators over viral material deemed offensive to women. It follows a pattern of NCW-initiated complaints leading to police action against online creators, raising ongoing debate about the line between comedy, free expression, and content regulation in India.
NCW complaint → police FIR is becoming a familiar pipeline for viral content in India. another comedian, another 'objectionable content' charge, another round of notices to platforms. the free-speech-vs-regulation debate here isn't going anywhere.
