Why You Must Watch Ba*ds of Bollywood: The Unfiltered, Satirical Roasting of the Hindi Film Industry

The time for polite, glossy Bollywood narratives is over. Ba*ds of Bollywood, Aryan Khan’s directorial debut, isn’t a love letter to the industry—it’s a chaotic, unflinching roast, and that is precisely why you need to watch it.**
This seven-episode Netflix series, born from a celebrity insider, doesn’t just peek behind the curtain; it rips it down. It’s a messy, meta, and often hilarious spectacle that validates every Reddit gossip thread and social media debate about the glamour, the scandal, and the sheer absurdity of Hindi cinema.
Here are the key reasons why this controversial series is essential viewing for anyone fascinated by the workings of Bollywood:
1. The Power of the Insider Satire (Nepotism Used as a Weapon)
The ultimate irony of the series is its creator. Aryan Khan, a prominent “nepo baby,” uses his unparalleled access and privilege not to flatter the industry, but to savagely parody it.
- Self-Aware Commentary: The show takes direct aim at the issues surrounding the industry: nepotism, the outsider vs. insider debate, and media scrutiny. When the lead character, Aasman Singh, delivers a cutting line about a star kid being able to “ride back to her big house in a Mercedes” if she fails, it hits harder because it comes from a place of deep, personal understanding.
- Irreverent & Raw: Unlike previous industry satires that held back (like Om Shanti Om), this show is profane, fast-paced, and unafraid to expose the hypocrisy. It gleefully tears into the manufactured image of stardom, exposing the chaos of contracts, PR spin, and behind-the-scenes manipulations that govern the creative process.
2. The Explosive, Real-Life Meta Commentary
The series isn’t just fiction; it’s a form of narrative revenge and catharsis, blurring the line between cinematic drama and real-life scandal.
- The Unflinching Personal Digs: In one of the most talked-about sequences, the show features a caricature of the officer involved in a major real-life drug case, mocking the entire legal and media circus that surrounded the events. This move is a bold, unprecedented act of reclaiming a personal narrative through art, making the series feel immediately authentic and high-stakes.
- Cameos that Roar: The use of star cameos (including Salman Khan, Aamir Khan, Shah Rukh Khan, and Karan Johar) isn’t just stunt casting. These appearances are cleverly coded, often delivering punchlines that feel like the industry finally saying the quiet parts out loud. When the biggest names in Bollywood participate in roasting their own personas, the satire lands perfectly.
3. A Modern Masala Spectacle
For all its sharp edges, the show remains a full-blooded Bollywood entertainer. It succeeds because it understands that audiences are both repulsed by and addicted to the chaos of the industry.
- Embracing the Absurd: The plot embraces Bollywood’s innate love for melodrama—from dramatic fight scenes and romantic tension to a major family secret twist in the finale. It deliberately leans into corniness, creating a fun, over-the-top ride that works because it’s self-aware.
- Next-Gen Talent: Led by a talented ensemble cast (including Lakshya, Raghav Juyal, and Sahher Bambba), the show brings a fresh energy that embodies the current media-savvy, quick-witted generation of performers.
If you are looking for a show that is not a gentle, romantic tribute to cinema, but a bold, messy, and hilarious piece of self-critical entertainment, Ba*ds of Bollywood* is a must-watch.



