On March 20, a day after Yogi Adityanath took over as the chief minister of Uttar Pradesh, reports of another drama, which happened 30,000 feet in the air, would send the social media into convulsions.
The crew of The Kapil Sharma Show, the popular laugh-fest on Sony TV, was on Air India’s flight AI 309 from Melbourne to Mumbai. According to various media reports, Kapil Sharma, the host of the show, was inebriated and didn't take nicely to his staff eating before him and vented his spleen at Sunil Grover, the key performer after Sharma, and others.
Details of the spat came out when the two took to Twitter soon after landing. Grover announced that he would no longer be a part of the show. In the last edition of The Kapil Sharma Show, aired on March 26, Sharma was his witty self, except there was no Grover. In his place, Sharma had inducted comedians Raju Srivastava and Ahsaan Qureshi, among others.
Sharma is televisions most bankable star. He paid advance tax of Rs 23.9 crore for 2016-17, which is way ahead of Bollywood heavyweights like Ranbir Kapoor (Rs 16.5 crore), Aamir Khan (Rs 14.8 crore) and Karan Johar (Rs 11.7 crore). On the Ormax Characters India Loves list, Sharma has been the number one nonfiction character since the start of Comedy Nights With Kapil in 2013.
The popularity has come with its share of controversies. His fallout with Colors last year was bitter, after which he moved to Sony. His tweets to Prime Minister Narendra Modi about bribes being demanded by a Brihanmumbai Municipal Corporation officer for construction of his office at Versova won him innumerable enemies in cyber space and brought on counter-allegations by BMC that he had flouted norms not only for the Versova building but also for his apartment in Goregaon.
And now after he is perceived to have ridden roughshod over Grover, people have begun to wonder if success has really gone to Sharma’s head.
Comedian Raju Srivastava, who has had a close association with Sharma for the past nine years, says that the pressures of stardom have gotten to Sharma. “When someone becomes a star, ek ajeeb pressure ho jaata hai (a strange pressure builds up). If a college has its annual day, it wants to call Sharma. If its a politicians birthday, call Sharma.”
The crew of The Kapil Sharma Show, the popular laugh-fest on Sony TV, was on Air India’s flight AI 309 from Melbourne to Mumbai. According to various media reports, Kapil Sharma, the host of the show, was inebriated and didn't take nicely to his staff eating before him and vented his spleen at Sunil Grover, the key performer after Sharma, and others.
Details of the spat came out when the two took to Twitter soon after landing. Grover announced that he would no longer be a part of the show. In the last edition of The Kapil Sharma Show, aired on March 26, Sharma was his witty self, except there was no Grover. In his place, Sharma had inducted comedians Raju Srivastava and Ahsaan Qureshi, among others.
Sharma is televisions most bankable star. He paid advance tax of Rs 23.9 crore for 2016-17, which is way ahead of Bollywood heavyweights like Ranbir Kapoor (Rs 16.5 crore), Aamir Khan (Rs 14.8 crore) and Karan Johar (Rs 11.7 crore). On the Ormax Characters India Loves list, Sharma has been the number one nonfiction character since the start of Comedy Nights With Kapil in 2013.
The popularity has come with its share of controversies. His fallout with Colors last year was bitter, after which he moved to Sony. His tweets to Prime Minister Narendra Modi about bribes being demanded by a Brihanmumbai Municipal Corporation officer for construction of his office at Versova won him innumerable enemies in cyber space and brought on counter-allegations by BMC that he had flouted norms not only for the Versova building but also for his apartment in Goregaon.
And now after he is perceived to have ridden roughshod over Grover, people have begun to wonder if success has really gone to Sharma’s head.
Comedian Raju Srivastava, who has had a close association with Sharma for the past nine years, says that the pressures of stardom have gotten to Sharma. “When someone becomes a star, ek ajeeb pressure ho jaata hai (a strange pressure builds up). If a college has its annual day, it wants to call Sharma. If its a politicians birthday, call Sharma.”
Illustration: Binay Sinha

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