Actor-comedian Vir Das is not one to mince words, especially when it comes to the contrasting realities of cancel culture in the West and in India. During a recent stand-up comedy performance, the outspoken comic offered a satirical, yet brutally honest take on how comedians are treated differently in each part of the world.
He shared a video snippet of this performance on his Instagram on Saturday, and it’s already getting people talking.
Vir Das on Cancel Culture: A Tale of Two Realities
From the moment Vir stepped on stage, he wasted no time in diving into the controversy. “Please don’t cancel me, I apologise! It would really interfere with my incarceration,” he joked to a laughing crowd. The irony wasn’t lost on anyone.
Referring to conversations with fellow comedians in the U.S., Vir mocked the typical Western outcry over cancel culture. He recounted a conversation with an American comic who dramatically lamented, “Vir, cancel culture is insane! The other day a mob came after me. A mob on Twitter!”
Das followed that up with a biting analogy, mocking the Western panic over online backlash compared to legal ramifications in India: “It’s like telling the freshly castrated that your balls itch.”
The audience roared with laughter, but Vir’s point was razor-sharp. He went on to critique an article he had read in a Western publication: “The most annoying article I ever read in the West is: Why doesn’t Indian comedy content push the envelope?” His response? “Really b**h? Because we looked inside the envelope! There are court cases inside the envelope. There is a court date on top of the envelope.”*
This wasn’t just hyperbole. For Das, the risks are not just about public opinion—they’re legal.
Legal Heat: The Cost of Pushing the Envelope in India
Vir Das is no stranger to controversy—or the courtroom. In 2021, he faced a police complaint and a wave of public outrage after a performance in the U.S. where he spoke about the “Two Indias” he comes from. The routine tackled hard-hitting issues such as women’s safety, Covid-19 mismanagement, environmental pollution, and the farmer protests. Critics accused him of insulting India, and legal trouble followed.
This wasn’t his first brush with legal challenges either. In 2020, his Netflix dark comedy series Hasmukh came under fire when a group of lawyers filed a legal notice against the show. Their claim? That episode four defamed and maligned the legal profession.
The message in his latest performance was clear: While Western comedians may fear social media outrage, Indian comics often face real, legal consequences for expressing dissent or satire.
And yet, Das continues to push boundaries.
His latest stand-up special, Fool Volume, was released on Netflix on July 18. The special has already garnered attention for its fearless take on politics, identity, and, of course, cancel culture. It’s a continuation of Vir’s brand—bold, unapologetic, and willing to take on the establishment, no matter the cost.
By drawing this East vs. West comparison, Vir isn’t just talking about comedy. He’s raising important questions about freedom of speech, censorship, and how societies deal with discomforting truths.