
Couple's 'cinematic' pond pre-wedding shoot goes viral, gets brutally trolled
India Today
A couple's decision to stage their pre-wedding photo shoot in a pond has gone viral, with the shoot's unusual setting sparking amusement online.
In a world of dreamy sunsets and pastel backdrops, one couple decided to stand out by stepping into a murky pond. Their pre-wedding shoot is now viral, and the internet cannot decide whether to laugh or worry.
A pre-wedding shoot video, now doing the rounds on X, shows a couple floating in muddy water while photographers stand knee-deep nearby, directing poses with cinematic seriousness.
What was perhaps meant to evoke “eternal love” instead struck viewers as something far more bizarre, somewhere between a dramatic film scene and an accidental parody.
Watch the video here:
Pre Wedding Shoots are getting too weird pic.twitter.com/xhVKjoZrVy— Rosy (@rose_k01) March 18, 2026
Pre-wedding shoots have long been about romance, soft sunsets, flowing dresses, maybe a candid laugh in a mustard field. But this one? It seems to have taken inspiration from an entirely different genre.

After Pakistan signed the Strategic Mutual Defence Agreement with Saudi Arabia, it was obligated to help Riyadh amid Iranian drone and missile strikes in the Middle East. When Saudi Arabia needed military help and assurances, Pakistan carried out intensive bombing in Afghanistan to signal that it was already caught up in a war.

The US shared a video of strikes on Iran, with US Central Command saying its forces continue to "hunt and destroy" threats, as the conflict with Iran enters its third week. The escalation comes alongside Israeli claims of targeting top Iranian figures and Tehran's call for global condemnation of the US-Israeli attacks.

The UAE has faced the most intense barrage of Iranian attacks among the Gulf countries since the US-Israel war on Tehran began. Civilian and business infrastructure in Dubai and other hubs have been targeted. But why has the UAE been targeted more than its Gulf neighbours? Here's what's driving Iran's aggression against it.










