
'No civic sense' influencer Amulya Rattan recreates her own video as self-parody
India Today
Influencers Amulya Rattan and Hardik Sharma engage in a self-parody recreation of a viral moment, highlighting the ongoing discussion about 'no civic sense'.
After facing online backlash over a viral ‘civic sense’ debate, influencer Amulya Rattan has flipped the narrative with a self-trolling video that is now going viral.
In the new clip, Amulya recreates a familiar influencer setup, filming an outfit video in a public space. But this time, there’s a twist. Another creator, Hardik Sharma, walks behind her while recording his own point of view. As Amulya continues shooting, Hardik sarcastically remarks, “Ye dekh lo, creators kahi bhi shuru ho jata hai, koi civic sense nahi hai” (Look at this, creators start anywhere, no civic sense at all). The role reversal instantly lands, with viewers recognising it as a playful self-troll rather than a defensive response. By exaggerating the situation, the duo strips the moment of its earlier seriousness and turns it into a shared joke.
Watch the clip here:
A post shared by Amulya Rattan (@amulyarattan_)
The video arrives after Amulya found herself at the centre of online backlash over a short Snapchat clip that went viral days earlier. In that video, she was seen reacting sharply to a man who walked past her while she was recording in a public space. Her visible irritation and remark about the man not apologising triggered criticism, with many users accusing her of entitlement and questioning influencers’ expectations of public spaces bending around their content.
As the clip circulated, the internet did what it does best, memes, parodies, and exaggerated recreations followed. The “civic sense” conversation expanded beyond Amulya, with creators and users alike poking fun at influencer culture’s unspoken rules. Even Orry joined the trend, adding to its viral momentum.

The profiles of at least three of China's leading nuclear, missile and radar experts were scrubbed from the website of the Chinese Academy of Engineering, the country's most prestigious academic body. This comes as a series of purges under Premier Xi Jinping's anti-corruption campaign have decimated the upper echelons of China's military and scientific community.

The aircraft had also been used by senior Iranian officials and military figures for both domestic and international travel, and for coordinating with allied countries, the Israeli military said. Meanwhile, Dubai International Airport has resumed flight operations after a temporary suspension of about seven hours caused by a drone strike near a fuel tank facility.











