
Video of Mumbai local's 'Great Khali' ticket collector sparks passenger stories
India Today
A video showing a tall ticket collector in Mumbai's crowded local train has gone viral as regular commuters identified the official.
A ticket collector’s height has unexpectedly become the focus of a viral video after he was filmed moving through a crowded Mumbai suburban train compartment, his head nearly touching the low ceiling.
A video shared on Instagram by user Avinash Mohite shows an unusually tall ticket collector making his way through a crowded suburban train compartment. As he checks tickets in the packed coach, his height becomes instantly noticeable. With limited headroom inside the train, he is seen carefully moving forward while his head nearly grazes the ceiling and the overhead hand straps sway around him.
The caption reads, “Height itni ki ticket bhi khud salute kare,” meaning, “He is so tall that even the ticket salutes him.” The witty line added to the charm of the video, helping it quickly gather momentum online.
Within a short span, the reel clocked over a million views, drawing amused reactions from viewers across the platform.
Watch the video here:
A post shared by Avinash Mohite (@avinashmohite89)

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.

When we look at Iran through the prism of religion and see a Shia Islamic country, we negate its thousands of years of rich pre-Islamic Persian culture. A dive into the world of Zoroastrianism and Vedas shows us how Indians and Iranians have been sharing languages, Gods, sciences and a sacred fire for thousands of years.










