
💰 “From Questions to Mansions: How Rubika Liyaqat Turned ‘Journalism’ Into a Real Estate Business”
This is not the house of a cricketer.
Not the house of a businessman.
Not the house of a bollywood star.
This is the mansion of Rubika Liyaqat — the “journalist” who thinks rahul Gandhi’s vacations are breaking news, but government scams are bedtime stories. And here’s the million-dollar (or should we say, bungalow-sized) question: Can real journalism buy this lifestyle? The answer is as obvious as a primetime “debate” on her channel — NO.
Here’s why Rubika’s lavish mansion is less about journalism and more about selling the soul of journalism itself:
1. Anchors Don’t Earn Mansions, They Earn Masters
Even the top anchors with 15 years’ experience don’t touch the kind of wealth needed for these sprawling houses. Unless, of course, you’re not paid in salary but in loyalty.
2. From Unknown to Mansion Owner in 2 Years — Magic or media Slavery?
Rubika wasn’t even a known name a few years ago. Now she’s living like Ambani’s neighbor. Journalism didn’t do this. Propaganda did.
3. Questioning rahul Gandhi, Defending Modi — The Perfect Career Hack
She built her career not by exposing power, but by protecting it. Criticism of the opposition pays pennies. Defending the government? That pays in property deeds.
4. Journalism or PR Agency?
Real journalists risk careers, reputations, and even their lives to speak truth to power. Rubika risks nothing — because she doesn’t question power, she serves it.
5. When Newsrooms Become Auction Houses
Oh, they don’t just sell their souls; they auction them off — with bidding starting at a lifetime supply of biryani and a hotline to the PMO. Journalism is dead; PR is thriving.
6. Public Pays the Price
While Rubika gets mansions, the public gets misinformation, distractions, and propaganda shoved down their throats — all in the name of “news.”
⚡ Conclusion: Bungalows Don’t Lie
Rubika Liyaqat stopped being a journalist long ago. Her bungalow isn’t built on news; it’s built on loyalty, propaganda, and betrayal of journalism itself.