
Godi Media’s nepal Humiliation: How Propaganda Crashed and Burned in Front of Youth
When it comes to selling propaganda, India’s godi media has mastered the art of twisting facts. But in nepal, the playbook didn’t work. Led by Aditya raj Kaul of Adani-owned NDTV, a shameless attempt to manufacture consent for Modi-style politics was brutally exposed by Nepal’s youth. What unfolded is not just embarrassment — it is a new low for indian media credibility.

Here’s how the propaganda collapsed in real time:
1. Paid Performance: The Staged Interview
A man was conveniently paraded on camera claiming nepal “wants a prime minister like Modi.” The godi anchor beamed with satisfaction, presenting it as proof of Modi’s popularity abroad. But truth has a way of surfacing.
2. The youth Fought Back
Soon after, videos of real Nepali youth surfaced — challenging the fake narrative, confronting godi journalists, and tearing apart Sanghi propaganda. Their voices were clear: they don’t need imported narratives, and certainly not Modi as a model.
3. Exposed: Media’s Manufactured Consent
This wasn’t journalism; it was PR for a political cult. Paying one man to speak for an entire country is not reporting, it’s manipulation. And the fact that this was attempted in nepal — a sovereign nation with its own democratic struggles — makes it even more insulting.
4. Adani’s NDTV Joins the Circus
Once considered a bastion of independent journalism, NDTV under adani has now fully joined the godi stable. The sight of its anchor being schooled by angry Nepali citizens is the final proof of its credibility collapse.
5. Propaganda Meets Reality Check
Slogans may work in rallies, but outside india, the godi formula falls flat. Nepal’s youth showed that facts, dignity, and awareness can overpower even the slickest propaganda machine. Their courage is a reminder of what a real democratic spirit looks like.
Final Word: Shame Without Borders
By staging lies abroad, Godi media hasn’t just shamed itself — it has embarrassed india on foreign soil. The mask of journalism has slipped, and what remains is naked propaganda in the service of power.
Nepal’s youth delivered the lesson: You can buy microphones, but you cannot buy people’s voices.