“From silver screen to Street Circus: How Vijay’s TVK Is Drowning in a sea of Low-IQ Fanatics” 🎭🤡


Actor-turned-politician Vijay has launched his Tamilaga Vettri Kazhagam (TVK) campaign with much noise, but as NDTV’s senior editor sam Daniel’s Trichy report showed, the so-called “movement” is less politics and more carnival. What unfolded on camera was not the image of a serious political force but of a star drowning in the antics of his overzealous, low-IQ followers. Here’s why Vijay’s politics looks more like a street play than a roadmap to fort St. George:




1. The Trichy Spectacle

Instead of policy talk or meaningful slogans, Vijay’s campaign trail was hijacked by his fans dancing, shouting, and flashing childish signs right in front of a senior journalist. A scene that should have been about political messaging turned into a roadside circus.



2. Fans Over Facts

Vijay has successfully carried over his cinema fan base into politics—but that’s exactly the problem. These aren’t engaged citizens; they’re movie groupies treating elections like a first-day-first-show celebration.



3. Low-IQ Energy on Full Display

From screaming at cameras to obstructing reporters, the Trichy visuals exposed a simple truth: Vijay’s fan base is running on noise, not knowledge. This is less about democracy and more about star worship gone brain-dead.



4. Cinema Hysteria, Political Bankruptcy

For decades, tamil Nadu politics has seen cinema seep into campaigns. But while mgr and jayalalithaa converted charisma into credible politics, Vijay’s brigade looks more like unpaid extras in a bad movie scene.



5. No Message, Only Madness

sam Daniel’s report was supposed to cover TVK’s political narrative. Instead, the coverage was drowned out by immature antics—proof that Vijay’s movement is still stuck at the fan club level, far from being a political party.



6. The Cult of Mediocrity

By relying on a fan base that behaves with zero political maturity, Vijay is only shrinking his credibility. Leaders build cadres. Stars attract crowds. Right now, TVK is nothing more than a mob with cutouts.



7. When the Spotlight Fades

Crowds dancing for the camera make for viral clips, but they don’t win elections. Eventually, votes are decided by issues, governance, and trust. And Vijay’s low-IQ circus isn’t inspiring confidence beyond his fan clubs.



🔥 Final Punchline: Vijay’s Trichy campaign proved one thing—his biggest strength is also his biggest weakness. Surrounded by immature, low-IQ fans who can dance but not debate, TVK risks becoming the biggest joke in tamil Nadu politics.

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