
On April 5, Rashmika Mandanna posted a cute beach video of herself singing “Happy Birthday” — all smiles, all heart.
It was her 29th birthday, and she chose to have a low-key, solo celebration. But what should’ve been a feel-good moment turned ugly as trolls jumped in with hate.
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The video was from her vacation in Salalah, Oman. No glam shoot, no promo — just a real moment of joy.
But some users trolled her expressions, some called her cringe queen, while others dragged in Sikandar’s failure as a reason to bash her. The timing couldn’t be more insensitive.
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Let’s be honest — Sikandar flopping would’ve already hurt. Imagine dealing with a film’s failure and still trying to find a reason to smile.
Instead of support, she got sarcasm and trolling — proving again how brutal and vile the internet can be, especially towards women in the spotlight.
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Why is it that the moment a celeb shares something real or raw, we pounce? This wasn’t a PR stunt — it was a real human moment.
And yet people acted like she owed them a reason to smile. It’s a reminder of how quick we are to judge and how slow we are to empathize.
Rashmika didn’t clap back. She didn’t delete the post. She just moved on — quietly, confidently.
That kind of grace? Rare. It’s high time we stopped expecting perfection and started appreciating authenticity.