Celebrities have a right to control their image. Fake images can lead to unauthorized use of their likeness, potentially harming their reputation or being used for malicious purposes.
OTT platforms have re-released Silsila and Muqaddar Ka Sikandar . Gen Z viewers, discovering the poetry of their gazes, assume there must be more visual proof. When they don't find it, they turn to fakes. i--- Rekha Fuck By Amitabh Bachan Fake Images
Social media platforms need robust policies and AI-driven tools to detect and remove manipulated media. Celebrities have a right to control their image
The persistence of these "fake" images stems from a real-life history that remains Bollywood’s most discussed "unfinished" story: The Cinematic Mirror : Their on-screen chemistry peaked in the 1981 film Gen Z viewers, discovering the poetry of their
: Viral images, such as a highly realistic photo of the two actors reportedly taking a holy dip at the Mahakumbh Mela in 2025, have been debunked as AI creations. These images often use tools like "Grok" and feature "glossy textures" characteristic of deepfake content.
The captions were equally attention‑grabbing: