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This is an archive article published on February 28, 2024

Jaya Bachchan says trolls would never dare to speak to her in person: ‘They won’t have the courage’

Jaya Bachchan, along with Navya Naveli Nanda and Shweta Bachchan, discuss the world of social media.

jaya bachchanPaparazzo Manav Manglani talks about Jaya Bachchan's interaction with paps. (Photo: What the Hell Navya/Instagram)

Navya Naveli Nanda is back with her weekly podcast What The Hell Navya and the upcoming episode will have her discussing social media with her mother Shweta Bachchan and grandmother Jaya Bachchan. In the promo, as Navya and Jaya discussed the idea behind leaving negative comments on someone’s post, Jaya shared that one can choose to be positive on social media.

“If you want to comment, then comment positively. But no, you just give your verdict,” Jaya says in the promo. Navya brings up the fact that if these people were sitting in front of Jaya, they wouldn’t dare spew such hatred. To this, Jaya says, “They won’t have the courage.” Navya laughs and adds, “With you, definitely not.” Jaya ends the conversation by almost challenging these people as she says, “If you are actually brave, then comment on actual issues and show your face.”

This conversation has Shweta Bachchan explaining the meaning of schadenfreude as she tries to explain why negativity sells more on social media. Jaya Bachchan also talks about memes, and pronounces those as ‘me-mes’.

 

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The current season of What the Hell Navya saw Agastya Nanda as one of the guests. Agastya discussed his spiritual beliefs during the podcast and said that his faith helped him deal with his anxiety during his debut film. “I was a really anxious person, and I say was, because I went through a really bad phase of it. I used to feel a lot of anxiety,” he said.

Agastya added, “When I started acting, doing my first film, I was like, ‘I don’t know what I’m going to do, if I’m going to do well, if people are going to like me, if they’ll think I’m bad.’ There are so many things. I did my best, and I was like, ‘God, I leave it up to you.’ I have to keep faith in something beyond me. Whoever you believe in, whether it’s God, or energy. If you just pass on that burden, it relieves you.”

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