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Fact Check: Scripted video of a Pakistani man preparing food, using organic waste, falsely shared as a real incident from India

A video showing a man allegedly preparing food using organic waste and dried grass has been circulated with claims that it depicts an Indian preparing food unhygienically. The clip was presented as a shocking example of Indian street food practices. The post quickly gained traction online, misleading viewers into believing the video was a candid capture from India. But the viral video claiming to show an Indian man preparing food with organic waste is misleading. It was actually created by a Pakistani content creator on TikTok, who often stages such videos while pretending to be Indian.

The influencer account @porqueTTarg shared it as a shocking glimpse into how street food is made in India, and the post quickly caught attention—leading many to believe the video was genuinely filmed in an Indian setting.”

Following this, several other accounts—such as @Boldyboy1975, @Entidoto , @AsianDigest and @DrClownPhD—picked up the clip and further amplified it, echoing the same false narrative to mock Indian food culture and hygiene.

Truth behind this viral clip:

As this clip started getting a hike on social media and people began sharing it like wildfire, the D-Intent team caught sight of it and decided to investigate. We ran a reverse video search and carefully examined the details, frame by frame, digging deeper to find out where it really came from. It turned out the video wasn’t from India at all. Instead, it was made and uploaded by a Pakistani TikTok creator who often pretends to be Indian in his videos, seemingly to paint India and its culture in a negative light. One telling detail in the background was the motorcycle—a Honda CD 70, a model sold exclusively in Pakistan—which clearly pointed to the actual location of the video.

If you look closely, there are several clear clues revealing the true origin of the video. The motorcycles and architectural style shown are common in Pakistan, not India. One obvious giveaway is the soft drink label visible in the footage—“Popular Ka Maza”—a brand based in pakistan. Checking out the creator’s other videos, we noticed a pattern: many of them mock India in similar ways. This situation highlights how important it is to question what we see online, especially when something spreads so fast and seems too shocking to be true.

Looking through the creator’s other videos, we noticed a pattern—many of them follow the same idea, mocking India. This whole situation just goes to show how important it is to look closely and question what we see online, especially when something spreads so fast and seems too shocking to be true.

Intent

Influencers and propaganda accounts are circulating staged videos created in Pakistan and falsely labeling them as Indian to push a malicious narrative against India on global platforms.

Conclusion:

Related Article: Fact Check: Scripted video of an individual threatening a police officer circulated as a real-life incident  – D-Intent Data

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