Viral content involving Bengali college students typically falls into two categories:
The "logic" of the internet took over. Someone found her LinkedIn; another person unearthed a three-year-old post where she’d criticized a popular film. Suddenly, the "sweet college girl" was being dissected. Threads emerged debating everything from her choice of lipstick to the "downfall of Bengali culture" represented by filming on campus.
"The real crime here is not the girl laughing in the video. The real crime is the boy who took out his phone, and the thousands of 'civilized' men who are now sharing it, commenting on her dupatta, her lipstick, and her 'future husband.'"
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Once a video is picked up by popular Bengali meme pages, its reach multiplies. These pages serve as the "digital town square," where thousands of users comment, share, and debate the merits of the content. Social Media Discussion: A Double-Edged Sword
: Discussions also resurfaced regarding a past viral video of a Maulana Abul Kalam Azad University professor purportedly "marrying" a student in class, which the professor claimed was a "psychological drama" exercise.
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