Yeh Hai Mohabbatein and Waaris actor Neel Samarthh is all set to return to television with his new show Sabse Bada Rupaiya, but during promotions, he took a moment to speak his mind — and didn’t hold back. In an industry obsessed with trends and numbers, Neel offered a rare, grounded take on how the explosion of OTT content is reshaping (and possibly eroding) the soul of storytelling.
"In a way it’s really good and really bad," Neel said, commenting on the OTT boom. “If you just serve everything on a platter for everyone, the hard work and value of content is gone. Now you can watch anything, anytime, anywhere — why would anyone go to the cinema anymore?” And he’s not wrong. The convenience of on-demand content has changed audience behavior — but Neel believes it has also dulled the magic.
Reflecting on the past, he painted a nostalgic picture: “When Ramayana was televised, it was a festivity. Shops would shut, people finished chores early, and the whole family would gather to watch together. That feeling is gone now. Today, the market is flooded with content — not just nationally, but globally — and it’s leaving people confused.” He points out that filmmakers now have mere minutes to hook audiences. “If the first five minutes don’t click, it’s over.”
Neel also addressed the shift in content tone — more violence, more skin, more shock value. “Everything’s in excess now — and not necessarily needed,” he said bluntly. “There’s demand, or perhaps demand has been created — but either way, it’s about money. Makers want quick returns, so they throw in item songs, intimate scenes, anything that gets attention.”He highlighted that smaller OTT platforms, especially those targeting rural India, are under pressure to monetize fast — and that often comes at the cost of meaningful storytelling.
Still, he remains hopeful: “This phase will pass. People will return to real content, and cinema halls will regain their glory. It’ll take time, but it’ll happen.”
In a world drowning in instant content, Neel Samarthh’s call for patience, passion, and purpose feels like a breath of fresh air — and maybe, just maybe, a spark of the old magic he says we’ve lost.