Rohan grinned. “Electrostatic drain via vintage magnetic pulse. Also, the Konami code works on everything.”
The challenge: 91mobiles was hosting a live event, “Tech Ka Maha-Yudh,” where fan-favorite phone brands battled in real-world tests. They needed an entertaining, non-celebrity host who could actually fix things on the fly. Rohan agreed. phata poster nikhla hero 91mobiles entertainment
The top half, showing Rohan’s heroic grimace, remained stuck. The bottom half, revealing his cheap sneakers and a misspelled slogan (“Save the Wi-Fi!”), flapped into a gutter. Rohan grinned
She was right. In the poster, Rohan had insisted on using his real, indestructible Nokia 3310 as a “cyber-weapon.” And tucked under the torn flap, barely visible, was a QR code. Meera scanned it. They needed an entertaining, non-celebrity host who could
The poster was hideous. Rohan, wearing a shiny silver vest and holding a broken keyboard like a weapon, stared down from a billboard outside Andheri station. Below it, in chipped paint, was his "hero" name: . For six months, the poster was a local joke.
Rohan “Rocky” Gill was a struggling Bollywood junior artist in Mumbai. His biggest claim to fame? His back profile in a Varun Dhawan song. His second biggest? A life-sized poster for a forgotten B-grade film called Gadar 2.0: Internet Wapas Aao .
Meera, live on 91mobiles’ stream, declared: “Ladies and gentlemen, the torn poster has given us a true hero. Not a Bollywood star. A real-life tech savior.”