Orry refuses to soften stance on 'cancel culture': 'I made myself famous, no one gave it to me'
Synopsis
Key Takeaways
Social media personality Orhan Awatramani, popularly known as Orry, has built his brand on unfiltered candour, rejecting the self-censorship that often accompanies public visibility. In a recent conversation, the influencer doubled down on his refusal to temper his opinions despite operating in an industry where reputation risk looms large.
Speaking candidly, Orry dismissed concerns that have made many public figures cautious. "It's true. I'm just bird vomiting all the time, and you never know what's going to fall out of my mouth. I don't hold back. I just don't," he said. "What's going to happen if I say something? I speak my thoughts. That's what's made me famous. That's what brought me here. So why would I now stop?"
Why the fearlessness matters
Unlike celebrities whose livelihoods depend on studio goodwill or brand partnerships, Orry has carved a niche as an independent voice. His refusal to moderate his statements stems from a calculated assessment: he built his following through authenticity, not institutional backing. "A lot of people don't want to say something because it'll change the way people look at them, or affect brand deals, or the movies they do. But I am not looking to do movies," he explained.
Reframing 'cancel culture'
Orry's argument against cancel culture rests on a counterintuitive premise — that withdrawal of support requires prior support. "A lot of people have the fear of being cancelled. But remember, you can't cancel what you didn't support," he stated. "I worked hard to be famous. I made myself famous. No one gave it to me. I am not a cricket star. I am not a TV star. I am not a movie star."
This framing suggests that his audience's relationship to him is fundamentally different from the parasocial dynamics that bind traditional celebrities to their fan bases. Where institutional celebrities risk losing platforms they did not build themselves, Orry positions himself as self-made — and therefore immune to the withdrawal mechanism that makes cancellation consequential.
The self-made narrative
Orry's conclusion crystallised his worldview: "I pay my own bills. No one pays my bills for me. So what are you going to do? Cancel me?" The statement encapsulates a broader claim — that financial and reputational independence grants freedom of speech that others, bound by contracts and institutional hierarchies, cannot claim.
What's ahead
On the professional front, Orry is set to appear on the reality television show Khatron Ke Khiladi season 15, marking a foray into mainstream television despite his stated indifference to film and television work.