Mumbai: Celebrated Bollywood actor Emraan Hashmi has shared a light-hearted yet revealing moment about his family life, saying his teenage son Ayaan reacted to his viral cameo in the OTT series The Ba**ds of Bollywood* by telling him: “You have ruined things for me in school.” The remarks shed a humorous but telling light on how celebrity appearances can ripple into personal spaces—even the classroom.
The viral cameo & its impact
Hashmi made a surprise cameo in the series, playing an intimacy coach in a scene that quickly gained traction online. While the cameo earned praise and considerable buzz, the actor revealed that his son’s reaction was anything but enthusiastic. According to the actor, Ayaan’s friends teased him relentlessly after the cameo, and he has asked his father to “just stop” since every day at school has become about the joke. The moment underlines how public visibility can affect children of celebrities in unexpected ways.
A father’s perspective
Emraan, who has often spoken about parenthood and the challenges of fame, offered insight into the quirky domestic fallout. With a smile, he admitted he “didn’t know if he should say this on camera,” adding that his son’s society groups at school now referenced his father’s role and joked about him becoming an intimacy coach. The candid admission marks a rare moment of vulnerability for the actor, showing how off-screen life and on-screen work intersect for star families.
Youth, fame and the blurred line
The incident brings into focus a broader discussion: how children of public figures navigate identity, peer scrutiny and the unintended consequences of family fame. While a viral scene might elevate a parent’s profile, it can also create imprints in a child’s social world—cafeteria banter, school “societies” and peer comments become part of the narrative.
For Ayaan, the cameo moment became more than a proud dad moment; it became a classroom reference point—something his father admits he hadn’t anticipated. Hashmi’s admission underscores that even a brief screen appearance can echo through personal, everyday spaces long after the credits roll.
What’s next?
While the actor continues to promote the series and talks publicly about his work, the anecdote will likely resonate with professionals in public life. How much awareness do stars maintain about the family-fallout of public roles? How much do children negotiate fame by association? And how much does a cameo that takes days to shoot become part of a teenager’s story? These are questions that the anecdote highlights.
Conclusion
Emraan Hashmi’s tale of fatherand-son dialogue—“You’ve ruined things for me in school”—is amusing yet revealing. It illustrates how even momentary screen time can translate into lasting social moments at home and school. For the actor and his son, it is a reminder that fame doesn’t end at the studio gate—it follows you into the everyday.
