City
Epaper

'Kantara' actor Sapthami Gowda slams "deliberate zoom-ins" of female artists; Rukmini Vasanth, Ashika Ranganath voice support

By ANI | Updated: March 3, 2026 22:30 IST

Mumbai (Maharashtra) [India], March 3 : 'Kantara' actor Sapthami Gowda has voiced deep resentment toward a "recurring issue" that ...

Open in App

Mumbai (Maharashtra) [India], March 3 : 'Kantara' actor Sapthami Gowda has voiced deep resentment toward a "recurring issue" that women face in the film industry.

In a strong-worded Instagram post, Sapthami called out disrespectful videos and photograps of female actors captured at public events, stating that such content violent their dignity and must not be tolerated.

"As women in the film industry, we stand together in addressing a recurring issue. Repeatedly, videos and photographs of female actors at public events are shot and circulated from inappropriate angles, with unnecessary zooms that focus on our bodies rather than our work. This behavior, carried out by a few individuals, is disrespectful and unacceptable. We are here for our craft. We are here for our cinema," she wrote in an Instagram story.

Sapthami condemned the "deliberate" zoom-ins on the artists and added, "We unequivocally condemn deliberate zoom-ins and inappropriate angles. They are clear violations of dignity and will not be normalized or tolerated. We expect those covering events to maintain professionalism, basic respect, and decency."

"We stand united in setting this boundary. We stand in solidarity with every woman who has experienced this - and we will continue to support one another in demanding respect," she continued.

In another story, the actor urged her media friends and journalists to support female artists in the concern against "these handful who are brutal in how they capture and project the ladies."

Kannada film actress Rukmini Vasanth also echoed similar sentiments, as she also posted the statement on her Instagram story.

Resharing the same, actress Ashika Ranganath wrote, "Let's normalise respect - not violation. Deliberate zoom-ins and inappropriate angles are disrespectful and unacceptable."

Notably, this is not the first time that celebrities have come forward to call out the paparazzi culture, particularly photographers.

Disclaimer: This post has been auto-published from an agency feed without any modifications to the text and has not been reviewed by an editor

Open in App

Related Stories

EntertainmentKaran Johar shares glimpse of Tokyo trip, appreciates silence and hygiene of the city

NationalDelhi HC denies bail to accused of raping law student, questions her statement in accused's support

InternationalFormer Nepal PM Oli, ex-Home Minister Lekhak released from jail

Other SportsMCA unveils Stands, Gates at Wankhede Stadium to honour former cricketers Shastri, Sardesai, Solkar, Edulji

EntertainmentShah Rukh Khan, Salman Khan shower love, sending warm wishes to Anant Ambani on birthday

Entertainment Realted Stories

EntertainmentCannes 2026 lineup: Palme d'Or winners Cristian Mungiu, Hirokazu Kore-eda; Oscar winner Asghar Farhadi leads competition

Entertainment"Dawn for all girls, ladies who want to work": Actor Simran Ahuja hails Women's Reservation Bill, expresses gratitude to PM Modi

EntertainmentSonu Nigam says 'So proud of his journey' as he recalls Arijit Singh's visit to his home

EntertainmentRashmika Mandanna's 30 birthday was all about revising her roots

EntertainmentSandeep Reddy Vanga backs Ranveer Singh's 'Dhurandhar: The Revenge'; Aditya Dhar reacts, sends love to Prabhas for 'Spirit'