close
close

The rule of the Bengaluru restaurant “No real estate or political conversations” becomes viral, Sparks online debate

Bengaluru Restaurant Sign Board (Image Source – X)

Something unusual or the other from Bengaluru becomes viral every day on social media. In another unusual story, a board in a restaurant in Bengaluru took the netizens for his “bizarre” message to the visitors. The message on the board of the restaurant asks visitors not to have any discussions related to real estate or politics during the meal.

A X-user informed a photo of the board that was on a wall in the South Bengaluru restaurant. “This institution is only used for dine-in purposes, not for real estate/political discussions. Please understand and cooperate.” The user labeled the article “Instructions clearly, okay”.

How did social media react?

After the contribution had become viral, many users joined the conversation and collected significant likes, views and comments from Internet users. A user wrote: “Immobilien -Onkel cannot go to the parks because Bangalore Parks are all closed in the afternoon!” What the X user replied: “Haha, difficult times: D.”

Another user asked: “How do you know what we are discussing?”

Another user commented: “I remember that the A2B restaurant in Yelahanka also has a similar board.”

Another user noticed: “Very frequent sight in restaurants in Bangalore.”

Another user wrote humorously: “How about family policy?”

Another user added “so helpful and healthy instructions.”

Another viral news shows a video that makes waves in the social media company making people who have difficulty identifying Bengaluru's official language and igniting strong reactions from Kannadigas online. The video, which apparently seems to be a VOX pop, seems to have been shot in Mumbai. It shows a man who asks random people what the official language of Bengaluru is.

Her answers included Hindi, English, Malayalam and Tamil – but nobody mentioned Kannada shockingly. The video has become viral across social media platforms and triggers mixed reactions. It was labeled: “It is not your fault …”

When the video online demonstration triggered, a user wrote: “Kannadigas learned Tamil, Telugu and Hindi to respect and accommodate others, but in return they are in their own country.

Get the latest news live in Times, together with Breaking News and Top headlines from Viral and the whole world.