Former England cricket team skipper and full-time pundit Michael Vaughan is quite active on Twitter as he expresses his own views about the game.
Case in point, the former England captain might not have liked Indian cities as he found something weird while he was travelling on the road. Needless to say, his comment about India received a huge backlash on social media after he wrote about the experience which he faced in the country.
He wrote how he came across several animals like elephants, cows, pigs, sheep, camels and goats in the middle of the road.
Vaughan tweeted ‘Love travelling in #India … So far this morning we have seen Elephants, Cows, Camels, Sheep, Goats & Pigs all in the middle of the road … #OnOn.’
Maybe his tweet wasn’t meant to insult the whole country but his tweet was not well received by the Indian citizens who bashed him in response. Check out the tweets below:
British chef insults Indian food Shashi Tharoor silences him
Gordon Ramsay who is a renowned British chef has been on the receiving end of trolls and abuses on social media. It all started when this popular personality criticised medu vada sambar as jail food. Gordon Ramsay, who is a Masterchef is famous for his high temper besides his witty one-liners and sarcasm.
However, he made a terrible mistake when he disrespected the most famous South Indian food and since then, netizens roasted him badly by coming up with strange tweets.
Now, a British professor calls Idli as the world’s most boring thing. He was roasted badly by Shashi Tharoor. It all began when the Zomato asked a question on Twitter. “what’s that one dish you could never understand why people like soo much,” Indian food delivery portal wrote.
Meanwhile, British professor by the name of Edward Anderson wrote there is nothing more boring than Idly in this world. “Idli are the most boring things in the world.”
His tweet caught the attention of Shashi Tharoor. “Yes, my son, there are some who are truly challenged in this world. Civilisation is hard to acquire: the taste & refinement to appreciate idlis, enjoy cricket, or watch ottamthullal is not given to every mortal. Take pity on this poor man, for he may never know what life can be,” Shashi Tharoor wrote.