House Arrest is a house of moral decay under the watchful vulgar eyes of Ajaz Khan. The show, streamed on the ULLU App – an OTT platform known for packaging mental rot in suggestive, near-pornographic formats. Thus, it rightly sparked outrage when its video clips went viral. Ajaz Khan now faces a firestorm of criticism for House Arrest’s explicit and degrading content.
Disguised as reality television, the show features contestants indulging in sexually provocative acts. It can be summed up in one line: semi-naked Hindu girls and morally corrupt men pretending it’s “entertainment.” The viral clips alone are enough to infuriate the public. They highlight the show’s corrosive impact on societal values and its potential to influence vulnerable, young minds across Bharat.
Ajaz Khan and The Disturbing Display of Vulgarity
In one shocking episode, Ajaz Khan asked female contestants to demonstrate sex positions on camera. In another, he invited contestant to remove their clothes while the others cheered. It wasn’t entertainment – it was public softcore sleaze. By exploiting positions from the Kama Sutra, House Arrest mocks culture while stimulating base instincts.
Ajaz Khan was not presenting art – he was assaulting on the senses of his viewers.
Explicit, offensive, and entirely inappropriate – House Arrest bears the unmistakable stamp of ULLU App’s suggestive format. But this time, it’s more than cheap titillation. It’s a direct threat to the moral fabric of Indian society. The show glorifies the objectification of women. Moreover, it indirectly promotes indecency in public behavior. Even worse, its barely-there paywall fails to shield young, impressionable users. Such shows that deserve condemnation were promoted by Sonu Sood and Munnawar Farooqui!
The host, the participants, the producers, and the platform must face public fury and legal scrutiny – they must not be allowed to continue eroding Indian cultural values.
House Arrest – Public and Political Outrage Mounts
This grotesque spectacle didn’t go unnoticed. Social media erupted in fury. Thousands called for a complete ban on House Arrest and a crackdown on the ULLU App. Netizens expressed disgust at the show’s sleazy nature and its disturbing social impact. BJP MP Nishikant Dubey denounced the show. BJP Yuva Morcha Bihar chief Barun Raj Singh appealed to Union Minister Ashwini Vaishnaw to “save our children.”
Advocate Vineet Jindal filed a formal complaint, pointing to blatant violations of cultural and legal standards.
Under pressure, the ULLU App quietly removed House Arrest. But Ajaz Khan remained defiant. In an arrogant statement, he claimed the problem wasn’t his content – but the public’s “bias” against him. He played the victim card, ignoring the fact that his show had crossed every ethical and moral boundary. It was not self-expression – it was public degradation.
Unregulated OTT: A Threat to Bharat’s Youth and Values
OTT platforms today are a cheap emulation of western wokeism. With barely any regulation and flimsy paywalls, explicit content is just a few clicks away for children and teens. This isn’t freedom of expression – it’s digital exploitation. Shows like House Arrest normalize vulgarity and desensitize viewers to indecency. Over time, they distort the perception of relationships, gender respect, and public behavior.
More dangerously, these shows consistently cast Hindu girls in degrading roles while pretending to promote “women empowerment.”
It’s a sick joke on Shakti and Indian womanhood.
Ajaz Khan’s House Arrest is a symptom of a larger disease – OTT platforms monetizing sleaze as entertainment. The Ministry of Information and Broadcasting must act decisively. It’s time to set strict content standards and punish those who cross the line. Apps like ULLU and ALTBalaji must be held accountable, and repeat offenders should face permanent bans.
When shock value replaces substance, art dies—and society follows.
Bharat cannot afford to let its youth absorb such garbage unchecked. House Arrest must serve as a red line. Let this be a turning point. The government must make an example of Ajaz Khan, the platform, and the entire show to deter others who peddle degeneracy in the name of “freedom.”
Entertainment should elevate—not infect—the mind.