In November 2025, comedian Akaash Singh, co-host of the popular Flagrant podcast, found himself at the center of a brutal online roasting. What started as resurfaced clips from his wife Jasleen Singh’s Main Character podcast escalated into a full-blown controversy, reignited by “red pill” podcaster Myron Gaines (of Fresh & Fit).
Gaines, nursing a grudge from a 2022 Flagrant episode where Akaash and Andrew Schulz called him out for sexist views, seized the moment to expose contradictions in Akaash’s personal life.
The core issue? Akaash had repeatedly bragged — on stage, podcasts, and interviews — about marrying a “virgin” wife, claiming they both lost their virginity to each other later in life (he was in his 30s, she in her 20s when they met in 2015). He positioned this as a badge of traditional values, conservative upbringing, and relationship success.
But Jasleen’s candid podcast episodes painted a wildly different picture. On Main Character (co-hosted with Nehal Tenany), she openly discussed her pre-marriage experiences: wild college parties, threesomes, group sex interests, “popping my pussy for frat guys” (often specifying white men), celebrity “hall passes” for actors like Chace Crawford, Jacob Elordi, and Austin Butler, and even admitting attraction to her co-host’s husband while laughing about it on air.
She recounted ex-boyfriends refusing certain acts during her period and shared blunt financial views like “his money is our money, my money is my money.” These clips, compiled and amplified by Gaines and commentary channels, went mega-viral, racking up millions of views and shattering Akaash’s narrative. Jasleen later clarified in a TikTok that they “both hooked up with people” before meeting and lost their “virginity together” in a technical sense — but the damage was done. Red pill communities labeled it a classic case of deception, with memes calling Akaash “Cuckaash” and questioning how he could tout purity while his wife reminisced about her “body count” era.
The undermining didn’t stop at past stories. Jasleen frequently used social media and her podcast to tease or diminish Akaash in ways that fueled perceptions of disrespect. She joked about dodging his kisses during proposals (focusing instead on ring size), mocked his political choices (blaming him for stock market dips after he platformed Trump), and positioned him as a safe, reliable “provider” rather than an exciting partner.
In one viral moment, she contrasted him unfavorably while gushing over other men’s attractiveness on the podcast. Critics pointed out she treats him like a “wall” — a stable backdrop for her life, not a source of genuine desire or arousal. This dynamic screams transactional: Akaash provides financial security and status through his rising comedy career, while Jasleen enjoys the perks without the passionate submission many argue is essential for a healthy marriage. She never hides her progressive, party-girl past or her current freedom to overshare, publicly embarrassing him in ways he tolerates with smiles and defenses.
This tolerance exposes Akaash’s deeper flaw: a lack of the dominant, frame-holding mentality that demands respect and attraction from day one. Despite his wealth, fame, and status as a successful Indian-American comedian, he accepts a standard far below what high-value men enforce. True winners insist on women who desire them viscerally — for their genetics, presence, and unapologetic masculinity — not just as a paycheck or safety net.
If she undermines you publicly, talks glowingly about exes or fantasies, or shows no real submission, you check her hard or walk away. No negotiation. Akaash, like Logan Paul (who’s endured similar public humiliations from partners while chasing clout and peace), lacks this wisdom-born backbone. It’s not about money or looks — plenty of rich, famous guys get genuinely adored wives. It’s about intelligence, experience, and refusing to beta-orb into tolerance for disrespect. Without that “walk away” power rooted in self-respect, you lose the frame, the attraction fades (if it was ever there), and you’re left as the punchline.
As of late 2025, Akaash has defended Jasleen fiercely online, reposting old clips to clap back at Gaines while downplaying the drama as “jokes.” Jasleen fired back at critics, calling them “brainwashed red pill betas” and “cockroaches.” But the internet doesn’t forget: this scandal has humanized (or humbled) Akaash for many, highlighting that no amount of success shields you from poor relationship vetting. Lesson? Demand genuine desire, enforce boundaries, or prepare to be exposed. In the manosphere, this one’s already legendary.








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