Orry vs. Sara Ali Khan, Ibrahim Ali Khan, and Palak Tiwari: The End of the "BFF" Era
- Vishal waghela
- Jan 26
- 3 min read
Updated: Jan 28
The January 2026 entertainment landscape just hit a massive tremor. While everyone is hyper-focusing on the "coordinated unfollow" by Sara Ali Khan, Ibrahim Ali Khan, and Palak Tiwari, the real story is much bigger. This isn't just about a "3 worst names" reel—it’s about the collapse of a social hierarchy where a "liver" finally refused to play the secondary role in a legacy star’s narrative.
What Actually Happened?
Orry posted a provocative reel listing "Sara, Paalak, and Amrita" as names he dislikes; Sara Ali Khan & Ibrahim Ali Khan responded with immediate Instagram unfollows.
On January 23-24, 2026, the man who famously defined his occupation as "living" dropped a reel titled "3 worst names." Without surnames, he named Sara, Paalak, and Amrita. The response was clinical: Sara Ali Khan hit unfollow, followed shortly by Ibrahim Ali Khan. It was a digital boundary-setting move intended to signal a total social excommunication from the Pataudi inner circle.
The Insider Take: Authenticity Over Sanitised PR
The narrative being pushed is that Orry "went too far." But let's be real: the star-kid ecosystem has used Orry’s presence as a relatability tool for years. He provided the "viral" energy that traditional legacy actors often lack. By mocking these names, Orry didn't just drop a joke; he signalled that he’s no longer willing to be a PR-friendly accessory to their brand. The swift reaction from Sara and Ibrahim suggests a level of fragility that can't handle a single pinprick of public humour. If their circle requires absolute silence and "yes-man" loyalty to maintain its image, Orry’s exit isn't a downfall—it’s a liberation. He has traded "insider access" to a closed-off circle for the one thing celebrities fear most: total independence.
Why This Matters for the Digital Economy
Orry has successfully reached a point where he is the news, not the guy next to the news.
The Ibrahim-Palak Factor: Ibrahim and Palak are currently the "It Couple." By standing his ground despite their relationship, Orry is proving that his brand isn't dependent on being in anyone’s good graces.
The "Receipts" Era: Orry has hinted at having a "real backstory." Unlike actors who have to protect their box office viability, he has nothing to lose. He knows the mechanics of the parties, the PR scripts, and the private fractures.
The Shift: Brands don't care if a legacy actor unfollowed him; they care that Orry is the one driving 20 million impressions while the stars are doing "damage control."

What the Public is Missing
This wasn't a random jab at Amrita Singh or Sara Ali Khan. It was a response to years of underlying tension. From the 2023 "middle-finger" emoji leak with Palak Tiwari to the alleged "fake account" drama, the math has been clear for a while: Orry was being sidelined as the group’s dynamics shifted toward serious dating and tighter PR control. He didn't lose his "best friends"; he just refused to follow a script he didn't write.
QUICK FACTS
The Catalyst: Orry’s "3 Worst Names" Reel (Sara, Paalak, Amrita).
The Fallout: Coordinated unfollows by Sara Ali Khan, Ibrahim Ali Khan, and Palak Tiwari.
Historical Context: 2023 Reddit allegations of Orry trolling Sara and leaked chats with Palak.
Status: The inner circle has officially splintered; Orry’s engagement is at an all-time high.
Fans Also Asked
Q: Why did Sara Ali Khan and Ibrahim Ali Khan unfollow Orry?
A: They unfollowed following his reel mocking their names and their mother's name (Amrita Singh). While the move looks like a "punishment," it effectively confirms the internal friction Orry has been hinting at for months.
Q: Is Orry still friends with Palak Tiwari?
A: No, Palak Tiwari also unfollowed Orry in January 2026. Their relationship has been visibly strained since the December 2023 WhatsApp leak, where Orry refused to apologize "out of respect for Sara."
Q: Did Orry actually insult Amrita Singh?
A: He listed "Amrita" as one of the "worst names." While he didn't use a surname, the context of his proximity to Sara and Ibrahim made the implication clear to everyone in the industry.
Q: Will this hurt Orry’s career in Bollywood? A: Unlikely. Orry’s brand is built on being an "outsider-insider." Losing the support of the Sara-Ibrahim camp allows him to pivot into a more unfiltered, "truth-teller" persona which is highly valuable for digital engagement.



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