Actors Hina Khan and Rocky Jaiswal have weighed in on Avika Gor and Milind Chandwani’s wedding, which was held as part of Pati Patni Aur Panga – Jodiyon Ka Reality Check and televised for viewers. In a recent conversation on Elvish Yadav’s podcast, the couple praised Avika and Milind’s decision but admitted it would not be their personal choice. Hina and Rocky called it “very daring” and said, “We can’t do this,” underscoring their preference for keeping milestones private.
The Wedding That Became a TV Event
Avika Gor—best known for playing Anandi in Balika Vadhu—and Milind Chandwani’s wedding drew attention because it blended personal rituals with reality television. Reports ahead of the ceremony had already indicated the couple planned to marry “on national television” on September 30, 2025, as part of the show’s format.
Coverage after the ceremony also described the wedding as taking place on the show’s set, with the celebrations packaged for broadcast/streaming.
Inside the Celebration: Rituals, Celebrity Moments, and the Viral “Joota Churaai”
The on-set wedding leaned into a full-scale celebration—traditional rituals, celebrity attendance, and made-for-TV moments. One widely reported highlight was the playful “joota churaai” ritual: Hina Khan and Isha Malviya reportedly secured ₹1.11 lakh during the exchange, which quickly became a talking point online.
Privacy vs Public Spectacle: Two Different Choices
Hina and Rocky’s reaction also stood out because their own wedding was intentionally low-key. The couple married on June 4, 2025, in an intimate ceremony in Mumbai under the Special Marriage Act, a route often chosen by couples from different religious backgrounds.
In contrast, Avika and Milind’s decision positioned the wedding as both a personal milestone and a public broadcast moment—an approach that continues to divide opinion even within the industry.
Why This Conversation Matters
Celebrity weddings have long been public-facing, but reality television is pushing that boundary further—turning life events into narrative arcs. Avika and Milind’s televised ceremony has sparked the familiar debate: does broadcasting a wedding democratise the moment for fans, or does it blur the line between intimacy and entertainment? Either way, the event delivered precisely what reality TV is designed to create—high engagement, high emotion, and a national conversation.
By – Sonali

