2 of 5 Dard-e-Disco cities now under Caliphate: Internet reacts to Zohran Mamdani’s win
If you have been on X (formerly Twitter) lately, you have probably scrolled past a cryptic declaration like, “Two of the five Dard-e-Disco cities are now under the caliphate.” The post, made by creator @juneymb, has sparked a wave of curiosity and tongue-in-cheek chaos across social media. What exactly are the “Dard-e-Disco” cities and why is everyone suddenly pledging allegiance to them?
The lyrics in the song from the Bollywood film Om Shanti Om, includes the lines -
"Ab phirtha hun mein London, Paris, Newyork, L.A., San Fransisco. Dil mein mere hai Dard-E-Disco."
This translates to the singer wandering between these iconic cities with a heart full of "disco pain," symbolising emotional turmoil mixed with the energetic nightlife these cities are known for.
When the tweet by @juneymb declared, “Two of the five Dard-e-Disco cities are now under the caliphate,” the Internet knew exactly what it meant and it was not about religion or geopolitics. It was about vibes. With Zohran Mamdani clinching the New York City mayoral race, South Asian Twitter (or X) broke into celebration and meme mode.
The tweet references the five glamorous cities, New York, LA, London, Paris and San Francisco, name-dropped in Shah Rukh Khan’s 2007 anthem Dard-e-Disco. Now, with Mamdani’s victory and London already under Mayor Sadiq Khan, two of those five cities that are both helmed by Muslim mayors, have unofficially been dubbed part of the “Dard-e-Disco caliphate.”
One user wrote, “From SRK’s abs to Zohran’s activism — the Dard-e-Disco prophecy is complete.” Another joked, “New York joins the Khan-Mamdani multiverse.”
The “Dard-e-Disco caliphate” is not political. It is poetic. It is the collective feeling of seeing brown excellence shimmer on a global stage, filtered through SRK lyrics and Gen Z meme humour.
Each tweet, meme and reply is ironic, self-referential and deeply sincere all at once. It is a perfect snapshot of how South Asian Internet humour thrives at the intersection of poetry, parody and pop culture.
The meme geography of heartbreak
The phrase “Dard-e-Disco”, literally “pain of disco” and immortalised by Bollywood superstar Shah Rukh Khan’s 2007 hit song, has long been Internet shorthand for a uniquely desi aesthetic of heartbreak: glamorous, dramatic and self-aware. Think neon lights, loneliness and existential dread in an Ola at 2 a.m.The lyrics in the song from the Bollywood film Om Shanti Om, includes the lines -
"Ab phirtha hun mein London, Paris, Newyork, L.A., San Fransisco. Dil mein mere hai Dard-E-Disco."
This translates to the singer wandering between these iconic cities with a heart full of "disco pain," symbolising emotional turmoil mixed with the energetic nightlife these cities are known for.
When the tweet by @juneymb declared, “Two of the five Dard-e-Disco cities are now under the caliphate,” the Internet knew exactly what it meant and it was not about religion or geopolitics. It was about vibes. With Zohran Mamdani clinching the New York City mayoral race, South Asian Twitter (or X) broke into celebration and meme mode.
NYC’s new mayor Zohran Mamdani
The tweet references the five glamorous cities, New York, LA, London, Paris and San Francisco, name-dropped in Shah Rukh Khan’s 2007 anthem Dard-e-Disco. Now, with Mamdani’s victory and London already under Mayor Sadiq Khan, two of those five cities that are both helmed by Muslim mayors, have unofficially been dubbed part of the “Dard-e-Disco caliphate.”
When Bollywood meets political milestones
The phrase Dard-e-Disco, meaning “pain of disco,” has become a shorthand for flamboyant South Asian melodrama that comes with a mix of heartbreak, pride and resilience. By blending it with a tongue-in-cheek political reference, users are turning a serious moment into a cinematic meme.The Internet’s favourite intersection: Diaspora pride and meme culture
For many, the joke captures something deeper - how South Asians abroad are rewriting narratives of representation through humour and culture. Instead of just headlines about elections, these memes frame identity through Bollywood nostalgia and self-aware irony.Screengrab of the tweet
The “Dard-e-Disco caliphate” is not political. It is poetic. It is the collective feeling of seeing brown excellence shimmer on a global stage, filtered through SRK lyrics and Gen Z meme humour.
From Queens to Cannes: The disco diaspora rises
Whether or not the other three Dard-e-Disco cities will “fall” remains to be seen but the tweet marks a moment in Internet history where a Bollywood lyric became a geopolitical metaphor for representation, glamour and belonging. In 2025, the revolution might just be televised and it definitely has a killer soundtrack.“The Caliphate” is not what you think
The Internet took the tweet in stride, not as politics but as a cultural coup. It was humour wrapped in high-drama language and a statement on how Gen Z constantly reinvents emotional geography through irony. Replies poured in from users declaring their cities’ allegiance, debating which ones had truly “fallen,” and proposing a Dard-e-Disco world map.Each tweet, meme and reply is ironic, self-referential and deeply sincere all at once. It is a perfect snapshot of how South Asian Internet humour thrives at the intersection of poetry, parody and pop culture.
end of article
Featured in Etimes
Trending Stories
- Dermatologist explains why using Phitkari on face can be harmful
- Quote of the day by Nelson Mandela: “What counts in life is not the mere fact that we have…”
- 5 natural beverages that can help relieve constipation, and make bowel movements easy
- Quote of the day by Morgan Freeman: “Life doesn't offer you promises whatsoever, so it's very easy…”
- Quote of the day by Will Smith: “If you're not willing to work hard, let someone else do it. I'd rather be with someone…”
- 5 silent signs of kidney disease beyond changes in urine
- "Walking is great but it won’t save your bones", says cardiologist: Why strength training is the missing piece
- When alcohol turns harmful: Liver specialist explains the medicines that should never be mixed with it
- Vascular surgeon recommends 3 natural ways to keep your arteries clear and protect heart health
- Quote of the day by Michael Jordan: “I can accept failure. Everyone fails at something. But I…”
Photostories
- 5 gemstones most rich women buy
- Weekly Horoscope TOI, 1 Dec - 7 Dec 2025
- Priyanka Chopra's roles that celebrate grit identity and constant reinvention
- Pregnant Bharti Singh stuns in a gorgeous maternity photoshoot, flaunting her baby bump; see pics
- 7 banana breakfast dishes from around the world
- 9 traditional Kheer variants to keep you warm this winter
- Chef Sanjeev Kapoor shares 7 common mistakes people commit while making dosa and how to rectify them
- 5 easy and effective ways to save more time daily
- 4 infused water remedies for everyday health issues and how to make them at home
- How this rare island reptile became the world’s biggest lizard and a powerful hunter
Up Next
Start a Conversation
Post comment