Vijay Sethupathi and the Rs 2-lakh ‘caravan favour’ a single tweet has Kollywood holding its breath

Just after the sun went down on Sunday, Ramya Mohan, a former assistant director turned columnist, tapped out a tweet that took barely three hours to detonate.
She wrote that a woman she once mentored—today a familiar face on television—was in rehab in Chengalpattu because “the industry’s drug-and-casting-couch carousel finally flung her off.”

Then came the name: Vijay Sethupathi, the actor whose gentle public persona has earned him the tag “People’s Treasure.” According to Ramya, he offered the woman Rs 2 lakh for “caravan favours” and smaller cash amounts for “long drives to Mahabalipuram.”
Within minutes, the post was everywhere—forwarded on WhatsApp, dissected on Reddit, turned into memes that contrasted Sethupathi’s on-screen kindness with the accusations.
Ramya deleted the tweet before midnight, saying her phone had become “a war zone of lawyers, journalists, and fan clubs,” but screenshots had already escaped into the wild.
The woman at the centre of the story has not spoken. Friends say she checked into the Chengalpattu facility on 3 July for treatment that began with anxiety medication and moved to detox.
A counsellor there confirmed she is under care but refused to elaborate. Two crew members who worked with her on Maamanithan (2022) remembered that every personal staffer had to sign sweeping non-disclosure agreements that lasted three years beyond a film’s release.
One quietly showed me a similar contract from another project forbidding “any statement that may damage the artiste’s reputation.”
An audio note—38 seconds of slurred Tamil that began circulating on Monday—claims, “He told me the caravan had a bed for a reason.” The voice is unverified. A college friend of the woman said, “It sounds like her, but detox meds can blur memory; let’s wait for her own words.”
Meanwhile, studio corridors have gone eerily quiet. Sethupathi is currently filming in London; his team has not returned calls.
Publicists who usually spin such storms into “misunderstandings” have been told, in the words of one senior manager, to “monitor, not mouth off.”
The last statement anyone can point to is an old Instagram post from two days before the controversy: a throwback photo captioned simply “Gratitude,” now flooded with snake emojis and folded-hands emoticons.
No police complaint has been filed; the Cyber Crime branch says it needs a written statement from the woman herself.
The National Commission for Women has asked the Tamil Nadu police for a status report, and the Producers’ Council promises an internal committee if the victim comes forward.
For many inside the industry, the details matter less than the pattern. Behind the Vadapalani bus stand, 22-year-old dancer Shruti, who has appeared in three Sethupathi songs, says the jokes about “caravan auditions” have been around for years.
Her friend Kumar, a lighting assistant, is more cautious: “We have bills to pay. If the hero is guilty, let the court say it. Till then, I just want my shift tomorrow.”
With a prolific career spanning over a decade, Vijay Sethupathi has become a beloved figure in South Indian cinema. His dedication to his craft and the range of roles he has played have cemented his place as one of the most revered actors of his generation.
The tweet is gone, the actor is silent, and the woman is in rehab. But the conversation that has reopened—about power, silence, and the price of fame—shows no sign of fading.