Amid
the
COVID-19
lockdown,
Bollywood
celebrities
have
been
posting
workout
and
cooking
videos
on
their
social
media,
to
keep
their
fans
engaged.
However,
there
are
a
few
people
out
there
who
have
objected
to
this
trend.
Recently,
Sonam
Kapoor's
filmmaker-sister
Rhea
Kapoor
penned
a
long
note
on
her
Instagram
story,
in
which
she
gave
a
befitting
reply
to
those
who
judge
people
for
sharing
glimpses
of
their
cooking
or
home
workouts.
The
Veere
Di
Wedding
producer
wrote,
"If
people
wanna
work
out
during
this
time
let
them,
if
they
want
to
bake
and
cook
and
make
friggin
eclairs
from
scratch
let
them,
if
they
wanna
stay
in
bed
for
22
hours
let
them.
If
people
wanna
work
from
home
9-5
on
zoom
let
them.
Everyone
let's
just
be
kind
and
good
natured
and
considerate
and
loving.
We
should
only
feel
gratitude
if
we
are
safe
and
surrounded
by
family.
We
are
better
than
judgment
and
b****y
comments
and
memes."
She
further
wrote,
"Some
days
I
feel
productive,
other
days
I
want
to
just
sleep.
Some
days
I'm
wise
enough
to
feel
grateful
for
my
family
and
my
life
others
I'm
petty
and
cranky
and
I
miss
my
friends
and
boyfriend.
Let's
just
make
our
homes
and
the
world
a
better
place.
The
last
thing
the
world
needs
is
negative
energy
because
someone
on
your
timeline
went
live
cutting
their
boyfriends
hair
and
for
some
odd
reason
it
didn't
sit
well
with
you.
Chill.
Skip
to
the
next
story
and
remember
your
blessings.
If
we
all
come
out
of
this
with
a
little
more
patience
and
empathy
the
world
will
be
better
for
it.
Peace."
Meanwhile,
Rhea's
sister,
actress
Sonam
Kapoor
agreed
with
her
opinion,
and
sharing
Rhea's
post,
captioned
it
as,
"Well
said
@rheakapoor
.
let
people
be,
judginess
is
so
not
cool."
A
few
days
ago,
Farah
Khan
hit
the
headlines
when
she
slammed
Bollywood
celebrities
for
posting
workout
videos
amid
the
lockdown.
Later,
while
speaking
with
a
news
agency,
the
Om
Shanti
Om
director
clarified
that
her
rant
wasn't
aimed
at
anyone
specific.
She
was
quoted
as
saying,
"I
want
to
apologise
to
everybody
who
got
scared.
I
know
I
took
off.
Please
workout.
I
walk
one
hour
around
the
balcony
every
day.
I
was
disturbed
with
the
frivolity
of
the
situation.
It's
not
a
global
party
guys,
it's
a
global
pandemic.
There
are
other
things
you
can
do
right
now,
there
was
a
glut
of
everyone
wanting
to
be
seen,
and
wanting
to
be
on
Insta.
It
seemed
a
little
shallow.
We
already
don't
have
a
great
reputation
for
being
an
industry
that
is
deep
thinking,
even
though
a
lot
of
people
do
so
much
good
and
contribution.
It
just
seemed
like
everything
was
about
'look
at
me,
look
at
me."