Updated On: 10 January, 2024 04:38 AM IST | Mumbai | Mayank Shekhar
Only one rule against getting conned, no? If it looks too good to be true—it is! Some documentaries could help get your antenna working

A still from the documentary series Wedding.con
Ever since I watched the hugely entertaining documentary, Tinder Swindler (2022; Netflix)—about an Israeli conman, Simon Leviev, pretending to be a diamond tycoon’s son on a dating app; attracting women for his wealth, but making them part with theirs—I’ve always wondered around those who follow crime (i.e., cops, journalists), if they know an Indian equivalent.
I’ve heard a suggestion or two, read some news pieces. None come close. Why? Because dating app, still a cosmopolitan niche in India, largely operates on involuntary, low-stake reflexes of left-right swipes, with mainly independent, single women, in far greater control of emotional impulses. Surely many on it seek something “long-term”—wish them luck.