Desi Bling Review: ⭐⭐⭐☆☆ (3/5)
Desi Bling is messy, flashy, over-the-top reality television — and somehow completely binge-worthy at the same time. While the drama often feels staged and the luxury can become exhausting, the show’s entertaining cast dynamics, emotional moments, and addictive pacing make it an easy weekend watch on Netflix.
Platform: Netflix
Genre: Reality Show
Language: English/Hindi
Cast: Karan Kundrra, Tejasswi Prakash, Satish & Tabinda Sanpal, Lailli & Alizeh Mirza, Dyuti & Iryna
There is a very specific kind of television that has no business being as entertaining as it is. You know exactly what you are getting. You know it is staged. You know half the drama was arranged to happen in front of a camera. And yet there you are at two in the morning, three episodes deep, genuinely invested in whether two people who met at a yacht party are going to stay friends. Desi Bling is that show. Netflix has delivered a certified guilty pleasure, and it works far better than it has any right to.
The show follows a tight circle of wealthy Indians living in Dubai — businesspeople, socialites, celebrities, and couples whose relationships appear to be held together by designer handbags and sheer stubbornness. The tone is set almost immediately. In the opening episode, Tabinda Sanpal casually mentions she owns 40 kilograms of gold and that her daughter’s first birthday gift was a pink Rolls-Royce. The child also wore a 24-carat gold dress and carried a gold pacifier. Your middle-class brain quietly short-circuits and never fully recovers.
But here is where Desi Bling gets interesting. Just when you are busy being envious, the show pulls the curtain back on something less glamorous. Tabinda’s husband holds the belief that a wife touching her husband’s feet every morning brings prosperity into the home. Suddenly the 40 kilograms of gold feel less impressive. Money, it turns out, can upgrade your address but not necessarily your thinking.
That tension — between obscene wealth and surprisingly ordinary mindsets — runs through the entire series and gives it more substance than it first appears to have.
The biggest draw, at least for a large part of the audience, is Karan Kundrra and Tejasswi Prakash. Their fanbase — the TejRan fandom — has been waiting for a proposal for years, and the show delivers one in its finale. It is a lovely moment. It is also very clearly timed for maximum camera impact. The setting is too perfect, the lighting is too flattering, and Tejasswi’s reaction hits every beat at exactly the right moment. You enjoy it and slightly distrust it at the same time, which is basically the experience of watching this entire show.
The gossip engine is where Desi Bling truly earns its keep. Nobody in this circle communicates directly. Everyone talks about everyone else through three intermediaries, falls out dramatically, patches things up, and then starts the cycle again. It runs on the energy of a prime-time Ekta Kapoor serial, except the sets are real and the handbags cost more than most people’s cars. Tamannaah Bhatia and Sania Mirza both get pulled into gossip sessions at various points, and the resulting awkwardness is television gold.
Not everything lands. Dyuti’s attitude toward his wife Iryna — suggesting she needs to be a better mother and wife while seemingly exempt from the same expectations himself — is one of several moments where the show’s regressive underbelly is visible. The series does not challenge this nearly enough.
Also Read: Desi Bling on Netflix: Release Date, Cast, and Everything to Know About the Reality Drama
What saves it is the occasional moment of genuine humanity. Sana Sajan, speaking about her cancer journey, is quiet, honest, and completely at odds with the surrounding spectacle. The Mirza sisters — self-made, raised by a single mother, visibly more grounded than almost everyone around them — are the most watchable people in the show for precisely that reason.
By the end, Desi Bling has done something quietly unexpected. It set out to dazzle you with wealth and ended up making ordinary life feel like a reasonable trade. You leave wanting the cars and the clothes and also deeply grateful for a life that does not require a camera crew to witness your relationships. That accidental emotional honesty is what lifts this show above pure spectacle.
Watch it. Desi Bling is now streaming on Netflix.


