Diwali—the Festival of Lights—has moved well beyond the confines of traditional homes and temples to become a recurring motif in global pop culture, thanks to the interplay of Bollywood imagery, Western celebrity shout-outs and branded celebrations. What began as a civilisational ritual marking the return of Lord Rama, the triumph of light over darkness, and the value of knowledge over ignorance has steadily gained traction as a visually rich and culturally textured moment of celebration on the world stage. In this piece we’ll trace how that shift has unfolded.
In India, Bollywood has long embedded Diwali in its storytelling. On-screen celebrations in films like Kabhi Khushi Kabhie Gham… and others capture family reunions, lavish rituals, firecrackers and the lighting of diyas—not merely as backdrop but as narrative hinge points. These scenes help standardise the festival imagery: lamps, rangoli, explosions of colour and fractal crowds become visual shorthand for warmth, tradition and communal joy. As one retrospective notes, Diwali scenes “capture the essence of the festival of lights” in Hindi cinema.
From that cinematic gravitas, Diwali began to migrate into diasporic Indian-American and British Asian pop culture, where Western TV series, social media and lifestyle platforms started featuring the festival in mainstream storylines. For example, the US TV show The Office (U.S.) aired an episode penned by Indian-American writer-actor Mindy Kaling in 2006 showing the Dunder Mifflin staff celebrating Diwali, a moment cited in commentary as marking the festival’s rising visibility in American pop culture.
As brand marketers and celebrities recognised this crossover appeal, Diwali began appearing in glossy lifestyle coverage and global product launches. Bollywood and Hollywood stars now host Diwali galas in New York, Los Angeles, London and Dubai, where black-tie ensembles meet traditional Indian wear, and the celebration becomes equally about fashion, networking and spectacle as about ritual. One 2024 ball in Manhattan drew stars and executives in gowns and lehengas, signalling that Diwali had been reframed as an aspirational cultural moment for a global audience.
Celebrity shout-outs on social media have likewise played their part. Western artists engage with Diwali via dance-challenges, festive posts in Indian attire, and collaborations that reference Bollywood songs and visuals. These instances serve to normalise the festival for non-Indian audiences and to reposition Diwali as part of a lived, shared cultural lexicon rather than a niche ethnic observance.
There are both opportunities and tensions in this mainstreaming. On the one hand, magnifying Diwali across global media offers representation, visibility and a richer showcase of Indian aesthetics. On the other hand, when the festival is rendered primarily as a luxe photo-op or marketing hook, its deeper mythological meanings—light over darkness, knowledge over ignorance, communal uplift—risk being flattened into visual spectacle alone. Some commentators caution that Western media framing of Hindu festivals tends toward simplification or even sensationalism, rather than honoring their layered cultural context.
Looking forward, the spread of Diwali in pop culture suggests further convergence: more films and streaming-series (East and West) will feature Diwali as a plot or aesthetic element; more lifestyle and fashion brands will incorporate Diwali-inspired campaigns; and more celebrities with cross-cultural platforms will continue elevating the festival via shout-outs and curated celebrations. The key will be doing so with authenticity, depth and respect for origin, rather than mere surface glitz.
In short, Diwali in pop culture today is more than fireworks and familial meals. It stands at the intersection of Bollywood visual heritage, Western celebrity culture, fashion-forward branding and diasporic identity. When handled thoughtfully, it has the power to carry both the celebratory sparkle and the meaningful mythology behind the Festival of Lights.
