Influencers Getting Faster Visa Approval Than Techies?

Not long ago, going to the United States followed a familiar script for Indians. Study hard, land a tech job, apply for H-1B, and pray that the visa lottery smiles on you. Even today, lakhs of engineers and professionals pin their futures on that one random draw. But the world has changed and quietly, the visa routes have changed with it.

Meet Darshan. He’s part of an internet-age boy band called Boythrob. Think catchy pop songs, bright outfits, playful choreography, and a lot of self-aware humour. But here’s the emotional twist: while his bandmates perform together in the US, Darshan appears beside them on stage through a laptop screen. He’s still in India, waiting for his visa.

Ironically, that visa may now depend less on degrees and more on digital love.

Boythrob has crossed one million followers on TikTok and over six lakh on Instagram. Darshan alone has more than seven lakh followers. Immigration lawyers say this popularity strengthens his case for the O-1 visa that meant for people with “extraordinary ability”.

Scroll through their comment sections and you’ll find strangers praying for Darshan’s visa like it’s a board exam result. Darshan himself openly says, “Boythrob needs to be more popular so I can get a visa.” It sounds funny and heartbreaking  at the same time.

This isn’t just about one boy band. Influencers, YouTubers, and even creators from platforms like OnlyFans are increasingly qualifying for O-1 visas by proving reach, earnings, media attention, and cultural impact. Meanwhile, highly skilled professionals still lose out to chance in the H-1B lottery.

It feels unfair, even absurd. But it also tells us something important: in today’s world, attention has become currency. Followers are no longer just fans as they are documents. And sometimes, a million likes can open doors that years of hard work cannot.

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