SpillB: Tania Mittal’s Hypocrisy and Lies on Bigg Boss
Welcome back to SpillB. Today, we’re diving deep into the personality of Tania Mittal, a current contestant on Bigg Boss, who has been accused of being delusional and hypocritical.
Lately, she has been justifying her behavior by attaching emotional backstories. Even her family is playing the same game—blaming the audience instead of taking accountability. They claim people are targeting her for attention, but in reality, it’s Tania who is constantly seeking the spotlight.
Her reels may look entertaining, but the way she twists facts and speaks with confidence is exactly why SpillB decided to analyze her words closely.
On Bigg Boss, Tania started a discussion around sarees—saying she succeeded in life while sticking to her cultural roots. She claimed sarees set her apart. But here’s the truth: she herself posts plenty of western outfit content, including GRWM (Get Ready With Me) videos.
The problem isn’t with what she wears—the problem is with the lie. When she says, “I’m not like others, I never did such things,” it’s simply false.
On the show, Tania portrays her life as restricted, saying her parents never let her socialize. But her old social media photos prove otherwise—showing her enjoying college life, attending events, and spending time with friends.
She also repeatedly claims to be just 12th pass. But posts with hashtags like “second year” and “third year” show she studied at a university. Even her own college praised her in public. So why deny it? Because it doesn’t fit her narrative.
Some of her statements on Bigg Boss sound almost unreal:
- She has never washed her own hair because staff always did it.
- The Bigg Boss house is smaller than her own lawn.
- She never lived in “small” spaces.
These exaggerations are laughable. Her old posts show her real home—it’s nice, but not what she describes. Even Ambanis don’t speak this way.
Tania calls herself a “Spiritual Storyteller on the Mystic Path.” From her word choices, it’s clear she’s shaping a calculated image. Just like Urfi Javed once used controversial outfits to gain fame, Tania seems to be using culture, spirituality, and superiority narratives to stay relevant.
On SpillB, we believe this isn’t just about Bigg Boss—it looks like a long-term plan to build influence, possibly even political or spiritual, once she secures enough blind followers.
The most worrying thing is that people believe her. A month ago, emotional reels from her got flooded with supportive comments. Her family’s statement even tried to guilt-trip the audience for questioning her.
Instead of taking responsibility, they said:
“Your reels and allegations may win you attention, but they leave scars that last a lifetime.”
But the lies remain unaddressed. And that’s exactly why SpillB is calling her out.
Final Thoughts from SpillB
Tania Mittal’s Bigg Boss journey has exposed hypocrisy, contradictions, and fabricated claims. The danger lies in how confidently she lies and how easily people buy into her narrative.
At SpillB, we’ll keep uncovering these realities—because if people don’t question now, tomorrow her influence could grow unchecked.