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Croissant and Prashant

THE WEEK India

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April 13, 2025

Blame it on the silly season.

- SHOBHAA DE

Croissant and Prashant

The heat is melting my brain, and the only way to stay sane is to order a frothy cappuccino with a buttery Prashant to go with it. What's a Prashant? If you don’t know, you are missing out. Ever heard of a croissant with a name? That name is Prashant. It all started with a viral video of a young man mispronouncing croissant, setting social media ablaze with memes and reels.

The first time ‘Croissant Prashant’ popped up on my screen, I was wondering what all the excitement was about. A young man receiving an AI tutoring lesson and innocently mishearing a word did not seem like a big deal. After all, apart from the snooty French, very few people in the world pronounce croissant correctly. The scene unfolds like this: AI briskly asks, “What is this called?” as an image of croissant appears on the screen. The young man confidently responds, “Pateesss” (pattice). AI corrects him: “Croissant” He hears “Prashant” and repeats it. And that’s it!

Bakers across India jumped on the trend, labelling trays of freshly baked croissants as Prashant, which began flying off the counters. With Prashant turning into a national obsession, savvy marketing teams wasted no time hopping on to the bandwagon. Britannia led the charge, followed by Netflix India, Lenskart, Swiggy and Myntra. The Prashant phenomenon was now official.

Here's a sheepish admission: my day begins with a ‘Prashant’ ordered from a neighbourhood bakery. While I enjoy my breakfast treat, I scroll for the latest reel engagingly put together by the OG—a young digital creator called Ayush Hu Mai. There he is—goofy, accessible, relatable, dressed in his by now trademark maroon hoodie, looking dishevelled and confused as he makes some more mistakes trying to improve on his English vocabulary. There is something totally disarming and adorable about his persona, as he unselfconsciously makes one mistake after another, wrongly identifying everyday objects and disingenuously mispronouncing most of them.

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