: Currently available on Netflix (regional availability may vary) and Plex . Free (Ad-Supported) : Can be found on Tubi and Fawesome.
In conclusion, the Index of Besharam offers a mirror to any culture, but particularly to honor-shame societies like those in South Asia. It forces us to ask: Who decides what is shameful? And who benefits from that definition? Whether we condemn the shameless attention-seeker or celebrate the shameless truth-teller, the index reminds us that shame is not a moral absolute but a social contract—one that can be rewritten, violated, or renewed by every person who dares to stop caring about what others will say.
With #MeToo India and #AuratMarch in Pakistan, the term became a weapon of counter-shaming. Women accused harassers of besharami (shamelessness) for lewd comments. One viral tweet: “He called me besharam for walking alone at night. I said: Real besharam is the one who stares.” Here, the index not only rises but inverts — the shamed become shamers.