Meet the Indian couple whose baraat shut down Wall Street: All you need to know about them

Meet the Indian couple whose baraat shut down Wall Street: All you need to know about them

Image credits: X/@NELiveTV

Recently, videos of a baraat shutting down the streets of the New York Stock Exchange went viral on the internet from people across the world being shocked by the typically bustling streets of NYC being filled with 400 people dressed in Indian attires dancing to music.The video of the crowd grooving outside Cipriani Wall Street was shared by DJ AJ on his Instagram account. “We shut down Wall Street for a 400-person Baraat. Who would’ve ever thought?!”While people were surprised to see the entire scene, what they were more intrigued about were the couple whose wedding procession took over the NYC- who they were and how rich they would be to block down blocks of the city for their wedding baraat? Here’s all you need to know about the Indian couple whose baraat ‘shut down’ Wall Street.The couple who were deemed to be some sort of ‘millionaires’ by half the people viewing the videos of their wedding baraat were identified as Varun Navani, CEO of enterprise AI platform Rolai and Amanda Soll, director of legal compliance and risk management, according to their LinkedIn pages.Additionally, the NYPost confirmed their identities by their wedding page on The Knot, which had details of their four-day wedding celebration.While the high-power couple hails from Boston, Massachusetts, they decided to tie the knot in NYC not only breaking the internet but most probably also their bank.As per the city records viewed by The Post, Navani and Soll filed 28 permits for their wedding day, thus spending somewhere between $25,000 and $66,000 per location to shut down the streets of the Financial District.The street events are classified by the Mayor’s Office on the basis of the area they take over-curbs, sidewalks and roads and by size and impact.While “large” events require full block closure and extensive setup, “extra-large” events need even more space, permits and NYPD coordination.Navani and Soll’s wedding festivities began on May 23rd, with breakfast and afternoon tea at the Conrad Hotel and a sangeet at The Glasshouse. On the 24th, the day began with brunch and tea at the Conrad, before the baraat started off at 3:30 pm, followed by a reception at the Cipriani Wall Street that had guests dancing from 5:30 pm to 2 am.That’s not all, on the 25th, the couple had another wedding, this time a Jewish one, at Cipriani and an after-party at Slate that was going on till 4 am. Lastly, on the 26th, they wrapped up the festivities with a post-wedding brunch and lunch at Conrad.The couple’s wedding surely had been grasping their chains on its expenditure and others relishing in the fun of two people joining hands forever.  

Leave a Reply

This site uses Akismet to reduce spam. Learn how your comment data is processed.