But the popular videos—the grainy loops, the aggressive edits, the WhatsApp forwards during a bear market—are where the myth truly lives. The Big Bull is no longer just a stockbroker. He is a mood. He is a reaction. He is a 5-second clip that says everything about the rage, greed, and tragedy of modern trading.

The film follows Hemant Shah (a fictionalized Harshad Mehta) from a small-town clerk to a kingpin of the Bombay Stock Exchange. It covers the infamous 1992 scam, the shoot-at-sight market crash, and his eventual arrest.

In the context of media studies and viral pop culture, refers to two distinct but overlapping phenomena. First, it refers to the portrayal of stock market magnates in mainstream cinema (specifically the 2021 Hindi biographical film The Big Bull ). Second—and more explosively—it refers to the underground library of viral clips, interview rants, and meme compilations featuring the late Harshad Mehta, the original "Big Bull" of the 1992 securities scam.