ARTIST
Sakshi Keswani Is Turning Everyday Romance Into Relatable Comedy
In a space where comedy often tries too hard to be loud, 22-year-old Sakshi Keswani has built her audience through softness. Known online as @beingsuku, she currently holds Rank 2 in the comedy category, and her growth feels rooted in relatability rather than shock value.
Hailing from Prayagraj, Uttar Pradesh, Sakshi began creating content during the pandemic. Like many others, she started with simple setups and everyday observations. But what made her stand out was her focus on slice-of-life romantic comedy. Her reels feel less like performances and more like moments pulled straight from daily conversations — awkward confessions, overthinking texts, small misunderstandings, and those unspoken relationship dynamics everyone recognizes instantly.
At just 22, her numbers reflect strong influence. With an average of nearly 3 million impressions and over 3.3 million views, her engagement is steady and loyal. A Goat Score of 9.03 and a high genuity rating of 0.872 suggest something important: her audience connects with her authenticity. She does not exaggerate reality. She gently mirrors it.
Earlier this year, Sakshi’s impact was acknowledged on a national stage when she was nominated for the National Creators Award under the ‘Disruptor of the Year’ category. The nomination itself speaks to how digital storytelling is evolving. Disruption today does not always mean controversy. Sometimes it means changing tone — and Sakshi has done exactly that by making softness powerful.
Beyond comedy, she is also an artist and runs a separate social media profile dedicated to her artwork. That creative side shows in her content. There is a certain aesthetic consistency, a sense of framing and emotional detail, that makes her reels feel polished without being artificial.
What makes Sakshi Keswani different is that she does not rush to chase trends. She focuses on emotion. In a digital world obsessed with speed, she builds connection through familiarity. Her audience is not just laughing. They are seeing pieces of their own stories reflected back.
And maybe that is why her content travels so far. Because when romance and comedy meet real life, people do not just scroll past. They pause.