
With 167K subscribers and a wave of emotional viral shorts, “Rich By Heart” is the creator turning food donation into a movement. Here’s how he made kindness trend in 2025.

While everyone your age is posting club reels and champagne stories, one young creator in India picked up a thali and made it his mission. No disco lights. No bottle service. Just food, served with dignity, filmed with honesty, and watched by millions.
Latest Published: Creator Helping Poor & Needy People Straight From His Car
The internet in 2025 is chaotic.
Half the creators are showing off vacations.
The other half are faking pranks.
And in the middle of all this noise… one boy quietly bends down, places a plate of steaming food in front of an old man sitting on a roadside, and says:
“Bhaiya, kha lijiye.”
That’s it.
That’s the content.
And somehow, THAT is what people can’t stop watching.
Meet Rich By Heart, the Indian creator whose food donation videos are spreading faster than any travel vlog or gym reel out there.
With 167,000 YouTube subscribers and Shorts pulling lakhs of views, he’s not flexing money. He’s flexing empathy.
And honestly? It’s the most refreshing timeline detox.
His content is simple but ridiculously impactful:
A hungry family on the roadside.
A plate of food.
A quiet conversation.
A genuine smile.
A soft “thank you, beta.”
Just real hunger. And real help.
That’s exactly why millions stop scrolling when they see his videos.
Because good deeds feel rare.
Kindness feels nostalgic.
And someone doing it consistently? Almost unbelievable.
You’re instantly pulled into someone’s struggle, and someone’s relief.
Hunger hits different. Watching someone eat after days hits even harder.
He shows:
the people, their stories, their gratitude
Not himself posing with a script.
His tone isn’t:
“Look how poor they are.”
It’s:
“Look how powerful generosity can be.”
We’re living in a burnout generation. Shorts like these hug the heart.
“Bhai, god bless you. Aapke jaise log zinda rakhe huye hain ye duniya ko.”
“Crying. This makes me want to donate.”
“I’m going to do this on my birthday too.”
“Finally a creator doing something meaningful.”
His comments aren’t fandom.
They’re movement-building.
He’s not just showing donations.
He’s creating a system.
People can donate directly through the number/account he shares.
He uses the money only for one purpose:
feeding those who can’t feed themselves.
His transparency?A big reason why people trust him.
It’s MASSIVE.
Food donation channels rarely grow this fast because the niche isn’t glam.
But he proved something powerful:
Humanity, when filmed honestly, grows faster than trends.
And he’s on track to hit 500K easily this year.
He’s not your beauty, fitness, or lifestyle creator.
But he’s a goldmine for:
CSR campaigns
NGOs
food brands
grocery brands
community-impact projects
social responsibility programs
government welfare awareness
Creators in this niche can earn:
₹30K–₹1 lakh per branded story
plus ad revenue
plus donations
But money is clearly not his storyline. Impact is.
While influencers argue about filters, edits, and aesthetics…
This boy chooses a roadside and a hungry family.
While others blow money on brunches and clubs…
he quietly uses it to buy a stack of fresh chapatis and dal.
While creators chase fame…
he chases dignity.
He isn’t “Rich By Money.”
He’s Rich By Heart, and in a world drowning in performative kindness, he’s proof that real compassion can still trend.
And honestly?
If this is the kind of creator going viral in 2025,
maybe the internet still has hope after all.

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