Mindy Kaling is not too pleased with her brother right now — and rightfully so.

Kaling's brother, Vijay Chokal-Ingam, who is an American-Indian man, pretended to be a black man to facilitate getting accepted into med school 15 years ago. He's written extensively about it on his blog, "Almost Black," and now — perhaps piggybacking off his sister's successful show, The Mindy Project — he's writing a book about his experiences. He's also trying to pick up some media attention for the project, as he spoke to The New York Post about his story. Apparently, his 35-year-old sis ain't too thrilled with his actions.

"I love my sister to death," Chokal-Ingam said. "She says this will bring shame on the family."

Interestingly enough, Chokal-Ingam describes himself in his Twitter bio as "Mindy Kaling's brother/nemesis."

Kaling's rep confirmed that status in a statement to Yahoo. "Mindy has been estranged from her brother for years," it read. "She was not aware of his decision to apply to medical school under a different name and race."

On his blog, Chokal-Ingam, 38, says that his modest 3.1 GPA didn't seem like it would cut it to get him accepted into a top tier medical school, so he adopted his middle name — Jojo — and gave himself a mini-makeover. "So, I shaved my head, trimmed my long Indian eyelashes, and applied to medical school as a black man," he writes. "My change in appearance was so startling that my own fraternity brothers didn't recognize me at first."

View photos Vijay Chokal-Ingam posted this photo to explain his scam (Twitter) More

Chokal-Ingam was accepted into some top medical schools, and he even enrolled in St. Louis University, before ultimately dropping out after two years. "Lucky for you, I never became a doctor," he wrote on his website. He did, however, earn his MBA at UCLA. Perhaps his conscience caught up to him, as he was accepted as an Indian man there.

On his Facebook page, Vijay has been posting about how his scam awoke him to the realities of affirmative action and racism, calling it a "stomach churning eye opener." But he seems set on letting people know that he did not do anything bad. "For the record, I never lied about anything in my application to medical school except my race," he writes. Much like his sister, the few that are commenting on his Facebook page are not thrilled.

Unfortunately, Chokal-Ingam is shining a mirror on how he is riding the wave of his hardworking sister's public image.