Baliga, who grew up in a remote, rural part of India,moved to Australia to study accounting and said he loved to watch Bollywood movies. In Australia, he was accused of stalking two women -- one for 18 months in 2012, and another for four months in 2013 -- by repeatedly calling, texting and approaching them. He even called himself their “boyfriend.”

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In court, Baliga pleaded guilty and said the male leads in Bollywood movies always got the women to say yes by doggedly chasing them. His lawyer, Greg Barns, said in court that this was “quite normal behavior” for Indian men.

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In the end, court magistrate Michael Hill accepted the argument that Baliga’s cultural background had influenced his behavior and let him go on the condition of good behavior for the next five years.

Indian women's activist @kavita_krishnan tweeted:

In the unprecedented national uproar in India that followed the fatal gang rape of a young woman in a moving bus in 2012, many have questioned the rampant misogyny in Bollywood movies. The male protagonist is routinely shown harassing, chasing and forcing women to admit their love in the movies.

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A recent U.N. report criticized Indian movies for their sexualization of women. In 2013, a film called 'Raanjhanaa' was criticized for glorifying stalking and harassment by the male lead.

Some movie stars have spoken against it as well.