One of the most viral science teachers in India, Ashu Ghai, did not start his journey with a high-end studio or a massive production team; he started with a wooden plank, some household items, and a desperate need to save his family from financial ruin.
Today, he is the face of Science and Fun, a digital powerhouse that has revolutionized the way millions of Indian students perceive physics and chemistry.
With a subscriber base that has surged past the 10 million mark, Ghai has transformed from a local tutor into a premier ed-tech influencer, co-founding ‘Science and Fun’ with his brother Ushank Ghai.
The early days of Ghai’s career were defined by the grit of the Delhi streets, where he and his brother sold cosmetic items in local markets to supplement their mother’s meagre income.
His entry into teaching was a matter of survival rather than choice, beginning in a cramped room with a single student.
This humble start eventually evolved into a successful offline coaching centre, but the arrival of the pandemic and a catastrophic family investment saw him lose his family home and nearly his livelihood.
The turning point came when Ghai decided to stop treating YouTube as a secondary hobby and started capturing the raw energy of his physical classroom.
His “Science and Fun” channel, which had sat dormant for four years, suddenly found its pulse through YouTube Shorts.
By showcasing experiments that felt more like street magic than a lecture, using everyday objects to demonstrate complex laws of motion or chemical reactions, he bridged the gap between the textbook and the real world.
One video on torque (a force that tends to cause rotation) using a simple dumbbell acted as the catalyst, generating 10 million views and a flood of subscribers in a single weekend.
His current operations have expanded far beyond short clips, as he now manages multiple channels, ensuring a tailored curriculum for every grade level.
His content empire is built on the philosophy that education should be an informal, high-energy exchange rather than a rigid lecture.
Despite being courted by major ed-tech corporations, Ghai maintains his authority by staying rooted in his offline academy, using the real-time feedback of his students to fuel his digital creativity.
He has successfully built a community where students don’t just “study” science; they experience it. His rise underscores a vital lesson for the modern creator: when you combine genuine expertise with a relatable, unpolished delivery, the world doesn’t just watch—it learns.
