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Pints & PPTs at bar lectures in NCR: Nerding out is the new weekend hangout
ETimes | December 5, 2025 10:39 PM CST

It’s a typical Saturday night in Delhi, but the loudest thing in a bar isn’t the music. It’s someone explaining a topic in quantum mechanics, anthropology, or literature while downing drinks. Once unimaginable outside a classroom or seminar hall, lectures have now moved into the city’s most relaxed spaces – bars and cafés.

Bar lectures , a concept borrowed from America, are the newest way to connect with curious minds, niche interests, and a community that loves to nerd out on the weekend.

‘Breaking the wall between intellect and everyday life’

Calling it an experiment that disrupts the idea of a lecture, Sonalika Aggarwal, co-founder of UnLecture , says, “It is an experiment in which we test how many ways we can disrupt the idea of a lecture. The space and the setting are key. Once you take lectures out of classrooms and formal spaces and put them into places where you go to drink or hang out with friends, it helps you find a community.” She adds, “It is also great to find a community that is curious to know things. It breaks the wall between intellect and everyday life.” “The conversations become more accessible because you can still go to a lecture after college… in a fun way,” she says.

‘Makes learning feel effortless’

Bar lectures have smashed the idea that intellectual conversations belong only in quiet rooms. Ayushi Mishra, who co-creates Pint of View lectures with Anmol Grace, says, “I think moving lectures out of formal halls and into spaces like bars and cafés changes the energy completely. It makes knowledge feel accessible again, not something reserved for academics or specialists. For the speakers, it’s a chance to see their ideas land in real time with a mixed audience of students, professionals, artists, and everyone in between. And for the audience, it’s easier to listen, question, and even disagree in a setting that’s informal and open.” Ayushi adds that many attendees arrive alone and leave with new friends, fostering a sense of community.



Abhishek Iyer, Assistant Professor in the Department of Physics at IIT Delhi, recently led a lecture on particle physics that drew around 55 attendees. Speaking about the experience, he says, “Sharing these lectures in metro cities in a relaxed atmosphere with a fairly exposed audience helps them understand things in a better way – even a subject like applied physics.”




‘Bar lectures offer an alternative to rigid academic spaces’

For hosts, the criteria for speakers are simple – passion, clarity, and the ability to explain complex ideas to a lay audience. Mishka Lepps, co-founder of UnLecture, shares, “From a physicist and a geologist to a psychologist – passionate people from many different walks of life, with sizable experience not just in their subject matter but in conveying that idea to someone else, are invited for lectures. It is ideal if they link their subject to everyday life.”

Vaibhav Dwivedi, Assistant Professor in the English department at St Stephen’s College, delivered a lecture at a Delhi café on monsters this Halloween. “The talk dealt with our fascination with monsters,” he shares, adding, “The audience was diverse, there was no restriction on food and drinks, and there was wonderful attendance. This is what bar lectures offer: an alternative to rigid academic spaces. I could be more flexible here; the conversations were not hampered by the need to finish any syllabus or assignments. Similarly, the audience was there because they wanted to be there and not out of necessity.” He added, “I was also surprised by how rejuvenating it can be to hear about your work from those who have a unique perspective, unfiltered by academic jargon.”

Pavani Mehra, a designer and rapper who has attended a few such lectures, says, “What stayed with me is how different learning feels inside a bar. The moment you sit down with a drink in hand, the usual stiffness of lectures disappears. A bar turns a lecture into a shared experience. Someone laughs, someone disagrees, someone leans in to ask a question they would never ask in a classroom.”

‘The stimulation is not just from booze but from discussions too’

Nerd Nite , which began in 2003 in Boston, has a unique format – three speakers, each giving a talk on a niche topic for about 18 minutes, followed by a 10-minute Q&A session. Following the format, Gopikrishnan Nair, who, along with Anandita Lidhoo and Bidisha Mahapatra, founded the Nerd Nite Delhi chapter in July this year, says, “Some of my most memorable evenings have been those that had stimulation not just from the booze but also from the discussions. That energy, along with the viral video of Lectures on Tap, pushed us to start this chapter.” Usually held once a month on a Thursday evening, Gopi says these nights are a “good opportunity for those interested to drop by after work and listen to three fantastic talks with a drink in your hand.”

Climate Party, a monthly meet-up across seven cities, brings people from different disciplines together to discuss climate issues. Sayesha Dogra, founder of Climate Party, shares, “The Climate Party is what we call the scenius (a term coined by musician Brian Eno that combines ‘scene’ and ‘genius’) of climate solutions, which is the collective genius of the people. The party involves a learning session on climate-related problems in different formats like fireside chats, workshops, etc. It is like an open dialogue among people.”


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