AI Summit 2026: American entrepreneur misses dinner with PM Modi due to Delhi traffic, ‘Would have been honoured’

Sara Hooker, co-founder of Adaption Labs, missed a dinner with Prime Minister Modi due to severe Delhi traffic. After getting stuck for nearly 4 hours, she shared her disappointment on social media.

Sounak Mukhopadhyay
Updated19 Feb 2026, 03:05 PM IST
AI Summit: American entrepreneur misses dinner with PM Modi due to Delhi traffic, ‘Would have been honoured’
AI Summit: American entrepreneur misses dinner with PM Modi due to Delhi traffic, ‘Would have been honoured’(X)

An American entrepreneur missed a high-profile dinner hosted by Prime Minister Narendra Modi last night due to Delhi traffic. Sara Hooker shared her disappointment on social media

After being trapped in severe traffic in Delhi, the co-founder and CEO of Adaption Labs missed the dinner with PM Modi. Hooker earlier attended sessions at the India AI Impact Summit in Bharat Mandapam.

She returned to her hotel to change from casual jeans into formal clothes for the evening gala. It was meant for select global delegates and industry leaders.

Also Read | AI Summit 2026 LIVE: PM Modi announces MANAV Vision, Jio to invest ₹10 lakh cr

However, when she tried to return to the venue, her car remained stuck in traffic for nearly 4 hours. Unable to reach on time, she finally cancelled the plan and went back to her hotel room.

Hooker later shared her experience on Twitter (formerly X). She also shared a photo of the Indian meal she ordered through room service.

“I got the invite to the gala with the Prime Minister, but got stuck in traffic getting back to the venue after I changed into gala attire (changed out of my jeans),” she wrote.

“Would have been honored to attend. But after 4h in traffic was equally honored to sit down to really excellent room service at 11 pm,” she added.

Many social media users reacted to her post.

“Wow that sucks! Traffic is so bad in India lol,” wrote Sophont AI CEO Dr Tanishq Mathew Abraham.

Welcome to India. We sit in traffic for 5 hours average everyday. This just shows india’s population, I always doubt China’s population numbers, their cities are always empty,” posted another.

“I feel conflicted. picky enough to not eat both the things, but now i am weirdly missing delhi's food. Good on you to not post in Delhi evening time,” posted another.

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Another user suggested, “Sara that doesn’t look good. Please get yourself a local person to make sure you have a great food experience in Delhi.”

“I ended up walking back through Delhi for 2 hours back to my hotel after; quicker than driving although I get an inquisitive monkey tracking me,” came from another.

Sara Hooker’s post was in reply to Subbarao Kambhampati’s post. The Arizona State University professor also missed the dinner. However, his reason was different.

“On my VIP armor front, I apparently did have a table seating for the PMO India summit dinner! However, the magical email that allows me in wasn't sent. Too bad I missed catching up with Raj Reddy. I did instead have a lovely dinner with my friend and his family, so all's well!” he wrote.

Delhi traffic

Traffic disruption in central Delhi affected many participants of the AI summit, not just Sara Hooker. Several guests said roads near Bharat Mandapam were blocked for VIP movement, forcing people to walk long distances.

Also Read | Stuck in Delhi traffic today? Check restrictions, diversions amid AI Summit 2026

The nearest Metro station was closed, and cabs were not allowed to enter the area. So, attendees walked for kilometres to find transport, according to HT.

Many shared complaints and videos on social media. Heavy congestion also built up around the venue and caused long delays for regular commuters. Some frustrated motorcyclists were seen crossing road dividers illegally to escape the jam, HT added.

About the Author

Sounak Mukhopadhyay covers trending news, sports and entertainment for LiveMint. His reporting focuses on fast-moving stories, box office performance, digital culture and major cricket developments. He combines real-time updates with clear context for everyday readers. <br><br> Sounak brings newsroom experience across breaking news, explainers and long-form features. He has a strong emphasis on accuracy, verification and responsible storytelling. His work tracks audience behaviour, celebrity influence and the business of sport and cinema. He helps readers understand why a story matters beyond the headline. <br><br> Sounak has contributed to widely read digital publications. He continues to build a body of journalism shaped by consistency, speed and editorial clarity. He is particularly interested in the intersection of media, popular culture and public conversation in contemporary India. <br><br> At LiveMint, he writes daily coverage as well as analytical pieces that interpret numbers, trends and cultural moments in accessible language. His approach prioritises factual depth, balanced framing and reader trust. The reporting aligns with modern newsroom standards of transparency and credibility. <br><br> Outside daily reporting, he explores storytelling across formats including podcasts, filmmaking and narrative non-fiction. Through his journalism, Sounak aims to document the rhythms of modern entertainment and sports while maintaining rigorous editorial integrity. <br><br> Sounak continues to develop audience-focused journalism that connects speed with substance in a rapidly-changing information environment. His work seeks clarity, trust and lasting public value in every story he reports.

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