Tehran walking vlog shows post‑ceasefire
- A YouTube creator, Walk with Mary, posted an April 27 Tajrish Bazaar walking video showing shoppers, vendors and open storefronts in north Tehran. - The upload was published 19 days after a U.S.-Iran ceasefire announced on April 8, and follows similar Tajrish street videos posted April 16. - The footage offers a street-level snapshot as ceasefire talks remain unstable. (apnews.com)
A Tehran walking vlog posted April 27 shows Tajrish Bazaar operating with shoppers in the aisles and storefronts open in north Tehran. (youtube.com) The video was uploaded by the channel Walk with Mary under the title “IRAN 2026 after CeaseFire | Tehran walking in Tajrish to the Friday Bazaar.” The channel page showed 13,000 subscribers and 66 views when the page was crawled. (youtube.com) The uploader describes the footage as being recorded in Tehran after “50 days of war in Iran,” and tags it as a street-food and walking-tour video. The page says the material was “personally recorded” on location. (youtube.com) The timing matters because the United States and Iran agreed to a two-week ceasefire on April 7, with public celebrations photographed in Tehran on April 8. President Donald Trump then extended that ceasefire on April 21 instead of letting it lapse. (usnews.com) (cnbc.com) That did not settle the conflict. The Associated Press reported on April 28 that negotiations were still “in flux,” even after a new Iranian proposal. (apnews.com) Tajrish is a well-known neighborhood and market district on Tehran’s northern edge, and travel guides describe the bazaar as one of the city’s oldest and busiest traditional markets. That makes it a useful place to gauge whether ordinary retail life is moving again. (surfiran.com) (irandoostan.com) This was not the only such clip. Another channel, Travel All Nation, posted a Tajrish walking vlog on April 16 titled “After 50 days of war in Iran,” and that video had nearly 3,000 views when crawled. (youtube.com) Those videos do not prove conditions across Tehran or Iran as a whole. They do show that creators are using ordinary street footage from a major market to document what post-ceasefire public life looks like while diplomacy remains unsettled. (youtube.com) (apnews.com)