Philosophy Tube / Oliver Lennard / Oliver "Olly" Thorn / Abigail Thorn - Breadtube's Patrick Bateman.

Can't he at least fucking try?
On the contrary, as @AssignedEva pointed out, he's trying very hard to steal the scenes he's in.

Notice when he's in the background, he suddenly clasps his hands together on two occasions just so he can stick out a little bit. His line delivery is a master class in overacting. When he collapses, he does so in the hammiest possible way. All this is classic small-time actor bullshit, trying to use what little of the audience's attention he has to play with to get noticed for a second or two.

Bit-parters do this all the time. A basically competent director will do his best to clamp down on it, because obviously the focus should be on the production as a whole. The audience shouldn't be distracted by people in the background going for the Oscar. And it's even more distracting of course in Olly's case because he's a giant man surrounded by women. Part of me suspects though that they gave him a wider latitude than normal because he's such a stunning and valid transwoman. Who knows?
 
Ollie's released a bibliography for the next Choob video (filming July 22nd with a late July/early August release date).
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We knew this video was going to be about phantasms and how they relate to death. Looking through this list I reckon I've got an inkling to what the arguments are going to be.
As always don't take the below to mean I agree, it's more an exploration of what I think the thinking is saying.

The Cultural Politics of Emotion effectively argues that emotions are more like cultural traditions rather than psychological states, which in turn shape the cultures in w- ok it's kind of hard to explain, but this example from the introduction is a neat summary of the sort of things Sara Ahmed is arguing;
The example that is often used in the psychological literature on emotions is a child and a bear. The child sees the bear and is afraid. The child runs away. Now, the ‘Dumb View’ would be that the bear makes the child afraid, and that the bodily symptoms of fear are automatic (pulse rate, sweating, and so on). Functionalist models of emotion, which draw on evolutionary theory, might say that the fear has a function: to protect the child from danger, to allow survival. Fear in this situation could be an instinctual reaction that has enhanced successful adaptation and thus selection. Fear would also be an action; fear would even be ‘about’ what it leads the child to do. But the story, even in its ‘bear bones’, is not so simple. Why is the child afraid of the bear? The child must ‘already know’ the bear is fearsome. This decision is not necessarily made by her, and it might not even be dependent on past experiences. This could be a ‘first time’ encounter, and the child still runs from it. But what is she running from? What does she see when she sees the bear? We have an image of the bear as an animal to be feared, as an image that is shaped by cultural histories and memories. When we encounter the bear, we already have an impression of the risks of the encounter, as an impression that is felt on the surface of the skin. This knowledge is bodily, certainly: the child might not need time to think before she runs for it. But the ‘immediacy’ of the reaction is not itself a sign of a lack of mediation. It is not that the bear is fearsome, ‘on its own’, as it were. It is fearsome to someone or somebody. So fear is not in the child, let alone in the bear, but is a matter of how child and bear come into contact. This contact is shaped by past histories of contact, unavailable in the present, which allow the bear to be apprehended as fearsome. The story does not, despite this, inevitably lead to the same ending. Another child, another bear, and we might even have another story.
It is not just that we might have an impression of bears, but ‘this bear’ also makes an impression, and leaves an impression. Fear shapes the surfaces of bodies in relation to objects. Emotions are relational: they involve (re)actions or relations of ‘towardness’ or ‘awayness’ in relation to such objects. The bear becomes the object in both senses: we have a contact with an object, and an orientation towards that object. To be more specific, the ‘aboutness’ of fear involves a reading of contact: the child reads the contact as dangerous, which involves apprehending the bear as fearsome. We can note also that the ‘reading’ then identifies the bear as the cause of the feeling. The child becomes fearful, and the bear becomes fearsome: the attribution of feeling to an object (I feel afraid because you are fearsome) is an effect of the encounter, which moves the subject away from the object. Emotions involve such affective forms of reorientation.
So for example, saying "that's disgusting" is argued to be a performative act that is avowing certain things as something you wish to abject from society, while certain acts of performative grief (e.g. Dianna) become reflections of our love which in turn is shaped by what our society considers to be worthy of love, part of that being people we want reciprocity of love (which ties into nation states - you love your country because you want your country to return that love in the form of a happy life with economic opportunities and stability, it's argued).

There's a bunch of stuff about how people often shy away from discussing death and so sometimes it gets expressed in weird ways, and the impact social media has on the way we manifest grief. Every year I send a dear friend of mine a message on her birthday, updating her on things going on in my life and plans for my future, and stuff I've gotten up to over the last year I wish she could have been at because she would have loved it. She was taken from us, suddenly and far too young, a few weeks before her birthday in 2016. Why do I do it? I know she can't read those messages. Initially I think it was because people who didn't know her very well got a Facebook reminder that year to wish her happy birthday, and they were posting it on her Facebook wall. I sent her a private message because I think it all still felt unreal; I still had the present I had been planning to give her. But after that it became a way of remembering her, keeping her alive in a way (and there's that phantasm). How will I feel when Facebook eventually deletes her account or shuts down one day? Will it feel like she died again, when I go to message her and then can't? How is me sending it privately different to someone publicly posting on their dead friend's Facebook wall or sharing photos, and why do those people mourn in that public way? It's actually quite an interesting topic, although I don't trust Ollie not to mangle it. There's probably also going to be something about social media being used to signal support for mass mourning (e.g. the "Je Suis Charlie" avatars and the Ukraine flag photo filters).

There's also obviously a lot of stuff about Dianna in there, examining how the media in particular pushed certain grief narratives and caused a performative display of grief among people who created a sort of "I'm crying because Dianna died" community, and the ritualised nature of the mourning (along with impacts of Dianna's death on minority populations) and how all this ritualised mourning actually caused changes to British society and the way it viewed itself and the royals... because it wasn't really about mourning a woman they'd never met but instead about the things Dianna seemed to represent; charity, compassion, humanity, a desire for a better society, a desire for an end to warfare etc etc.

From there I reckon Ollie's going to "unpack" the hidden secret meanings behind acts of mourning. For example, the candlelit vigils of 1980s/1990s AIDS activists were just as much about ritualised grief with the subconscious intent of trying to stave off their own deaths from AIDS as it was about commemorating the departed, and it leached into the aggressive militancy of ACT UP (this is part of the argument in Mourning and Militancy - militancy was just a form of dangerous denial, citing an ACT UP organiser "We have to realise that activism is not a prophylaxis against opportunistic infections; it may be synergistic with aerosolized pentamidine [a drug used prophylactically against Pneumocystis carinii pneumonia], but it won't on its own prevent you from getting AIDS"). This will probably also be impacted by looking at how stories of anxieties in the media of the time (women with an ex who was bisexual, healthcare workers with needlestick injuries, parents whose children are taught by a HIV+ teacher) tended to neglect to ever interview the primary victims of the AIDS epidemic, gay men, leading to further need for ritualised mourning within the community. I will be shocked if this isn't then linked to Transgender Day of Remembrance and the vigils and name readings that are done every year, and stuff like #SayHerName.

And then the denouement. Mourning isn't really about mourning someone who died, it's more a display of specific values. Black Afterlives Matter explores how white people being performative about black people dying during the heyday of BLM ended up really making it all about themselves, and at the same time showing relatively little interest in any of the black people who died that didn't become hashtags. And it's the people we DON'T mourn that are relevant. If you felt genuine grief at the passing of David Bowie but didn't feel sad about Brianna Ghey, why is that? Why do we feel sad about the Holocaust but generally less sad about the Trail of Tears? Why did we do two minute's silence on D-Day but didn't memorialise the people dying in Gaza? It's because we do not view those groups as being worthy of the love and affection of the in-group; we view them as the outgroup that should be demeaned, abjected and ultimately destroyed. Grief is performative - it is both performed to communicate a message, while also shaping a message about how should be mourned and therefore who is worthy of life. By failing to mourn minorities we are complicit in creating a worldview that they don't deserve to be mourned and therefore their lives are not important.

Which ties up with From Shooting and Crying to Shooting and Singing. Shooting and Crying is an Israeli term for a certain form of sentiment; look at the terrible things I was made to do. Something like Waltz with Bashir or Golda Meir's statement "we can forgive the Arabs for killing our sons, but we can't forgive them for making us kill their sons". It's a form of self victimisation, like the performative white people in #BLM - the terrible things I did weigh heavily on my conscience, I am the victim here; a way to reframe actions you took as an aggressor as things that happened to you. You didn't want to shoot that child but you were forced to and now you have PTSD... so it's the civilians who are to blame for that child's death, not you! A way for a nation state to sidestep processing national shame. But of late, the sentiment has changed - there's no more tears. It's just shooting while people cheer them on and even write songs like Harbu Darbu celebrating massacring Palestinians. So it's noticeably more common in Israeli culture for people to now make jokes about the murder of Palestinian children - which makes it easier to do so, because now there's not even a pretence of shame. They are not worthy of grief, they are subhuman roaches who need to be exterminated, so why would we feel bad about doing it? Commit more war crimes, Moshe! And you can say the same thing about colonialism in general, and how things like Columbus Day and Thanksgiving get celebrated in the States while National Mourning Day goes unrecognised... or Confederate Memorial Day is a holiday in many Southern States while Juneteenth only got made a federal holiday in 2021 (or closer to home, how we have a Commonwealth Day that was originally Empire Day, but we don't have a "we're sorry for the British Empire day"). A way to try and downplay or avoid national shame and therefore avoid reparations while continuing a national narrative that justifies continued acts of Imperialistic aggression. Oh and we get angry about it when questioned because of phantasms or something.

And 100% this is then going to be linked to Ollie's new pet cause, punishing NHS senior leaders. The NHS has not apologised for children dying on waiting lists for gender clinics. The NHS is not apologising for suspending puberty blockers. The NHS is not apologising for the Cass Review, or for "segregated healthcare", or for not switching to a pure affirmation model. Unless the NHS Senior Leaders are made to apologise publicly and punished appropriately, this will switch to Shooting and Singing - the UK needs to acknowledge the deaths of transgender people in a suitably ashamed and serious manner, or else there's going to be (more of a) transgender genocide.

Basically, mourning is a fake psyop that is used to affirm social values, and failure to properly mourn certain minority groups or figures is epistemic violence that further dehumanises them as The Other. If you felt sad about Matthew Perry dying but didn't feel much about Brianna Ghey dying, that's because you hold transgender people in contempt - and failure to mourn Brianna appropriately makes it easier for more transgender people to be killed, because our nation is therefore normalising the idea that deaths of transgender people deaths are unimportant, and therefore their lives are unimportant. You're literally murdering trans people by not mourning them properly, you murderer. Also round up all the senior NHS people and make them wear sackcloth and ashes or else there's going to be a transgender genocide.

Something like that, anyway, is how I think this video will go.
 
On the contrary, as @AssignedEva pointed out, he's trying very hard to steal the scenes he's in.

Notice when he's in the background, he suddenly clasps his hands together on two occasions just so he can stick out a little bit. His line delivery is a master class in overacting. When he collapses, he does so in the hammiest possible way. All this is classic small-time actor bullshit, trying to use what little of the audience's attention he has to play with to get noticed for a second or two.

Bit-parters do this all the time. A basically competent director will do his best to clamp down on it, because obviously the focus should be on the production as a whole. The audience shouldn't be distracted by people in the background going for the Oscar. And it's even more distracting of course in Olly's case because he's a giant man surrounded by women. Part of me suspects though that they gave him a wider latitude than normal because he's such a stunning and valid transwoman. Who knows?
He also starts hammily shaking his head just before a cut back to the black woman, so the movement is like distractingly cut off mid motion , which the person editing will have been pissed off about but will have had to make do as it was obviously the best bit available-which means he was doutless up to worse, weirder behaviour in the multiple other takes.

He also has probably sidled off his mark in that shot, getting up into the front center of as many shots as he can despite being tall af and making the scene feel visually disjointing.

Every person there on the actual work side of things will be pissed off by this Ricky Gervais in Extras series 1 type behaviour, and won't trouble him with a call again.

Being as he can't help but squee over nigh strangers who are his new "bezzie" (when they can demonstrably help his career), that was very absent with anyone from this at any point mentioned during or since- seems to have not made even acquaintances with the rest of the cast, I can imagine he sort of got into the swing of keeping himself to himself as regards the other cast members, since the play in London for "security", and being burned by the CIS BITCH actress's disinterest in Django - I think he only really talks to, or even really sees people as non-NPCs if they are also AGPs, wether or not they have taken the plunge into MTF (Devon, lol)

-So; he was very likely an aloof pain in the arse on set, doing absolutely nothing to at *least*, interpersonally, make up for the fact that he was making a bad show worse and more difficult to shoot in every shot he (dis)graced.



Ollys new video may be about the one or two troons who died, or it may be about whatever personal tragedy he alluded to recently. He can't let a good misery go to waste, so.
More olly trauma lore to be written.
 
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I swear that he must’ve been a diversity hire, no wonder this show is shit
I'm sure he was. From my understanding this is a witch coven (but in space) and the whole thing with a lot of that is that magic (or that sort of magic, played off against the Jedi) is specifically feminine. Moon magic tied to the menstrual cycle, the Sacred Feminine, women's mysteries, the sisterhood, that sort of thing - women have the power to create life etc. Men can't understand and can't wield these powers. The sort of stuff you see in hippy dippy pagan/wiccan circles.

There's no way to have that sort of plot line in current year without being called transphobic, unless you very specifically make a show of including a trans woman to signal that space-Hecathe supports self ID. Add in the fact that Star Wars makes heavy use of English accents, and you can almost conclude it's logical to hire Ollie for a small role.
 
On the contrary, as @AssignedEva pointed out, he's trying very hard to steal the scenes he's in.

Notice when he's in the background, he suddenly clasps his hands together on two occasions just so he can stick out a little bit. His line delivery is a master class in overacting. When he collapses, he does so in the hammiest possible way. All this is classic small-time actor bullshit, trying to use what little of the audience's attention he has to play with to get noticed for a second or two.

Bit-parters do this all the time. A basically competent director will do his best to clamp down on it, because obviously the focus should be on the production as a whole. The audience shouldn't be distracted by people in the background going for the Oscar. And it's even more distracting of course in Olly's case because he's a giant man surrounded by women. Part of me suspects though that they gave him a wider latitude than normal because he's such a stunning and valid transwoman. Who knows?
It reminds me of the story Jay Mohr told about working on a film by Clint Eastwood. In which Clint blows up at an extra for making a showstopping production out of her one scene: handing the main character his mail.

"Honey, I can't begin to tell you how much this movie isn't about you. If I could have hired just your goddamn arm, I would have."

 
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Looking through this list I reckon I've got an inkling to what the arguments are going to be.
If I was olly, by now I'd have twigged on that I release a bibliog of stuff that's vaguely tickling my ego rn, and then perch on this thread til you write your essay about it.

Then film it.

Bung Brian the stylist his Shien budget ofc.
Passive income babes. Get a mastubatory session in the makeup chair and in studio out of it too.



Let us not forget, RE his shambolic Star Warts display HE THINKS IT WAS GOOD. HE THINKS HE, SPECIFICALLY, DID GOOD.
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He was ~absolutely~ trying to scene-steal. But the thing is, I genuinely don't even think he realises that he was. He hoenstly sees himself as more of a character than he was. He saw those scenes - 18 other characters huddled up scrumstyle with him be damned-as his scenes.
His special troon award character had a name! An arc! It wasn't just stunt cast special boy gold sticker our franchise is dead and we are throwing anything anywhere to see that nothing sticks.

He went in with an idea - firm and unshakeable- and despite all the reality fo the situation, stuck with it. He had a real part! In Star Wars! The narc knows no bounds.
That's one of the most frustrating things about Tube as a cow. Most cows are frustrated tmby their lot in life, but Olly, even in his moments of should-be acute humiliation, rides high and haughty on sheer delusion.

Remeber that this is the lad who was rejected from drama course after drama course for being shit at acting. It made no difference to his desire to pursue it. I doubt anything will. Even the fact that his reputation as a craftsman in the medium is now unquestionably trash. He will keep going as long as he can keep writing his own shit queer media to apear in. He will keep going, probably, til Nebula guy's dad's shareholders say Enough.
So.. About 4 years on fumes, absolute and total max? Maybe 3 or more realistically even 2 in this economy.
 
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My god, he sticks out even just when standing there doing nothing, look how tall he is in this crowd of women. I swear that he must’ve been a diversity hire, no wonder this show is shit.
I think is ought to be more embarrassing how he can't even just act normal. In the first still he gives me overacting with a tinge of 'gotta look pretty while acting'. In the second he has this blank expression whereas everyone around him reflects in their expressions they are actually listening, also hands are held claw-like compared to the more relaxed demeanor of the lady right next to him.
I've not watched The Acolyte and I don't plan on changing that, so for all I know this are stills right after he delivers his lines but its more likely the same shit as with his slumping, he wants to stand out and either no one cares or wants to tell him to stop. This has to be deliberate, they want him to stand out because even in the mass death scene it seems his robes are of the different colour than the other characters.
 
Do we know this? Did he say it in a video?
From an interview:
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Drama schools plural. We don't have more insight than this to my knowledge, but he's a posho who wants to act so at the very least will have considered RADA, LAMBDA, Central and Guildhall. Maybe East 15 was his first choice based on its ranking in league tables and he opted for the strongest vocational option over mixing with public school luvvies, but there is genuinely zero reason to give Ollie the benefit of the doubt.

Case in point - he says he has a Master of Arts and did it over four years "rather than three years and a postgrad somewhere else", gently brushing over the "Scottish MA". A Scottish MA is equivalent to a BA. It is an undergraduate degree spread over four years and is not equivalent to a postgraduate qualification... but he's ok with you believing that about him. You see similar with his approach to acting - his profiles say "graduated from drama school in 2018". He did graduate from his one year MA in acting from East 15 in 2018, but the phrasing could lead you to believe he had a whole undergraduate degree in acting as well and is a highly trained actor.

This interview is actually a pretty bleak insight into Ollie's mindset. An angry kid who kept pushing himself really hard because he came from a family of high achievers, he was picked on in school and took his anger out in Cadets, with his only real escape being getting involved in school plays. He fell into philosophy basically by accident. In Philosophy class (which sounds like something out of the Dead Poets Society) he was in a class of only four, and was lavished with attention and made to feel special. He didn't know what to do with himself so took the suggestion of Philosophy to heart - but got rejected out of 4/5 universities and then flunked his A-Level exam and didn't meet the offer to St Andrews (until his posh private school was able to put in a call to get the exams regraded).

Once at St Andrews he worked incredibly hard to meet the standard, becoming known as "That Guy Who Has His Essays Done A Month Before They're Due" and spending lots of time doing reading in advance instead of partying. He got rejected from an improv troupe and so decided to get into stand up comedy to "prove" he was talented;
See, my first week of uni I tried out for the improv troupe and got rejected. I was feeling pretty down about it, and then I saw that the improv troupe would be judging a standup contest the next week. I had never done standup before, but I thought, "I'll show them!" and went along anyway. And at the end of the night I won! The head of the troupe that had rejected me had to say, in front of an audience, that I was the funniest guy there and hand me £100 in cash! So I kept going. But right from the start standup for me was just a way of proving I was the cleverest guy in the room, it was about winning.
My own standup act got increasingly challenging, deliberately esoteric, Brechtian, political (in a superficial way) and confrontational until I was basically just trying to make the other comics laugh and the audience feel like they had to laugh too or they'd be left out. I took a lot of cues from Stewart Lee, in the sense that I used to inhabit a right-wing perspective that wasn't mine and take it to extremes in order to parody it. Some of it survives, you can still see it! In that video you can hear the other comics off camera left laughing the loudest and fastest after a punchline, and the audience lagging behind, not sure of themselves, which is exactly how I used to like it.
He acts like he recognises how bad that was, but there's a sense of pride coming through in this, although interestingly:
if someone told me I was banned from standup comedy it would honestly have been a relief for me, not to mention the audiences I terrorized, because it was an exercise in bitterness
He started making videos and once he graduated he didn't know what to do with himself, considering conversion courses to Law and Medicine. Eventually he settled on acting while continuing to make videos, and after VidCon 2018 (where he met Contra) he had a new lease of life on content creation. Interview's from 2019 when he was still going out with Contra. There's some other dubious claims in this interview, like how he was "top of his class" (he got a First, which is no mean feat, but there's no evidence he was "top of his class") just like how at other points he claimed he was the funniest stand up in St Andrews... which seems to be linked to this winning a comedy competition. It appears like he's always got a rationalisation for his claims.

Ollie does have a strong work ethic, it's one of his few positive traits. He puts a lot of work into his videos and spends a lot of money on them. The end result is laughably bad, but he overtook ContraPoints mostly by dint of making videos on different subjects month after month (rather than doing drugs in a crumbling mansion and releasing one rambling video a year). He's written a play and a short film and got them made - they're not good, but he did achieve it. He aggressively networks and hobnobs his way into acting roles - he's not a natural at schmoozing but he puts the legwork in and does actually get roles in somewhat notable productions (he's just terrible at acting and pisses off people around him).

This interview made it click. He's the dim kid who works really hard to get good grades. He's not naturally gifted, not particularly intelligent, no creative flair, not particularly charming or interesting, but the sort of kid who kind of recognises this in themselves and is driven to try and prove themselves, and can end up more successful than the gifted kids who didn't have to work at school. In a world without YouTube he'd have probably ended up as a mediocre solicitor or accountant - decent income but smalltime - married with kids in a Surrey commuter town and participating in the local AmDram productions. He's trying to force himself into being famous purely by dint of will.

He knows roughly what he needs to do to get famous, but keeps making bizarre errors in judgement that undermine him because it's not natural to him;
A couple of years ago I was approached by a marketing agency on behalf of a major UK university asking me to make a video promoting their uni. They offered me £2500. So I made the video, and then immediately made a follow-up one saying, "I believe everything I said in that video, they are a great uni, but here's what else is going on," and I talked about how their cleaning staff were on strike, their teaching staff weren't getting decent wages, and their students were paying £9000 a year while the uni was pumping money into hiring YouTubers to make ads for them. I couldn't in good conscience take that money, so I publicly donated my fee to the student union and unsurprisingly almost no brand or marketing agency has touched me with a ten-foot pole since, haha!
he couldn't work out whether he should be a corporate shill or be a leftist and
he made a video "exposing" SOAS, followed by laughably bad fake crying. He lets on in this video that he was the "YouTuber who Knows Things" and was getting validation for being thought of as intelligent. It follows through to his grandiose behaviour at trans pride and his remarks about being the most famous trans woman in the UK and his extreme stances in his videos - too far removed from his philosophy degree to keep mining it for content, he still wants to be revered as a voice of wisdom and the smartest person in the room. The fact this keeps stalling is perhaps why he's more seriously considering dropping his channel in future now he thinks he's got his feet under the table with acting. It even explains some of his more egregious faux pas, trying to get Nigella and Judith Butler on his channel, antagonising that literary agent to try and make an adaptation, trying to force his way into Baldur's Gate 3 social media posts by editing other actor's TikToks, sending terrible fan art of his minor character to casting directors - all he knows how to do is try really, really hard and that bloody mindedness is what brought him the small amount of success so far. He's struggling to get any further but doesn't have the natural abilities to recognise this strategy isn't a long term positive one.

Once again I find myself feeling a bit sorry for Ollie, although I'm sure those feelings will evaporate in time for his next video.
 
He was just blabbing on Twitter about "trans kids" and it's just so gross how the trans movement goes after kids. 90% of troubled young people report same-sex attraction, most with a plethora of emotional problems. They'd be gay adults if left alone. The trans movement is intensely anti-gay. Olly's all-in on the drugging, castration, mutilation of gay teens. I don't poke the beast on TwitterX but can I say i've really grown to hate him.
 

"I did end up coming top of my year."

Are there really British universities that grade students so you can tell who came 'top of their year'. Don't you just get a first, a 2.1, a 2.2, etc? And a Masters doesn't even have that degree of granularity. It's just a pass and a pass with distinction. I don't think any of the academic institutions I've ever been involved with had a system that would let you know with any certainty who had the highest marks in the year.

Perhaps Scottish universities are different? Edit: It would seem so. Certainly different from when I had any involvement. Though I'm still not sure how you'd be able to compare your own results with those of others on your course. Perhaps they pin up a league table in the common room?

But even if it were true, what kind of try-hard narcissistic cunt would be telling people that in interviews? If Ollie was as civilized as he pretends to be, he'd be embarrassed by his own vanity.
 
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Are there really British universities that grade students so you can tell who came 'top of their year'. Don't you just get a first, a 2.1, a 2.2, etc?
Grade transcripts. Your overall mark is just going to be a First or a 2:1 or whatever, but each submitted assessment and exam will have gotten a mark. So feasibly someone could work out that they'd repeatedly obtained the highest marks in the class on each assessment if they constantly compared results and kept an autistic little spreadsheet. Maybe if you were the only person in your graduating class with a first? But I doubt that'd be the case in St Andrews.

I don't think St Andrews (or any university) formally publishes who is the highest marked student in each graduating class. They do recognise extreme academic achievement where there's clear front-runners with things like the Principal’s Scholarship for Academic Excellence, The Dean's List, The Miller Prize and the Bell Prize (for proxime accessit, second most successful) and even things like the Principal's Medal and the Proctor's Medal for combined academic achievement and extra-curricular achievement (as you might expect for the "funniest stand up in St Andrews"). There's no evidence that Ollie ever got awarded one of these and he's never mentioned them, which you'd assume he would if he'd received such an accolade. He even mentions his parents and brother all getting awards for being top of their class in uni, but skips over that with his own degree.

Saying he was the top of his class (especially when he dropped theology and switched to pure psychology in second year) is just something that can't be proven or disproved unless alumni from his cohort decided to do an exposé, which they probably wouldn't because they're probably relieved they don't have to interact with him any more.
 
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Grade transcripts. Your overall mark is just going to be a First or a 2:1 or whatever, but each submitted assessment and exam will have gotten a mark. So feasibly someone could work out that they'd repeatedly obtained the highest marks in the class on each assessment if they constantly compared results and kept an autistic little spreadsheet.

That was the only way I could see him having done it. He'd have to be asking everybody else in his year what mark they'd got for each essay and each exam and keeping a spreadsheet -- but who the hell would do something like that?

Presumably the same kind of person who adopts a woman's identity in the hope they can use it to parlay into an acting career. Somebody with no sense of shame whatsoever.

(TBH, I think he was lying. Or guessing. Or alternatively, sucking off one of the academic staff in return for better grades.)
 
Hahaha
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This was absolutely a way to try and pull focus in the shot for longer.
Although in fairness, he was already pulling focus with how pale he is, and was possibly lit that way to highlight they hired a trans actor. He really sticks out.
The more I watch this the things I want to point out but the way he throws his arm to make it stand out!

He really thinks the next top powerbroker in Hollywood will spot itty bitty Abigail and make "her" happen. I'm sure it's a wank fantasy.
 
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