“My entire twenties has been documented on high resolution camera. No one gets that,” says Ollie, laughing, when new sits down for a chat with him.
“Life is difficult for lots of people, including us,” he says. “So, if we can sit there and make someone smile on a Monday night, it’s a real privilege to be able to do so. If we can stop them thinking about their lives for 10 seconds and make them laugh, what a joy.”
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Ollie’s dedication to TV has come with its ultimate highs, such as the 2020 episode, which aired his wedding to husband Gareth Locke at the Natural History Museum in London.
“We’ll always have that memory of getting married on TV, which not many people can say they have,” says Ollie, 37. “Our wedding was watched by 3.5 million people and it’s amazing – our kids can watch their parents get married. It’s lovely.”
But it has also featured extreme lows, including the couple finding out on camera in 2021 that their surrogate had suffered a miscarriage at six weeks.
“We put all the rawness of our relationship on camera,” says Ollie. “We found out on camera that we had lost our babies after I said to the producers, ‘If I’m going to do this, I will do it properly.’ I told them to keep the cameras rolling whatever happened so it was real. Then we found out. It was some really powerful and raw stuff.”
In July 2023, Ollie and Gareth became parents to fraternal twins, Apollo Magnus Obi and Cosima Emily Bex, after experiencing failed IVF attempts and miscarriages. Ollie is clearly a doting dad as his eyes light up when we ask about the twins.
“It’s the best experience I’ve ever had in my life,” he says. “I can’t imagine life without it – it’s bizarre. Cosi is a bit of a monkey. She’s smiley and Apollo is a total boy who likes to bounce into things, roll off things and throw things.”
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Ollie and Gareth, who started dating in 2018 after years of friendship, have certainly got their hands full with the twins.
Admitting that becoming a family of four has been a difficult adjustment, Ollie explains, “At the beginning, Gareth would take Apollo and I had Cosi when it came to changing and night-times and all that kind of stuff. Otherwise, with twins, it’s mental. You’re up the whole night and then you go back to sleep but it’s time for another feed two hours later. We were exhausted and there were definitely some tears at the beginning. You’re not yourself in any manner – you’re a completely different person. Every time I see my mum now I thank her because you don’t realise how hard it is to raise a child until you’re a parent yourself. It makes you more grateful.”
While Ollie has settled into life as a dad, he and Gareth have been through a challenging time which saw Apollo in hospital for an operation he has needed since birth.
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“We’re OK and he’s fine,” says Ollie, who doesn’t disclose what the operation was for but says it was a tumultuous time for the family. “It was absolutely horrendous. It’s really, really difficult having any child go on general anaesthetic, but it’s awful having your baby not understand what that is because he’s too young. It was traumatising. I cried for three hours while he was in the operation – I just didn’t know what else to do so I stay...