Oli Frost


Oli Frost is a British satirist whose best-known work includes Lifefaker., Flopstarter, and an eBay auction of all his personal data
In 2018 he appeared on the show Britain's Got Talent posing as a recorder player who covered hip-hop tracks.

Work

Lifefaker.com

In 2018, Frost “founded” , a startup which appeared to sell photos that could help users fake a perfect life on Instagram. In an interview he explained how the idea came to him.
However, when visitors tried to buy the photos they instead found the site was part of a campaign by mental health startup . The site was covered in the media around the world and provoked online discussions on how social media impacts our mental health.

eBay Data Sale

In May 2018, Frost put an archive of all his personal data on eBay. According to his listing, the data included “every like, post, and inane comment since I was 16,” “photos dating back to when I had a fringe and listened to Billy Talent,” and “loads more, like who I vote for, my boss’s name, and where all my family live”.
Within 24 hours the auction had £300 in bids, with 44 bidders and 5 days remaining. However, an hour after the story appeared on news sites, eBay removed the listing on the grounds it might violate Facebook's Terms and Conditions. Frost later apologised on his blog for mistakenly thinking he owned his personal data.

Flopstarter

Frost is the creator and editor of the site , a crowdfunding site for bad ideas. The site allows users to submit and back projects such as “Natural Death Beef”, “1D Printers”, and “Coconut Shampoo for Coconuts”. Presenter Richard Bacon described the site as “basically, a really good idea about really bad ideas”.

Music

Frost appeared on Britain’s Got Talent 2018 posing as “Recorda Boi”, a recorder player who covered hip-hop tracks. On the show Recorda Boi explained how he wanted to make the recorder cool again.

Activism

In 2015, Frost co-created , a campaign to get homeless women better access to sanitary care. The campaign's petition to give shelters an allowance to buy sanitary products passed its goal of 100,000 signatures and in 2016 was raised in UK Parliament.
The campaign gave rise to numerous local projects around the world that organise the collection and distribution of sanitary products to shelters and foodbanks.