Stampy goes by he/him and they/them?

Sorry if this is me thinking too much into it, but I was in the middle of watching an old stream Stampy did in 2021 of him playing The Is No Game: Wrong Dimentions and somebody named Alex asked him what his pronouns were. He replied with He/Him them/they and I just wondered if he meant they/them in terms of everyone can use they/them or if he actually goes by they/them as well as he/him. Sorry if I am thinking too much into it but i've never heard of him, or anyone else, referring to Stampy as anything other than male pronouns before. Any thoughts? This is not hate I am literally just curious because I was never aware he went by anything other than he/him.

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My first tesco meal deal in YEARS...

I feel like i did good to get all of this for £3.85. This will also be my first time trying the sandwich, drink and chocolate so I'm hoping I'll like it.

u/Sarah-is-always-sad9 — 7 days ago
▲ 22 r/Greggs

I have questions for any greggs workers. (delete if not allowed)

So I, every so often, order those breakfast meal deals for myself and my dad. We typically get the sausage breakfast baguettes and I get a hot chocolate and he gets a flat white. 2 questions I would like to ask are: how you guys make your hot chocolate. I really love the Cooplands' ones (they are probably a little better than the Greggs ones in my opinion). Cooplands taste more creamy compared to the Greggs's hot choccys so is it just water vs milk or something else? Also, why are flat whites served in little 8oz cups but ever other drink isn't? Thank you for reading. Sorry if this isn't appropriate for the sub but there is no Cooplands sub and I find the greggs sausage baguettes better than the ones at Cooplands.

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u/Sarah-is-always-sad9 — 10 days ago

I am a few days behind, but the beach they filmed on looks really nice and wondered where it is filmed. Google says 'Camber Sands', but the photos don't really match the scenes in the episodes (I could be wrong tho). Does anyone here know? Sorry if they mentioned it and I missed it during the episodes.

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u/Sarah-is-always-sad9 — 2 months ago

So I'm not the smartest person in the world, (I was in extra classes in primary and secondary school to keep up with Maths and English because I was so bad) but I am a British person, from a British family, never left the country. With all of that being said I have been told repeatedly in my feedback that I am using the speech marks and quotation marks incorrectly. I specifically remember in year 5 learning how to write dialogue and being told to use " and " (66s and 99s is what we used to call them) and I was told in secondary school that ' and ' were used for quotes taken from a book or website or whatever really. However, since studying with the OU this doesn't seem to be the case. I have been told quite a few times to only use quotation marks ' and ' for speech and to only use speech marks for quotes which is the complete opposite of what I knew from school. Speech marks are literally called speech marks for a reason and quotation marks are called quotation marks for a reason. Google says that in America they do it differently, but I'm not American and I'm confused if I was taught wrong originally or if the OU are doing it wrong. Can anyone shed some light on this please or am I suffering from the mandela effect or something?

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u/Sarah-is-always-sad9 — 2 months ago