Oli London is humiliated as Times Square pulls billboard for book

EXCLUSIVE: Controversial British influencer Oli London is humiliated as Times Square pulls billboard unveiling his new book at the last minute because it is ‘too political’

  • Oli London, 33, dropped his new book Gender Madness yesterday
  • Billboard advertising executives  scrapped the advertisement at the last minute
  • The billboard company told the British influencer his book was ‘too political’  

Controversial British influencer Oli London was left red faced this week after arriving at New York’s Times Square for the unveiling of the billboard advertisement of his new memoir ‘Gender Madness’.

Just minutes before the launch, and with a waiting camera crew, who were there to film the launch of the advert, the billboard advertising company TSX Broadway pulled the illuminated advert because they deemed it ‘too political’. 

Advertising company TSX, however, sent a computerized message citing copyright infringement for the reason they decided to pull the advert. 

London has been a vociferous in his media campaign to ban gender affirming sex changes on children. 

Controversial British influencer Oli London was left red faced last night after arriving at New York’s, Time Square for the unveiling of his new memoir ‘Gender Madness 

But despite re-jigging the advert to remove any potential infringements, the company still refuse to run the advert.

In 2018, London made international headlines when he revealed he’d spent over £75,000 on surgeries to look like K-pop star, Jimin from South Korean boyband BTS. 

London’s much publicized metamorphosis from K-Pop singer Jimin, from Korean boyband BTS to trans female, then back to a male conservative commentator with a love for Jesus, has so far divided opinion.

Shortly after his stint as the Korean pop singer, London underwent surgery to transition to a woman which began with a series of invasive surgeries. 

Now he wants to warn others considering going under the surgeon’s knife to re-consider after he suffered severe scarring from botched surgeries over the years. 

Turning to the ‘banned’ Times Square billboard advert, he raged: ‘I’m not sure why they’ve decided to put the kibosh on my advertisement-all I’m doing is campaigning to put an end to children undergoing sex change operations.’ 

Online reviews of the book, which went on sale last night, have been mixed with one brutal critic on Good Reads comparing Oli’s tome to Adolf Hitler’s Mein Kampf.

But another took a more positive standpoint: ‘I hated Oli for being so confused and influencing children, but he’s come around and he’s fighting stronger than I ever could. I stand behind you now, children must be protected at all costs.’ 

Meanwhile, one reader fumed: ‘De-transitioning’ from getting surgeries to be ‘Korean’ then back to white? From cultural appropriation to Christian right [wing] talk show guest? The blurbs for this are just Tucker Carlson and others saying random reactionary stuff’.

Oli told DailyMail.com: ‘The critics are giving me one star, but it only came out last night – they haven’t even read it.’

The rolling advert featured parts of Oli’s manifesto to stop sex change operations on children

The British influencer received a rejection response from the company yet when he removed any potential infringements the company still refused to run the advert 

The influencer’s devastating struggle with ‘woke ideology’ has earned him many enemies within the trans community, despite London struggling with body dysmorphia himself after years of torment from bullies. 

In his new book, London chronicles the grueling surgeries he underwent to achieve his various looks which include K-Pop singer, Barbie and then subsequently a Ken doll: ‘I became a completely different person determined to change everything and undo all the years of bullying traumas and reinvent myself.’ 

 He describes in his book how he was mercilessly bullied by fellow students over his ‘man boobs’.

But he admits he regretted the surgery carried out in a filthy Armenian hospital to remove his man boobs because he later wanted to get breast implants when he decided to transition to a woman.

‘The bullying I experienced as a teen- from being teased about my bad facial acne to my gender, to my man boobs, while being constantly emasculated and made to feel like I was a girl and an ugly one at that, left me with deep scars both mentally and physically- they followed me into adulthood.’

Recalling his time in his British school where he was bullied relentlessly by schoolyard bullies, London described his decision to change gender.  

‘I was questioning my gender more and more evoking memories of my teenage years when I was told by others that I was like a girl.  I eventually decided the time had come I was going to give in to them. They must have been right and the way I was made to feel must mean that I was trapped in the wrong body.’

Before: Oli London before he embarked on his body transformation

In 2018, Oli made international headlines when he revealed he’d spent over £75,000 on surgeries to look like K-pop star, Jimin from South Korean boyband BTS (pictured with Ta Moon)

Numerous surgeries to achieve the perfect look left Oli with several scars and without feeling in his face

Barbie: Oli was desperate to take on the appearance of a woman after being severely bullied 

WHAT SURGERIES HAS OLI HAD?  

Oli has spent £230,000 on surgeries, Botox and fillers over the past eight years.

  • Six rhinoplasties 
  • Five tip plasty and septoplasty 
  • Canthoplasty
  • Anterior hairline lowering 
  • Forehead shaving 
  • Supraorbital rim shaving 
  • Blepharoplasty/cat eye lift 
  • Mid Face Lift 
  • Neck Lift 
  • Chin Shaving 
  • Lip Lift 
  • Buccal Fat Removal 
  • Two x Nipple correction (areola correction) 
  • Liposuction 
  • Gynecomastia 
  • Mandible angle reduction (jaw shaving) 
  • Zygoma Reduction (cheek bone shaving) 
  • Brow lift 
  • Forehead lift 
  • Cheek lift 
  • Genioplasty with T-osteotomy (chin contouring)

 ‘I ended up down a dark and destructive path resulting in 32 plastic surgeries consisting of six nose surgeries, chest reduction, facial feminization, three eye surgeries, three facelifts and having my bone shaved and completely restructured,’ he wrote. 

‘I then began my research into gender reassignment surgeries in Bangkok, Thailand, an apt name for a city where I could have my penis removed.

‘It would be reshaped and made into a woman’s part, and I would be changed forever. I consulted with multiple doctors over video call, and it all sounded so easy and seamless.’

The author describes how a chance walk past a church, when he was just about to embark on penectomy surgery, put paid to his gender changing endeavors. 

‘When I woke the next morning to a cold crisp autumn day, I felt different. I felt a power had run through my body and enlightened me. I was not Oli London anymore or crazy K-Pop, trans identifying, surgery addict I was just me.’ 

‘In order to get back to the real me I had to become a man again. I had to lose the hair extensions, lose the dresses on the makeup and just be my authentic self.’ 

The star now believes Jesus saved him from further maiming the body he was born in: ‘I opened the story of Jesus healing a man with leprosy. The leper man was rejected by society, ostracized and forced to live in the shadows without human love and compassion.’

He added: ‘I felt like the leper, like I had been cast out from the outside world. The Church reached out to welcome me, helped me in my time of need, helped push me forward through life to become passionate about tackling the issue of the rise in teen dysphoria.’ 

In his quest to emulate the look of South Korean singer Jimin (pictured) Oli underwent a series of painful operations

After: Oli’s transformation to K-Pop singer still did nothing to quelch his desire to change his appearance

The author describes how a chance detour past a church put paid to his gender changing endeavors

 In another blow his Gender Madness book, London says retailer Barnes and Noble have refused to stock his book in store, but they have however, agreed to sell it on their online platform.

He said: ‘I went into Barnes and Noble flagship and asked them where my book was and they said they are not selling it in store, only online. They had books about trans stuff but won’t have mine.’ 

DailyMail.com has reached out to TSX Broadway for comment.  

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