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The Wire

Varsity Blues -

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Varsity Blues -

Singer instructed parents to seek medical professionals who would diagnose their children with learning disabilities, even if they had none. This allowed the students unlimited time on the exams. Crucially, the students were then moved to testing centers that Singer "controlled"—often a private high school in West Hollywood or a center in Houston.

To make the deception stick, Singer and his team created falsified athletic profiles. They would take a student's headshot and Photoshop it onto the body of an athlete playing the sport. One student who did not play water polo was Photoshopped into a goalie position in a pool. A student who posed for a photo on an ergometer (rowing machine) was sold to Georgetown as a coxswain, despite never having rowed. What made Varsity Blues a global sensation was the involvement of Hollywood celebrities and business titans. The indictment named actresses Lori Loughlin (famous for Full House ) and Felicity Huffman (an Oscar nominee and Desperate Housewives star), alongside business leaders like Douglas Hodge, the former CEO of PIMCO, and Agustin Huneeus Jr., a vineyard owner. Varsity Blues

University athletic departments often have "slots" allocated to them by admissions offices. A coach’s endorsement is effectively a golden ticket. Singer bribed coaches from tennis, water polo, soccer, sailing, rowing, and volleyball teams. Singer instructed parents to seek medical professionals who

The was the traditional route: getting in on merit. This was hard and out of a parent's control. The "Back Door" involved institutional advancement—donating a building or endowing a scholarship, which could cost tens of millions of dollars and still offer no guarantee of acceptance. This was the method of the "old money" elite. To make the deception stick, Singer and his

In one infamous instance, a student was told to claim he was "slow" and needed extra time. He flew to a testing center where Riddell corrected his answers, boosting his score by over 300 points. The second, and perhaps most brazen, prong of the operation involved bribery in college athletics. Singer bribed coaches at elite universities to designate applicants as recruited athletes, even if the student had never played the sport competitively.

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