That Full Frontal ‘Off Campus’ Scene Was 100% Real

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Published Jun 1, 2026

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Updated Jun 1, 2026

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Some shows flirt with nudity. Off Campus shows up, kicks the door open, and says: this scene? “No prosthetics today, thanks.” The Prime Video adaptation of Elle Kennedy’s books starts out like your standard college rom-com: fake dating, emotional confusion, hot people making questionable decisions, repeat. But somewhere along the way, it also decided subtlety was optional and locker rooms are apparently a place where personal space goes to die. 

RELATED: Off Campus’ Belmont Cameli Is Too Hot, Cute, and Helped Save 7 Lives

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And nowhere is that clearer than that scene.

Walk into the Wrong Room, Win the Scene 

Ella Bright’s Hannah is doing what any responsible ex-confronter would do: marching into a hockey locker room to confront Garrett Graham (Belmont Cameli). What she gets instead is less “dramatic emotional showdown” and more “unexpected group audition for confidence.”

RELATED: Locker Room Full-Frontal Nudity or TV’s Most Attractive Jump Scare?

 

A full room of naked players. No coy angles. No careful censorship gymnastics. Just hockey boys existing in their natural, aggressively unfiltered state. If you blinked, you missed nothing—because the show was not blinking for you.

“Oh yeah. Oh yeah.” — The Most Direct Answer Possible

Naturally, the internet had questions. Mostly one question: was any of that real? Ella Bright cleared it up on Amanda Hirsch’s podcast Not Skinny But Not Fat in a way that left zero room for interpretation:

Bright answered: “Oh yeah. Oh yeah.”

@notskinnybutnotfat

Ella Bright is on the pod!! #ellabright #offcampus #nsbnf #podcastclips #offcampusseries

♬ original sound – Amanda Hirsch

That’s it. That’s the clarification. No legal jargon. No evasive phrasing. Just confident confirmation that yes, the locker room situation was exactly as advertised, and no, your eyes did not deceive you.

The Casting Call That Basically Said: “Bring Confidence, and Nothing Else”

Behind the scenes, the production apparently had to be very upfront about what they needed.

“We had a casting announcement going out, like people just willing to be full nude, come in.”

Which is one way to write a job description. Efficient. Direct. Emotionally unprepared, but efficient. Forget “must be comfortable on camera.” This one was closer to: must be comfortable existing, fully visible, in a room full of strangers while a camera rolls.

No Prosthetics, No Problem (Apparently)

Unlike shows that politely protect everyone involved with prosthetics or careful framing, Off Campus opted for the “we said what we said” approach.

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The result? A scene that viewers are still talking about because it does not try to soften the landing. It just lands. Hard.

Nudity Levels, But Make It Character Development

It wasn’t chaos everywhere, though. According to Bright, nudity in the show is actually structured—because of course it is.

@victoriaa.heckman

Hannah Storms Into the Men’s Locker Room to Confront Garrett 🚨 #offcampus #fyp #clips #movie #edit

♬ original sound – Candy love

“For Hannah, the briefing was partial nudity, and for Allie it had to be full, just because Allie, she’s got this amazing confidence about her, and she is so free with her body.
“And sex is just such an important part of her life. It is honestly just showing the difference between these characters.”

So yes: in this universe, clothing choices are basically emotional storytelling. One character gets strategic coverage, another gets full confidence mode activated. It’s costume design, but emotionally louder.

The Age Gap Conversation (and the Calm Reality Check)

With all the on-screen heat, some viewers also raised concerns about Ella Bright filming scenes with Belmont Cameli given their age gap. Bright, however, made it clear she wasn’t walking into anything blindly:

scene

“Listen, I came into this job and during the chemistry reads with more than enough information and knowledge and understanding of what this role required,” she said. “I just fell in love with Hannah and these scripts immediately. Like, there was never a question that I wouldn’t want to do this.”

And on set dynamics:

“I get people’s concern, but also not once did I feel left out from being younger than everybody. We’re all such a family, and everyone was just more than perfect, and I couldn’t be more comfortable on this set with these people.”

Translation: intense scenes, yes—but not a chaotic free-for-all behind the camera.

The Bottom Line: This Show Is Not Shy

Off Campus isn’t trying to be subtle, and it definitely isn’t trying to be metaphorical about what it shows you. It’s a romance, yes. A sports drama, technically. But also occasionally a reminder that locker rooms in this universe operate with absolutely no warning system and even less fabric.

And according to the cast? That’s exactly the point.

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