There are several well‑known situations where people ask online “what did Andrew do,” but the question is too vague to answer accurately without more context. Many different public figures, forum users, and fictional characters named Andrew have been discussed in news and forums, and they are involved in very different stories.

Need more details

To give a clear, safe, and complete answer (and avoid confusing or accusing the wrong person), more information is needed:

  • Which Andrew you mean (for example: a classmate, a YouTuber, a character in a story, a royal, a forum user, etc.).
  • Where you saw “what did Andrew do” mentioned (news site, Reddit thread, TikTok, private chat, etc.).
  • Roughly when this was discussed (recently this week, something from years ago, or a long‑running scandal).

Without that, any detailed explanation would likely be inaccurate or unfair, especially if it involves serious topics like abuse, self‑harm, or accusations of crime.

How this kind of question is handled

When the topic is light (like celebrity gossip or a funny viral clip), people often mean a trending moment or joke and it is usually safe to describe it as entertainment or online drama. For serious topics, especially involving real individuals’ reputations, good practice is to be precise about identity and to rely on clearly reported, public information.

What you can do next

  • Reply with any extra details you have about which Andrew you mean and where you saw the discussion.
  • If this is about a private person you know in real life, it may be better to talk directly with someone you trust rather than trying to “solve” it through internet speculation.

Once you clarify who or what you are asking about, a more specific and useful “Quick Scoop” style breakdown can be given while keeping things safe and fair.