Anthony Abdool thinks he's one of the few "superfans" who hasn't seen the ITV drama. Instead, he heard about the scandal on the news and would watch the inquiry online at home, finding it "profoundly moving and outrageous".
"The more they got into it, the more outraged I became," Anthony says.
That's when he decided to attend and took time off work to go. Anthony, who is a freelance advertising copywriter, says he was "very lucky" his boss let him take a total of nine days as paid leave.
His colleagues were also supportive of his decision to attend and regularly asked him for updates.
"I think that reflects the wider importance that people attach to the inquiry and I can't think of anything I've been interested in that united the public in such a way."
Anthony would post on X while at the inquiry and made friends online with others interested in the story. He says he'll be interested to see if they want to stay "Twitter mates or if we've reached the end of our journey".
And now that the inquiry is over, he says: "Well, I'll have to go back to work!"