<p>Look, I apologize for calling you delusional, that was just rude on my part. </p>
<p>But we’ll have to agree to disagree on whether Brown is a match for many qualified students. Of course it could be that we don’t agree on what exactly being a ‘match’ means, but certainly there exist students who’ve consistently gotten good grades, good test scores, stayed committed to their extracurriculars, get good recs and write good essays. If my GPA didn’t look as horrendous as it presently does (for reasons that I won’t reexplain here) I’d go so far as to say that I’m a match for Brown. </p>
<p>And on another note, especially since you’ve been a Brown interviewer for 30 years, it seems a bit odd that you’re saying that being extremely wealthy or a celebrity like Emma Watson is going to put you in a favorable place with Brown. Granted, that might have an element of truth in it but its certainly no grounds to dismiss otherwise capable applicants as reaches simply because they’re not Emma Watson or the scion of Bill Gates.</p>