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Controversy has erupted around a California high school following an audacious event financed by an adult website, held within its gymnasium.
This past weekend, Canyon Crest Academy in San Diego hosted a 24-hour livestream filled with peculiar and inappropriate antics.
The event was backed by the adult platform Fansly and broadcast live on Twitch by internet celebrity Dennis Richardson, also known as ‘PaymoneyWubby’ online.
The spectacle involved four male participants engaged in a 24-hour rated R twist on the game of tag.
However, this wasn’t the typical game from childhood; the men faced various ‘punishments’ when caught, adding a controversial edge to the event.
The participants were heard swearing and seen donning absurd sashes that read phrases including ‘botched penis’ and ‘pedophile.’
At other points throughout the hard-to-watch stream, the contestants mocked Jesus’ crucifixion and licked melted chocolate off of women’s feet.
Other head-tilting activities included leg waxing and the men dressing up as babies.
Pictured: Participants mimicking the crucifixion during the 24-hour live stream
Pictured: Fansly model Ellie James with the chocolate fondue she dipped her toes in during the 24-hour livestream
San Diego’s Canyon Crest Academy was the location of a 24-hour livestream featuring bizarre and distasteful activities
They also shared a racist PowerPoint presentation, featuring tone-deaf statements like: ‘What does a White man in America face today? Too much Spanish, Black history month (as a whole), Trader Joe’s, China.’
Women in skimpy clothing appeared throughout the stream to help out with the activities.
‘The first thing I see is a full-grown adult, an adult man wearing a baby costume and being fed milk from a baby bottle. I was like, okay that’s kind of weird,’ one taken-aback student, Parker Jaconette, recalled to NBC.
‘We check on it again a couple hours later, and there’s another dude who’s eating chocolate off of the feet of not-safe-for-work content creators or adult film content creators.’
The event was reportedly arranged between the Canyon Crest Academy Foundation – a nonprofit, separate from the district, that raises money for the school – and an undisclosed production company.
But the foundation has claimed that they were totally blindsided by the inappropriate behavior that unfolded in the school’s gymnasium.
Students told NBC that they found out about the ’24-hour tag’ livestream when they tried to use the gym on Friday, but were unable to do so because they were setting up.
It simply did not sit right with many of them.
Pictured: Competitors appeared to place their heads in stockings for one of the livestream’s bizarre activities
‘It feels nasty. It’s gross. I’m astonished. I can’t believe my school would let a bunch of basically semi, like, porn stars come to the school and film on my campus,’ student Giordano Bruno told NBC.
Another pupil, Rihanna Roohanni, added: ‘People have just been saying how disgusting, or like, “Oh my God, I can’t believe this happened.”
‘It’s not like very safe for students, especially who are underage.’
In response to the uproar, the school’s principal, Brett Killeen, issued a statement to parents denouncing the event.
‘We are aware of a recent production filmed on our campus this weekend by an external company that is inappropriate, distasteful, and in conflict with our organization’s core values,’ he wrote.
‘We are working with our District to engage legal counsel to examine our options to hold the parties involved accountable.’
In a statement, the school district claimed that the event ‘violated the terms of the agreement’ made between the foundation and the hosts.
‘While school sites are intended to be a civic center available for public use, such use is not without limits, and our top priority is always the safety and support of our students,’ the district wrote, according to The San Diego Union-Tribune.
Pictured: One of the contestants got his leg waxed during the stream over the weekend
Pictured: Scantily-dressed women helped with the challenges and punishments of the stream
The Canyon Crest Academy Foundation confirmed that they had agreed to allow an outside company to use the gym on October 9.
The nonprofit claimed that the event’s producers did not disclose its specifics, only that it would be PG-13.
A foundation spokesperson apologized to the school community and assured that this situation has highlighted a need for stricter oversight for events hosted at the school.
But Richardson refuted this claim, alleging that the team ‘had a wonderful and very successful event that fully complied with our contractual agreements,’ in a statement.
A lawyer for Richardson and the undisclosed producers told the Daily Mail: ‘The production fully complied with its contractual obligations, and statements by district and foundation personnel to the contrary are not only false but are likely defamatory.’
The Daily Mail has reached out to Fansly and the Canyon Crest Academy Foundation for comment.