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Phone Sex Ad Found in Guangdong Primary School

Posted: 04/10/2014 7:30 am

Children are changed through their interactions with the adult world. Most of the time, parents are just praying that their children would cling to their innocence a little bit longer. They try their best to shield them from the vicissitude of a world where sex and pornography are so readily available.

This probably explains why parents were outraged at a Guangdong primary school when a sexually suggestive advertisement for a phone sex app was found on its notice board, according to a recent report by an unidentified Taiwan media outlet. The advertisement shows a woman revealing most of her breasts while lying in a seductive pose with a caption that reads: “a magical gadget of love is waiting for you tonight”. Next to the caption, is succinctly written in English: “phone sex”.

The ad was discovered on the school’s campus on April 8, and one parent took a photo of it and posted the image online. But when reporters arrived at the school, the poster has been removed. One female teacher at the school said she had never seen the poster. The school said it had no idea why the poster appeared on campus and said they have increased campus security.

In one of the images posted online (above), it shows a troop of students huddling around the ad with one young boy in a yellow jacket smiling in a sly yet timid manner, seemingly too advanced for his age.

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Haohao
  • Zen my Ass

    Clever marketing move: kids will soon be old enough to need that service.

  • http://shanghaiist.com/ The FRED FONG

    With the Dongguan sex trade closed down…how do they expect young boys to “relieve” themselves? Seems like a good way to teach sexy English

  • http://sinopathic.com/ terroir bon bon

    It’s irrelevant if there is actually any parental moral outrage. The real thing is reader outrage, and it’s what fuels this viral marketing scheme, which is what this is.

    No actual news source? No problem. the perceived outrage is all that’s required to make this relevant. Why would a school agree to put up ads? Why would anyone think a school is a good place for this? Why has the original parent who posted these photos not been interviewed?

    The better question may be “why is the idea of boobs so horrible to children?” A Japanese soldier gets cleaved in half on television, and I still haven’t had my first cup of wine, or coffee for that matter.

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