Kids Fetish

Kids Fetish




🛑 ALL INFORMATION CLICK HERE 👈🏻👈🏻👈🏻

































Kids Fetish

*First Published: Dec 4, 2013, 1:12 pm CST
More stories to check out before you go

Posted on Dec 4, 2013   Updated on Jun 1, 2021, 12:37 am CDT
Behind even the most innocent-seeming YouTube trends can lurk predators intent on exploiting young kids.
Vocativ reports on YouTube “Feet Dares,” a creepy trend of men, sometimes disguised as fellow tweens, asking tween vloggers to show their soles, suck on their toes, or open a banana with their feet .
But now the kids are fighting back.
“Feet dares” for both male and female tweens have become so pervasive that many make videos specifically to address how they won’t do feet dares. The requests come in innocently enough as suggestions for videos that will give the kids more subscribers and views.
“ The dare exchanges—a sort of play-date for the digital age—are common among kids who find themselves bored after school. But in reality, many of the tweens engaging in challenges aren’t tweens at all; they’re ‘pervs’…on the hunt for a certain kind of child porn,” writes Vocativ.
A channel called YouTube Video Alert made an entire video warning underage vloggers that those asking to see their feet aren’t doing it as an innocent dare, but because of sexual intent.
The challenges seem weird but harmless to the kids, and many in the videos expressed that they didn’t know why someone was inundating their inbox with requests for “foot dares.” One says she won’t show the soles of her feet, but she does demonstrate her flexibility by putting her legs behind her head.
As Vocativ puts it, “a mature eye reveals the stunts are far dirtier than the girls believe.” But some tweens do realize that the requests are coming from “foot fetish people,” as evidenced in the video compilation of complaints below. Some of the kids ID the YouTube usernames of the people who solicit them, then warn other tween vloggers not to answer those messages.
Vocativ reports that YouTube is trying to crack down on “content related to kids and sex” (reluctant to use the term “child porn”) and has cleared out 100,000 queries involving inappropriate videos of children. “Foot Dare” videos specifically are hard to find because many have innocuous titles like “Dares!” or “Dares and Challenges!”
Blocking creeps and pedophiles has been an ongoing battle for YouTube, because offenders often don’t post their own videos or leave the other evidence necessary to file reports against them. If their accounts are eventually taken down by YouTube, they can easily start new ones.
In 2012, the Daily Dot reported on a scammer who solicited underage YouTubers by pretended to represent a modeling agency. He was eventually stopped—not by YouTube, but by the FBI.
H/T Vocativ / Photo via Prio/Flickr
Gaby Dunn is an actress, comedian, and blogger who covered YouTube for the Daily Dot. Since 2016, she’s hosted the podcast ‘Bad with Money,’ and operates a successful YouTube channel. Her writing has appeared in the New York Times, the Boston Globe, Vice, and Salon.
‘Babe Google it’: Writer blasts Gen-Z applicant for asking question about job because it might not be ‘worth’ their ‘time,’ sparking debate
‘Customer service isn’t for the weak period’: Call center worker records themself crying while helping a customer
‘Don’t show me a routine that doesn’t require a 45-minute commute’: Worker dismisses TikTok algorithm over ‘corporate girly’ work from home videos
Newsletter: This ‘Loab’ meme is haunting the internet


*First Published: Dec 4, 2013, 1:12 pm CST
More stories to check out before you go

Posted on Dec 4, 2013   Updated on Jun 1, 2021, 12:37 am CDT
Behind even the most innocent-seeming YouTube trends can lurk predators intent on exploiting young kids.
Vocativ reports on YouTube “Feet Dares,” a creepy trend of men, sometimes disguised as fellow tweens, asking tween vloggers to show their soles, suck on their toes, or open a banana with their feet .
But now the kids are fighting back.
“Feet dares” for both male and female tweens have become so pervasive that many make videos specifically to address how they won’t do feet dares. The requests come in innocently enough as suggestions for videos that will give the kids more subscribers and views.
“ The dare exchanges—a sort of play-date for the digital age—are common among kids who find themselves bored after school. But in reality, many of the tweens engaging in challenges aren’t tweens at all; they’re ‘pervs’…on the hunt for a certain kind of child porn,” writes Vocativ.
A channel called YouTube Video Alert made an entire video warning underage vloggers that those asking to see their feet aren’t doing it as an innocent dare, but because of sexual intent.
The challenges seem weird but harmless to the kids, and many in the videos expressed that they didn’t know why someone was inundating their inbox with requests for “foot dares.” One says she won’t show the soles of her feet, but she does demonstrate her flexibility by putting her legs behind her head.
As Vocativ puts it, “a mature eye reveals the stunts are far dirtier than the girls believe.” But some tweens do realize that the requests are coming from “foot fetish people,” as evidenced in the video compilation of complaints below. Some of the kids ID the YouTube usernames of the people who solicit them, then warn other tween vloggers not to answer those messages.
Vocativ reports that YouTube is trying to crack down on “content related to kids and sex” (reluctant to use the term “child porn”) and has cleared out 100,000 queries involving inappropriate videos of children. “Foot Dare” videos specifically are hard to find because many have innocuous titles like “Dares!” or “Dares and Challenges!”
Blocking creeps and pedophiles has been an ongoing battle for YouTube, because offenders often don’t post their own videos or leave the other evidence necessary to file reports against them. If their accounts are eventually taken down by YouTube, they can easily start new ones.
In 2012, the Daily Dot reported on a scammer who solicited underage YouTubers by pretended to represent a modeling agency. He was eventually stopped—not by YouTube, but by the FBI.
H/T Vocativ / Photo via Prio/Flickr
Gaby Dunn is an actress, comedian, and blogger who covered YouTube for the Daily Dot. Since 2016, she’s hosted the podcast ‘Bad with Money,’ and operates a successful YouTube channel. Her writing has appeared in the New York Times, the Boston Globe, Vice, and Salon.
‘Babe Google it’: Writer blasts Gen-Z applicant for asking question about job because it might not be ‘worth’ their ‘time,’ sparking debate
‘Customer service isn’t for the weak period’: Call center worker records themself crying while helping a customer
‘Don’t show me a routine that doesn’t require a 45-minute commute’: Worker dismisses TikTok algorithm over ‘corporate girly’ work from home videos
Newsletter: This ‘Loab’ meme is haunting the internet


Therapists
:
Login
|
Sign Up


United States


Austin, TX
Brooklyn, NY
Chicago, IL
Denver, CO
Houston, TX
Los Angeles, CA
New York, NY
Portland, OR
San Diego, CA
San Francisco, CA
Seattle, WA
Washington, DC







Mental Health


Addiction

Anxiety

ADHD

Asperger's

Autism

Bipolar Disorder

Chronic Pain

Depression

Eating Disorders








Personality


Passive Aggression

Personality

Shyness








Personal Growth


Goal Setting

Happiness

Positive Psychology

Stopping Smoking








Relationships


Low Sexual Desire

Relationships

Sex








Family Life


Child Development

Parenting







Talk to Someone


Find a Therapist


Find a Treatment Center


Find a Psychiatrist


Find a Support Group


Find Teletherapy








Trending Topics


Coronavirus Disease 2019

Narcissism

Dementia

Bias

Affective Forecasting

Neuroscience





Conditions
 > 
Sexuality
 > 
Fetishistic Disorder


Contents



Symptoms




Causes




Treatment





article continues after advertisement


American Psychiatric Association, Diagnostic and Statistical Manual of Mental Disorders, Fifth Edition


Baez-Sierra, D., Balgobin, C., & Wise, T. N. (2016). Treatment of Paraphilic Disorders. In Practical Guide to Paraphilia and Paraphilic Disorders (pp. 43-62). Springer International Publishing.


Eusei, D., & Delcea, C. (2020). Fetishistic disorder. Theoretical-experimental Models in Sexual and Paraphilic Dysfunctions, 67.


Ventriglio, A., Bhat, P., Torales, J., & Bhugra, D. (2019). Sexuality in the 21st century: Leather or rubber? Fetishism explained. Medical Journal Armed Forces India , 75 (2), 121–124. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.mjafi.2018.09.009


Guenther, K. (2016). ‘It’s All Done With Mirrors’: V.S. Ramachandran and the Material Culture of Phantom Limb Research. Medical History , 60 (3), 342–358. https://doi.org/10.1017/mdh.2016.27


Bipolar Disorders



Bipolar Disorder
Cyclothymic Disorder





Communication Disorders



Childhood-Onset Fluency Disorder
Communication Disorders
Language Disorder
Speech Sound Disorder





Impulse Control Disorders



Intermittent Explosive Disorder
Kleptomania
Oppositional Defiant Disorder
Pyromania





Connected Topics


Sex


Scent


Pornography


Sexual Orientation





Diagnosis


Paraphilias


Voyeuristic Disorder


Sexual Masochism Disorder


Transvestic Disorder





Are you a Therapist?
Get Listed Today



Get Help

Find a Therapist


Find a Treatment Center


Find a Psychiatrist


Find a Support Group


Find Teletherapy





Members
Login
Sign Up




United States



Austin, TX
Brooklyn, NY
Chicago, IL
Denver, CO
Houston, TX
Los Angeles, CA
New York, NY
Portland, OR
San Diego, CA
San Francisco, CA
Seattle, WA
Washington, DC








Mental Health


Addiction

Anxiety

ADHD

Asperger's

Autism

Bipolar Disorder

Chronic Pain

Depression

Eating Disorders








Personality


Passive Aggression

Personality

Shyness








Personal Growth


Goal Setting

Happiness

Positive Psychology

Stopping Smoking








Relationships


Low Sexual Desire

Relationships

Sex








Family Life


Child Development

Parenting







Talk to Someone


Find a Therapist


Find a Treatment Center


Find a Psychiatrist


Find a Support Group


Find Teletherapy








Trending Topics


Coronavirus Disease 2019

Narcissism

Dementia

Bias

Affective Forecasting

Neuroscience





The question is not whether you’ll change; you will. Research clearly shows that everyone’s personality traits shift over the years, often for the better. But who we end up becoming and how much we like that person are more in our control than we tend to think they are.

Fetishistic disorder is an intense sexual attraction to either inanimate objects or to body parts not traditionally viewed as sexual, coupled with clinically significant distress or impairment.
According to the DSM-5 , fetishistic disorder is a condition in which there is a persistent and repetitive use of or dependence on nonliving objects (such as undergarments or high-heeled shoes) or a highly specific focus on a body part (most often nongenital, such as feet) to reach sexual arousal.
Since fetishes occur in many normally-developing individuals, a diagnosis of fetishistic disorder is only given if there is accompanying personal distress or impairment in social, occupational, or other important areas of functioning as a result of the fetish, or when sexual arousal is impossible without the fetish object. People who identify as fetishists but do not report associated clinical impairment would be considered to have a fetish but not fetishistic disorder. Most individuals find particular nongenital bodily features attractive, indicating that some level of fetishism is a normal feature of human sexuality .
The term "fetishism" originates from the Portuguese word feitico , which means "obsessive fascination." Only through the use of this object, or focus on this body part, can the individual obtain sexual gratification.
For some, merely a picture of the fetish object may cause arousal, though many with a fetish prefer (or require) the actual object in order to achieve arousal. The fetishist usually holds, rubs, tastes, or smells the fetish object for sexual gratification or asks their partner to wear the object during sexual encounters.
Inanimate object fetishes can be categorized into two types: form fetishes and media fetishes . In a form fetish, the shape of the object is important, such as high-heeled shoes. In a media fetish, the material of the object, such as silk or leather, is important. Inanimate object fetishists often collect the object of their favor.
Fetishistic disorder is a much more common occurrence in males than in females—in fact, the DSM-5 indicates that it appears almost exclusively in males.
In earlier versions of the DSM, fetishistic disorder revolving around nongenital body parts was known as partialism; in the latest version, partialism was folded into fetishistic disorder.
The sexual acts of people with fetishistic disorder are characteristically focused almost exclusively on the fetish object or body part. In many cases, a person with fetishistic disorder can only become sexually aroused and reach orgasm when the fetish is being used, often feeling intense shame or distress about their inability to become aroused using "typical" stimuli. In other instances, a sexual response may occur without the fetish, but at a diminished level, which may cause shame or relationship tension.
Sexually active adults without fetishistic disorder—or adults with a specific fetish that causes them no distress—may at various times become aroused by a particular body part or an object and make it a part of their sexual interaction with another person, but not fixate on it.
The diagnostic criteria for fetishistic disorder, as catalogued in the DSM-5 , include:
Fetishistic disorder can fluctuate in intensity throughout the lifespan.
Research indicates that nearly anything can become the object of a fetish. The most prevalent body fetishes are for feet, hands, hair, obesity, tattoos, and piercings. The most prevalent fetish objects are shoes, gloves, and (soiled) underwear, leather, rubber, skirts, gloves, and wearing diapers.
A sexual fetish is not unhealthy by definition, but if it causes prolonged, intense distress in a person, it may then be considered a fetishistic disorder. A festishistic disorder can make someone feel as if they’re no longer in control of their lives. A man who incorporates a fetish into his romantic relationship with a consenting partner does not necessarily display unhealthy behavior. But if the man is so consumed by his fetish that he is no longer sexually attracted to his partner and can only be aroused by his fetish item, then that is likely a sign of an unhealthy fetish.
Limited research indicates that individuals often have more than one fetish. One small study found that of 48 individuals with fetishistic disorder, 17 had only one fetish, nine had two fetishes, 12 had three fetishes, six had four fetishes, and others had up to nine fetishes. 
Fetishes typically become apparent to an individual during or even prior to puberty. Sexual fetishes almost exclusively develop in males.
While estimates are that as much as 10 percent of the population may have some type of fetish, fetishistic disorder appears to be rare, with less than 1 percent of the population in psychiatric care for the condition.
Paraphilias such as fetishistic disorder typically have an onset during puberty, but fetishes can develop prior to adolescence . No cause for fetishistic disorder has been conclusively established.
Some theories include childhood experiences; biological factors, such as abnormal brain development; and cultural factors, as studies have shown different rates of fetishism in cultures that approach sexuality differently from each other.
One neurological idea about the cause of foot fetishes comes from the fact that the region in the brain that process
Vampire The Masquerade Bloodlines Cosplay
Japan Old Beautiful Young Wife Husband Xxx
Vintage Erotik

Report Page