Teen Boys Sex Games

Teen Boys Sex Games




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Teen Boys Sex Games
Content is generally suitable for ages 13 and up. May contain violence, suggestive themes, crude humor, minimal blood, simulated gambling and/or infrequent use of strong language.

Content is generally suitable for all ages. May contain minimal cartoon, fantasy or mild violence and/or infrequent use of mild language.
Content is generally suitable for ages 10 and up. May contain more cartoon, fantasy or mild violence, mild language and/or minimal suggestive themes.
Content is generally suitable for ages 13 and up. May contain violence, suggestive themes, crude humor, minimal blood, simulated gambling and/or infrequent use of strong language.
Content is generally suitable for ages 17 and up. May contain intense violence, blood and gore, sexual content and/or strong language.

Part of HuffPost Wellness. ©2022 BuzzFeed, Inc. All rights reserved.
Teen pregnancy is at a record low in the U.S. , and a new report from the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention may explain why.
The new data, collected from 2011-2013, shows that adolescents are delaying sex, being more responsible with birth control and have better birth control access and perhaps more cultural support than any previously studied generation. Still, there are improvements to be made, particularly for some groups who are at higher risk of pregnancy than their peers. Here's what we learned from the latest data on teens and sex:
Teens are continuing to delay sex for longer, said the CDC's lead author Gladys Martinez. Back in 1988, 51 percent of teen girls and 60 percent of teen boys reported having sex at least once between the ages of 15 to 19. Now those numbers are 44 percent and 47 percent, respectively, holding steady from a previous CDC report that used data collected between 2006 to 2010.
Teens who delay sex until older adolescence, or age 17 and up, are more likely to use birth control during their first sexual encounter. This is significant, explained Martinez, because teen girls who used birth control that first time were half as likely to become teen moms than those who did not.
"The data on sex activity and contraceptive use, linked together with the data on the probability of having a teen birth, all line up in helping explain the recent decline in teen birth rates,” Martinez concluded.
The chart on the left shows that rates of sexual activity are holding steady with 2006 to 2010 levels, while the chart on the right shows that teens who don't use birth control for their first time are more likely to become pregnant in their teenage years.
The vast majority of teens (79 percent of girls, and 84 percent of boys) use birth control during their first time, and condoms were their most commonly-reported method. Martinez pointed out that in addition to being cheap and accessible, condoms are the only birth control methods that also protect against disease.
Also of note: Emergency contraception use rose from eight percent in 2002 to 22 percent in 2011-2013 .
The most likely explanation for this major increase is the changing access to emergency contraception, Martinez hypothesized, as it is now available over the counter with no age limits .
Gender Equality Is Improving Sexual Health
“In the previous decade, if a girl had a condom with her, there was a fear she’d be called a slut,” said Brindis. “But a woman’s right to be protected against an unintended pregnancy or STD or HIV has become a greater part of the social norm, so those numbers have been increasing over time."
The graphic above shows that while condoms are the most popular method of birth control at 97 percent, withdrawal comes in second at 60 percent. The pill, the patch and depo provera, a hormonal injection, are on the decline, while emergency contraception and hormonal implants are up.
Considering how dicey the withdrawal method is as a means of birth control ( Planned Parenthood warns it takes a great deal of "self-control, experience, and trust”), it’s alarming to see how many teens report having used it at least once to avoid pregnancy. But Martinez notes that it mirrors adult use; 60 percent of U.S. women also report using withdrawal at least once.
Brindis also emphasized that this data shows “ever use,” as in, has a person ever used a given method of birth control, even one time. By no means does it indicate that withdrawal is some teens’ primary method of birth control, she said. Instead, high pullout rates mean simply that adults have to do a better job helping teens anticipate sexual encounters.
"It may not be the best safety net, but it is a safety net that young people may have to rely on when they’re caught in the moment,” she said. "We have to help young people anticipate what happens in that moment."
The bottom line here: the kids are alright, but we shouldn't pat ourselves on the back just yet. U.S. teen pregnancy rates, while historically low at 26.5 per 1,000 women , are still the highest among nations that track this sort of data.
"We’re not in the promised land yet, but we’re going in the right direction and it’s taken a whole village to make an impact on this issue," said Brindis. If the U.S. wants to continue on this path, she said, the country needs to start zeroing in on at-risk teen subgroups that still might see parenthood as a more fulfilling and realistic path than college or career training.
"We need jobs and we need kids to graduate from high school," Brindis concluded. "These kinds of strategies that go beyond the availability of condoms and clinics are a very important part of the formula."
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Part of HuffPost Wellness. ©2022 BuzzFeed, Inc. All rights reserved.
Professor Claire Brindis, an expert on teen health at the Bixby Center for Global Reproductive Health at University of California, San Francisco, thinks that the report’s findings are “great news” for American teens. Brindis credited everything from the Affordable Care Act to condom visibility in films -- look no further than the recent “Trainwreck” for evidence -- for higher rates of birth control use and the continued delay of teens' first sexual experience. She also said that changing social norms about a woman’s sexuality have contributed to smarter sexual choices in teens.


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I-Team uncovers new details in horrifying case
Accused child sex traffickers lured two teen boys to St. Petersburg using video games, online apps and even the promise of a puppy, the I-Team uncovered in new details of the horrific case that made headlines last year.
and last updated 12:24 AM, Feb 15, 2020
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Give Light and the People Will Find Their Own Way
ST. PETERSBURG, Fla. — Accused child sex traffickers lured two teen boys to St. Petersburg using video games, online apps and even the promise of a puppy, the I-Team uncovered in new details of the horrific case that made headlines last year after the state’s top prosecutor revealed the victim “was moved into a filthy trailer and used as a sex slave for nearly a year.”
Police said the men used video games and online apps, including Omegle, Roblox and Discord to find and communicate with their victims.
A 2016 study funded by the U.S. Department of Justice estimates 36 percent of child sex trafficking victims are boys.
Neighbors at the mobile home park told the I-Team they met and saw the first victim, a 16-year-old Marion County boy, with his accused traffickers but never suspected he “was forced to serve as their own personal sex slave” — the accusations in a probable cause affidavit obtained by the I-Team.
The boy first met accused traffickers Mark Dennis and Andrew Clements at their April 2017 wedding. Police say he was brought to the wedding by a family friend, Eleanor McGlamory, who is also charged with conspiracy in the case.
Court records show Dennis and Clements immediately started texting the boy using Discord, a free video and texting app, and picked him up at his home 140 miles away just three weeks later.
Police say the men disabled the boy’s cell phone, so he couldn’t be tracked and then gave him a new name, birth date and back story.
Mark Dennis, Andrew Clements, Curtis Gruwell and Michael Schwartz all lived in the trailer with the boy at Silver Lake Mobile Home Park. Two other men, Michael Blasdel and J.R. Gauthier, regularly visited the trailer, according to police reports.
All six men currently face charges of conspiracy to commit human trafficking, among other charges.
Investigators said Dennis, Clements, Blasdel and Gauthier repeatedly raped the boy for nearly a year.
But neighbors at the trailer park told the I-Team they didn’t suspect anything unusual was going on inside the trailer until police announced the charges in early 2019.
The trailer was just feet away from the mobile home park’s garbage containers where residents of the 600-unit complex dump their trash.
“As many times as I went to the garbage can — cause they live across from the garbage can — I never heard anything, never seen anything out of order,” said neighbor Allene Dixon. “They would ride by in the golf cart and wave.”
Neighbor Mary Homerding told I-Team Investigator Adam Walser she didn’t suspect anything was amiss when she saw the first victim.
“The kid was polite. He seemed happy,” said Homerding, who told the I-Team she saw the first victim only once, riding in a golf cart with Clements. “He introduced him as his adopted son and the boy agreed.”
When she didn’t see the boy again, Homerding said she figured the adoption didn’t work out.
Homerding said neighbors didn’t suspect the men because they were well liked in the community.
“They put on a good front,” said Homerding. “They were always polite. They joked around.”
Groover-Skipper said it’s not uncommon that neighbors didn’t noticed a child sex trafficking victim was living in their midst.
“People are so busy that they go about their life and they don’t always look at clues or look at signs that something could be wrong,” said Groover-Skipper. “It’s so under the radar most of the time that the majority of the world has no clue that this type of thing is going on.”
Abigale Ackerman said she met the first victim when the men brought the boy to a Pasco County pagan festival in early 2018.
“I asked him if there was anything going on. It seemed like he was really depressed,” said Ackerman.
She told the I-Team Dennis offered to pay her $2,000 to make the boy a fantasy costume, but the deal never happened.
“They wanted me to make him a blue and white husky suit for his birthday,” said Ackerman, who revealed the men also showered the boy with other gifts. “(They gave him) expensive things like game consoles, a full blooded husky puppy that they bought him.”
The police reported finding that husky in the trailer after the boys were rescued.
Groover-Skipper said the gifts are all part of the grooming process traffickers use on victims.
“Even though there may not be physical chains around a victim, around a person, they have mental and emotional chains around a person,” said Groover-Skipper.
Police also reported finding whips, leather masks and bondage tools inside the trailer.
According to police reports, Mark Dennis called himself “Grand Master” and referred to the other men and the boy as his “pups” during bondage rituals. The entire group referred themselves as the boy’s “family circle,” police said.
Groover-Skipper said traffickers know how to prey on victims’ deep-rooted need to belong and be part of a family.
But police recovered text messages showing the boy was unhappy
“I’m stressed to high hell,” the boy texted nearly a year into captivity. “I don’t want sex all the time.”
One of his abusers replied, “Which is such a shame when such a tight group of people who love you have come into your life.”
In 2018, police reported the men met a new victim online — a 17-year-old Louisiana boy they convinced to come live with them.
Eleanor McGlamory and Curtis Gruwell drove about 10 hours to pick the boy up in the woods near his rural Louisiana home in the dead of night, court records show.
Three days later, Louisiana police found the boy's online messages and alerted St. Petersburg Police, who found the missing Louisiana boy and the Marion County boy and rescued them from the trailer.
All seven suspects are currently behind bars awaiting trial, which is set for early May.
The Florida Attorney General's Office says Blasdel, Gruwell and Gauthier have entered plea agreements and have agreed to testify at the trial.
The Florida Department of Children and Families says it's important to manage your child's use of multimedia by setting ground rules, explaining safety rules, keeping the computer in a common room and monitoring online activity.
The National Center for Missing and Exploited Children has age appropriate information for children and their parents to learn how to protect themselves online and avoid becoming a victim.
If you believe you are a victim of Human Trafficking or suspect an adult is a victim of human trafficking, please visit the National Human Trafficking Hotline, or call them at 1-888-3737-888. If you suspect a child is a victim, please call the Florida Abuse Hotline at 1-800-96-ABUSE.
If you have a story you'd like the I-Team to investigate, , you can call 1-866-428-NEWS or adam@abcactionnews.com


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Sixteen is a tough age. Teen-agers are caught between two stages of life. They are no longer children, but are not yet a full-fledged adults. This confusion can manifest itself in activities as simple party games, in which guests are too old for pin the tail on the donkey, but too young for adult games of a more risque nature. Fortunately, there are still a slew of fun activities that these fast-growing teen-agers can enjoy.
Suck and blow is a game that is perfect for a co-ed party. More flirty than overtly sexual, suck and blow is also low cost, requiring only a single playing card. Players stand in a circle, alternating genders--boy, girl, boy, etc...--and try to pass a the playing card around the circle without using their hands. The first person places the card to his lips and inhales, affixing the card. He then moves his lips to those of the next person, who inhales as the first person releases. With skill, the card is transferred to the next person and is then passed around the circle; otherwise, the card falls to the ground and the two parties accidentally kiss.
Name that tune is a timeless game that is fun for all age groups. The rules are simple. Participants hear a snippet of a song and try to be the first to cite the artist. Whoever guesses correctly first wins the game. The first contestant to reach a certain score or the player with the most points at the end of a set period of time wins. The game can be set up in several ways. Participants can either make a play list of songs on their computer beforehand and set their program to random or they can flip through preset radio stations.
Another classic of adolescence, spin the bottle remains fun well into one's teen-age years (and, in proper settings, adulthood.) Players sit in a circle and take turns spinning a bottle placed in the middle of the circle. The spinner must kiss whomever the bottle lands on, without argument. The bottle must, however, complete one full rotation. The game is generally played until all players have been kissed.

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