Teens Fetish
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Teens 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.
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*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.
‘Guys are really out here with the nerve and audacity’: Woman exposes Bumble match for faking a car accident to cancel their date
‘Get that check’: TikToker says a ceiling tile fell on him at Starbucks
‘I was a prisoner, and you kept me in your prison’: Woman accuses pastor of grooming her when she was 16 in front of church
Delta worker says flight was delayed because ‘the pilot did not have the qualifications to fly this aircraft’ in viral TikTok, sparking debate
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Joe Strike is Komos the Komodo dragon in furry circles.
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Many people still don't know about this culture, like this lady who thought a furry convention was for dogs
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It is estimated that at least 250,000 people in the US identify as “furries.” These are not an offshoot of PETA activists, rallying for the safety of animals and their coats.
Instead, furries are a subculture whose members enjoy dressing up as cartoonish animals, sometimes as a sexual fetish but more often as a fun escape.
In early September, the furry movement made headlines for all the wrong reasons. Scott Chamberlain, a councilman from New Milford, Conn., was forced to resign when it came to light that he was a furry . His animal of choice: a fox called Gray Muzzle. This revelation was confirmed via Chamberlain’s profile on a website called sofurry.com.
The profile showed a photo of him posing alongside someone in furry garb. That he checked a box, on his sofurry.com profile, stating that he “tolerates rape,” did not help his situation.
Nevertheless, those in the furry community rallied behind Chamberlain. People who wanted Chamberlain out of his political position got “carried away,” said Joe Strike, 67, a writer who lives on the Upper East Side, identifies as a furry and authored the new book “ Furry Nation ” (Cleis Press) out now. “I don’t want to call it a lynch mob, but people get upset. I feel sorry for the guy.” From postings he’s read, Strike added, “people thought it was unfair.”
If it’s any consolation to Chamberlain, Furpocalypse, the largest gathering of furries in New England, takes place Oct. 27-29. It will be held in Cromwell, Conn., 112 miles from Chamberlain’s home base.
Strike, who dresses up as a suave Komodo dragon named Komos — “He wears a dinner jacket, his eyes are hypnotic and his presence is commanding; all that’s missing is a sherry goblet” — will be joining an expected 1,500 attendees at the event.
Strike looks forward to costumed comedy sketches and song parodies along with opportunities to socialize with those of his ilk. “I will wear my costume every opportunity I get — at conventions and on Halloween,” he said, acknowledging that the handmade outfit — constructed of felt and foam rubber — is generally too hot to don on a day-to-day basis. A minority of furries, he added, dress up a few times a month for gatherings in peoples’ homes and public parks.
Strike estimates that two-thirds of furries are men and that a large number of them come from the IT and technology professions. The latter somewhat jibes with a study on furries led by Canadian college professor Dr. Kathy Gerbasi and published in the journal Society & Animals. Gerbasi found that approximately 25 percent of those surveyed considered themselves less than 100 percent human and would become zero percent human if they could. Strike said that most furries he encountered grew up with interests in anthropomorphic cartoon characters and now find comfort around others with the same interest.
While it’s commonly believed that sexuality plays a large role in the socializing of furry friends, Strike insisted that only a small number of his comrades engage in sexual acts while dressed in their outfits. “You don’t have fetish scenes at the conventions, but some people might go back to their rooms for fun.”
Nevertheless, his current boyfriend (Strike is bisexual) met him at a furry event, was attracted to Strike’s outfit and used it for an entreaty. “One day he sent me a text saying, ‘How are you, you sexy ’gator?’ ” said Strike. “He’s a walrus, and I don’t find his costume to be a turn-on. But he is quite younger, he called me sexy and I am not complaining.”
Though the idea of people relating to animals and adopting their own beastly characteristics dates back thousands of years, Strike figures that the modern furry movement gained its footing in the early 1990s. “The Internet began hooking people up and it took off,” Strike said.
Initially believing that costumes were overkill, Strike had a change of heart three years ago after trying on a friend’s meerkat outfit. “That’s when I decided to get a suit of my own.” A designer in Maryland, named Artslave, who specializes in furry wear, created Strike’s outer trapping, which cost $2,100. “It was worth every penny,” said Strike. “I like the eyes that glow and its serpentine tail that wiggles as I walk.”
For the furries who will be gathering in Connecticut this month, pleasures promise to go beyond the physical. “People invent mythologies for themselves, and it is a hell of a lot of fun,” said Strike. “You have permission to not be yourself, and it is liberating.” Outside of his costume, Strike said, “I am easygoing. As Komos, though, I become forceful. It’s a nice vacation for me.”
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Pornhub revealed its most popular searches and trends of 2021 and let’s just say there are some interesting people out there.
The X-rated viewing habits around the world may surprise you, with everything from porn stars, who watches the most, the longest and where Canada falls in all that.
Let’s break down some of the more titillating tidbits, shall we?
The top three most searched porn stars are Lana Rhoades, who took the No. 1 spot for the third straight year, followed by Abella Danger, who repeats in second, and Eva Elfie, who jumped two spots from last year, ahead of Riley Reid and Mia Malkova.
The United States sure enjoys Pornhub’s content, as it continues to reign supreme in countries by traffic. The U.K. and Japan round out the top three, while Canada ranked seventh in daily traffic to the site, according to the release.
What’s surprising is that while the U.S. clicks on Pornhub more than any other country, Americans don’t spend too much of their time on the site.
As far as time spent per visit, the Philippines is tops at 11 minutes and 31 seconds, followed by Japan and France. In this category, Canada is in the ninth spot at nine minutes and 48 seconds, just edging out the U.S., which spent an average of nine minutes and 44 seconds on Pornhub.
“Female visitors came and went 14 seconds faster than men,” read the release, while women’s favourite category to click on is “lesbians.”
2021 also saw the amount of female visitors to the site grow to 35%, with the Philippines, Colombia, Argentina, Mexico and Ukraine all having greater than 40% female viewership.
Some of the most searched terms of 2021 include milf, massage, threesome and the No. 1 search, “hentai.”
In Japanese culture, hentai can refer to any sort of sexual fetish, however, globally, it is often used to describe the pornographic form of anime.
What may be most surprising is the searches for “romance” and “romantic” more than doubled, while “passionate” increased by 139%. Who says love is dead?
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