Several short videos uploaded to the YouTube website are modelled on the Channel Four programme Skins and targeted at teenagers.
But the graphic clips show a young woman having unprotected casual sex with a male in various positions while he films the trysts with a hand held camera.
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Passion: The film shows the pair having sex on the girl's bed in what has been described as a 'pornographic' scene
Outraged YouTube viewers have flagged one of the videos as inappropriate - meaning only users who are over 18 can watch the clips.
The interactive video, 'Condon, No Condom', is promoted on the NHS website and is expected to be circulated virally online and used by teachers.
The style of filming is similar to that used by amateur pornographers. Scenes also mirror the controversial teen drama Skins in which youngsters regularly have casual sex.
Teenage boys are given the choice of how they behave in the bedroom with a girl they meet at a party.
In the first clip, a group of teenagers are preparing for a party from the point of view of an unseen male character.
They are given the choice of whether to buy condoms or not buy condoms when they visit their local newsagents.
The next clip allows viewers to choose the video 'whip out a condom'. The clip shows a graphic scene where the male character has sex with the young woman against a door in a hallway.
Another video, 'called Go Back to Jen's' shows the girl splayed across a bed while the filmer of the clip has sex with her.
Protection: A shop assistant offers to sell the boys condoms
Mistake: The young woman appears to be unhappy after unprotected sex
Bad news: The young male character is told that he has contracted an STD
In some scenarios the couple have unprotected sex. If the male tries to ignore the question of using a condom he is rejected by Jen.
A final video portrays the outcome of not using a condom as an unfullfilling event followed by the news that the teenage boy has contracted an STD.
Campaigners have complained that at no point in the video are teenagers advised that abstinence is the 'right option'.
Norman Wells, the director of the Family and Education Trust, said the NHS should not be sending out the message that casual sex 'leaves no regrets'.
He said: 'It is grossly irresponsible of the NHS to present a graphic portrayal of unbridled lust in which a young woman is depicted as no more that a sex object and then to tell young men that they have ''made the right choices'' simply because they have used a condom.''
Vivienne Pattisson, the director of Mediawatch, said she was concerned that there were no effective controls to prevent children from watching the clips.
Government officials are understood to be blocked from watching theclip because it breaches pornography filters.
But Rachel Drummond-Hay, who produced the video for Bristol-based Omni Productions, said that a friend's 15-year-old daughter 'loved' the film and that it was intended to be 'titillating rather than pornographic'. ( dailymail.co.uk )
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ReplyDeleteStupid realy stupid video!!!!!!!!!!
ReplyDelete