CARMEL VALLEY, CA – Students at an elite San Diego high school are demanding their gymnasium be “renovated from top to bottom” after discovering it was rented out over the weekend for an adult-oriented livestream featuring scantily clad performers, simulated religious imagery, and a grown man being fed from a baby bottle.
The incident occurred at Canyon Crest Academy when a New Hampshire-based production company rented the school’s gym for a 24-hour Twitch stream hosted by popular internet personality “PayMoneyWubby.” The event was sponsored by Fansly, an adult content subscription platform similar to OnlyFans.
Students first learned something was off when they were denied access to the gymnasium on Friday. Curious about what was happening inside their school, some tuned into the livestream and were shocked by what they saw.
“The first thing I see is a full-grown adult, an adult man wearing a baby costume and being fed milk from a baby bottle,” student Parker Jaconette told reporters. The stream also reportedly featured performers in revealing outfits and depictions of crucifixion.
Fellow student Brian Cheng didn’t mince words about his reaction. “It feels nasty. It’s gross. I’m astonished. I can’t believe my school would let a bunch of basically semi, like, porn stars come to the school,” he said. “I want them to renovate every single inch of the gym. I don’t want to even walk on that.”
Another student, Rihanna Roohanni, expressed concern for younger classmates. “People have just been saying how disgusting it is. It’s not like very safe for students, especially who are underage.”
Principal Brett Killeen condemned the production as “inappropriate, distasteful, and in conflict with our organization’s core values.” Regina Twomey, executive director of the CCA Foundation which approved the rental, acknowledged a failure in oversight. She said the contract indicated the content would be “PG-13.”
An attorney for the streamer, Jason Brower, pushed back on the criticism, claiming his client made full disclosures and complied with all contractual terms.
The school has promised to implement stronger vetting protocols for future facility rentals.


I am not defending this in any way, but simply noting that schools in California are broke, and if this tasteless and questionable activity raised a significant amount of much-needed money for Canyon Crest Academy, do they have a better, and equally effective, plan for fundraising?