San Diego academy students outraged after school gym used to film questionable adult content
Dec 10, 2025
Students at a San Diego high school said they were outraged after an online streamer rented the school’s gymnasium for a livestream that was sponsored by an adult content subscription site and featured scantily clad women as well as a depiction of a crucifixion.
The event was livestreamed from
Canyon Crest Academy starting Saturday. The school’s Canyon Crest Academy Foundation rents out the gymnasium for private events. This event was a 24-hour stream by a Twitch user who goes by Wubby, or “PayMoneyWubby,” sponsored by a site called Fansly.
Several students said they found out about the event on Friday, when they tried to use the gym but were told they couldn’t as the equipment was being set up. For some, that sparked curiosity, and they then tuned into the stream they said featured content that was not appropriate to be broadcast from a school.
“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. I was like, OK that’s kind of weird,” said student Parker Jaconette. “We check on it again a couple hours later, and there’s another dude who’s eating chocolate off of the feet of not-safe-for-work content creators or adult film content creators.”
“People have just been saying how disgusting, or like, ‘Oh my God, I can’t believe this happened,’” said student Rihanna Roohanni. “It’s not like very safe for students, especially who are underage.”
“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 and film on my campus,” said student Giordano Bruno.
The school’s principal sent an email to parents Sunday, calling the production “inappropriate, distasteful, and in conflict with our organization’s core values.”
“The production was in violation of the standards set forth by the District and CCA Foundation in the Use of Facilities License Agreement,” Principal Brett Killeen’s email said. “We are working with our District to engage legal counsel to examine our options to hold the parties involved accountable. The District is also in the process of updating its Facilities Use policy to strengthen District and Foundation oversight and supervision of any third parties holding events on District property.”
In a brief statement, Wubby disagreed.
“We had a wonderful and very successful event that fully complied with our contractual agreements,” he said, adding, “Based on threats of litigation made by other parties, I cannot comment further at this time.”
Wubby directed further inquiries to his attorney Jason Brower, who said the contract was “exceedingly clear and there was no violation of the contract.”
“This was fully disclosed as to the individuals and activities involved, including sponsorship by Fansly,” Brower said when reached by phone. “Any insinuation which was made by the school and the foundation that they were unaware is both incorrect and potentially defamatory.”
“While the specific nature of the production was not disclosed to us in advance – and the activities were in clear violation of our Use of Facilities License Agreement – we acknowledge that, as the permitting entity, we ultimately failed to ensure proper oversight,” the Canyon Crest Academy Foundation’s Executive Director Regina Twomey said in a statement.
The foundation was already facing criticism after a student investigation sparked an independent audit that earlier this year found inaccurate financial reporting and missing records.
“On October 9th, 2025, we approved a facilities rental to an external production company based in New Hampshire. No inappropriate or concerning content was disclosed,” Twomey said. “Standard procedures were followed, including a signed contract with a show summary indicating PG-13 content, legal review on the production company’s end, branding-removal requirements and independent security hired. We are consulting with legal counsel to review what occurred and to determine appropriate next steps regarding the third party involved.”
“To our Canyon Crest Academy community: We sincerely apologize for this incident. We are fully committed to implementing stronger internal protocols, enhanced review processes and additional safeguards to ensure that nothing like this happens again,” Twomey’s statement concluded.
Still, students said they were frustrated and confused as to how the event was even allowed to happen in the first place.
“I’m very, very angry,” Bruno said. “It hurts me that my school is doing all this and letting this slide, and they didn’t take more action into looking into who these people were.”
“When I first saw it, I was just completely shocked. Like I mean at first, I thought it was AI, like I didn’t want to believe my eyes,” said student Aiden Gildersleeve, asking, “How do you not have that much precaution, like to make sure that doesn’t happen?”
“I don’t like it. It ruins our school’s reputation. We’re known for, like, studying and academics. Not really like this OnlyFans stuff,” said Brian Cheng, who said he had to play a basketball game in that same gymnasium on Monday night.
“I don’t know if I want to use the gym after that, because who knows what they could have done,” Cheng said. “I want them to, like, renovate every single inch of the gym, make sure, like, every inch is cleaned. I don’t want to even walk on that.”
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