San Diego

Racy 24-Hour ‘Game Show’ Takes Over Carmel Valley High School Gym

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Published on December 09, 2025
Racy 24-Hour ‘Game Show’ Takes Over Carmel Valley High School GymSource: Google Street View

Over the weekend, a popular online streamer turned Canyon Crest Academy's gym in Carmel Valley into the backdrop for a 24-hour “game show” livestream that has parents, students and district officials furious. The broadcast featured adult-themed punishments, a mocking religious skit and other stunts filmed inside the public school. The San Dieguito Union High School District says the production appears to have violated its facility-use rules and is now reviewing what it can do about it.

What Happened

According to The San Diego Union-Tribune, the event, advertised as "24-hour tag," was produced by streamer PayMoneyWubby, sponsored by Fansly and livestreamed on Twitch. Video clips and social media posts cited by the outlet showed men in the gym wearing sashes that read "botched penis" and "pedophile," contestants licking chocolate fondue off women’s feet as a punishment and scantily clad women assisting in staged bits.

The stream also featured a parody of the crucifixion and a slide listing allegedly racist items, details that have especially inflamed students and community members who say they never expected to see that kind of content associated with their high school campus.

Students And Community Reaction

Students said they first realized something unusual was going on when the gym was closed for setup, then later tuned in to the livestream to see what had been filmed inside their school. As NBC 7 San Diego reported, one student described watching "a full-grown adult... wearing a baby costume and being fed milk from a baby bottle," while others said they saw a clip of a man eating chocolate off a model’s feet.

The reaction was swift. The school's principal emailed parents calling the production "inappropriate, distasteful, and in conflict with our organization’s core values," and families have been asking how something billed as a school facility rental turned into a viral spectacle.

How The Rental Was Approved

The Canyon Crest Academy Foundation said it approved the rental on Oct. 9, 2025, after receiving a production summary that was described as PG-13, and that an external production company based in New Hampshire handled logistics, according to The San Diego Union-Tribune. Foundation executive director Regina Twomey apologized, saying "we ultimately failed to ensure proper oversight" and promised stronger protocols going forward.

The district is weighing a memorandum of understanding that would place new transparency and operations rules on school foundations, a measure the paper reports is expected to be finalized by January 2026. The district's fee schedule lists commercial gym rentals at roughly $3,000 per day, underscoring that this was treated as a business arrangement, not a school-sponsored event.

District Response And Next Steps

In a message to families, the principal said the production "was in violation of the standards set forth by the District and CCA Foundation in the Use of Facilities License Agreement," and added that the district is consulting legal counsel to "examine our options to hold the parties involved accountable," according to NBC 7 San Diego.

District officials say they are updating the Facilities Use policy to toughen oversight of third-party events and may also consider broader rules governing how foundations can rent out school spaces. Trustees are debating whether stronger contracts and reporting requirements, or even revoking a foundation's right to arrange rentals, should be part of the new rules.

Legal Implications

Potential fallout includes breach-of-contract claims or indemnity demands if the production is found to have violated the license agreement. The district could also seek restitution or other remedies, depending on what its review uncovers.

Whether officials actually move ahead with civil action will hinge on the contract terms, any indemnity provisions and the outcome of the ongoing review. For now, trustees and the foundation say they plan to rewrite procedures and tighten approval processes to make sure a sequel to this 24-hour spectacle never gets past the front desk.