Ferry mistakenly plays porn on lounge TV…
Talk about a peep show gone incorrect.
The absolute last factor people count on when driving a ferry is seeing some hanky panky — on a screen that is.
On a DFDS ferry going from France to Sussex, a “hardcore porn” movie randomly began enjoying on a lounge TV that passengers had just completed watching a Formula One grand prix on.
Any younger kids on board this ferry who caught a glimpse of or heard this naughty movie enjoying supposedly “ran screaming,” according to one passenger who spoke to Argus newspaper in Brighton.
Talk about a mum or dad’s nightmare.
These passengers had been minding their own business as a risqué video blared on the lounge TVs. AFP via Getty Images
“…Some parents came out and they were asking the man who worked there to sort the TV out, they were saying, ‘There’s hardcore porn on the TV.’ I couldn’t see it, but it was audible,” the nameless passenger continued.
The naughty mistake supposedly occurred during a malfunction at a port, which precipitated the ferry to go back to France.
Obviously embarrassed, DFDS apologized immensely, saying they weren’t conscious of the incident. “Once the crew were alerted to the content, the channel was swiftly changed,” said a spokesperson according to the Independent.
“We are very sorry for the understandable upset and anger that this caused. This will not happen again.”
This naughty incident is any mum or dad’s nightmare. Prostock-studio – stock.adobe.com
As wild as this incident is, it’s not the first time an surprising peep show in the randomest place has occurred.
An digital billboard that faces both north and south along Interstate 75 in Michigan reportedly had porn enjoying around 11 p.m. for a strong 20 minutes before it went utterly darkish.
That’s one billboard that will get drivers’ consideration.
“It was very bizarre,” driver Chuck McMahon told WDIV. “I thought maybe it was a billboard for a strip club or something.”
“I was just looking up at it and I was like, ‘Huh, oh, wow. That’s porn,’” McMahon continued.
Thankfully, no reported crashes befell among the shocked drivers and motorists who bought a glimpse of the risqué show.
But there’s no denying that it was a “huge distraction and obviously obscene and inappropriate,” police Lt. Ryan Gagnon told the Detroit Free Press.
“It was dark out, so the screen was glowing really bright,” he said.
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