





An advertisement featuring Tay and Brinsley, who were popular influencer siblings in the lore. In the lore, they are in costume and performimg in a titillating advertisment. The shoots were performed separately, but juxtaposed by marketers. The outfits are risque, but sex sells, or so they say. But is this really an appropriate way to market medical goods? Or even appropriate in general?
The image of sexual imagery and luxury medical goods in the face of a real deadly pandemic offers social commentary. This also parodies sexualized anti-vax imagery, as anti-vax Facebook memes would compare pandemic protection to fetish wear as a means of denigrating it.
This is judged as MA15+, against MA15+ mainstream media. MA15+ mainstream media easily tolerates fetish gear, and yet even more extreme sexualized nudity than shown here. If you think this violates good taste for MA15+ media, please take it up with mainstream classification boards first.
The single piece of above art work in this post, Tay_Brinsley_Sex_Sells.webp, is released under CC0/Public Domain. If you like it, you can help me out by sharing or reposting it to your own page, and by spreading it across the web by any means you desire. Thank you.
See another picture of Tay and Brinsley here.
Alt Text
Visual description –
Panel 1 – A woman wearing nothing but a full-face mask and nipple pasties, leaning towards the camera.
Panel 2 – A man in a full-body latex suit, with his hands behind his head.
Text transcript –
Panel 1 – This could save your life! $299.99 face shield.
Panel 2 –
Caption: You don’t need to cover your whole body. You only need a mask. $199.95.
Nametag: Hi my name is Brinsley.
The final two panels are the same as the first two, without text.



2 images. Watercolour Pencils | Alcohol Markers. These are teeny tiny (A6 size) IRL.