Source: Tom's Hardware UK – Keywords: Sarah, Green, video Category : Miscellaneous
A teacher in a private school in Britain could be fired after a video of her starring a commercial was posted on YouTube.
Green took part in the advertisement two years before she took the job in Stockport Grammar School. The video is an ad for clothing for construction workers and has a slightly, er, dodgy spin.
The video, as you can quite plainly see, shows Ms. Sarah Green simulating sex with a builder while demonstrating the safety features of his work-wear. Not that it matters, but she’s the blond girl at the beginning. . .
Naturally, after students found it earlier in the month, it wasn’t long before the entire school had caught wind of it. Sadly this also meant that it wasn’t long before their mummies and daddies saw the clip. Uh oh.
So as you can imagine, some of the parents are none too pleased.
“It appears her character is possibly not best suited to such a highly regarded school.”
Mind you, judging by the comments on YouTube, the students don’t seem to care as much.
-
Previous News Article
British Airways plant crash lands on... -
Next News Article
XGen Studios announces Wii download...
- Dell tells customer to consider buying a Mac
- Oprah to launch her own TV channel
- Scrabulous fans claim Scrabble bosses are doing themselves no favours
- GamersGate and THQ publishing finally annouce partnership
- Logitech announces best quarter ever for Q3 of Fiscal Year 2008
- Electrical Vehicle explodes on Riverside Campus
- Study shows Mac owners are more openminded and confident
- MacWorld: Analysis: MacWorld is disappointing? Yeah right.
- Scientology video featuring Tom Cruise is leaked to the net
- Scrabulous to get scrapped
"We're sorry, this video is no longer available"
Hmm the embedded one is playing fine for me. Why have I watched this 4 times? Sigh.
I'll try and find it somewhere else for you though.
Yo, it's still up on Metacafe.
http://www.metacafe.com/watch/922649/scruffs_hardware/
The quality is a bit shit but what can you do?
why do they really care what someone did years ago? if she is performing fine as a teacher now, and has proved to be a fine teacher before, why not keep her?