The
Tammy sex video scandal was an incident in Singapore
involving a sex
video first circulated in mid-February
2006 that turned into an Internet phenomenon. The incident
began when a student from
Nanyang
Polytechnic (NYP), known only as Tammy, apparently had her
mobile phone stolen, and a 10-minute
video of her having sex (which included intercourse as well as oral
sex) with her
boyfriend was uploaded on
the
internet.
The video, which was stored in the girl's mobile phone, was
initially spread via
instant
messaging,
email and
blogs, but eventually made it to the front pages of
national
newspapers. Shortly after, the
video gained international notoriety as many people curiously began
searching for it online under the keyword
Tammy
Nyp, causing the scandal to make it to the first five
places in
Technorati's top search terms
for almost two weeks.
The video was reportedly sold on DVDs in Penang, Malaysia
. A domain on the scandal's top search term
was also
squatted, and other
merchandise such as T-shirts was sold
online.
Questions of morality were raised after the scandal broke. Critics
blamed the girl for shooting the video in the first place, while
others pointed the finger at the culprit who uploaded the video.
Her boyfriend, on the other hand, escaped the same level of
criticism, prompting comments questioning some critics' bias. The
girl, when interviewed, claimed that she had no aspirations of
fame.
References
- " Taking over Tecnorati", Tym Blogs Too!,
24 February,
2006
- " Sex video featuring student on sale",
The Star , 25 February, 2006
- "blogosphere", Melissa Hwee, The Straits Times
(Digital Life), 28
February, 2006
- "Parents must address lax values", Jeremy Au Yong and
Nur Dianah Subaimi, The Sunday Times, 26 February, 2006
- "Behave and be damned?", Tan Mae Lynn, The New Paper,
27 February,
2006