Before the athletes all descend on Paris to compete in the summer games, Olympians are being urged to wrap it up should they decide to engage in things of a sexual nature.
As athletes from around the world descend upon the Olympic Village in Paris ahead of the international sporting event’s Opening Ceremony, they have all gone to their rooms and found packs of condoms waiting for them.
According to an unboxing video posted by Canadian sailor Sarah Douglas, the condoms are branded with Phryge, the hat-shaped mascot for the Paris Summer Games.
As for the Olympics condoms, they are bright and colorful. They not only have images of the official mascots of the 2024 Paris Olympics and Paralympics but also have messages on each packet.
In the TikTok video, showing off the Olympics-branded condom packaging, sailor Sarah Douglas from Canada held up the blue and pink condom holders that read, “On the field of love, play fair,” read one of the condom’s wrappers. “Ask for consent.”
Messages on the other condoms included: “On the field of love, play fair. Ask for consent,” “Don’t share more than victory, protect yourself against STDs,” “Score a win: Yes to consent, no to STDs,” and “No need to be a gold medalist to wear it!”
Click on ‘Follow Us’ and get notified of the most viral Olympics stories via Google! Follow Us
There are 14,500 athletes at the Olympics, so that is a ton of condoms to give off. Every four years, we get a number of athletes popping up on social media, giving room tours and showing off the infamous anti-sex beds.
Organizers are providing 300,000 condoms as this year marks the return of condom distribution after the Tokyo Olympics enforced a sex ban due to the COVID-19 pandemic.
The Paris Olympics “Anti-Sex” Beds Seem To Be A Huge Myth
The countdown to the 2024 Summer Olympic Games is officially on, with the opening ceremony in Paris taking place on Friday.
Just as fans were enthralled four years ago in Tokyo, the first thing fans wanted to know was if the “anti-sex” beds were making a comeback.
Those beds were installed in the Tokyo Olympic Village in a reported effort to decrease the risk of COVID-19 transmission.
According to a TikTok video posted by the official Olympics account, the beds are “sustainable.”
Northern Irish gymnast Rhys McClenaghan uploaded his own video on Instagram showing what the famous ‘anti-sex’ beds can withstand.