According to recent reports, a Canadian animator who is best known for his work on the children’s TV show, “My Little Pony,” has been sentenced to 28 months in prison for possessing more than 60,000 child exploitation images—also known as “child porn”—and sharing them with others online.
Tom Wysom, 55, worked on TV productions such as “My Little Pony: Friendship is Magic” and “Littlest Pet Shop,” according to the Internet Movie Database.
Wysom pled guilty to child porn charges in December and was sentenced earlier in July. In October 2017, police found 60,165 images in his home—many of them duplicates—along with 1,626 videos, some of which depicted adults engaging in sexual acts with children. In some of the disturbing images, young girls had their hands and feet bound.
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In a pre-sentence report, presented to court, Wysom told a probation officer that he developed an addiction to adult pornography about a decade ago, but slowly became desensitized to it and “needed something more.” He turned to child pornography, Wysom said, which became a way to deal with his clinical depression and other medical issues.
An Obsession That Evolves
Research shows that porn is a habit that escalates, and it can often be an obsession that evolves way beyond anything the consumer could anticipate.
Let’s look at the data. Like any potentially addictive substance, porn triggers the release of dopamine into a part of the brain called the reward center (a.k.a. reward pathway or system). [1] Basically, the reward center’s job is to make you feel good whenever you do something healthy, like eating a great meal, having sex, or getting a good workout. [2] The “high” you get makes you want to repeat the behavior again and again. [3] Your brain is hardwired to motivate you to do things that will improve your health and chance of survival. [4] Simple.
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Well, actually, not quite so simple. Researchers have recently discovered that the reward center is actually two different brain systems, a “Liking” system and a “Wanting” system, that work in different—sometimes opposite—ways. [5] Understanding how they work helps explain why porn can be habit-forming and why consuming porn is often an escalating behavior.
Porn is an escalating behavior because as some consumers develop tolerance, the porn that used to excite them starts to seem boring—like in Wysom’s case. [6] Predictably, they often try to compensate by spending more time with porn and/or seeking out more hardcore material in an effort to regain the excitement they used to feel. [7] Many porn consumers find themes of aggression, violence, and increasingly “edgy” acts creeping into their porn habits and fantasies. [8]
And this is how some consumers eventually end up in illegal territory.
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Crossing The Line
Dr. Julie Newberry is a psychologist who has worked with patients who have stories like the “My Little Pony” animator’s.
In an article for PsychReg, she writes: “My therapeutic experience is that a person who views child abuse images, though committing a sexual offense, is not necessarily a paedophile. A paedophile has a primary sexual interest in children. I suggest that for some people, it is porn addiction rather than paedophilia, which is the cause. A person, usually a man, who has no sexual interest in children, can find himself ‘crossing the line.’”
Related: Understanding The Booming Underground Industry Of Child Sexual Exploitation
She continues on to describe her experience, saying, “[My clients] didn’t go onto the internet with the intention of looking at child abuse images, but nevertheless ended up there. They couldn’t understand why they continued to do something that disgusted them and which they knew was illegal. I suggest that each of them became desensitized to mild porn and sensitized to extreme porn. Their higher thinking brain, compromised by addiction, could not win the battle, even when it came to viewing child abuse images. Porn sex was too powerful a need and withdrawal too difficult.”
Related: Inside The Industry Where Child Exploitation, Pornography, And Sex Trafficking Collide
While not every porn consumer will end up turning to illegal content, many do, like Tom Wysom says he did. This is why we raise awareness that porn is anything but harmless, personal entertainment. In too many cases, the porn consumer ends up becoming consumed by their porn.
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