I will hold off until I actually see it. Having them act like posting nudes happened and not actually having them do it is okay, but I would think they cross the line if they actually had them do it.
I think the conversation about it is one we need to have. SO many girls are doing this and sexting and if we just pretend it isn't happening, it only causes more problems rather than actually addressing it in media.
When I was a Para in Brooklyn, I was an anomaly of sorts. I was a large, much more fit black guy taking care of children. No one really met me for the first time and was ok. They were more like "Are you here for your child? No ... Then why are you here?!"
It took some time to win people over. I didn't win everyone over. But I won enough. But I was scrutinized every second of every day I was with them. I didn't want to walk alone with anyone, because that happened once and that child was pulled out of the program because the mother thought it was inappropriate and I was almost brought up before a disciplinary review because of it.
The child reported nothing, because there was nothing to report. But the fear that I could have done something was enough.
This is to say that... for the most part, a lot of guys are in a really weird position when it comes to children. Girls, especially. Men need to be open, understanding, enlightened... but if we talk too much about it, people are ready to put us on a list because we're probably perverts.
I think most men stymie sexual talk with their little girls because this is a topic that they a.) feel like they are going to lose their girls once they discover boys (and that's anecdotally true from what I've seen) and/or b.) have no idea how to broach the topic because it's such a taboo that the literal only time they probably can voice their opinions about it in any acceptable form is when they are in front of their growing daughter and having to answer questions that (once again) makes a lot of us guys feel we're going to get on a list if we talk to any girl about this stuff.
This is just another facet of "We demand change, but while we keep the same oppresive status quo that prohibits growth" mindset that is so pervasive nowadays.
To be clear, yes, young girls should be not only aware of their growth and understand that their desires (or lack their of) is perfectly normal, nothing to be ashamed of, and is going to be apart of her life in hopefully a beneficial manner for a long time to come. But to ask some of us to be a part of that process while maintaining an atmosphere of "If I even think you stepped over the line, Child Protective Services will be here faster than a lightning bolt"... Well, that makes it a mighty scary place. Conversations can not spring from such an atmosphere.