Skip to main content

Sexuele Voorlichting 1991 Belgium Full Exclusive Videotitle Porn Tube May 2026

Deze punten geven een overzicht van de belangrijkste ontwikkelingen in entertainment en media in België in 1991. Het was een tijd van verandering en groei, zowel in de media zelf als in de manier waarop informatie en entertainment werden geconsumeerd.


Note on terminology: Voorlichting is a Dutch term that broadly translates to “information,” “guidance,” or “public education.” In a Belgian (Flemish) media context, it most famously refers to sex education and public health information campaigns, often produced by the Sensoa organization or government agencies. The year 1991 was a pivotal moment for this genre in Flanders, marked by a famous (and controversial) television special.


Prior to 1991, sex education in Belgian schools was a patchwork. Catholic schools offered moral warnings; secular schools offered biology. AIDS was no longer a distant American news story. By 1990, Belgium had over 1,000 reported HIV cases. The fear was palpable, but the information was sterile. Deze punten geven een overzicht van de belangrijkste

“Parents were petrified,” recalls Dr. Liesbet Van Hecke, a media historian at KU Leuven. “They knew their teenagers were sexually active—the pill had been available for decades—but they couldn’t bring themselves to say the words ‘condom’ at the dinner table. So, they outsourced the job to the television.”

The most prominent example of voorlichting in 1991 was the handling of the HIV/AIDS epidemic. By the early 90s, the initial panic had evolved into a need for sustained behavioral change. Note on terminology: Voorlichting is a Dutch term

Not everyone had noble intentions. The success of voorlichting content in 1991 spawned a grey market. Private cable channels, exploiting a loophole in Belgian broadcasting law that classified “educational sexology” as distinct from “pornography,” began airing late-night shows that were little more than softcore films with a doctor standing nearby.

The most infamous was “Seks voor Beginners” (Sex for Beginners) on a now-defunct Luxembourg-based channel beamed into Belgian homes. It featured real sex therapists demonstrating techniques on consenting actors. The show had a psychologist on set, but critics argued the “education” was a thin veil for titillation. Prior to 1991, sex education in Belgian schools

“There was a fine line,” says media regulator Paul De Smet. “In 1991, we realized that ‘good’ explicit content saves lives. ‘Bad’ explicit content just sells soap. The challenge was distinguishing the two.”

1991 is historically significant for the launch of what would become a Belgian cultural phenomenon and a global standard: The Bob Campaign.

BRT also produced A2-sized posters that were hung in youth clubs and record stores. These posters looked exactly like movie posters for Terminator 2 or Robin Hood: Prince of Thieves—but with a twist. The muscular hero would be holding a condom, or the romantic couple would be reading an information pamphlet. The tagline: "De beste actie is veilige actie" (The best action is safe action).