Maybe I'm just too liberal for my own good?!
Whilst I'm not a huge fan of long, strung out s3x scenes and ones which can come across as degrading or not relevant to the "plot", I also accept that sometimes they are in keeping with the storyline. You can keep Fifty Shades of Grey and Magic Mike etc. It doesn't interest me one bit.
Does it worry me about impressionable, young people watching them? I don't know.
When I was at school as a teen (late 80s, early 90s) we watched horror films to scare ourselves, "rude" films for a giggle and read magazines which, for their time, were raunchy, a bit rude had pullouts of "50 of the best s3xual positions" and advice pages on how to deal with pushy boyfriends.
Whilst times have changed and this stuff seems much more "in your face" I don't think it's changed that much. Gone are the magazines hidden under beds and now we have internet, TikTok and Instagram. If we have frank, open conversations with our children/young people and they know they can come to us with worries and issues then I think that's half the battle of instilling healthy, respectful and consensual relationships with those around us.
And, controversially, it's not just boys who are guilty. I've known personally of several girls who have made up stories regarding how boys have treated them when they've been alone together. To the point where boys have (again, controversially) videoed "consent" videos with a girl so they don't get into trouble.
Of course, when it comes to the crunch, NO means NO.
Whilst my children are young adults, I have many young friends who have shared their worries with me ( in my previous job I became the "Auntie" to the young'uns 🥰). Their worries are valid and not always what we think they are. Very often they're not about boyfriends/girlfriends. But at least they knew they could talk to me about anything.
I wouldn't want to be the parent of a teen nowadays. Or, as it happens, be a teen.