This Morning’s Phillip Schofield and Ruth Langsford talk of adult toys and cyber sex

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    Daily Mail Reporter
    Last updated at 3:36 PM on 28th February 2011

    TV viewers got an eyeful today with their breakfast and coffee.

    This Morning blurred the boundaries of pre-cocktail hour conversation when they discussed the results of a sex survey on the show.

    Phillip Schofield and stand-in host Ruth Langsford didn’t appear to know where to look when sex therapist Jo Hemmings and Dr Pixie McKenna showed up with adult toys on the ITV program to chat about spicing things up in the bedroom.

    Uncomfortable: This Morning hosts Phillip Schofield and Ruth Langsford didn't know where to look today during a segment about sex on the breakfast program

    Uncomfortable: This Morning hosts Phillip Schofield and Ruth Langsford didn’t know where to look today during a segment about sex on the breakfast program

    Spicing up the bedroom: Sex therapists showed viewers some risqué role play

    Spicing up the bedroom: Sex therapists showed viewers some risqué role play

    The results of the network’s sex survey 2011, a follow-up from last year, were shown to a soundtrack of Sexual Healing and a breathy voice over.

    Schofield stumbled over his words while discussing one figure – that 20% of male respondents to the survey admit to faking an orgasm.

     

    As they watched one couple demonstrating a racy sexual position, he quipped: ‘Glad she’s kept her stockings on, there’s only so far we’re allowed to go.’

    Too far for breakfast TV? Sexual positions were also discussed

    Too far for breakfast TV? Sexual positions were also discussed

    Sex by numbers: The survey found that 52 per cent of respondents have been cheated on, and that 64 per cent of women count cyber sex as infidelity

    Sex by numbers: The survey found that 52 per cent of respondents have been cheated on, and that 64 per cent of women count cyber sex as infidelity

    At one point another couple perched on a bed with handcuffs, a feather boa and blindfold, in a demonstration about role play in the bedroom.

    But some viewers may think that the program had overstepped the line for a morning show as they chatted animatedly about whether or not cyber sex is considered cheating.

    Results from the risqué survey, of which 88 per cent of respondents were female and 12 per cent were male, showed that 64 per cent of women believe that cyber sex does count as infidelity.

    Blushing: Dr Pixie McKenna turned red when Phillip Schofield turned the tables on her, asking if she'd ever been cheated on by a partner

    Blushing: Dr Pixie McKenna turned red when Phillip Schofield turned the tables on her, asking if she’d ever been cheated on by a partner

    Inappropriate? Actors played out bedroom scenes, while Schofield joked that the woman had to keep her stockings on, because 'they can only go so far'

    Inappropriate? Close-ups of bedroom scenes were shown, while Schofield joked about the woman keeping her stockings on,  as ‘We can only go so far’

    52 per cent of respondents have been cheated on, while 42 per cent of men admit to fantasising about other partners in bed.

    Phillip Schofield turned the tables on Dr Pixie McKenna when she chatted about infidelity, making her blush when he asked if she was a victim of a cheating partner.

    It was his turn to get a little hot under the collar, though, as they discussed the statistics that 68 per cent of women have used sex toys, while 25 per cent of men use pornography ‘most days.’

    Do you have a story about a celebrity? Call the Daily Mail showbusiness desk on 0207 938 6364 or 0207 938 6683. For U.S. stories, phone 310 642 2317.

     

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    This Morning’s Phillip Schofield and Ruth Langsford talk of adult toys and cyber sex