The mid-1990s marked a profound global and domestic shift in how media portraying minors without clothing was evaluated legally and socially.
Today, Jung und Frei is remembered as a relic of a bygone era in FKK history. Its existence highlights the vast cultural differences in how societies view the human body, privacy, and childhood across different decades. While the broader FKK movement continues to thrive in designated clubs, parks, and resorts across Europe, the naturist media landscape has evolved. Modern naturist organizations and publications maintain a much stricter adherence to privacy, heavily emphasizing adult-only content or requiring strict parental consent and supervision for any youth participation.
Removing clothing as a status symbol to foster equality.
For more information on the history of German nudist culture, you can visit the German Association for Free Body Culture (DFK)