Ted Cruz’s record on the economy is a little soft, no matter how hard his stance on pornography is. At least, that seems to be the opinion of adult actress Cory Chase, whose video was “liked” by the Texas senator’s official Twitter account, much to Cruz’s embarrassment and the rest of the world’s amusement.
Speaking to the Huffington Post, Chase said that Cruz “should have paid” for the video of her film “Moms Bang Teens 20,” going so far as to accuse the senator of piracy.
“I didn’t like that he watched it for free,” Chase said. “He pirated that video. He should have paid Reality Kings for a subscription.”
Reality Kings itself would seem to differ on the topic; after Cruz’s since-deleted “like” of the video aroused interest throughout the nation, the adult-entertainment outlet offered the senator a free lifetime subscription to its service.
For those not familiar with “Moms Bang Teens 20,” Chase offered a synopsis of the offering, which was filmed about a year ago and also starred Bruce Venture and Avalon Heart.
“[Heart] played my step-daughter who stayed home pretending she was sick,” Chase said. “I see her having sex with her boyfriend and, of course, it turns me on.”
Of course.
Cruz’s failure to pony up for the video isn’t Chase’s only regret. The 36-year-old Florida resident told Huffington Post that she hasn’t seen the reaction to Cruz’s inadvertent endorsement, as her internet access has been spotty due to Hurricane Irma.
“I hate that it happened when I can’t see it, but when I found out it was trending, it was one of those OMG moments,” Chase, who is presumably well familiar with OMG moments, noted.
Speaking to reporters Tuesday at the Capitol, Cruz said, “There are a number of people on the team who have access to the account. It appears that someone inadvertently hit the ‘like’ button and when we discovered the post, which was I guess an hour or two later, we pulled it down.
“It was a staffing issue and it was inadvertent, it was a mistake, it was not a deliberate action,” he continued, according to the Washington Post. “We’re dealing with it internally but it was a mistake, it was not malicious conduct.”