Children have to learn about bodies as they grow up, especially during puberty.
However, one Danish show has been slammed for its attempts to do this by airing a children's TV show where adults strip in front of kids in order to teach them about the human body.
The program, which features a crowd of children aged 11 to 13, was created to "promote body positivity and combat body-shaming", the New York Times reports.
Ultra Strips Down, which airs on the Danish channel DR Ultra, challenges the narrative that there is such a thing as a perfect body type by showing children a variety of adult bodies.
One of the recent episodes of the show took a look at skin and hair.

"At what age did you grow hair on the lower part of your body?" one of the children asked when the adults took off their bathrobes.
Another questioned: "Do you consider removing your tattoos?"
And a third child asked: "Are you pleased with your private parts?"
The show is incredibly popular in Demark - a nation that the Daily Star states does not view nudity as the taboo it is elsewhere in the world.
At the Danish TV Festival, the show even scooped up an award for being the best children's television program.
However, when a clip from the unusual show surfaced online, it was widely criticized for its content.

Per the Daily Star, Activist Obianuju Ekeocha wrote on Twitter: "The show claims to teach kids about different body types by exposing them to naked adults.
"Why? Why are there now so many pushing to destroy children?"
Another said per the news outlet: "This is so heartbreaking. What happened to the innocence of childhood?"
Another Twitter user added: "The Danish 'children's' show, 'Ultra Strips Down', claims it teaches kids about body types by having ADULTS STRIP NAKED right before their eyes!
"The assault on children is real, it's global and it's intentional. #ProtectChildren"
The show has also received criticism from within Denmark itself.
The New York Times reports that a leading member of the right-wing Danish People's Party, Peter Skaarup, said that the show was "depraving our children."
He told B.T., a Danish tabloid, that it is "far too early" to expose children to what adult naked bodies look like, as at that age, they "already have many things running around in their heads."
The show has now responded to the backlash by saying that it is "educational TV for kids and families who can have a healthy talk about what bodies look like."
What do you think of the show? Is it educational and teaching children about the human body, or has it gone too far? Let us know in the comments section below.