Teen Mom star Jenelle Evans has been nothing but a role model to young MTV viewers. The show has displayed the 21-year-old fighting with her mom over child custody and crying over not being able to smoke pot, but fans are seeing a lot more off the camera. When the cameras aren't rolling, Evans is getting arrested, fighting, getting a boob-job and releasing disturbing before and after topless photos all over the web. What exactly is MTV trying to tell young viewers about being a Teen Mom?

Photos of the Teen Mom flaunting her new breast augmentation in a neon pink bikini have been circulating, but it's the nude pictures posted by RadarOnline that have really caught everyone's attention.

MTV didn't want her to do it, a source told RadarOnline of Evans' jump from a 34B to a C. But they didn't do anything after she did it.

Evans isn't the first Teen Mom to get a breast augmentation. Both reality stars Maci Bookout and Farrah Abraham have gone under the knife, but the only difference is that the moms didn't release nude photos after.

According to Perez Hilton, the five photos of a nude Evans circulating the web were taken by her (blatantly sleazy) ex-boyfriend, Kieffer Delp. Delp is also responsible for selling the pictures.

The photos of the teen mom pre- and post-boob-job look like obvious attempts for media attention, rather than the more subtly (and poorly attempted) seductive nude photos of another fellow Teen Mom cast member, Amber Portwood.

Even worse is the fact that the teen mom paid $5,000 for the surgery because an ex-boyfriend (Not Kieffer Delp), Gary Head, said she would look better with bigger boobs.

Did MTV raise a monster who is hungry to make a couple quick bucks off some nude pictures?

Perhaps the best thing to say about it is that these irresponsible actions of Evans and her other cohorts display that the show is not really documenting the struggles of young motherhood, but rather the self-destruction of money- and fame-hungry teens.

A source claims that MTV is not happy about big fake boobs, but they have yet to pull the plug on the program.

Has TV gone too far? Does MTV have any shame in airing (and subsequently) promoting the careless and degradation of teen moms?

What do you think?