This new ad campaign has divided an entire country who don't know whether to applaud or ban it ahead of a visit by the Pope, news.com.au reports.
Lithuania's capital is pressing ahead with controversial plans for a raunchy international advertising campaign that refers to the city as the "G-spot of Europe", despite opposition from the church and central government.
Posters advertising the Baltic country's capital, which are due to appear in Berlin and London from today, show a young woman lying on bed sheets printed with the map of Europe and clutching a handful of cloth where Vilnius is located.
"Nobody knows where it is, but when you find it, it's amazing. Vilnius, the G-spot of Europe," says the advertisement, which is aimed at portraying the city as the continent's undiscovered treasure.
The reference to the elusive erogenous zone has raised hackles in the devoutly Catholic Baltic EU country of 2.9 million people.