You know what really makes us want to support a company? When they use the public violation of women's privacy to sell tickets.

Spirit Airlines emailed a "bare fare" promotion to their mailing list today, making light of this weekend's celebrity nude photo leak. Instead of showing compassion for the people whose privacy was breached, someone thought this would be the perfect opportunity to sell some airline tickets.

Don't care how low @SpiritAirlines fares get. Not ever flying with them again when they pull stuff like this: pic.twitter.com/7Cni9Z32pB#p2 — Marc Peters (@rippleofhope) September 3, 2014

In an email titled "Our Selfie Leaked Too..." the company uses the image of a semi-nude woman to promote their "bare fare." The text reads: “We feel naked; you were never supposed to see this Bare Fare! It was meant for a special someone (who isn’t you). Now it’s all over the Internet for you to take advantage of as you see fit.”

A spokesperson for Spirit Airlines told The Huffington Post that the "bare fare" campaign was originally launched in May, referring to their "unbundled" fees. The idea was reused in the tweet and email blast sent today.

"It coincides with a trending news story that's out there... It was not meant to be offensive," he told HuffPost. "Our ads are meant to be different. We acknowledge and accept that some people may not feel the same way."