Alicesey Suicide Nude

Alicesey Suicide Nude




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Alicesey Suicide Nude


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Since launching in 2001, the Suicide Girls website has become the place to go if you want to look at ultra hot, alternative punk girls posing provocatively. While tame in comparison to other nude sites which have become a common place on the net, Suicide Girls manages to maintain eroticism that is tastefully done without slipping into the hardcore porn category. Tattoos, piercings, geeky t-shirts and sexy cosplayers, these girls are what every teenager on the fringe of what is accepted as popular culture, dreams of one day going out with. With over 5 million visitors a month, there is clearly a fan base that is ready to part with hard cash to look at naked alt girls. Such is the demand, the brand now encompasses DVD's, nationwide tours and comic books. There are currently over 2500 girls on the website and it gets 1000 applications a week from hopefuls applying to become a Suicide Girl. The appeal is obvious with many raising their profiles and launching successful modeling careers from appearing on the site. Out of the ones that have made it onto the Suicide Girls website, here are 33 we class as the most beautiful Suicide Girls of all time.

33. Jeyden

Jeyden is a 21 year old professional model from Bordeaux, France. With her supermodel looks, its no wonder she gets booked to travel all over the world. The only thing we don't understand is why she's listed Jason Statham as an artist she admires on her profile, we will assume she's joking. 32. Lockhart

The 23 year old archeological student is a total geek, something we very much approve off. As well as being a bookwork and artist, she lists Assassins Creed, Borderlands and the Final Fantasy series as her video games of choice. Lockhart also claims to buy all her sex toys at the hardware shop. We would love to see what she can do with a shovel or a bag of cement. 31. Blur

21 year old Blur is from Chilli and her Latin background makes her stand out. She is apparently a trainee hairdresser who is a dog lover, stoner and a fan of sushi. But bad luck boys if you thought you might be able to chat her up while she does your hair, she's in an exclusive relationship with her boyfriend.



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Like your girls with an edge? Then you will absolutely love these beautiful Suicide Girls.

Child of the 80's. Brought up on Star Trek, Video Games and Schwarzenegger, my tastes evolved to encompass all things geeky.
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And how the site changed what's beautiful online
By Kasia Mychajlowycz Published: Oct 8, 2013
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On the current spectrum of Internet porn, Suicide Girls ' photos of beautiful young women with tattoos, piercings, and wild hair stripping slowly are downright demeure. You'll see more anatomy on HBO. But, with five million unique visitors per month and a lively brand spread over every social network, Suicide Girls' model of tasteful nudes, a subscription-only website, and lots of model-fan interaction has endured through a decade of the web's shifting sands. Now Suicide Girls has relaunched its website and is reviving its live burlesque tour, slated to hit 46 cities starting Friday.
"When we started celebrating tattooed and alternative-looking women being beautiful, the majority of what you saw in pop culture was Gap models and Pamela Anderson. Barbie-doll types were the sort of women heralded as being beautiful," says Suicide Girls founder Missy Suicide when asked what influence she thinks her company has had on the wider culture. "Today there are so many actresses and fashion models who have tattoos and who don't fit into the mold of mainstream beauty, and I like to think Suicide Girls had a little bit to do with that."
(Watch above: a teaser of the Suicide Girls' burlesque show rehearsals posted on Instagram.)
The relaunch updates the website's look to a more Tumblr-like format (though expect a few delays and missing components while they work out the bugs), and Missy promises a similar update for the Blackheart Burlesque Tour . "Our routines aren't the feather boa, 'Hey big spender' type you think of when you think of burlesque," she says. "Ours has modern music and references to pop culture, but the show is still in the same sexy spirit of old burlesque in the same way that the website's photographs are homages to the classic pinup, but they're with modern girls with piercings and tattoos."
In honor of these developments, we asked Missy to name her top five Suicide Girls, a tough task, she says, since there are more than 2,500 of them. Here they are:
Missy says that many Suicide Girls also staff the company's office, like Moon, a model coordinator who also models. Moon is light on tattoos, though she looks no less tough for it.
The new girl, Bricksie became a Suicide Girl this year and stars in the burlesque show (there are many "hopefuls" on the website who vie for the attention it takes to become an official Suicide Girl). "Her dancing is awesome and her look embodies Suicide Girls," says Missy.
A sweetheart face framed by hair that seems to change color every other week, she also has some fire-eating skills that we all hope she brings to the live stage.
A veteran of the 2006 burlesque tour, Razzi's been working on her dancing skills and maintaining her extraordinary flexibility for the upcoming performances.
Another staffer, Tristyn provides subscribers with customer support. And, of course, her photos.
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In entertainment, an awful lot of stuff happens behind closed doors, from canceling TV shows to organizing music festival lineups. While the public sees the end product on TVs, movie screens, or radio dials, they don’t see what it took to get there. In Expert Witness , The A.V. Club talks to industry insiders about the actual business of entertainment in hopes of shedding some light on how the pop-culture sausage gets made.
When Suicide Girls launched in 2001, it changed the face of pornography. No longer was the web solely full of busty blondes. Suicide Girls championed the alterna-girl with tattoos, disheveled hair, and tons of black eyeliner. They didn’t have to be super skinny, super tan, or super busty—they just had to be themselves and be willing to be photographed nude.
Almost 13 years later, there are nearly 2,600 actual Suicide Girls, all of whom have contributed to the more than 5 million nudie pics on the site. More than 6 million people like SG on Facebook, and more than a million follow the site on Instagram. There’s no word on how many people actually pay the $12 a month or $48 a year to get unlimited access to the site, but according to stats provided by SG, about 5 million unique visitors—51 percent of whom are women—click on the site every month.
A.V. Club commenter Mrs. Langdon Alder has been Suicide Girl Morgan Suicide (spoiler alert: That’s not her real last name.) since 2002. She reached out to The A.V. Club to tell her story, and since we’re as interested in boobs and pay structures as anyone, we decided to take her up on the sexy, sexy offer.
The A.V. Club: How did you become a Suicide Girl?
Morgan Suicide: I joined the site around April of 2002, so it was pretty soon after it started. I think it started in September of 2001.
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If I remember right, I discovered it because there was a thread about the site on the old Bust magazine forums that don’t exist anymore. Someone posted a picture of SG Marie, and I was fascinated by her. So I went, looked, and decided to join. My boyfriend at the time was like, “You should totally see if they want a tattooed model.” You have to understand, it is really hard to become a Suicide Girl now from what I understand. You have to have an amazing photo set that you spend money to do, and it’s just a rigorous process at this point. But for me, I just emailed Missy, who was the person you contacted at the time, asked if she was interested, sent along a photo that my boyfriend took on his crappy digital camera, and was a Suicide Girl. It took me a week. My first couple of photo sets were taken on that same crappy digital camera.
I think any girl who is a model now would say, “That’s completely unfair; it took me a year,” but it was a quick process. It’s hard to tell, but I was something like the 70th SG.
AVC: What was it about Suicide Girls that appealed to you?
MS: At the time, I was into very third-wave feminism and thought it would be an empowering thing to do. And it was. I’m not bashing my 19-year-old self here, but I was drawn to the idea of doing something liberating. It’s also an ego boost for sure.
I think it continues to interest me, because of the people. It’s become a really cool community over the years. I’ve met a lot of amazing people and had a lot of amazing opportunities. For example, the owner of the site, Sean, at one point, introduced me to Richard Fick, who is an Australian guy who owns a bunch of websites where they do similar kind of stuff. He does I Shot Myself and Beautiful Agony , and a site that’s most like SG called Abby Winters . I started doing photos for I Shot Myself and, after doing that for about a year, I went out to Australia, because they paid me to model for them. That was all through SG.
I haven’t done a SG photo set in a while, and I’m not sure if I ever will again, but I’d never leave the community behind.
AVC: Are you allowed to ask to have your photos taken down?
MS: They do that in rare occasions. Usually, a girl isn’t interested in being on the site anymore and they archive her, which means she is moved to a different section. They can remove her profile information, or something like that, so they can just leave a skeleton, but it’s very rare that they take a photo down.
The last time I can remember that happening was when a girl did a bunch of sets on a semi-Nazi-themed set. It had pedophilia suggestions, and people protested so much. She threw enough of a hissy that there’s no record of her anymore on the site.
They don’t usually take down pictures. Any time you sign a lawful agreement with almost any even kind of small-time photographer, you will find boilerplate text about how they will own your photos forever. And they can do whatever they want with them.
AVC: You’re obviously totally fine with having your pictures out there, but could there be women who think, “I didn’t have a family 10 years ago, and now this is embarrassing”?
MS: I think there are a lot of girls who start, especially when they’re younger, and don’t realize, for example, that those photos could end up other places.
AVC: Right click, and you’ve got a screenshot.
MS: There have definitely been a lot of instances where I’ve seen someone be like, “This ended up on another site, how did this happen?” And I’m like, “Well, that’s kind of what you signed up for.” One good thing is that I think a lot of girls who try and model now are part of the community first, so they have more awareness about it and they’ll talk about it plenty.
A lot of sites also have Flash now, so it’s harder to save pictures.
AVC: What does it mean to you to be a Suicide Girl?
MS: Some of it reminds me of what I think about being on any website I’ve been on for a long time. It’s being around people that are like-minded. It’s a lot of people who are alternative. There are a lot of people who are arty and very snarky people, and being a part of that, I guess that’s what being an SG is to me. I’m a part of that group of people that all get along based on our shared love of nerdy things and boobs and tattoos.
AVC: That’s how you originally came together, but you stayed together for other reasons.
MS: Exactly. And, you know, I’ll be honest here: I haven’t done a photo set in a while, and I’m not particularly active anymore. With the redesign I find it hard to navigate, but I would never leave, because I get a free subscription to see naked ladies.
AVC: Speaking of that: Do you guys get paid for the photo shoots?
MS: It’s changed a lot over the years. I believe when I got my first photo set, I was paid something like $50 and a T-shirt, which I still have. It was a really cute baseball tee. It’s torn to shit, but I keep it in my closet, because I never want to let it go.
But it’s changed. They went from that to $100 to $200, and I believe they pay $1,000 now, but don’t quote me on that. It’s something around $1,000, though. It’s a lot.
AVC: But you have to lay out all the money for your own shoot?
MS: Yeah, unless you’re in one of the areas where they have an official photographer. Back when I was doing it, there were two official photographers, and they were all in Portland, [Oregon] where it started. So, unless you could get out there, you had to take your own photos. Even then you had to spend some money for your clothing and that kind of thing. If you couldn’t use someone official, you had to hire a photographer, unless you knew someone who is really good and who would work for free. There’s a lot more to it; you have to have an interesting location. Even if it’s a bedroom set, it has to be amazingly well shot, and you probably have to dress really well. There are girls who hire people to do their makeup and hair all the time.
AVC: If you’re going to be on the Internet forever, you want to look your best.
MS: Exactly. I ended up pretty lucky. When I started off, they didn’t mind that I had a boyfriend taking pictures. Later on I was friends with one of their official photographers, so we would shoot sets together because we were buddies. Up until the last photo set I took, I didn’t have to buy anything except for maybe an outfit.
AVC: Do they give you direction? Do they say, “No dudes,” or anything like that?
MS: They had a frequently-asked-question thing about that when I started, but I know it’s expanded quite a bit. The obvious requirement is that they require full nudity, and that you should have a certain percentage of your set have full nudity. You can’t just have the last 10 pictures out of a 60-picture photo set show you naked, that kind of thing. There are some themes they won’t allow, like I said before.
They don’t encourage anything particularly hardcore like penetration or toys. For a while, they’d send out trend reports like, “This is what we’ve seen a lot of, this is what we’d like to see less of, we’ve seen too many sets on a very pretty bed, there are too many couch sets,” that kind of thing. But mostly they tend to let people get pretty creative, so it works out pretty well.
I’m trying to think of the most unique one I’ve seen. There was an underwater one at one point, which was really cool. They did a Fight Club one with a dozen different girls. There’s been a lot of really unique stuff.
AVC: You were writing blog entries for them, too. Were you getting paid for that?
MS: Oh no. Most of the stuff was, “If you’re interested and have some free time, go ahead and submit stuff.” I was playing those games anyway, so I thought it was really fun to do.
Also, for a while, I updated their newswire. They don’t do that anymore, but they’d have community people go in and look through all the submitted posts and make sure they were proofread and schedule when they’d go up and that sort of thing. That was more volunteer stuff.
Pretty much, at this point, you have to be near their headquarters to be paid to work for them, unless you’re a photographer.
AVC: If people are paying to subscribe, then you should be sharing in that wealth. You should be getting paid.
MS: I’ve been on the site for so long, and seeing my name show up on their newswire is really cool. These things also take like half an hour to write.
But no matter what you’re doing, if you’re working, it’s best to get paid for it. It seems like, with the redesign, they’re focusing on featured blogs and featured photos, and those featured blog girls are already getting paid for the featured blog or featured photos.
AVC: Did you ever get recognized? Did you go on the Suicide Girls tour?
MS: I’ve been to tons of SG parties that people would hold in their homes and stuff like that. I went to the Reading Tattoo Con one year and sat at a booth. I wasn’t part of their burlesque tour as a dancer, but one year I was their tip girl, which was fun. I got to get into the show for free and hang around the girls a little bit backstage, which was cool. I’ve done two Wizard World Chicago stage things, which was fun because you get to meet girls you’ve talked to for quite a while and hang out with them all day. I’ve never been recognized on the street, but I’ve had plenty of, “Oh, Morgan is here!” when I would go to a SG party.
AVC: That’s your actual name, right? Some people use aliases.
MS: Yeah. When I sent my initial email to Missy and she responded, I asked to be Merricat just because one of my favorite books has always been We Have Always Lived In The Castle . She was like, “I like the name Morgan so much. Can
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