Barely Legal Topless

Barely Legal Topless




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Barely Legal Topless
Published September 26, 2017 4:53pm EDT

By
Stephanie Nolasco , | Fox News
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Sofia Vergara recently turned 45 on July 10th and she’s proudly flaunting her birthday suit.
The “Modern Family” star posed completely nude for Women’s Health’s Naked 2017 issue. And the highest-paid television star in the world claimed flaunting her curves was a breeze.
“I’ve always been very comfortable with my body,” the actress told the magazine . “You know, I’m Latin so we grow up going to the beach in a G-string. I used to do work for the Latin market in my 20s. Like I would do calendar shoots, very sexy and everything. And you know things have changed… how much you take care of yourself is a reality. We all age and you have to embrace it.”
However, Vergara admitted she was a bit nervous about the upcoming photo shoot. Right before, Vergara was filming “Bent” in Rome and “ate like an animal.” She wasn’t exercising and then two days before the shoot, she came home with pneumonia. Looking over at photos of potential poses sent by the creative team also didn’t help.
“They’re all of tall models holding their boobs with one arm,” she said. “But I can barely cover my boobs with two arms — I’m a 32-triple-D! My boobs are real, and I had a baby. If I grab them, I can’t even cover the nipple!”
These days, Vergara is attempting to have a regular fitness routine, but even she gets tempted to stay in bed.
“Like I find any excuse not to do it,” she said. “[I’m] Taking a couple of yoga classes. I’m very bad at it. I don’t have much patience. So I’m always trying to find something that I can do."
She also added, "I don't know if I'm strong. I have bad knees and very thin bones; I can barely do a pushup. I wish I could be a little more athletic, but when you're born with these gigantic boobs... I've had them since I was 13 and they've gotten bigger when I was pregnant and had the baby."
And even though her husband, "Magic Mike" actor Joe Manganiello, is a lifelong athlete, she still can't seem to enjoy any workout sessions, either alone or with her beau.
"It's like torture for me," she explained. "I'm in a bad mood two hours before, I'm in a bad mood while I'm doing it, I'm in a bad mood at the end because I have to schedule the next class."
Vergara did say it’s gotten easier for women like her to proudly embrace their shape in front of cameras.
“It’s not just the Barbie doll on the cover,” she said. “It’s real women. So it’s getting better. I think before it was a little bit more strict to how women were supposed to look... It's not about having muscle or cut abs. I don't have abs because I'm not 'I need to be a fit model with the perfect body.' That would take too much effort!"
The September 2017 issue of Women’s Health hits newsstands August 8.
Stephanie Nolasco covers entertainment at Foxnews.com.
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This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten, or redistributed. ©2022 FOX News Network, LLC. All rights reserved. Quotes displayed in real-time or delayed by at least 15 minutes. Market data provided by Factset . Powered and implemented by FactSet Digital Solutions . Legal Statement . Mutual Fund and ETF data provided by Refinitiv Lipper .



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Before traveling to Nevada, the photographer Marc McAndrews had never been to a brothel. Now he's been to every single one in the state. Over the course of five years, McAndrews made regular trips to Nevada's legal brothels, staying anywhere from a week to a month each time. He stayed in bedrooms in the houses, shared bathrooms with the sex workers, and saw a world that few others have. In 2014, McAndrews shared some photos from his trips inside the brothels with Business Insider. You can see more photos and read amazing stories in his book, "Nevada Rose." Visit Business Insider's homepage for more stories.


When McAndrews began shooting the brothels, he expected them to be seedy and filled with drugs, he told Business Insider. What he found was something completely different.


He started by visiting Moonlite Bunny Ranch, made famous by HBO's "Cathouse" series. When he asked about taking photos, the women thought he was just a nervous customer. He was turned down.


After being turned down by brothels near Carson City, one of the sex workers recommended he try a small town like Elko or Ely, where proprietors might be friendlier.


In Elko, he had his first luck at a "parlor brothel," which, like this one, looks more like a bar. Other brothels are called "lineup brothels," where workers line up when customers enter, McAndrews said.


There are also "city houses," which cater to those wanting a slicker, partygoing atmosphere, and "country houses," which are quieter and friendlier, McAndrews said.


Once inside, customers go to the pay room to withdraw cash for the night.


Carli at Mona's Ranch in Elko was one of the first women he photographed. He stayed at Mona's for five nights and shared a bathroom with the workers.


McAndrews was given free rein to photograph, as long as he had a worker's permission. Of why he stayed at the brothels, he said: "It's a different experience when you wake up in the morning and have to pass the cereal and the milk to your subject."


McAndrews mostly photographed in mornings and afternoons when the brothels were quiet. Because he was shooting with a large-format camera, he would have to pack up when guests arrived, so as not to spook them.


Most of Nevada's brothels are in places far outside of the cities and zoned into specific areas. Often, many occupy the same parking lot.


McAndrews says many of the women have kids and partners. "People's guards go down, and they become more at ease," he said of staying at the brothels. "They start to let you see their world."


The easy stereotypes — drug users, women without families — existed but weren't as prevalent as McAndrews expected, he said.


One woman who McAndrews met was a math teacher in Minnesota during the school year. She said she worked at the Nevada brothels because it was a turn-on, McAndrews said.


The business is often a family affair. In Carlin, "Whorehouse" Charlie and his mom, "Miss Pat," run Sharon's Bar and Brothel together.


This is Ben, the former owner of the Wild West Saloon brothel in Winnemucca, with his father, Art.


Some customers were OK with being photographed. Here, Brett sits with Dimon, a sex worker at the Stardust Ranch in Ely.


McAndrews was able to photograph in every brothel in Nevada, though he said it took a lot of persuading.


The final brothel he had to get access to was the Moonlite Bunny Ranch. He said he had to convince its owner, Dennis Hof, who owned six other brothels, that it was a good idea.


McAndrews told Hof the project was an artistic documentation of the community, not a generic brothel travel guide. Judith Reagan, a publisher and radio host who was friends with Hof, convinced him the project was important.


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Editor's note: A previous version of this article incorrectly said McAndrews had never visited a strip club before beginning the Nevada Rose project. While he had been to some, he disliked them because of "the aggressiveness of the clientele," he said.



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Well, d'uh. The Saved By The Bell graduate's turn in the movie that threatened to end director Paul Verhoeven's career is legendary for the level of skin on show. Whilst Showgirls may have been intended as a cautionary tale about the pursuit of fame, money and acrobatic sex in swimming pools, the real cautionary tale to aspiring actresses was to be a little more cautious in choosing your first leading role than Ms Berkley was - or it may also turn out to be your last leading role.
Of course, one can hardly blame her for jumping at the chance. She landed a role initially earmarked for Drew Barrymore, in the next movie from the writer-director team behind box office smash Basic Instinct - and, as the first studio-backed movie to be made specifically with the NC-17 certificate in mind, it was a clear chance to be part of movie history.
In a sense they succeeded - it's certainly not a movie anyone will forget. Just not quite for the reasons they intended.

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