Cute Teen Dressed Undressed

Cute Teen Dressed Undressed




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Cute Teen Dressed Undressed

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Just when you thought you’d seen every variant of reality television dating shows, SBS comes up with an absolute cracker.
Undressed is the latest series that aims to ‘find love’ for its contestants by creating an environment that cultivates an emotional and physical connection.
Two strangers are placed in a room with a double bed and a television. The television either asks questions or states instructions and the participants follow accordingly.
It’s raw. It’s unscripted. And it’s totally addictive.
Listen to Laura and Tiffany battle it out about why Undressed divided them so strongly on The Binge. 
Host Laura Brodnik was joined by TV critic and former Dolly editor Tiffany Dunk to discuss the show on the first The Binge podcast for 2017.
Tiffany was quick to criticise the show for its inability to capture the awkward nuance of real life dating.
“It was awkward but not in a First Dates sort of way… and that’s what I love about so many of the other dating shows – it’s those relatable moments,” she said.
“This is so forced, so scripted. I just think so unnecessary. I never thought I’d meet a dating show I didn’t love but it turns out Undressed may just be that show for me.”
Laura disagreed with Tiffany’s view and said the show’s inclusive casting and raw conversations were a breath of fresh, realistic air.
“I found it incredibly truthful because they had people from all different walks of life, and sexuality and race and background. They’d all come on this show to have these really honest conversations.” she said.
“I felt like I learned so much from these people and I wasn’t expecting that.”
“This one woman’s saying, ‘I’m a single mother and I’ve had this terrible journey with love’ and then a picture flashed up on the screen of her and her mother and her mother had died and I just felt – I was nearly in tears!”
Tiffany once again disagreed, and pointed out how such reveals were simply the result of clever production rather than true honesty.
"I don't know how honest or organic any of that was and I think that's my problem with it," she said.
"I thought being told to kiss and being told to talk about racism - you know, it's not organic... I hope I never have to watch that show again... and I'll watch anything."
Agree? Disagree? Give it a go at the very least.
You can watch the first four episodes of Undressed on SBS's online portal SBS ON DEMAND .
To find out about all the incredible new TV shows you should be watching, listen to The Binge. 
To subscribe to The Binge in iTunes go to apple.co/mamamia where you'll find all of our shows in one place and any books written by the many Mamamia guests.






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Published: 20:36 BST, 2 June 2014 | Updated: 22:45 BST, 2 June 2014
These are the 'too-short' shorts that caused administrators at a Montreal high school to kick student Lindsey Stocker off campus.
Stocker donned the jean shorts To Beaconsfield high school on the first hot day of the season, and was temporarily suspended when she refused to change.
The grade 11 girl is seen wearing the controversial shorts for the first time, in pictures published by the Montreal Gazette .
'Too short': These are the denim shorts that got Montreal teen Lindsey Stocker suspended from school
Stocker unwittingly started a revolution by refusing to change out of a pair of shorts, when she was told they were not appropriate for school on May 21.
She refused, and instead printed a poster that she plastered over the school, questioning why girls' bodies were the focus of the rules instead of boys' behavior.
During third period on that day, two vice principals entered her classroom and told everyone to stand up so their outfits could be inspected .
'And when they came to me after about two rows of looking they stopped and told me my shorts were too short and I had to change,' Stocker told the National Post .
Get shorty: Lindsey Stocker says she was humiliated in front of her class for wearing a pair of shorts on a hot day
'They continued to tell me would be suspended if I didn't start following the rules. When I told them I didn't understand why I had to change they told me that it doesn't matter - I don't have to understand the rules, I just have to comply by them.'
Stocker felt singled out and humiliated in front of her class, but what concerned her more was a set of rules that focused on girls' bodies rather than boys' behavior.
So instead of complying with the rules, she went and printed up about 20 posters and stuck them up all over the school.
The posters read, 'Don't humiliate her because she's wearing shorts. It's hot outside. Instead of shaming girls for their bodies, teach boys that girls are not sexual objects.'
Statement: Although Stocker's poster only remained up for about 10 minutes before teachers took it down, it had the desired effect
Support: Stocker has had strong support on social media and other girls at her high school are wearing shorts to school in solidarity
The posters were taken down by teachers after about 10 minutes, but they live on in social media.
Stocker also has won the support and admiration of other girls at school.
'Most people are agreeing with her, women shouldn’t have to cover themselves up completely because we shouldn’t be viewed as sexual objects,' student Sierra Drolet told CJAD News .
Lauren Paquay, 15, showed up wearing shorts in support of Stocker. She said the dress code verification - making girls stand up with their arms by their sides to ensure their outfits are fingertip length - is 'humiliating.'
School rules: The school district spokesperson says there are dress rules for both girls and boys
'People are being judged for the way they dress, they have to change because boys look at them. The boys should be the ones who have to learn to treat women better and look at them in a different light,' she told CBC .
The chairperson of the Lester B Pearson School Board told CJAD News that Stocker has been suspended for not following the rules.
'The rules are there to help the children learn and prepare them for their future work places, high school is a job for them, they are there to learn to function in society, so it’s important that the rules be followed,' Susanne Stein Day says.
'Girls and boys have rules on dress codes; it is not a girl, boy thing, that’s not the point.'
'I was in violation for showing my legs,' she says. 'And that, point blank, is a problem for me.'
The comments below have been moderated in advance.

The views expressed in the contents above are those of our users and do not necessarily reflect the views of MailOnline.

We are no longer accepting comments on this article.
Published by Associated Newspapers Ltd
Part of the Daily Mail, The Mail on Sunday & Metro Media Group

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You probably wear sweatpants to finals. Meanwhile, several art students at University of California, San Diego have a very specific finals dress code: their birthday suits. But get your mind out of the gutter -- there's absolutely nothing sexual about it.
For the class "Visual Arts 104A: Performing the Self," professor Ricardo Dominguez asks students to perform a nude gesture, called their "erotic self," as part of their final. The course's official description says it uses "autobiography, dream, confession, fantasy, or other means to invent one's self in a new way." Performing naked is part of that, and if students don't participate, they risk failing the course entirely -- though Dominguez says alternative assignments are possible.
"Nudity has been and is a core part of the history of performance art/body art from the 20th century to now ... If students are to learn about performance art as practitioners, this history of the medium is crucial for them to experience in a direct way," Dominguez wrote to MTV News in an email. "It is not just a matter of reading about it or viewing slides."
One student's mom was very, very concerned at this curriculum, ABC affiliate 10News reported Saturday (May 9). She claimed her daughter wasn't aware of the nudity assignment at the start of the course, and her outrage became a viral news story.
"It bothers me, I'm not sending her to school for this," the mother anonymously told 10News . "To blanket say you must be naked in order to pass my class... It makes me sick to my stomach."
MTV News went straight to the source -- the class's professor and several of his students -- to get the stripped-down (sorry) truth.
Students confirm they knew about the nudity assignment in advance.
Brooke Kesinger, Lisa Korpos and Vincent Wesley Lin, all seniors in Dominguez's class, tell us they were fully aware of the course's nudity component at the beginning of the semester, if not earlier. It was also included on the syllabus.
"There were rumors about the 'nude' gesture floating around the art department several weeks before the course had even begun ... Professor Dominguez discussed the criteria of all the required performances during the first week of the quarter," Korpos wrote in an email. "His expectations were made abundantly clear ... I knew what I was signing up for."
Dominguez has taught at UCSD since 2004. This performance class has been around for over a decade, but no student has ever issued a complaint about the final assignment.
Not cool with dropping your pants? No prob. The class is 100% optional.
On Monday (May 11), Dr. Jordan Crandall, Chair of the Visual Arts Department at UCSD, clarified in a statement to 10News , "Removing your clothes is not required in this class. The course is not required for graduation." UCSD art students who aren't comfortable with Dominguez's class can opt to take a different upper division course to fulfill the same credit requirements for their major.
In his email to us, Dominguez wrote that he offers an alternative assignment for the "erotic self" gesture in case a student who chooses to take his class isn't comfortable stripping down: "I have always been willing to work with students to help them navigate the process, during my office hours and in the context of the class. Our advising team is also very willing to discuss the options for doing the performance without having to be actually nude/naked."
Dominguez didn't give us specific details about the alternative assignment -- one of his students wrote that she never heard him mention the possibility of an alternative assignment in class -- but the course is about more than just being naked, say both the professor and his students.
"[The] nudity requirement isn't necessarily a literal one," Korpos wrote. "Nudity can refer to
vulnerability -- an expression of one's most honest self. Clothes can most certainly stay on. Some students choose to interpret nakedness literally, but it's certainly not forced upon them."
For a different assignment, Korpos explained, "All 15 of us willingly blindfolded ourselves, and we sat huddled together, sharing these hauntingly honest tidbits of our respective histories. Each confession was more stirring or powerful than the one before. ... I think it may have been the most awe-inspiring 10 minutes I’ve ever spent on campus."
Many of the course's students are actually used to performing naked.
In order to take Dominguez's class, they had to complete a prerequisite course that also included nudity in its syllabus.
"The class ['Introduction to Art-Making: Motion and Time-Based'] is an intro class to performance," Lin explained. "My particular TA pushed us very hard to make powerful gestures, and so I had been nude twice in my class before. It in fact helped me to be more comfortable and 'out' with my sexuality as a gay male."
But not every student at the school is thrilled about the "erotic self" assignment. Amanda Fitzmorris, chair of the College Republicans at UCSD, spoke to Fox and Friends about her concerns on Tuesday (May 12).
"We're a publicly funded institution and I believe that the taxpayers should have a say of some sort over this kind of adult-themed course," Fitzmorris said. She also mentioned that Dominguez himself participates in the final, too -- meaning he is naked alongside his students.
Yes, the professor is naked, too...
Which sounds weird AF, though one student in the class says it would be even weirder if he weren't naked.
"I think it's only fair that he intends to put himself through the same potential awkwardness or discomfort that he's asking of his students," Korpos wrote. "There are about 15 of us, so it would be strange if he were the only one to choose to remain clothed."
...but there's (probably) nothing illegal about this.
We asked Daniel Perlman , a criminal defense attorney based in California, to break down the legal implications of the course and its nudity requirement.
"From a criminal perspective, a lewd act ... would require that the action taken was for sexual gratification, meaning that this teacher was telling these students to take off their clothes because it satisfied some sexual desire on his part," Perlman explained over the phone. "It really doesn’t seem like that."
"This is not a sexual thing," Kesinger, one of the students, tells us. "This is a natural thing. So much of performance art is done in the nude, so to restrict yourself, to restrict your canvas of art making, is to sell yourself short of what may be needed to get a point across to an audience."
The only way Dominguez's course could cross into criminal territory, Perlman said, would be if a minor under the age of 18 -- say, a freshman who graduated high school early -- were naked in front of their older peers. But Kesinger confirmed that freshmen cannot take the course unless they receive a special prerequisite waiver from UCSD's Visual Arts Department; it's an advanced course intended for upperclassmen.
“I just don’t see the criminal angle here," Perlman said. "I would be very surprised if anything criminal was even investigated in this."
Clothes on or off, Dominguez's students believe the course inspires confidence.
All of the students we interviewed from the class say they've gained artistic experience both professionally and personally thanks to the unique curriculum.
"There's a lot of media focus on the 'nude' gesture, but nobody has slowed down for even a moment to consider what else we have been doing," Korpos wrote. "Every single student came out of that class with a deep sense of empathy, understanding, and care for their fellow classmates."
© 2022 Viacom International Inc. All Rights Reserved. MTV, EMA and all related titles, logos and characters are trademarks of Viacom International Inc.

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