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Megan Fox is all on board with boyfriend Machine Gun Kelly's foot fetish. She even got a sexy manicure so she could step on his face in their 'My Bloody Valentine' music video.
Megan Fox knows what her boyfriend Machine Gun Kelly ‘s kinks are, and she’s totally supportive of him being a foot kind of guy. The 30-year-old rapper says that his lady has the “most beautiful feet that exist” and wanted her to step on his face when they filmed his “My Bloody Valentine” music video together . Not only was she happy to oblige, she got a manicure in advance knowing about his foot fetish and anticipating his request. You can see MGK discussing Megan and her desirable feet starting at 12:07 in the below video:
MGK — real name Colson Baker — sat down and discussed his various music videos with Teen Vogue . In a video released on July 13, the subject of the couple’s super sexy “MBV” vid came up. The music video was Megan and Colson’s unofficial coming out party after reports that the pair were dating, and it dropped two days after actor Brian Austin Green revealed that his nearly 10 year marriage to Megan was kaput .
“It’s no secret I think feet are beautiful. And I think Megan has the most beautiful feet that exist,” Colson explained with a smile on his face. He then went on to elaborate about the moment in their music video where her feet with red painted toenails smush down upon his cheek, as MGK is shoved against the floor with pink tape across his mouth.
“This was right before we moved the locations in the house to somewhere else. And I was like, ‘Megan, you already know what I’m about to ask you.’ And she was like ‘Yeah, I literally got a pedicure cause I knew you were going to ask me that,'” he revealed. So before they even shot the video, Megan already knew about Colson’s foot fetish! “I was like ‘alright, plop it on,’ he revealed, slapping his cheek where he asked for her foot to be placed. As the below still from the video shows, Megan did exactly as she was asked.
Megan and MGK sent tongues wagging when they were photographed out together celebrating her 34th birthday on May 16, and she was without her wedding ring. Two days later, her BH90210 star husband confirmed that their marriage was over during the May 18 episode of his podcast, …With Brian Austin Green . Then on May 20, Megan and MGK’s “My Bloody Valentine” video dropped, showing off their intense chemistry.
The pair finally made things official by heading out to a Sherman Oaks, CA bar on June 15, where they were photographed holding hands and kissing. They then headed up to a hillside to watch the sunset and have a romantic sushi picnic dinner . Colson wrote on the IG video that he was “In love,” and the pair has been going strong ever since.

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This Foot Does Not Exist should satisfy your foot fetish. If your fetish for feet includes texting a robot that sends you pictures of feet. Feet that appear to be human but are actually created by a GAN neural network system set up for the explicit purpose of sending foot pictures in response to a text. That's it. That's the TL;DR.
It's another piece of engineered chaos from MSCHF , the subversive collective of socially conscious minds with an eye toward chaotic neutral sociology who brought us M-Journal , Blue Donkey and Bull & Moon . MSCHF, with This Foot Does Not Exist once again has created something that pushes the levels of social engineering innovation while remaining absolutely silly.
First, let's address the acronym in the room. What is GAN? It stands for Generative Adversarial Network. In a very flattened explanation, it's two neural networks playing an advanced game of cat & mouse, in order to create better and more recognizable results.
Common uses of GAN networks include image-making and image-recognition. Computer vision for self-driving cars and automatic creation of imitations of paintings or photographs for style transfers are several other uses.
One network strives to create real, identifiable things while the other is working to identify fake things. Naturally, the most obvious use for a GAN is to apply it to the creation and distribution of foot pictures.
If you are searching for the why (or just for the foot pics) then you should probably break out that vat of lubricant and settle in. Like the sweet, musky scent of flip-flops after a day at the beach, feet might seem simple but are as complex as the brains they are eventually attached to. We're talking Bi-Modal content here.
There is a long explanation of this on the This Foot Does Not Exist website, but the most relevant bit is this:
"Because foot pics can operate in two discrete modes of content consumption simultaneously (i.e. they can be memes and nudes simultaneously, in the same public sphere), their perception depends entirely upon the viewer and the context in which the image appears. This results in an unusual economic paradigm by which the foot pic is both highly valuable and almost throwaway — worthless at the same time — and this creates a highly intriguing supply+demand dynamic when creators/consumers fall on different ends of this valuation scale."
It continues, addressing the asymmetrical currency of feet pics:
"Because the foot pic may be devoid of any mainstream pornographic signifiers it is both low barrier to entry and significantly safer to distribute. The production of the picture may, depending entirely upon the person to whom the foot belongs, be essentially valueless in the mind of the producer — and yet the resulting image strongly valued by the right consumer."
The final folder for distribution and subjective consumption contains 100k feet images and 100k sole (as in bottom of feet) images generated off two separate models at 512x512 resolution. Early permutations of the models were trained over several months, burning out several GPUs. Each model took about three to seven days to train in each different data permutation. The result is feet pics generated by a computer. Hence, this foot does not exist.
Generation results from a preliminary sole model.
Not only is this proof of function of a GAN modeling system, but it has that sociological twist that encourages curiosity. Foot pictures are harmless, or they are dirty, dirty, dirty. It completely depends on your own personal bias and point of view. Some people hate their feet, some people put feet in their mouths. Some people don't regard them much at all.
Did we need a neural network to create foot pics from nothing to tell us how we feel about feet? Probably not. Is it something that exists regardless of how we feel about computer generated foot pictures? It does now. What it does suggest, if we remove feet from the equation, is a future of computer generated imagery that will continue to obfuscate what we perceive as reality.
MSCHF Head of Commerce Daniel Greenberg reinforces the subjective nature of the output created here. "Two people should view it," he tells me while wiggling his toes in the air, "and see totally different things. This exemplifies that it’s also just about how obsessed the Internet is with feet."
The internet is obsessed with feet because we are . It's one of the most common fetishes held by humans. People like feet. And if we don't like them in a sexual nature, we love to put polish on them, shoes and so on. We just freaking love feet. So will we love computer generated feet?
We likely won't be able to tell the difference. While early models created some abhorrent mutations of feet, the current output may as well be photographs you took yourself. We're not here to judge. You like feet. You already texted This Foot Does Not Exist for foot pics. It's your fetish, it's your meme. Roll with it.
As the explainer, well, explains, feet are much more than a pornographic currency when used in a visual nature. They could simply be used to convey a sense of geography, a psychological state of mind or simply used to show existence. Think of how many foot pics you see on Instagram on a daily basis? Someone lying with their feet up, on a beach or at home, with some #basic caption expressing their desire and inherent pleasure to no longer be on the feet in view.
On Instagram, #feet has 12.9mm posts; #feetpics has 332k, #prettyfeet has 2.8mm and #feetselfie has 119k. These are just some of the most common foot related hashtags, there are surely thousands of others being used. Now you have to ask yourself — are they all real feet? If they have a face attached to them, probably. But if not, they could be an amalgamation of everything you know about the visual appearance of feet.
But what is real? Is a computer generated picture of a foot not a real picture of a foot even if it's not a real foot that exists in the physical world? Does it matter? Should it? Those are the questions posited by This Foot Does Not Exist . The answers are up to you, and your feet.


*First Published: Dec 4, 2013, 1:12 pm CST

Posted on Dec 4, 2013   Updated on Jun 1, 2021, 12:37 am CDT
Behind even the most innocent-seeming YouTube trends can lurk predators intent on exploiting young kids.
Vocativ reports on YouTube “Feet Dares,” a creepy trend of men, sometimes disguised as fellow tweens, asking tween vloggers to show their soles, suck on their toes, or open a banana with their feet .
But now the kids are fighting back.
“Feet dares” for both male and female tweens have become so pervasive that many make videos specifically to address how they won’t do feet dares. The requests come in innocently enough as suggestions for videos that will give the kids more subscribers and views.
“ The dare exchanges—a sort of play-date for the digital age—are common among kids who find themselves bored after school. But in reality, many of the tweens engaging in challenges aren’t tweens at all; they’re ‘pervs’…on the hunt for a certain kind of child porn,” writes Vocativ.
A channel called YouTube Video Alert made an entire video warning underage vloggers that those asking to see their feet aren’t doing it as an innocent dare, but because of sexual intent.
The challenges seem weird but harmless to the kids, and many in the videos expressed that they didn’t know why someone was inundating their inbox with requests for “foot dares.” One says she won’t show the soles of her feet, but she does demonstrate her flexibility by putting her legs behind her head.
As Vocativ puts it, “a mature eye reveals the stunts are far dirtier than the girls believe.” But some tweens do realize that the requests are coming from “foot fetish people,” as evidenced in the video compilation of complaints below. Some of the kids ID the YouTube usernames of the people who solicit them, then warn other tween vloggers not to answer those messages.
Vocativ reports that YouTube is trying to crack down on “content related to kids and sex” (reluctant to use the term “child porn”) and has cleared out 100,000 queries involving inappropriate videos of children. “Foot Dare” videos specifically are hard to find because many have innocuous titles like “Dares!” or “Dares and Challenges!”
Blocking creeps and pedophiles has been an ongoing battle for YouTube, because offenders often don’t post their own videos or leave the other evidence necessary to file reports against them. If their accounts are eventually taken down by YouTube, they can easily start new ones.
In 2012, the Daily Dot reported on a scammer who solicited underage YouTubers by pretended to represent a modeling agency. He was eventually stopped—not by YouTube, but by the FBI.
H/T Vocativ / Photo via Prio/Flickr
Gaby Dunn is an actress, comedian, and blogger who covered YouTube for the Daily Dot. Since 2016, she’s hosted the podcast ‘Bad with Money,’ and operates a successful YouTube channel. Her writing has appeared in the New York Times, the Boston Globe, Vice, and Salon.
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