Nadia Facesitting

Nadia Facesitting




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Nadia Facesitting
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News presenter forgets she's sitting at a glass desk and gives viewers an eyeful on live TV
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The journalist was sitting at the desk with her legs apart when the camera panned out to reveal the embarrassing wardrobe malfunction live on TV
A news presenter suffered an embarrassing wardrobe malfunction live on TV - when she forgot she was sitting at a glass desk.
Journalist Costanza Calabrese was presenting the late night bulletin on Italian TV channel TG 5 when she gave viewers a bit of an eyeful.
As the 38-year-old starts talking, the camera is zoomed in on her face.
But it soon begins to pan out, to show her full desk, covered in papers as she reads the bulletin.
Unfortunately, what Costanza doesn't seem to realise, is that her desk - being made from glass - shows absolutely everything.
Which meant that the reporter, who was sitting with her legs apart, flashed her knickers to the entire watching audience.
And to make matters worse, the clip has now been uploaded to YouTube, where it has been seen by over 40,000 people.
One viewer wrote: "Poor woman! Surely her producers should have let her know something was up!"
Another added: "How was her dress so high in the first place?"
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Two women fight at a female fight club in Berlin. Photographer Katarzyna Mazur spent months at the club over the last two years.
A fighter nicknamed Anna Konda prepares herself for a fight.
Anna Konda grapples with a fighter named Lady Naina.
A fighter nicknamed Red Devil, bottom, takes on Belgian wrestler Nadege.
A closeup of Nadege. Mazur tried to get as close to the action as she could.
Anna Konda pushes Lady Naina to the wall.
Red Devil tries on a new outfit. In the background, a fighter named Isi prepares herself for a fight.
Red Devil takes on a Polish wrestler named Sandra.
Story highlights Katarzyna Mazur spent months photographing a female fight club in Berlin "I enjoy exploring new worlds, especially a world which exists in a gray area," Mazur said
There are no official rules to this female fight club. The fighters are both beginners and professionals, anywhere from age 20 to 50, said photographer Katarzyna Mazur , who spent months documenting the club in 2013 and 2014.
Led by founders nicknamed Anna Konda and Red Devil, a match might pit a bodybuilder against a martial arts master. They can wrestle, throw punches or "cat fight." There's no judge, just someone who knows the parameters they've decided for the match. The small audience is mostly made up of men, but it's a place for women to shed the roles they play outside.
"When I saw this kind of fighting for the first time, I was quite shocked. I had never seen something like that before, and it was really interesting to experience all of this so close," said Mazur, who photographed the fight club as part of her work toward graduation from photography school. "Inhibition and fear do not exist on the mat."
At first, Mazur said, she shot the fight club in color, but the look of the blue mat and neon lights didn't satisfy her. She shifted to black-and-white images and reduced her point of view, getting as close as she could to the action.
"It was not easy to work like that, because the matches were going very quickly and were unpredictable," she said, although fighters were respectful and would stop if someone was seriously hurt. "I had to be very careful not to get hit. Fortunately, there are chairs on the side, so I could jump on them if the female fighters suddenly rolled under my feet."
For all the aggression built into fighting, Mazur said, the project required a lot of sensitivity. She had to work quickly, and she didn't always know her subjects well. The bouts, the motivations, the scene can all leave a lot of room for interpretation. Mazur said she had to examine her own limitations, questioning "How far can I go? Do they trust me? Am I allowed to do that?"
"I enjoy exploring new worlds, especially a world which exists in a gray area," she said.
She also had to remember that the fighters pushing and pummeling inside the club have lives outside, too -- they're mothers, partners, friends. Their actions on the mat might contradict how they live the rest of their lives.
Even years later, the fight club is still running and is "better than ever," Mazur said.
"Very often, I was very moved after seeing and editing the pictures, realizing what exactly happened there," Mazur said. "It is important to always remember my role as a photographer and to always approach the subject with interest and (an open mind)."
Β© 2022 Cable News Network. A Warner Bros. Discovery Company. All Rights Reserved. CNN Sans β„’ & Β© 2016 Cable News Network.
Updated 1426 GMT (2226 HKT) March 16, 2015
(CNN) Under harsh lights in a private, rented room in Berlin, women face each other in violent, sometimes bloody battles of brute strength.
Follow @CNNPhotos on Twitter to join the conversation about photography.
Katarzyna Mazur is a Polish photographer based in Berlin. You can follow her on Facebook .

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