Skinniest Teen Porn
🛑 ALL INFORMATION CLICK HERE 👈🏻👈🏻👈🏻
Skinniest Teen Porn
All Titles TV Episodes Celebs Companies Keywords Advanced Search
Fully supported English (United States) Partially supported Français (Canada) Français (France) Deutsch (Deutschland) हिंदी (भारत) Italiano (Italia) Português (Brasil) Español (España) Español (México)
Suggest an edit or add missing content
The Best Movies and Shows to Watch in July
New & Upcoming Superhero Movies and Series
REVENGE Queen said 'Thank goodness Meghan's not coming' to Philip's funeral, book claims
WEDDING SAVERS I ordered an £11 bridesmaid dress off Shein - I can't believe the result
NAKED TRUTH I sunbathe topless in my garden, my neighbours have full view of my boobs
WATER GOOD IDEA Dad shares genius hack to fill up giant paddling pool without a hose
Super-thin models were seen on the Yves Saint Laurent runway at Paris Fashion Week displaying gaunt cheekbones and extreme thigh gaps
THE fashion industry has made strides in recent years to combat its reputation of fetishising waif-like models, and include more diverse body types.
But it appears for all the push towards inclusion that we are STILL seeing skeletal runway models with sunken cheeks, stick-thin legs and knobbly knees.
The debate over the issue was reignited at Paris Fashion Week at the Yves Saint Laurent runway show on Tuesday - which seemed to once again promote malnourished models as the benchmark of beauty.
This was ironically from the label who pledged in 2017 to restrict using super-thin models.
Francois-Henri Pinault, the billionaire chairman of Kering – the parent company behind the likes of YSL, Gucci and Alexander McQueen – said at the time he wanted to “inspire the industry to follow suit”.
But it appears little has changed, if this year’s show is anything to go by.
The YSL runway in particular featured oversized jackets, baggy shorts and gaping boots, which made the worryingly slender-limbed models appear even skinnier in comparison.
Some people refer to particularly skeletal models as “Paris thin”, as there’s a reputation in the industry that the models at PFW are typically thinner than in other shows.
Former Australian Vogue editor Kirstie Clements admitted that when a model had starved herself down two sizes to be cast in international shows she had achieved the “Paris thin” goal.
Kirstie wrote in the Guardian : “This dubious achievement was generally accompanied by mood swings, extreme fatigue, binge eating and sometimes bouts of self-harming.
“All in the quest to fit into a Balenciaga sample.”
It’s not the first time YSL has come under fire in particular.
In 2015 an advert by the fashion company was banned by the UK’s advertising watchdog, the ASA, for using a model who appeared to be unhealthily underweight.
And steps have been taken in the industry as a whole to allegedly prevent the issue of casting malnourished models.
Back in 2017, a new law was passed in France banning the use of unhealthily thin models from the runways.
Models were told they needed to provide a doctor’s certificate as proof of their overall health, including their body mass index (BMI) – which measures their weight in relation to their height.
But while the movement in the industry aims to help beat eating disorders and inaccessible ideals, models are STILL being penalised for being too large.
Just last week, British model Edie Campbell, 28, was told she was “too big” to open a show at Milan Fashion Week.
Taking to Instagram, the 5ft10in model, who has 24-and-a-half-inch waist, joked that by “too big”, she didn’t mean “too famous”, but she was told she was “too fat”.
Size eight to 10 model Edie didn’t name and shame the company in her social media post, which showed her tucking into a “slap up brekkie” in her hotel room.
However, it could easily apply to numerous big labels who continually push waif-like ideals on the runway.
Eating disorder charity, Beat, said it was time clothing companies changed their practices.
The charity’s head of communications, Rebecca Field, told the Daily Mail : “The idealisation of thinness that is often presented by the fashion industry can be a key factor in exacerbating the illness.
"Fashion retailers should recognise and respect the diversity in people's natural body shapes and sizes.
"Eating disorders are serious mental illnesses with multiple causes, so pressure to fit certain size clothes would never be the sole and direct reason for someone developing one."
The backlash comes amid an ongoing debate over models’ weight.
Magazine Cosmopolitan came under fire for “glamorising obesity” after using size-26 model Tess Holliday on their cover.
Fabulous Digital has contacted Yves Saint Laurent for a comment.
Queen said 'Thank goodness Meghan's not coming' to Philip's funeral, book claims
I ordered an £11 bridesmaid dress off Shein - I can't believe the result
I sunbathe topless in my garden, my neighbours have full view of my boobs
Dad shares genius hack to fill up giant paddling pool without a hose
©News Group Newspapers Limited in England No. 679215 Registered office: 1 London Bridge Street, London, SE1 9GF. "The Sun", "Sun", "Sun Online" are registered trademarks or trade names of News Group Newspapers Limited. This service is provided on News Group Newspapers' Limited's Standard Terms and Conditions in accordance with our Privacy & Cookie Policy . To inquire about a licence to reproduce material, visit our Syndication site. View our online Press Pack. For other inquiries, Contact Us . To see all content on The Sun, please use the Site Map. The Sun website is regulated by the Independent Press Standards Organisation (IPSO)
Our journalists strive for accuracy but on occasion we make mistakes. For further details of our complaints policy and to make a complaint please click this link: thesun.co.uk/editorial-complaints/
WhatCulture
About
Team
Advertise
Contact
Feb 17, 2017
Updated: February 17th, 2017
Want to write about
Sibel Kekilli, Sasha Grey, Sunny Leone, Shu Qi and Traci Lords? Get started below...
Company Pages
About Us
Contact Us
Careers
Advertise With Us
Sign Up
© What Culture Ltd. 2022 All Rights Reserved. —
Privacy Policy
While her name may not be as well known as the aforementioned, Qi featured in a very big movie with a certain Jason Statham - yes, in The Transporter. The Taiwanese actress has made a number of mainstream movies since ending her career in pornography - The Transporter and The Eye 2 being the most notable of her work.
While the majority has been Asian films, she's nevertheless successfully made the transition from porn star to mainstream actress in Hollywood. Qi has even won multiple awards for the movies she's been in post-porn. She's been nominated best actress on eight occasions - winning once. Now more synonymous with mainstream work for to the majority now, such flicks like Viva Erotica, Sex & Zen II, while appearing in the Chinese version of Playboy are all now in the past.
Her former co-star from The Transporter, Jason Statham, may be intrigued to check out her previous work had he known about Qi's past. If he's reading this, and it's safe to say he is, the two aforementioned films should be available somewhere. I can't imagine money being an issue with the Hollywood star, so ordering a copy won't break the bank. Preferably, could you buy two as well please?
Crippy Cooke, 23, is a freelance Football Writer contributing to What Culture. He's had work featured on Zoo, MSN, London 24, The Telegraph, The Huffington Post, and was recently named Writer of the Year on FTBpro - while also a nominee for Best Male Blog in the Football Blogging Awards.
8 Movie Plot Twists That Were Hiding In Plain Sight
10 Movies That Had TWO Incredible Villains
10 Movie Endings Darker Than You Remembered
10 Time We Absolutely Believed The Movie Hero Was A Goner
10 Star Wars Secrets Everyone Knows But You
10 Unusual Demands Made By Actors On Recent TV Shows
10 Horror Movie Moments IMPOSSIBLE To Watch Same Way After This Article
Harry Potter Or Friends Quiz: Who Said It - Ron Weasley Or Joey Tribbiani?
Thor: Love & Thunder Review - 5 Ups & 5 Downs
9 Movie Characters You Didn't Realise Didn't Die
Delivering passionate and comprehensive entertainment coverage to millions of users world-wide each month. Seen on Sky News; featured in The Guardian, NY Times, The Independent and more. 40,000+ articles posted by thousands of contributors spanning the entire cultural spectrum.
Katrina Pornstar
Shemales Espana
Filled Panties