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American gymnast Katelyn Ohashi strips off for ESPN Body Issue
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Published: 17:46 BST, 3 September 2019 | Updated: 19:55 BST, 3 September 2019
Gymnast Katelyn Ohashi has posed nude for ESPN's September Body Issue, which will be the magazine's final printed issue as it moves towards a digital platform for readers. 
The 22-year-old Seattle, Washington, native went viral on social media in January after competing 2019 Collegiate Challenge for her team — University of California , Los Angeles. Her performance on the floor earned her a perfect 10 and stunned fans around the world. 
Now Katelyn is making her appearance in ESPN's iconic Body Issue alongside other accomplished athletes —including U.S. Women's National Soccer Team star Kelley O’Hara and NBA point guard Chris Paul. 
Work it: Gymnast Katelyn Ohashi has posed nude for ESPN's September Body Issue, out on newsstands Wednesday 
Focused: The 22-year-old Seattle native went viral in January for her floor routine during the 2019 Collegiate Challenge
Incredible talent: She earned a perfect 10 for her high-powered performance on the mat, and it garnered her internet fame
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Behind-the-scenes shots show the gymnast leaping around the room and demonstrating perfect splits mid-air, all while in the bare nude. 
These poses will appear in the final print of the September Body Issue published by ESPN annually, and will be out on newsstands Wednesday. 
The annual issue aims to celebrate the achievements of individual athletes while also showcasing their toned frames. 
Katelyn earned the honor from ESPN after she went viral in January for the second time with her high-powered floor routine during the 2019 Collegiate Challenge. 
The gymnast, who has since retired from the sport after finishing her final year with the UCLA Bruins women's gymnastics team — which she competed on for four years while attending the college. 
Posing nude for ESPN is a big deal for Katelyn, who has previously spoken about issues she has overcome with body shamers online.  
Stunning: Behind-the-scenes shots show Katelyn leaping through the air and posing in water for the new issue 
Impeccable skills: Posing nude for ESPN is a big deal for Katelyn, who has previously spoken about issues she has overcome with body shamers online
Katelyn opened up about her struggles with her body image when speaking to CNN earlier this year. Some of the body problems sparked after she went viral on social media for her fun floor routines because she was subjected to a number of shameful comments about her figure. 
'I feel like, a lot of times, I've felt alone when I was going through all this stuff,' Katelyn told CNN in August. 
'Social media portrays one side of a person that they don't mind you seeing, but the other parts are hidden and not so openly talked about.
'And so being that person that welcomes every person that doesn't feel "normal" — or whatever that means right — with open arms and make them feel like they're not the only people. Because, trust me, everyone's going through their own things.'
Katelyn has used her platform to address body issues with the public to hopefully help other people going through similar struggles. 
Killing it: Katelyn went viral for her infamous floor routine in January. While she received an insane amount of praise, the gymnast admitted she also had people rudely commenting about her body 
Accomplished: Katelyn's appearance in ESPN's Body Issue comes as the publication announced a change to its issue, instead focusing its efforts on the digital platform
Recently, she accepted two ESPY's awards — Best Play and Viral Sports Moment — and used her time onstage to address people who chose to body shame others on social media.  
'Being able to help people is what I strive for,' Katelyn said about that moment. 'They always say, "those 15 minutes of fame," right? I've managed to elongate my time from one gymnastics video, which is really amazing to see.
'And continuing to spread this positive message to other people that might be struggling or need to hear exactly what I've been through.'  
Katelyn's appearance in ESPN's Body Issue comes as the publication announced a change to its print issues, instead focusing efforts on the digital platform. 
The magazine intends for the September issue to be its last but is considering exploring 'differentiated print formats' for big series, Ad Week reports.   
'Our data shows the vast majority of readers already consume our print journalism on digital platforms, and this approach will maximize our reach and impact,' ESPN said in a statement.  
Someone please explain how this helps her body ima...
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Warning: nudity ahead in the loveliest way.
Toronto's Now magazine has released its annual Love Your Body Issue , and once again it's a beautiful ode to the skin we live in.
As in years past , a group of locals posed nude and talked about their relationship with their bodies after a tumultuous year. They talk about body hair, colonialism, gender expression, and the fraught pursuit for perfection.
The magazine used just six models this year (fewer than usual) due to COVID-19, and you can read about how photographers shot the images safely here .
"Posing for Love Your Body is about creating space for other people to be inspired, to have somebody see a face that looks like theirs," she told Now .
"There’s only one story of Indigenous women and two-spirited people that’s usually told in the media: one of tragedy and victimhood. We need to hear other stories of Indigenous people and Indigenous queer folk."
"I was fortunate that my mom was a tomboy and I lived with brothers, so I wasn’t modeled after a lot of super-feminine behavior. Whenever I would do anything feminine, I got a lot of attention," she said.
"I remember feeling really uncomfortable trying feminine things, and I felt like it was inherently sexual and felt pressure to perform a certain gender identity. I just wanted the freedom to be able to try things and try different gender presentations without getting comments on it."
"I also believe that taking care of your body is a requirement in the work of dismantling injustices and building movements. We are bombarded every day by the unrelenting forces of capitalism, white supremacy and colonialism," he said.
"Having a strong base (weightlifting), good heart and lungs (cardio) and healthy mind (sleep, therapy, meditation) are vital in order to meet these forces head-on. In that way, being kind to, and mindful of, your body — loving your body — becomes a deeply radical and revolutionary act of love and justice."
"We live in a world where life is harder if you’re overweight. When I was at my thinnest I was treated better, I got better customer service. But I can kill myself to lose weight or I can just live my life and focus on being true to who I am and connecting with people in ways that feel authentic," she said.
"In the future, I will lose weight and I will gain weight. But that no longer has permission to change how I feel about myself."
"I’m Black and brown, and people often are like, 'What are you?' So this racial ambiguity feels tied up in or similar to the gender ambiguity," they said.
"I realized that striving toward ambiguity is toxic because it’s just reinforcing the same thing. Now I’m saying that there’s masculine and feminine on two ends and then nonbinary is supposed to land squarely in the middle of that, encompassing both or something, but that’s just not how it is at all. We need to see more representation of nonbinary people in order to have more concrete representation of this anti-ambiguity nonbinary existence."
"I’ve probably regressed in the last five or six years. I got a tattoo, I got my ear pierced, things I always wanted to do. Maybe I don’t want to get old?" he said.
"But I feel the freedom to be more self-expressive than I have in the past. I don’t think of somebody being elderly until they’re in their 80s. I think attitudes are changing ever so slowly."
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By Antoinette Bueno







7:00 AM PDT, August 2, 2017





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Sofia Vergara is feeling body confident!
The 45-year-old Modern Family actress recently posed nude for Women's Health 's Naked Issue, looking undeniably gorgeous on the September cover. In the accompanying interview, Vergara gets candid about how her body has changed through the years, the work she puts in to maintain her famous physique and why her husband, Joe Manganiello, appreciates her for being herself.
Vergara says posing naked for Women's Health was especially important to her because of the message it's sending.
"Here's a woman, 45, being able to show her body," she points out. "It's not like before, when it was just young girls who would make the cover of a magazine."
Though Mangianello, of course, had some thoughts.
"Joe's like, 'F**k, you're going to be naked in everything now? Why?'" she says with a laugh, referencing a steamy shower scene in her upcoming spy thriller, Bent .
Vergara has no problem getting candid about aging in Hollywood.
"I'm 45. Even if you want to, at this time in your life, you can't be perfect," she explains. "It's not that you hate it, or that you're upset about it, but it is our reality. We're changing. I see it happening to me. I want to look my age, but I want to look great. I think if you are obsessed with this 'I want to look younger' thing, you're going to go crazy."
"People say, 'Oh, you look like you're in your 20s.' Well, it's not true," she adds. "Our skin is different. I had never thought of the word pore, then I'm like, 'Sh**! What do I do with these?'"
Another topic Vergara isn't shy about is her bra size.
"I can barely cover my boobs with two arms -- I'm a 32-triple-D!" she says when noting why most nude magazine poses won't work for her. "My boobs are real, and I had a baby. If I grab them, I can't even cover the nipple!"
The actress is accepting of her body, including that she'll never have six-pack abs. But she does strive to eat healthy, and works out with a trainer three or four times a week using the Megaformer, an advanced Pilates machine.
"Joe built a very nice gym in the house, so I don't have any excuses," she admits. "It's not about having muscle or cut abs. I don't have abs because I'm not 'I need to be like a fit model with a perfect body.' That would take too much effort!"
"It's like torture for me," she later admits about exercising. "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."
But if there's one thing she does love, it's looking her best for any occasion. Vergara admits she almost always wears lipstick, even if she's at home by herself.
"One of the first things Joe told me when we started dating was, 'I like how you're always very well put together,'" she reveals. "He said, 'I've had girlfriends that are all day long prancing around the house in sweats, no makeup…' I'm not saying that's bad; it's great. For good or worse, it's the way I grew up: Accept yourself but also be better than yourself."
ET spoke to Vergara last month at the Emoji Movie premiere, where she talked about playing the flamenco dancer emoji.
"Who who else is gonna do that than me?" she quipped.

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When it came time for Cathy Bartlett-Horwood to drop her dressing gown to the floor and stand naked in her village hall in front of her friends, she was nervous. The 60-year-old has had a complicated relationship with her weight for many years. She was so nervous, in fact, that she was physically sick beforehand.
Nevertheless, she persisted. Bartlett-Horwood became part of a group of brave women who’ve come to be known as the "Wonders of Whimple." The "wonders" are thus-named because they posed naked in the village’s most scenic spots for a calendar celebrating the beauty of the village's female population.
This calendar is more than a photographic paean to the female form. It’s a fundraiser for this village's year-long mission to change the way its residents feel about their bodies.
The village’s name is one you might not have come across before, for the village itself is deep in the heart of rural Devon—a county in the south west corner of England. Readers imagining a scene not unlike the idyllic filming location of the 2003 film Calendar Girls wouldn't be entirely off the mark.
Whimple is comprised of winding lanes dotted with thatch-roofed whitewashed cottages with the occasional farm thrown in for good measure.
But, beyond the chocolate box prettiness of the village, its 1,173 inhabitants have been working hard to acknowledge and embrace the beauty of their own bodies. It's by no means been an overnight flick-of-a-switch process for many of the people involved. 
Gill Wilson— an eating disorders therapist—is the woman behind the movement. It all started in January 2016, when Gill organised screenings of a documentary in the village called Embrace (opens in a new tab) .
The film—created by Australian activist Taryn Brumfitt after a successful Kickstarter campaign—explores the issue of "body loathing" and aims to inspire people to change the way they think and feel about their bodies.
"After having my three children, I ended up hating my body," says Brumfitt in the documentary. "So I trained hard, and I'm standing there in my perfect body and I’m not happy." Brumfitt says she didn't want her daughter to grow up feeling the same way so she traveled the world to find out why so many people hate their bodies. 
Wilson’s decision to screen the documentary in the area is one backed up by research. According to Dove’s Global Beauty and Confidence Report, which surveyed 10,500 women from around the world, British women have one of the lowest self-esteem scores, and just 20 percent said they liked the way they looked.
Alarmingly, a 2016 report by the Children’s Society found that girls are “less happy than they used to be” about their physical appearance. The research found that more than one-third of UK girls are unhappy with the way they look, a 30 percent rise over five years.
Wilson says that after she put on two screenings in the village, people came forward with ideas to further the notion of embracing one’s body image. One of which was a calendar.
“I was getting loads of emails, and the biggest messages wa
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