Young Mexican Nude

Young Mexican Nude




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Young Mexican Nude
Published September 26, 2017 4:53pm EDT

By
Stephanie Nolasco , | Fox News
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Sofia Vergara recently turned 45 on July 10th and she’s proudly flaunting her birthday suit.
The “Modern Family” star posed completely nude for Women’s Health’s Naked 2017 issue. And the highest-paid television star in the world claimed flaunting her curves was a breeze.
“I’ve always been very comfortable with my body,” the actress told the magazine . “You know, I’m Latin so we grow up going to the beach in a G-string. I used to do work for the Latin market in my 20s. Like I would do calendar shoots, very sexy and everything. And you know things have changed… how much you take care of yourself is a reality. We all age and you have to embrace it.”
However, Vergara admitted she was a bit nervous about the upcoming photo shoot. Right before, Vergara was filming “Bent” in Rome and “ate like an animal.” She wasn’t exercising and then two days before the shoot, she came home with pneumonia. Looking over at photos of potential poses sent by the creative team also didn’t help.
“They’re all of tall models holding their boobs with one arm,” she said. “But I can barely cover my boobs with two arms — I’m a 32-triple-D! My boobs are real, and I had a baby. If I grab them, I can’t even cover the nipple!”
These days, Vergara is attempting to have a regular fitness routine, but even she gets tempted to stay in bed.
“Like I find any excuse not to do it,” she said. “[I’m] Taking a couple of yoga classes. I’m very bad at it. I don’t have much patience. So I’m always trying to find something that I can do."
She also added, "I don't know if I'm strong. I have bad knees and very thin bones; I can barely do a pushup. I wish I could be a little more athletic, but when you're born with these gigantic boobs... I've had them since I was 13 and they've gotten bigger when I was pregnant and had the baby."
And even though her husband, "Magic Mike" actor Joe Manganiello, is a lifelong athlete, she still can't seem to enjoy any workout sessions, either alone or with her beau.
"It's like torture for me," she explained. "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."
Vergara did say it’s gotten easier for women like her to proudly embrace their shape in front of cameras.
“It’s not just the Barbie doll on the cover,” she said. “It’s real women. So it’s getting better. I think before it was a little bit more strict to how women were supposed to look... It's not about having muscle or cut abs. I don't have abs because I'm not 'I need to be a fit model with the perfect body.' That would take too much effort!"
The September 2017 issue of Women’s Health hits newsstands August 8.
Stephanie Nolasco covers entertainment at Foxnews.com.
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Sex on the Border: ‘Boys Town’ Brothels Lure American Men
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CIUDAD ACUNA, Mexico (AP) _ In a handful of cities on the Mexican border, American men still throng to the brothels of ″boys towns,″ legal prostitution zones little changed by fears of sexual disease or campaigns for more wholesome tourism.
At least five Mexican border cities have flourishing boys towns, and though some have been moved away from central tourist districts, they remain popular attractions for businessmen, hunters and teen-agers.
They’re accepted with little controversy, although Texas’ Republican gubernatorial candidate, Clayton Williams, drew heat after admitting recently that he frequented border brothels during his college years more than 30 years ago because they were the only place to get ″serviced.″
Visiting the prostitutes, Williams said, was just ″part of growing up in West Texas.″
On a Thursday night in Acuna, across the border from the Texas town of Del Rio, about 50 American men mingled with Mexican women at the Hunters Saloon beneath a glittering banner that proclaims in English: ″Welcome Hunters.″
While nude dancers perform on stage, prostitutes lead customers toward the bar’s back rooms.
″We’re just here to check it out,″ said one Texas man, gazing around the bar. ″This is really mild compared to a lot of places.″
Outside along the dusty streets of boys town - also known as La Zona de Tolerancia or Zone of Tolerance - scattered groups of men from nearby Air Force installations, teen-agers and other Americans wander to bars like the Rio Club and La Camelia.
The half-dozen bars, most only a few years old and well-appointed, are clustered on a small hill along a gravel road south of town. Smaller and older brothels cater to Mexican clients.
A Del Rio businessman in his 40s who has frequented the brothels for more than 20 years says there’s little fear of AIDS or other sexual diseases.
″I believe there are more problems with diseases ... in the big cities,″ said the man, who declined to be identified. ″These ladies go to medical checkups. Every week a doctor checks them.″
Dr. Herbert H. Ortega of El Paso, executive director of the U.S.-Mexico Border Health Association, said AIDS is ″almost nonexistent″ among the prostitutes. He credits education efforts by the association and other groups, such as the Pan-American Health Organization that he leads.
Acuna health officials last week cited some prostitutes for not having health certificates and checked them for disease.
Men visiting boys towns say many prostitutes require condoms. Some say the threat of disease limits them to looking.
″It’s too much of a chance, going home with something you don’t want,″ said a Brownwood, Texas, man who made a side trip to Acuna from a seminar for undercover narcotics agents in Del Rio. The agent, who did not want to be identified, said he was there only to drink and look.
Until the early 1980s, boys town was near the center of Acuna, a city of about 120,000. After residents complained about the noise, the district was moved out of town and the party atmosphere subsided.
Boys towns also flourish in the border towns of Reynosa, Juarez, Neuvo Laredo and Piedras Negras.
Prostitutes come from all over Mexico to earn money at the brothels.
Clients say the women charge $40 to $100 for their services. The prostitutes won’t discuss profits.
They say they have no pimps and keep all the money they get except for about $5 per customer they pay the bar for use of a room.
By contrast, the legal minimum wage in Mexico for unskilled workers is $3.90 a day. Mexican workers in some American factories along the border generally are considered well-paid at about $100 a week.
The prostitutes shy away from discussing their personal lives.
Rosalinda, 26, said in her six months in Acuna she has had sex with thousands of men.
Her only complaints are slow nights early in the week and the American youths who come not for sex but to take advantage of Mexico’s lower drinking age.
″You don’t need them around,″ Rosalinda said in Spanish. ″What do you need them for?″

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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 was that the film needs to be shown in schools, but you need a licence for it to be shown in schools,” says Wilson. But, the idea of the calendar presented a solution to the licence issue—the proceeds raised by the Wonders of Whimple could pay for licences. 
Word of the calendar spread through the village, and slowly but surely people came forward and signed up to take part in it. “Once people knew their friends were doing it, they’d say 'oh, if you're doing it, I'll do it,'” says Wilson.
This was exactly how Bartlett-Horwood came to be involved in the calendar. “I knew some of my friends were taking part, and I thought, hey why should I just tell them how proud I am of them when I can actually do it too!” Her photo now sits pride of place on the calendar’s February page, and she’s also on the front cover.
“I have spent years battling with my weight and worrying how I look in front of my family and friends,” she says. “But, why when I am healthy and happy I have wonderful people around me who love me for who I am and it is inside that really matters.”
Bartlett-Horwood wants other people to feel the way she feels and “not to be worried about what other people think.”
“Allow your real self to shine and feel comfortable with who you are,” says Bartlett-Horwood. “We are all fabulous.”
Her bravery—and that of the women who took part in the calendar—has not gone unnoticed in the village. “People I don’t know have recognised me from the calendar and hugged me,” says Bartlett-Horwood.
Suzanne Rothwell, 72, decided to take part in the calendar for reasons close to her heart. A grandmother of six, Rothwell says she’s seen her grandkids starting to worry about body image from a very young age.
“My 5-year-old granddaughter one day said she couldn't do something because people would see her tummy. How sad is that?” Rothwell says. She feels that children are “constantly bombarded” with images of “perfect people.”
So Rothwell posed nude in an orchard along with other women from the village.
“It was great fun taking part, everyone was being quite modest taking their clothes off and putting on their dressing gowns,” says Rothwell. “Amazingly, when we finished the shoot and went to get changed, most ladies just undressed without worrying about their nakedness.” 
The women of Whimple posed in nothing but their birthday suits betwixt apple trees in an orchard, beside scones and jam at the local cricket club and, of course, on high stools at the Thirsty Farmer.
“We were keen for the calendar to get a real cross-section, and to get a diversity of body shapes,” Wilson added. “We ended up having a young girl of 18 and a lady of 84 years of age.”
Wilson says that most of the women felt “empowered” after the photo shoot.
“Everybody's journey was different, and people were fairly tentative to start with,” says Wilson. “I can’t speak for other people, but I was in the calendar and I felt really empowered, really liberated.”
She said that some of the experience couldn’t be “put into words” as it was “such an unusual experience."
"The shoot that I was in was in an orchard and it's not every day you take your clothes off and stand in an orchard," says Wilson. 
Sue Draycott, the photographer behind the Wonders of Whimple, says the experience of shooting the calendar was “amazing.”
“The women were all incredibly supportive of each other and I found it was a real bonding experience for all of us,” says Draycott.
The first screening of the film was what made Draycott decide to get involved in the calendar. “I have always had my own body image issues and struggled with my weight so when I heard that Gill was showing the film Embrace I knew this was something I had to see,” says Draycott.
“It was such an incredibly moving film and really struck a chord with me,” Draycott explains. She says that, during the screening, she realised that social media plays “such a big part in the way we see ourselves.”
"Having a teenage daughter also played a big part in the way I was struck by this film,” says Draycott. 
Draycott didn’t just stand behind the camera during the shoot, thought. “I joined one of the groups for a shoot and then took a self portrait of myself (naked of course!) for the back page of the calendar,” she says.
“I am so glad that I got involved and honestly feel I am on my way towards a better self acceptance of my body,” she says.
The calendar has raised around £4,000 ($5,414), which will be go towards five licenses and the remainder will be donated to two breast cancer charities. For Rothwell, the calendar also served as a way to remember her father, who died from breast cancer. 
Cathy Bartlett-Horwood, second from right, who was so nervous before now proudly sits on the throne.
"The calendar has raised enough money to get the film into five of our local secondary schools. So, they'll all be screening it next term," says Wilson.
Wilson hopes that women will look at the calendar and think "she looks like me, I can relate to her."
“I want someone to feel it's relatable and to appreciate that we're all beautiful with our stretch marks and cellulite. We've got amazing, amazing bodies, and it makes me really sad that so many people go through life hating their bodies and feeling they should look a certain way.”
Wilson says that she feels the calendar is already starting to have an impact in the community.
"It's one of those things, it's not going to be a flick of a switch and 'oh my god I love my body,'" she says. "The way change happens is little by little.” 

December 29, 2021, 10:39 PM · 9 min read
Olivia Wilde for True Botanicals - Credit: Guy Aroch/True Botanicals.
Channing Tatum’s Instagram story - Credit: Channing Tatum/Instagram.
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While Chris Evans’ NSFW nude shot and Cardi B’s naked upload were both “oops” moments for the stars in 2020, there’s no denying that naked picture taboo is at an all-time low in Hollywood and beyond, thanks to the work of La La Land’s most enterprising celebrities. Call it the rise of the Kardashians or the rise of the internet (one and the same, really), but a nude picture just doesn’t have the same scandal factor it used to, especially when so many stars are choosing to proudly share their own shots. From fully nude photoshoots to targeted social media shares to getting ahead of another threatened leak, these celebrities have all shared their naked photos (on purpose) for the world to see — and helped pave the way for moments like Evans’ screen recording to be way less mortifying.
Here’s a definitive list of stars who have stripped down and hit “send.”
A version of this article was originally published in 2020.
Back in October, Olivia Wilde stripped down to her birthday suit for a True Botanicals campaign and couldn’t have looked more stunning or confident.
One of our favorite things about Heidi Klum ’s many Instagram nudes is how many are taken by her husband Tom Kaulitz — who clearly has a great eye for capturing his wife’s candid moments .
That’s right, Magic Mike himself shared a nude , and you won’t want to miss it. “You know when you in the make-up trailer a–hole naked holding a towel over your junk you about to do some s–t on set that you gonna have to prepare ya mama for before she see the movie,” Tatum wrote under this treat for his fans.
You better work, b*tch! In the months following her triumphant freedom from her decades-long conservatorship, Britney Spears has been showcasing her love for herself on the ‘Gram, and we’re loving the view.
One Tree Hill star Jana Kramer shared an empowering message about loving her naked body while sharing this nude showing off her new breast implants. “All I know is I was good enough before, and I’m good enough now,” she writes.
Elizabeth Hurley knows a good nude is the best way to get everyone’s attention…which is why she used this photo to clear up some recent rumors that she was planning a reality TV show (she’s not).
Even before her nude Vogue Czechoslovakia cover at age 55 that broke the internet, Porizkova was having fun stripping down and showing off on Instagram, as pictured here.
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