Word: bikinis
(lookup in dictionary)
(lookup stats)
Dates: all
Sort By: most recent first
(reverse)
Once arriving at Harvard, Nick cultivated his bent for exhibitionism in the unlikeliest of social settings. “At our freshman study breaks, I dressed up a few times as ‘Bunny the Lifeguard’—bunny ears, a bikini top, and lifeguard thong,” he says of his days in Straus A. “I’d gotten the reputation of being that asshole.” Despite Nick’s offbeat choice of entryway attire, he received tacit encouragement from above. “As ashamed...
...change from tease to stripping happened gradually over time but really began to crystallize in the sixties with changes in fashion like the miniskirt and the bikini,” Shteir wrote in an e-mail. With women baring nearly all in public, strippers had to find new territory. Soon, public displays gave way to private performances in people’s homes—what Shamrock sells today. Stripping became interactive; entertainers today simulate sex with their customers and each other. Girl-on-girl acts, the typical second act in a private show, are “relatively...
...What competition? There is no competition. Remember that. They’re facing what is essentially a professional army against their group of rag-team rebels,” says Ross-Rieder who claims he may get a “full-on bikini wax” for the competition...
Chloe tells us the calorie count of everything she eats ad nauseam and she dishes the dirt on her bikini-waxing ritual, trying to let us into her body anxiety: “I grab a bag of SoyChips, chips for us carbophobes who buy into the gospel that Vogue preaches,” she tells us conspiratorially. But her descriptions of the scanty (or nonexistent) outfits in which she trots off to parties, meant to make her audience revel in the bacchanalia of college life, don’t gel with her supposed embarrassment...
...mildly, the biggest names of the '80s had no such compunctions about money. Koons, a former commodities trader, publicized his 1988 "Banality" show with color-photo magazine ads that showed him on a pony being fed cake by a model in a bikini--the artist as king of the world. In another he was cavorting with pigs. Thinking back on that ad now, Koons has a simple explanation. "I thought I would call myself a pig before the viewer could, so they could only think more of me," he says. And anyway, he has had the last laugh. He turned...