Candice Swanepoel | Steven Meisel | Vogue Italia February 2011
/Candice Swanepoel | Steven Meisel | Vogue Italia February 2011 AOC Private Studio
Daily excerpts of new fashion, culture, lifestyle, activism and women's news posts 2007-2019.
OK, so we’re feeling a little manipulated with the LOVE magazine buildup to the newsstand release early next week, but we’ll play along.
As we wrote yesterday, our Lea T traffic is insane with her appearance walking the Alexandre Herchcovitch show in Sao Paolo, and frankly, we must mainstain our superior front-page Google positions in the digital battle for eyeballs, now that Google cleared the link farms out of the way. Who says bloggers don’t help print media?
Now we have Lea T alone on the cover of LOVE’s Androgyny issue, also lensed by Mert & Marcus.
Previously, we had Lea T and Kate Moss in a sexy kiss on a LOVE cover.
Kate Moss & Lea T | LOVE Magazine Androgyny Issue | Mert & Marcus
Justin Bieber has the second LOVE cover. Titled ‘The Beautiful One’, Bieber celebrates the soft man aspect of androgyny. We reported earlier that Justin has inspired a blog Lesbians Who Look Just Like Justin Bieber.
Lillian McEwen didn’t decide to write a book about her relationship with Justice Clarence Thomas because Virginia Thomas left a phone message on Anita Hill’s voice mail, asking her to consider apologizing to Thomas for her sexual harassment allegations against him during his confirmation hearings.
Lillian McEwen, the girlfriend and confidante to Justice Thomas, has been writing her memoirs. It does seem that the Virginia Thomas phone call to Anita Hill struck a sour note, given McEwen’s own experiences with Clarence Thomas, which she has now detailed in the Washington Post.
Her words are a bombshell and basically support Anita Hill’s claims and those of several other women, whose complaints about Thomas were passed off by the Judiciary committee. Lillian McEwen was not asked to testify in the hearings, which were confined to the candidate’s professional, not personal, relationships with women.
Woman | Guinevere van Seenus By Mario Sorrenti For 10 Magazine Fall 2010
Written Sept. 23, 2010
These images come at a time when many creatives are wrestling with the challenges of photographing the female body in an elevated style — but explicitly and yes, with a degree of confrontation — and not getting in trouble with the censors in the traffic engines that run our lives and also Facebook, should we post one of these photos.
We are also trying to distinguish ourselves from the pornographers and drive a wedge in the assumption that any imagery of the female body is corrupting. Conservatives want all images like these banished from the face of the earth. It’s too much woman power.
How thrilling to see this psychological treatise on the female body. I feel that Sorrenti — known for his love of woman power — is so intimately connected with what we’re trying to accomplish here. Mario Sorrenti is officially a soul mate in our drive to create a more female-centric world. Bravo and thank you! Anne
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