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I'm waiting for people to tell his lame ass to play the background. |
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[quote=pinkies up;1400437]
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My inkling would be that its not as big a story as she made it out to be. I mean, I could see a situation where there were a couple calls, and some contact of hers made a big deal out of it. Who knows.
It just seems to me that if this a legit story, some other outlets would have jumped on it. A lot of news outlets love racial controversy stories. |
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B) that its not really a legitimate story. It is, IMHO, nothing more than an attempt to start an UL. If the media in NYC, and elsewhere, can spend hours on a KFC with Rats in it, they would spend days on this. After all, IIRC, the swim-suite issue of SI is it's largest seller and get a whole bunch of free air play every year. |
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I've been looking for more sources, and all that I come up with lead to allhiphop.com and one mention of Sandra Rose's blog. All of the articles are cut and paste about Beyonce keeping quiet about being the first non-model cover of the swimsuit issue and then a mention that "some readers think there have been mass cancellations"
It does seem to be percolating its way up the news, albeit very very slowly. At some point it'll be addressed by Sports Illustrated. |
The story/history of the Swim suit issue via Slate:
The Sports Illustrated Swimsuit IssueAn intellectual history. By Bryan Curtis Posted Wednesday, Feb. 14, 2007, at 1:22 PM ET http://www.slate.com/id/2159853?nav=ais Something of interest to this thread; "Campbell's 1978 issue proved a watershed moment for cheesecake. In Brazil, Campbell had persuaded model Cheryl Tiegs to pose for a throwaway shot in a white fishnet top, her nipples fully exposed. Somehow the shot made its way into the magazine. According to The Franchise,Michael MacCambridge's excellent history of the magazine, nasty letters poured into Time-Life headquarters—more than 340 subscriptions were cancelled—and the swimsuit issue reached new heights of ignominy. But in some ways, the Tiegs fiasco was also a logical endpoint. Barring nudity, the Sports Illustrated model had nothing left to reveal. Thus for the next few decades the editors had to maintain a careful balance: They had to make the issue seem much racier than it actually was, while still maintaining its wholesome aesthetic." As for the OP/source of thread, all I can find is this: http://mauricebroaddus.proboards24.com/index.cgi http://sandrarosenews.blogspot.com/2...elling-si.html Those and all the others I have seen have same source. Makes you kind of wonder....... |
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