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Jim Shockey (born 1957) is a Canadian outdoor writer, a professional big game outfitter and television producer and host for many hunting shows. Shockey is the former producer and host of Jim Shockey's Hunting Adventures and Jim Shockey's Uncharted on Outdoor Channel and Jim Shockey's The Professionals on Outdoor Channel and Sportsman Channel.
Eva Shockey is the co-host of Jim Shockey's Hunting Adventures on Outdoor Channel alongside her father, Jim Shockey. She appeared on the cover of Field & Stream magazine on the May 2014 issue - making her the second woman ever to be photographed for the magazine cover, the first being Queen Elizabeth II. [6]
An image of Jenny Joseph modeling for a reference photo used by artist Michael Deas as the basis for the Columbia Pictures logo, shot in the New Orleans apartment of photographer Kathy Anderson ...
Long before Ivanka Trump was a successful business woman or first daughter, she held another day job -- a model. The then-teenage daughter of Donald Trump traveled the world in the late 1990s to ...
World Modeling became infamous for unknowingly representing a then underaged Traci Lords. [2] Through South's agency, 15-year-old Lords started nude modeling; she had introduced herself with a fraudulent identification card in the name Kristie Elizabeth Nussman, which falsely showed her age as twenty two years old. [3]
Shockey is a surname. Notable people with the surname include: Eva Shockey, Canadian Author, Hunter, TV Personality, Blogger; Hal Shockey, Canadian outdoorsman; Jeff Shockey, US lobbyist and Congressional staffer; Jeremy Shockey, American football player; Jim Shockey, Canadian outdoor writer, professional big game outfitter, TV Producer and Host
In her early days of modeling, the site states, Melania Trump worked in Milan and Paris before moving to New York in 1996. She met future husband Donald Trump two years later at a New York fashion ...
The Athletic Model Guild, or AMG, was a physique photography studio founded by Bob Mizer in December 1945. During those post-war years, United States censorship laws allowed women, but not men, to appear in various states of undress in what were referred to as "art photographs". Mizer began his business by taking pictures of men that he knew.