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The video was removed from YouTube due to this "offending material". As a response, the band directed a brand new video, featuring behind-the-scenes and off-stage material with numerically even more explicit content, censored by pixelation. "E.T." Katy Perry: Floria Sigismondi: Shaun Ross: An actor is seen nude with rear shown toward the end of ...
The concept of sexuality in 80s music videos is evident in Olivia Newton-John's music video for "Physical." The video's cinematography emphasizes the naked male body. [6] Another example includes Culture Club's music video "Karma Chameleon," in which the cameras are paned underneath women's skirts and zoomed in on cleavage. [7]
In December 1971, Boys in the Sand was released and opened in theaters across the United States and around the world, [34] and reviewed by Variety magazine. [35] [36] Featuring explicit all-male sex scenes, the film's title is a parodic reference to the gay-themed 1968 play by Mart Crowley, and the 1970 film adaptation The Boys in the Band. [37]
In 2002, Natalia Vodianova appeared in the music video for "I Get Along" by the Pet Shop Boys. The video was directed by fashion photographer Bruce Weber. Stephanie Seymour appeared in music videos for Guns N' Roses, in the early 1990s. Tawny Kitaen appeared in several of Whitesnake's music videos in the late 1980s.
Playboy Celebrity Centerfold videos are similar to the Video Centerfolds, featuring a celebrity who is not a current Playmate. Prior Playmates who have become celebrities (or just notorious) in their own right may be featured in a Celebrity Centerfold. The videos are approximately 60 minutes in length, with 45 minutes devoted to the celebrity ...
It's the ab showdown! While stars like Miley Cyrus and Heidi Klum are busy flaunting their sizzlin' summer bodies in some teeny bikinis, we gotta give the Hollywood hunks some love too.
The decade of the 1980s in Western cinema saw the return of studio-driven pictures, coming from the filmmaker-driven New Hollywood era of the 1970s. [1] The period was when the "high concept" picture was created by producer Don Simpson, [2] where films were expected to be easily marketable and understandable.
I Love the '80s is a decade nostalgia television program and the first installment of the I Love the... series that was produced by VH1, based on the BBC series of the same name. [1] The first episode, "I Love 1980", premiered on December 16, 2002, and the final episode, "I Love 1989", premiered on December 20, 2002.