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Page 3 was not a daily feature at the beginning of the 1970s, [5] and The Sun only gradually began to feature Page 3 models in more overtly topless poses. Believing that Page 3 should feature "nice girls", Lamb sought to avoid the image of top-shelf pornography titles by asking The Sun 's female reporters to review Page 3 images to ensure women ...
In 2016, the No More Page 3 campaign redirected its efforts into a short-lived project called Sexist News, aimed at highlighting misogynistic media coverage in The Daily Express, The Daily Mail, The Daily Mirror and The Sun. [20] The Daily Star ceased its topless glamour feature in April 2019, becoming the last mainstream daily tabloid to do so ...
A Page 3 girl is a woman who formerly modeled for topless photographs published on the third page of UK tabloids. The feature was removed from The Sun in 2015 and no longer appears in any UK print daily.
Higham was a Page 3 model from 1998 until around 2004. She first appeared on Page 3 of The Sun on 17 April 2000 and appeared in the newspaper 30 times. From 2002 to 2006, she was the model for Aintree-produced Big D peanuts; this caused a 35% increase in sales in 2003. [2]
Kelly Brook (born Kelly Anne Parsons, 23 November 1979) is an English model, actress, and media personality.She began her career modelling for a range of advertising campaigns, which led to her discovery by the editorial team of the Daily Star tabloid, where they began featuring her as a Page Three girl.
Russell made her Page 3 debut in The Sun on 23 August 1982, and first appearing in the Daily Star on 7 September, notching up 189 appearances in total (118 in The Sun and 71 in the Daily Star), before making her final appearances in The Sun on 27 September, and 8 October 1990 in the Daily Star respectively.
The following year, she won the "Search for a Babe" contest run by the Daily Star tabloid, and began appearing topless as a "Star Babe" in that newspaper. In 2003, she began appearing as a Page 3 girl in The Sun. Her bubbly-blonde looks and natural 32FF breasts prompted The Sun to hail her as "the new Samantha Fox." [3]
In 2002, aged 16, Hazell left school to work as a hairdresser. [2] [1] Her colleagues persuaded her to try modelling.[2] [1] Aged 17, she competed in The Daily Star's "Search for a Beach Babe" contest and won, [2] [1] but she was not old enough to pose for Page 3 and so went to study fashion [2] at Lewisham College. [1]