Just when people thought that Miley Cyrus had reached a level where she has nothing more to bare, she is once again shocking the world with photos of her most provocative self. The former Disney child star bared it all literally on the cover of Spain's Candy magazine which prides itself as the "first transversal style magazine."
Cyrus was naked in photos that can be described as explicit, bordering pornographic. In one photo she licked her hairy armpit. In two separate pictures, she was simulating a graphical act with a police baton and then with a toy while completely bent down. The most shocking of all photos was Cyrus completely nude with just a cat covering her face. There was a photo where she wore a vest but it was unbuttoned, she was slightly squatting and she was sucking her forefinger and middle finger. "Miley has what it takes," the log line of the cover reads. The limited edition issue has only 1500 numbered copies boasting with nine different spreads of Cyrus.
Latinos Post decided not to print the pictures. The controversial photos, taken by equally controversial photographer Terry Richardson, can be found here.
Candy "is the first fashion magazine completely dedicated to celebrating transvestism, transsexuality, cross-dressing and androgyny in all their glory," the publication said on its website. "A style magazine about fashion, art, culture, make-up, glamour, icons, amazing transformations and fun," the website further stated.
Kin Woo of Dazed Digital described creative director Luis Venegas work on Candy as a "fantastic riposte to the dwindling state of print media." Woo said Venegas has "launched his bravest, most exciting concept yet: a magazine that celebrates the world of transgenderism."
The word "transversal" originally means a line that passes through two lines in the same plane at two distinct points. Nowadays the word could also mean being gender fluid, a sexual preference described in detail by Cyrus in a June interview with TIME magazine.
In the interview she said she does not like labels, like boys, girls or even gender fluid but that she prefers the latter. "I'm just equal. I'm just even. It has nothing to do with any parts of me or how I dress or how I look. It's literally just how I feel," she said. In Nashville, back when she was just a teen, she was the person other sexually curious teenage girls came too. "They all wanted to experiment. I was always the one," she said. Being in a relationship with guys made her feel like she "had to be femme-bot, which I'm not," so she does not want to be with boys. Being on a relationship with girls, on the other hand, made her feel like they are "going to need someone to protect" them "so I'm going to need to have this macho energy" which she neither likes.
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