Sofie Dossi rocked a bikini that paid tribute to a ferocious feline species during a trip to the Bahamas. However, the wildlife she encountered were of the porcine variety.
The former America's Got Talent competitor usually dazzles her Instagram followers by showing off her incredible contortion skills , but she wasn't twisted into a pretzel while she fed a few happy pigs some healthy treats. Instead, she stood in knee-deep water as she kept a watchful eye on her hungry companions. Scroll down to check them out!
Sofie, 19, is so flexible that some of her fans are convinced that she doesn't have a spine . This is obviously untrue, but the talented performer works hard to make it seem as though the bones in her back are missing.
The results of her hard work were evident as she totally rocked a leopard-print bikini. It was a stringy style with a tie top, triangle cups, and tieless adjustable bottoms. Sofie wore her thick curls brushed over to one side, and a few of her springy locks were getting blown around by the wind.
The swimming swine are a huge tourist attraction, but Sofie seemed to be the attraction in their eyes. This is because she was holding what appeared to be a handful of carrot sticks. It's not uncommon for the pigs to get meals from tourists who want to get closer to them, and Sofie's friends were clearly not afraid of her at all.
However, the pigs can get a little too friendly, as fitness model Michelle Lewin found out. When she was vacationing in the Bahamas in 2019, one of the animals bit her on the butt cheek. The scary encounter was captured on video .
Sofie did have her own backside dangerously close to the heads of a few of the pigs, but she seemingly survived her encounter unscathed. She tagged the Powerboat Adventures tour company to reveal how she reached Pig Beach.
Sofie gave her followers an "oink oink" in her caption, which prompted her fellow TikTok star, Hootie Hurley, to joke that she "fit right in."
Vanessa Hudgens channels Jennifer Lopez and wows in a neon yellow bikini | HELLO!
The official start of summer may still be months away, but it’s already arrived for Vanessa Hudgens.
SHOP: Jennifer Lopez sizzles in a yellow bikini - and we found the best dupe on Amazon for less than $30
The Polar star made jaws drop when she uploaded a photo of herself on Instagram that showed off her incredible physique as she had some fun in the sun wearing a neon yellow bikini and a matching bucket hat.
In the photo, Vanessa can be seen standing poolside as she lifts up the corners of her high-cut bikini bottoms. The actress took the look up a notch with more accessories - a gold body chain, a necklace that spelled out her name, and a pop of bling on her belly button ring.
Actress Alexandra Shipp and Olivia Culpo dropped fire and heart-eye emojis in Vanessa’s comments, and fans were quick to praise the look too. “A serve!,” one fan commented, while another added, “are you even real?!”
Vanessa didn't reveal where she found the neon bikini, so we tracked down the perfect dupe on Amazon.
The look was reminiscent of the neon yellow bikini Jennifer Lopez wore when she nearly broke the internet just a few weeks ago.
The Hustlers star stunned fans when she shared videos of herself on social media dancing around in a pool to DJ Khalid and Drake’s Popstar in a neon yellow bikini.
SHOP: J.Lo and Selena Gomez are major fans of these disposable face masks - and they’re less than $2 each
'Bond Girl' Talk and Groping: Albany's Toxic Culture for Women - The New York Times
A legislative aide in New York's state capital grabbed the thigh of a lobbyist so hard at a fund-raiser that he left finger-shaped bruises on her skin. A top official at a state agency projected a picture of a colleague in a bikini for all to see in a meeting she was attending.
Another lobbyist described a legislator touching her thighs and feeling her chest in his State Assembly office. And a state senator said a male colleague told her she looked "like a Bond girl" as they sat near each other in the chamber.
The senator, Julia Salazar, who declined to identify her colleague, also recalled attending a fund-raiser just outside the Capitol in 2019 where another legislator's staff member began commenting on her appearance. "He said, 'You should be on a calendar,'" recalled Ms. Salazar, who was 28 at the time. "I was so embarrassed that I left."
If encounters like these are unacceptable and potentially career-ending, especially in the #MeToo era, they are also a defining part of the culture of government in Albany, N.Y., and so endemic that they have continued even after sex scandals took down a governor (Eliot Spitzer) and several members of the State Assembly. Sexual misconduct in Albany has been thrown into sharp relief by allegations against Gov. Andrew M. Cuomo from multiple current and former aides who have accused him of sexual harassment and, in one case, groping during an encounter in the Executive Mansion.
"There are all of these patterns that we just keep seeing over and over again," said Leah Hebert, a former state legislative aide and a member of the Sexual Harassment Working Group , which advocates better workplace conditions in New York. "You could definitely look at Albany and say nothing has changed."
Yet the allegations, which Mr. Cuomo has denied, also suggest that a new generation of women in Albany will not remain silent or tolerate behaviors that many men there saw as normal. And the sexualized environment in many offices has changed recently with the election of liberal women in greater numbers and efforts like harassment training. The #MeToo world is different from when most lawmakers knew their behavior at a bar near the Capitol would be protected by the unwritten rules of the so-called Bear Mountain Compact — what happened on the other side of the mountain stayed there.
In more than 30 interviews, women and men who have worked in Albany — including aides, lobbyists, government officials and elected leaders — described a predatory and misogynistic culture that is of a piece with Mr. Cuomo's alleged behavior. Some say the governor and his top aides normalized intimidation in Albany over the last decade through bullying, which was common in the governor's office , and aggressive political tactics aimed at members of both parties.
"There's a whole community of very smart people who are jaded by the abusive behavior and accept it as normal and don't do anything about it," said State Senator Alessandra Biaggi, who worked in the governor's office before she was elected in 2018 among a group of new and outspoken female senators who included Ms. Salazar and Jessica Ramos.
She argued that the behavior of the governor and his staff sent a signal to others in Albany. "If they see the person at the highest level get away with it, and they align themselves with that person, then they'll get away with it too," Ms. Biaggi said.
Beach Volleyball Players Meet Bikini Ban | panorama
Instead of a bikini, beach volleyball players should wear a knee-high shirt and shorts. This is what is written in the dress of big men in Qatar. A list that German athletes at least disagree with.
Admittedly, when you think of Germany, you don’t immediately think of an influential country in beach volleyball, but the eastern neighbors won their Olympic gold medal for the first time in 2016, so they are no longer young players these days. It caused a huge shock when a German couple indicated that they didn’t feel like it. “We are there to do our work, but we are not allowed to wear our work clothes. This is the only country where the government tells us how to do the work,” said Carla Bürger, who is forming with Julia Sowd the German duo.
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