Showing posts with label Tyra Banks. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Tyra Banks. Show all posts

Sunday, March 4, 2012

Your 2012 Rookies

Voting for Rookie of the Year ends on March 12. At the moment, it looks like Nina Agdal is in the lead, followed by a tie between Jessica Perez and Michelle Vawer. I can't decide my favorite; it's a very nice crop this year.

In any case, like last year, I thought I'd try to place each rookie in some kind of mathematical/historical context.

Take Roshumba Williams and add Damaris Lewis's eyes, and you end up with Adaora.Early Kathy Ireland plus a touch of Kim Alexis gives you Nina Agdal.Two parts Isabeli Fontana and one part Alyssa Miller gives you Crystal Renn.Alicia Hall fortified with a nice dose of Valeria Mazza gives you Michelle Vawer.Tyra Banks with Josie Maran's face results in Kirby Griffin.Ingrid Seynhaeve with a splash of early Brooklyn Decker gives you Jessica Perez.Jessica's photos might be my overall favorites, but she already won a popular vote last year, so it might be time to give another girl a chance. I will say that Michelle is intoxicating, thanks to smooth and lovely shots like this one:

Monday, February 13, 2012

It Was Inevitable

Kate Upton is your 2012 Sports Illustrated swimsuit issue cover girl.Wow. About a year and a half ago, I wondered if the trend was going to be toward larger bikini bottoms. This seems to be a resounding "no."

Frankly, I think those bottoms are a little too skimpy. They might have crossed over from "sexy" to "look what we can get away with." I don't know. Maybe I need time to digest. (And maybe swimsuit issue covers aren't the place to look for subtlety.)

Kate is not the first girl to jump from rookie one year to cover the next. She joins a small club of models who made the cover in their sophomore years.
Carol Alt
Debut: 1981. Cover: 1982.

Paulina Porizkova
Debut: 1983. Cover: 1984.

Elle Macpherson
Debut: 1985. Cover: 1986.

Vendela
Debut: 1992. Cover: 1993.

Tyra Banks*
Debut: 1993. Cover: 1996.
*Tyra skipped a couple years after rookiehood, then came roaring back with two consecutive covers.

Carolyn Murphy
Debut: 2004. Cover: 2005.
(And yes, there's a handful of models who have made the cover their first time out.)

In other news, Hot Clicks has revealed that Bar Refaeli will be posing with athletes this year.
(That face is Hot Clicks author Jimmy Traina, by the by.)

I have nothing against hunky, shirtless guys per se, but I do hope there are plenty of dude-free photos of Bar this year. It would be a shame to have any obstacles in the way of her.

According to the cover, there are 18 models this year. That's one more than last year. Here's a nice preview of Alyssa Miller.Her hair is significantly lighter.

What else? If you need a little appetizer, Kate has a new photoshoot, video, and interview at Esquire.com.Good grief. That girl is so sexy it isn't even funny.

Saturday, August 13, 2011

Marisa of Disguise

There exists a series of photos of Marisa Miller recreating shots of prominent models throughout the swimsuit issue’s history. I am ashamed to say that I’m not sure of the story behind them.



I got it into my head that they were released in 2004 as part of the 40th anniversary issue. (The SI.com gallery of Marisa seems to support that.) But I have the 2004 issue, and these photos of Marisa don’t appear in it.



I have seen some video footage of Marisa’s shoot, but I can’t seem to find it online anymore.



The confusion is compounded by the fact that a lot of the original photos on SI.com seem to be labeled as if part of the 50th anniversary. (For example, the files of Cheryl’s and Heidi’s are labeled 50th_ctiegs_01.jpg and 50th_hklum_01.jpg, respectively.) But the 50th anniversary won’t happen for a few more years.



Nevertheless, the shots are fascinating. With Marisa recreating, as accurately as possible, the swimsuit shots of models from previous decades, she creates the sensation of two women in the same bikini, a superconcentrated supermodel.



Marisa as Cheryl Tiegs (1978)Marisa has more curves up top, and fewer down below, than Cheryl did. But I’m impressed that they were willing to show the fishnet in all (or most) of its translucent glory.



Marisa as Christie Brinkley (1981)Frankly, I think there are better photos of Christie, but it’s hard to argue with that expanse of silky skin (X2).



Marisa as Paulina Porizkova (1985)Again, Marisa’s “modern” breast size interferes with the accuracy of this one, but a pretty beautiful setup.



Marisa as Kathy Ireland (1986)This one might be the best. Done up like this, even Marisa’s face looks like Kathy’s. If I didn’t know this was an impostor, I might not have even suspected.



Marisa as Elle Macpherson (1990)I miss the sheen on Elle’s midriff. Pretty gorgeous, though.



Marisa as Stacey Williams (1993)I’m thrilled that they did Stacey. Sadly, this was the one I had the hardest time finding a pic of online. The Marisa shot seems to be from a print magazine, but which print magazine?



Marisa as Daniela Pestova (1995)They went a little too severe on the hair, but otherwise a very convincing simulacrum.



Marisa as Tyra Banks (1997)This could have been touchy, but they played it well. Just dye Marisa’s hair black, don’t worry about the skin tone. Also, Marisa’s boob-to-hip ratio seems to be best suited for reproducing Tyra.



Marisa as Sarah O’Hare (1999)Interesting. Sarah O’Hare is the least “household” of the names on this list, and she only did two issues. But I think this one is more about the sand-kini than the girl wearing it.



Marisa as Heidi Klum (2000)Wow. The snake shot? Well, if you’re lucky enough to find two non-ophidiophobic swimsuit models within a five-year period, you have to go for it.



Marisa was the perfect model to do this. She had done a lot to reinvigorate the idea of the SI girl as a well-known object of worship. (Heidi Klum filled that position beautifully, but she’d been out of regular circulation for a couple years by 2004. She returned for some 1940s bodypainting for 2006 and a weird Will Ferrell movie tie-in for 2008.)



But even more importantly, she functioned well as a blank slate onto which the prominent beauties of years past could be projected.



(Though I have to admit, as Marisa Miller Week draws to a close, I have a new appreciation for her. She’s not as “cookie-cutter” or generic as I thought; those eyebrows and that smirk and those warm eyes do set her apart.)

Friday, July 8, 2011

Hottest Bikini Shots

A couple months ago, the folks at Complex.com put together a list of the 50 Hottest Bikini Shots of All Time. Aside from a few inaccuracies (including a hazy idea of what constitutes a “bikini”), it’s a great list.



Predictably, there are lots of SI girls, and near the end of the list it’s almost a Tourette-style tirade of swimsuit issue covers.



#44: Paulina Porizkova
They refer to this shot as coming from 1987, but it’s from 1985. My first swimsuit issue, seared in my memory.



#43: Christie Brinkley
They list this as from 1975, but it's actually from 1981. It was good enough for SI to recreate it with Marisa Miller almost a quarter century later.

#41: Brooklyn Decker
The only SI girl in a non-SI setting. Nice choice.

#34: Kathy Ireland
From Complex’s description:

“This image was a cornerstone in Ms. Ireland’s career because it was a ridiculously long time coming for the S.I. vet. After 13 consecutive appearances in Sports Illustrated Swimsuit issues, she had finally earned a solo cover.”



Welllllll, 1992 was Kathy’s ninth consecutive year, not her thirteenth. (She was in twelve altogether.)



Also, she had her first solo cover three years earlier, in 1989 (the 25th Anniversary issue).



Finally, by specifying that she “finally” had a “solo cover,” they seem to imply that the cover she shared with Elle Macpherson and Rachel Hunter came out earlier than this one. In fact, it came out two years later, in 1994.



#32: Babette March
Still a sexy photo. Babette is an artist with her own gallery now.

#30: Irina Shayk


#23: Elle Macpherson/Kathy Ireland/Rachel Hunter


#20: Niki Taylor
Not what I’d call a bikini, but certainly a good choice for One-Piece Wednesday.



#18: Marisa Miller


#17: Elsa Benitez


#16:ValeriaMazza/Tyra Banks


#15: Cheryl Tiegs
Yum. One of the giants on whose shoulders stand Irina, Marisa, Brooklyn, etc!



#14: Christie Brinkley
Another pioneer. This may have been the skimpiest bikini on the cover to date (1981).



#12: Petra Nemcova
Eight years later, and she’s still adjusting those strings.



#6: Beyoncé


#2: Tyra Banks
Tyra’s intro to the all-bikini 1997 issue is the highest-rated SI bikini shot on the list. (I call for an asterisk, as #1 is Farrah Fawcett in a red one piece.)

Wednesday, May 11, 2011

One-Piece Wednesday: Tyra Banks, 1993

This tweet from last Friday, by rookie-in-waiting Jessica Perez, takes up the cause of one-piece swimsuits. I don’t agree 100% with the assessment (it’s not so much what a one-piecer hides as what it clings to that I find alluring), but I appreciate the sentiment.

Jessica Perez has never in her life worn a one-piece, so I go straight to the source.

Friday, February 25, 2011

Ranking the Covers

There have been 27 swimsuit issues since the first one I ever owned (1985). I thought I’d rank them, from my least favorite to my most favorite, to see where Irina’s’s 2011 cover fits.

#27: Kathy Ireland, 1992
Kathy is cute, no question. But I never quite understood why she got all the marriage proposals from fraternities—other models from her era earned my obsession more readily. Still, the problem with this cover is the weird pose: kind of an action pose, kind of not. Her hair looks like she’s landing after a jump, but the rest of her body looks pretty stationary. And the point of focus seems to be the side of her body. A head-scratcher.
• • •

#26: Marisa Miller, 2008
If this blog had any kind of following, I think I’d get hate mail about this choice. Marisa is insanely popular, and this was her much-awaited cover—topless, no less. How could she be so near the bottom? But as is the case with Kathy, I don’t quite see what all the fuss is about. Beautiful girl, but (for me) she doesn’t stand above the crowd of beautiful girls the swimsuit issue offers.
• • •

#25: Bar Refaeli, 2009
Another opinion that would have a lot of people questioning my credentials. I’ve mentioned the shortcomings of this cover before, but suffice it to say that the shot they picked doesn’t live up to Bar’s otherworldly beauty.
• • •

#24: Cover Model All-Stars, 2006
A better fantasy than a cover. The girls all look great, and you can’t argue with all that skin. But it’s a little clumsy, and there’s no place to focus. Each of these girls’ individual covers is better than this beach-harem shot.
• • •

#23: Daniela Pestova, 2000
Nice hip-thrust, beautiful bikini bottom, but that’s about all this cover has going for it. The necklaces are ugly and gangly, the facial expression is dead-eyed, even the landscape is kind of grey and post-apocalyptic. Daniela is gorgeous (her 1995 cover is much higher on this list), but this cover doesn’t do her justice.
• • •

#22: Elle Macpherson, 1986
The first of Elle’s covers is also the most bewildering. It’s an unflattering suit and a goofy pose, without a hint of the glories that Ms. Macpherson would attain in subsequent years. (I love you, Elle. Your other covers are much higher.)
• • •

#21: Beyoncé, 2007
I’ve stated before that I thought putting a non-model on the cover was a bit of a misfire, and maybe that is affecting my judgment. But this cover just kind of sits there.
• • •

#20: Kathy Ireland, 1989
Great face, and a perfect museum-quality example of late-80s hair. Everyone was kind of gaga about Kathy on the 25th anniversary cover, but I found it to be a little bland.
• • •

#19: Judit Masco, 1990
Cute cover, and I like seeing the contour of the bikini bottom as it crests her hips. But not the most memorable shot, and it seems like a dim echo of Paulina’s 1985 cover.
• • •

#18: Ashley Richardson, 1991
What other swimsuit issue cover has inspired an Off-Off-Broadway play? Ashley Richardson (Montana, here) demonstrates what is wonderful about a one-piece. A beautiful cover, but a little rote.
• • •

#17: Elsa Benitez, 2001
The whole is less than the sum of the parts. Elsa is freaking gorgeous, and she looks great in this bikini. (There are other shots of her in this same suit that prove it.) But I suspect her face has been touched up all the way to Uncanny Valley.
• • •

#16: Carolyn Murphy, 2005
Classic blonde-in-a-red-bikini theme. Cute “Oops, my top has come undone—whatever shall I do?” scenario. But the pose is kind of an odd choice for the cover.
• • •

#15: Tyra Banks, 1997
This cover pioneered the “thumbs hooked in the bikini bottom” look that would be championed by later cover girls Marisa Miller and Bar Refaeli. Fantastic body, but the face has a wax-museum vacancy that emphasizes Tyra’s slightly alien look.
• • •

#14: Yamila Diaz, 2002
This is another cover, like Elsa in 2001, that should be better than it is. Yamila is a breathtaking model, and she’s sitting there in a red bikini—how could you go wrong? Face and cleavage: beautiful. But the pose is awkward from the waist down.
• • •

#13: Vendela, 1993
Weird suit, but a very sleek look. Vendela uses her icy princess face to its best advantage, like a sexy vanilla ice cream cone.
• • •

#12: Veronica Varekova, 2004
This cover was originally lower in my ranking, but it benefits from extended viewing. Veronica is flawless. All that silky skin, the dangling top, and the seductive thumb-bite work wonders. It’s also one of only two truly butt-centric cover shots in SI history. (This is the other.)
• • •

#11: Valeria Mazza and Tyra Banks, 1996
I love how playful this is. It’s a very kinetic picture—you can almost see them undulating, hips and shoulders shimmying, hair flying in the breeze. And the leopard print? This picture takes the cheesiness and owns it.
• • •

#10: Heidi Klum, 1998
Great girl, great suit, great pose, great cleavage. Heidi is one of the most beautiful women ever to walk the earth, but her facial expression in this photo leaves something to be desired. A little more softness, or a smile, and this would have probably been in the top five.
• • •

#9: Elle Macpherson, Kathy Ireland, and Rachel Hunter, 1994
I was a little dismissive of this cover in the past, but I have to admit, that’s a lot of wonderful pulchritude on display here.
• • •

#8: Irina Shayk, 2011
Without the benefit of distance, I’m placing this year’s in the top ten. Gorgeous body. Sexy suit. Irina is presenting her breasts like a tray of canapés. But her face is a little waxen, which leads me to suspect that this cover may sink in my rankings as the years go by.
• • •

#7: Brooklyn Decker, 2010
Last year’s cover also makes the top ten. Beautiful, curvy girl, smiling and sun-kissed in yellow. What’s not to like?
• • •

#6: Petra Nemcova, 2003
What a beautiful girl. That flirty little squint reveals so much of Petra’s personality. It’s like she’s caught you watching her adjust her string—but she’s not going to stop. And let’s not beat around the bush: those breasts are heart-stopping.
• • •

#5: Paulina Porizkova, 1985
My first swimsuit issue. I love how friendly Paulina looks as she offers up her hip for your inspection and enjoyment.
• • •

#4: Rebecca Romijn, 1999
Just magnificent. That pose, that sculpted body, pretty much the Platonic ideal of a swimsuit issue cover.
• • •

#3: Elle Macpherson, 1988
Sultry! The staring-down-the-camera look can come off as corny, but Elle pulls it off very nicely, her huge brown eyes glaring from behind the mussed overhang of her luxurious hair.
• • •

#2: Daniela Pestova, 1995
I love the angle of her body. I love the legs-together pose. I love the beginnings of a smirk and the way she plays with her top.
• • •

#1: Elle Macpherson, 1987
Ladies and gentlemen, the best swimsuit issue cover of my time. Elle Macpherson at her peak, sopping wet, staring at you with a warm and flirtatious grin. She presents her body in a suit cut as high on the hips as only the mid-to-late 80s could deliver. The greatest SI model in the greatest of her five cover appearances.

These rankings are purely subjective and subject to change from one day to the next.