Emily Ratajkowski Chats With Vogue Australia For New Cover
The podcaster discussed many different subjects ranging from freedom, privacy, and self-value with the publication.
The mother of one first reflected on the peculiar sensation of realizing that she is probably being photographed every single day of her life.
"I think I’ve basically been photographed every day of my life. Because even if I wasn’t getting paparazzi’d, I work so much as a model. Being documented that much is just a bizarre thing," she says.
When it comes to motherhood, the actress opened up and said: “I wasn’t somebody who always knew I was going to be a mother. It wasn’t something that was super on the agenda. I actually always imagined myself being much older when I became a parent. I think the beautiful thing was that I kind of didn’t have preconceptions."
She continued to reveal: "I really was interested in meeting my child and getting to know who they were before I decided to have positions, and develop that relationship in a respectful way without any kind of assumptions about how the two of us were going to interact. And that’s been, again, kind of handing over control and saying, ‘Okay, what’s this going to be like?’”
Emily Ratajkowski Faces Backlash For Posing In Oversized Jeans
The 32-year-old has recently found herself in controversy for modeling a pair of jeans typically associated with plus-size models, and she has even been criticized as being 'fatphobic.'
The founder of Inamorata, known for her advocacy of body positivity and author of the book 'My Body,' shared a series of photos on Instagram from a feature in M Magazine.
In these images, she is seen wearing light-wash jeans that are noticeably several sizes too big for her. Notably, she accentuates the extended waistband on the pants, drawing attention to the empty space in the pants that she does not occupy due to her thin frame.
Online users have now flooded the comment section of almost every post after that on Instagram, asking the model to apologize for her insensitive post.
"Designers won’t make plus sizes unless it’s for a photo opp where a thin person can be quirky," said one user. "Like how you’re dealing with the fatphobia after writing a book on body positivity?," asked one fan.
Another user said, "Who writes a whole book on body positivity just to come out against body positivity? Girl, it's all for fame. Disgusting."
"Imagine if companies actually made plus size clothes not for thin photoshoots lmaooooo," wrote another user.