It is not Miley Cyrus on the cover and spread of a magazine if the model is clothed and in decent poses. Shocking is a mild word to use in describing the former Disney star's photos for the latest issue of Candy magazine.
Nude poses are standard for any Miley pictorial. To stand out, she needs to do something bizarre, and she did not fail readers of the teen magazine with a photo of Miley licking her armpit hair. She has some clothing on, but the rest of the images are still raunchy, from her two fingers inside her mouth that apparently symbolizes oral sex to a display of her left breast and nipple partially covered by an open plaid red, blue and white top, to her barely-there cut-off jeans that almost gives a peek of her private parts. Only her feet and legs are more covered with a mid-thigh high black leather boots.
The photos, taken by Terry Richardson, came out in nine covers of Candy this November, observes MTV. Most of the covers, expectedly, are "very much NSFW," which once more "scandalizes," says Hollywood.com.
With Miley, E! News points out, "there were actually zero boundaries to push." Her Candy magazine "spread" - figuratively and literally - makes her recent photo session for V magazine's "Diary of a Dirty Hippie" appear tame, the entertainment website comments.
For that shoot, taken backstage at the 2015 MTV Video Music Awards, Miley was totally naked while she sat on a makeup chair. E! News notes that "naked-sitting Miley seems G-rated compared to naked-smoking Miley."
She also has lower body totally exposed, including her lady garden, while her upper body was covered, the breast by her crossed arm and a white kitten to cover her breast. The photo might as well be titled "My p**ssy" which could refer to both the real baby cat and the one down under.
In another photo, she wore a white swimsuit with the words "MY PUSSY MY CHOICE" in red letters, accompanied by three outlines of hearts. It's a limited edition of Candy, with only 1,500 printed, so Miley fans who loved to be shocked were advised by MTV to run to their nearest newsstand before the edition runs out.