Bikini in popular culture

Main article: Bikini
Models in bikinis, 2011

The modern bikini made its debut in 1946, and since then it has caught the popular imagination becoming probably the most popular woman's swimsuit, and not necessarily for swimming. Today, bikinis appear in competitions, films, magazines, music, literature, magazines and even video games. Despite the easy availability of more revealing glamour imagery, bikini modeling remains popular and can still create controversy. Portrayals of the bikini in popular culture led, to a large extent, to its acceptance by Western society at large. In 1960, Brian Hyland's pop song "Itsy Bitsy Teenie Weenie Yellow Polka Dot Bikini" inspired a bikini-buying spree.[1] The white bikini worn by Ursula Andress as Honey Ryder in the 1962 James Bond film Dr. No has been cited as the most famous bikini of all time and an iconic moment in cinematic and fashion history.[2][3][4][4][5] By 1963, the movie Beach Party, starring Annette Funicello and Frankie Avalon, led a wave of films that made the bikini a pop-culture symbol. Playboy first featured a bikini on its cover in 1962. The Sports Illustrated Swimsuit Issue debuted two years later. This increasing popularity was reinforced by its appearance in contemporary movies like How to Stuff a Wild Bikini featuring Annette Funicello and One Million Years B.C featuring Raquel Welch.[6] Hollywood stars such as Marilyn Monroe, Jayne Mansfield, Gina Lollobrigida and Jane Russell helped the growing popularity of bikinis further. Pin up posters of Monroe and Mansfield, as well as Hayworth, Bardot and Raquel Welch distributed around the world contributed significantly to the popularity of the bikini.[7]

Bikini contests

Main article: Bikini contest
Newsreel of a Dutch bikini contest, 1971

Bikini contests are a form of adult entertainment where women compete against each other in bikinis ostensibly as beauty contests. They can take place in bars, nightclubs, strip clubs, on beaches, and at beauty pageants, as well as during intermissions of boxing or wrestling matches, and at car shows. Bodybuilding competitions may also feature bikini contest segments. It is becoming more common for women to wear bikinis at swimsuit competitions. Bikini contests can also take place over the Internet by women submitting pictures of themselves in bikinis.

Bikini contests may be organised or sponsored by related companies for marketing purposes or to try to find and attract new talent to promote their products.[8] Miss Hawaiian Tropic is organized by Playtex to promote "Hawaiian Tropic", its suntan lotion. NOPI runs the annual "Hot Import Nights" bikini contest, which is held in conjunction with the import car-show in Atlanta, Georgia, and the annual Hooters bikini competition.

Some contestants in bikini contests undergo plastic surgery for breast and lip augmentations.[9] Bikini contests can still generate controversy in some parts of the world. When Mariyah Moten competed in the Miss Bikini of the Universe pageant in Beihai, China in 2006,[10] she was the first Pakistani girl to participate in a bikini pageant,[11] creating outrage in her home country.[12][13][14] She also became the most photographed participant of the contest and won the Best in Media/Miss Press title.[15] A year later she was 2nd Runner-up in the Miss Asia International contest[16] and Miss Asia World,[17] and was featured on the cover of Sexy South Asian Girls 2007 calendar.[18][19]

Bikini in major beauty pageants

Miss World

Main article: Miss World

Origin

In 1951, the first Miss World contest, originally the Festival Bikini Contest,[20][21] was organized by Eric Morley as a mid-century advertisement for swimwear at the Festival of Britain.[22] The press welcomed the spectacle and referred to it as Miss World, and Morley registered the name as a trademark.[23] When, the winner Kiki Håkansson from Sweden, was crowned in a bikini, countries with religious traditions threatened to withdraw delegates. Håkansson remains the first and last Miss World to be crowned in her bikini,[23] a crowning that was condemned by Pope Pius XII who declared the swimsuit to be sinful.[24][25] Bikinis were outlawed from the pageant and evening gowns introduced instead.[26] After the controversy, bikinis were banned from other beauty pageants around the world as well.[27]

Controversy

Bikinis reappeared in later contests amid additional controversy. In the 1970s and 1980s the contest was regularly picketed by feminist protesters, who distributed flyers against the indecency of the contest.[28][29] The pageant disappeared for a while and in 1996, when the Miss World contest was held in Bangalore, India, dozens of Indian groups who opposed the event claimed that the contest degraded women by featuring them in bikinis. Social activist Subhashini Ali commented, "It's not an IQ test. Neither is it a charity show. It's a beauty contest in which these things have been added on as sops." The protests were so intense that the organizers were finally compelled to shift the venue of the "Swimsuit Round" to Seychelles.[30][31][32] Countering these claims, the contest organizer says that the organization has raised ₤300 million for charity in many of the countries where it operates since 2000.[33] Feminist groups published fliers against bikinis in the contest in 1970.[34]

In 2013, the Miss World event is to be hosted by Indonesia, the world's largest Muslim-majority country. The country's top Muslim clerical body, the Indonesian Ulema Council, suggested that the event should be cancelled because it promotes "hedonism, materialism, and consumerism", and is nothing but "an excuse to show women's body parts that should remain covered." The organizers later announced that the bikini would be replaced by one-piece swimsuits and even sarongs, traditional beachwear on the resort island of Bali. Critics accuse the Miss World organizers of caving to extremist pressures. They point out that Bali is a destination for tourists from across the world who often wear minimal swimwear.[25]

Miss Earth

Main article: Miss Earth

Vida Samadzai was the 2003 Afghani contestant for the Miss Earth title. She was severely condemned by the both Afghan authorities and community for seeking the title.[35] Samadzai was born in Afghanistan but raised in the United States. She was living in India at the time of the contest.[36] The Afghan Supreme Court banned swimsuit contests and said that appearing naked in beauty contests is completely un-Islamic, and is against Afghan tradition, human honour and dignity. Habiba Sarabi, the Afghan women affairs minister, said Samadzai's semi-naked appearance "is not women's freedom butdon my opinion is to entertain men". Afghanistan's embassy in Washington DC declared that claims by Afghan American Samadzai to represent Afghanistan is baseless.[37] Samadzai, the second woman to be crowned Miss Afghanistan after Zohra Daoud's crowning in 1972, received a number of death threats and had to be under the protection of FBI for three months.[35][38] She said she was a bit uncomfortable wearing the "70s style red bikini" and was aware of the risks involved.[36][39][40] Curiously, when Samdzai's compatriot Zallascht Sadat won the crown of Miss Deutschland 2010,[41] which she kept it through 2011 because the contest was not held that year, wearing a bikini, before going on to become Miss Globe 2012,[42] there was not much controversy.

Miss America

Main article: Miss America

Era of one-piece swimsuits

Miss America began as a swimsuit competition between eightcontestants in Atlantic City, New Jersey in 1921 as National Beauty Pageant Tournament, bikinis were dropped from its list of acceptable swimwear in 1947.[21] After the bikini is introduced in Paris in 1946, Miss America contestants are issued identical two-piece swimsuits that clearly show their midriff. The following year, the two-piece swimsuits are replaced with identical cable-knit swimsuits.[43] The pageant grew to include formalwear and talent and its popularity increased.[9] Swimsuits issued by the pageant were nicknamed "bulletproof vests". Two of the 17 swimsuit finalists wore two-piece swimsuits, and Erika Kauffman, representing Hawaii, wore the briefest bikini of all and won the swimsuit competition.[44] In 1949 the Los Angeles Times reported that Miss America BeBe Shopp on her visit to Paris said she did not approve the bikini for American girls, though she did not mind French girls wearing them.[45] Feminist protesters protested against that swimsuit in the 1960s and 1970s.[9] In 1994 Miss America Organization asked viewers to vote to decide whether to keep the swimsuit round. Viewers overwhelmingly voted to keep it.[9]

Era of bikini

In 1997, 51 years after the bikini's debut, and 77 years after the Miss America Pageant was founded,[44] the 51 contestants in the contest were, for the first time, allowed to pick their own swimsuits.[46] On September 9, 1997, Miss Maryland Jamie Fox became the first contestant in 50 years to compete in a two-piece swimsuit during the Preliminary Swimsuit Competition at the Miss America Pageant.[47]

Various major pageants

Founded Pageant Organizer Location Bikini allowed Bikini regulation Bikini controversy
1921 Miss America Miss America Organization[21] Atlantic City, New Jersey 1997 Contestants are allowed to wear bikinis after a fifty-year ban imposed in 1947.[21] 1947: Bikinis were outlawed because of Roman Catholic protesters.[48]
1951 Miss World Eric Morley London, England 1952 Has toned down its swimsuits to more modest designs from the bikinis of its inaugural year.[21] 1951: The first winner Kiki Håkansson from Sweden was crowned in a bikini. countries with religious traditions threatened to withdraw delegates.[26] Pope Pius XII condemned the crowing as sinful.[24][25]
1996: Miss World contest was held in Bangalore, India, but "Swimsuit Round" was shifted to Seychelles because of intense protests.[30]
2013: The swimsuit round was dropped because of Islamist protests in Bali, Indonesia, where the contest took place.[49]
1952 Miss Universe Donald Trump New York City 1997 Contestants are allowed to wear bikinis after a fifty-year ban imposed in 1947.[21] 1996: Alya Rohali, the first Puteri Indonesia was withdrawn from the competition.[50][51]
1952 Miss USA Donald Trump New York City 1997 Contestants are allowed to wear bikinis after a fifty-year ban imposed in 1947.[21]
Tankinis were provided as an option for the first (and last) time in 2000.[21]
1983 Miss Teen USA Gulf+Western Palm Springs, California 1997 Contestants are allowed to wear bikinis.[21] Tankinis were provided as an option for the first (and last) time in 2000.[21]
2001 Miss Earth Carousel Productions Quezon City, Philippines 2003 2003: Vida Samadzai from Afghanistan participating in a bikini caused an uproar in her native country.[21]

Movies

Frankie Avalon and Annette Funicello in publicity photo for the series of Beach Party films

Beach party films

Beach Party films were an American 1960s genre of feature films which often starred Annette Funicello and Frankie Avalon. Walt Disney reluctantly consented to Funicello, a former main cast member of The Mickey Mouse Club, wearing a bikini.[7] The series was originally intended as a low-budget imitation of both the Elvis Presley musical and the Doris Day sex comedy, aimed at the teen market, but they ended up taking on a life of their own. The "classic" series was produced by American International Pictures (AIP), and imitated in turn by numerous other studios. AIP produced a series of seven beach films:Beach Party (1963), Muscle Beach Party (1963), Bikini Beach (1964), Pajama Party (1964), Beach Blanket Bingo (1965), How to Stuff a Wild Bikini (1965), and The Ghost in the Invisible Bikini (1966).

The 1965 AIP film Ski Party (with Dwayne Hickman, Yvonne Craig, Lesley Gore and James Brown) is also notable for employing many of the same actors and schticks, only transplanted to a ski resort in the Sawtooth National Forest. Susan Hart, wife of AIP co-founder James H. Nicholson, was in The Ghost in the Invisible Bikini and Dr. Goldfoot and the Bikini Machine as well as two non-AIP beach films, For Those Who Think Young and Ride the Wild Surf.

The 1996 movie That Thing You Do! touches briefly on the phenomenon, with the Wonders making an appearance in a fictional beach party movie, Weekend at Party Pier. A 2001 episode of Sabrina, the Teenage Witch ("Beach Blanket Bizarro") also paid homage to the series, with Avalon appearing as himself. Avalon and Funicello starred in Paramount Pictures Back to the Beach in 1987, playing off their original roles and subsequent careers. Kelly Killoren Bensimon wrote in The Bikini Book, "It was really all about Annette Funicello. If the girl next door wanted to wear a bikini, then everybody wanted to wear a bikini. We didn't want to be a bad Bond girl. We all really wanted to be the good girl."

Iconic film bikinis

Time magazine list of top 10 bikinis in popular culture

Source: Chris Gayomali, "Top 10 Bikinis in Pop Culture", Time online, 07-05-2011

In 1962, an icon was born as Bond girl Ursula Andress emerged from the sea wearing a white bikini in Dr. No. The Dr. No bikini scene has been quoted as one of the most memorable scenes from the British spy film series.[52] That white bikini has been described as a "defining moment in the sixties liberalization of screen eroticism".[53][54] It is regarded as one of the most important bikinis in history as sales of the two piece bikini rocketed after the appearance of Andress in Dr. No.[55] Channel 4 declared it the top bikini moment in film history,[56] Virgin Media puts it ninth in its top ten,[57] and top in the Bond girls.[58] The Herald (Glasgow) put the scene as best ever on the basis of a poll.[59] British Broadcasting Corporation observed, "So iconic was the look that it was repeated 40 years later by Halle Berry in the Bond movie Die Another Day."[54] In a survey of 1000 women to celebrate the 60th anniversary of the bikini, Andress in her white bikini was voted "The Ultimate Bikini Goddess".[60]

It also helped shape the career of Andress,[61] and the look of the quintessential Bond movie.[62] Andress said that she owed her career to that white bikini, remarking, "This bikini made me into a success. As a result of starring in Dr. No as the first Bond girl, I was given the freedom to take my pick of future roles and to become financially independent."[2][63][64] Because of the shocking effect from how revealing it was at the time, she got referred to by the joke nickname "Ursula Undress".[54] In 2001, the Dr. No bikini worn by Andress in the film sold at auction for US$61,500.[54]

Raquel Welch wore a fur bikini in One Million Years B.C. (1966) that made her an instant pin-up girl.[54] Welch was featured in the studio's advertising as "wearing mankind's first bikini"[65] and the bikini was later described as a "definitive look of the 1960s".[66] She was strategically promoted to increase the value of the film by repeating "Raquel Welch in a fur bikini" five times in the trailer making it the reason to watch the film.[67] Her role wearing the leather bikini raised Welch to a fashion icon[68] and the photo of her in the bikini became a best-selling pinup poster.[66] One author said, "although she had only three lines in the film, her luscious figure in a fur bikini made her a star and the dream girl of millions of young moviegoers".[69] When Phoebe Cates dropped her red bikini in teen film Fast Times at Ridgemont High (1982),[70] it became "the most memorable bikini-drop in cinema history."[71] The bikini scenes in B.C. and Fast Times were ranked 86 and 84 in Channel 4 (UK)'s list of the 100 Greatest Sexy Moments in Film.[56] In 2011, Time listed both Welch's B.C. and Cates' Ridgemont High bikinis in the "Top Ten Bikinis in Pop Culture".[72]

In the 1983 film Return of the Jedi, Princess Leia (played by Carrie Fisher) wears a metal bikini,[73][74] an iconic slave girl costume often imitated by female fans at Star Wars conventions.[75] The metal string bikini consisted of a patterned copper brassiere with a curved, plunging neckline that fastened behind the neck and back with string. The thong bottom had copper plates at the groin in front and back partially covered by a red silk loincloth. Leia wore high leather boots, a hair fastener that positioned her braided ponytail to cascade over her right shoulder, two bracelets, and a snake arm-wrap. She also wore a chain and collar that bound her to Jabba the Hutt, her captor, which she used to kill him.[76] The costume was made of brass and was so uncomfortable that actress Carrie Fisher described it as "what supermodels will eventually wear in the seventh ring of hell."[75] The slave Leia costume has been elevated to pop culture icon status, spawning various spoofs and parodies (notably the episode of Friends, "The One with the Princess Leia Fantasy") and even a dedicated fansite.[77]

Actresses fighting in bikinis in movies like Charlie's Angels: Full Throttle and Blue Crush have made the two-piece, according to Gina Bellafonte of The New York Times, "the millennial equivalent of the power suit."[78] The Full Throttle scene showing actress Demi Moore walking out of the ocean wearing a bikini was credited with reviving her career.[79] In the film Varsity Blues (1999), Ali Larter attempts to seduce James Van Der Beek sporting a "bikini" made of whipped cream over her otherwise naked body. In the film Not Another Teen Movie, Chris Evans tries to recreate that scene.

Bikini films

Bikini Bloodbath (2006), Bikini Cavegirl (2004), Bikini Planet (2002), Bikini Bandits (2002, featuring Dee Dee Ramone) Never Say Never Mind: The Swedish Bikini Team (2001, featuring the Swedish Bikini Team), the bikini car wash series including The Bikini Carwash Company (1992) and The Bikini Carwash Company II (1993), the Bikini Summer series including Bikini Summer (1991), Bikini Summer II (1992), Bikini Summer III: South Beach Heat (1997), Bikini Island (1991), Dangerous Curves (1988), Slave Girls from Beyond Infinity (1987), The Malibu Bikini Shop (1986), It's a Bikini World (distributed by AIP, 1967), Operation Bikini (produced by AIP, 1963, featuring Frankie Avalon), and Bikini Baby (1951) are some of the many films with plotlines revolving around the bikini.

Among non-English films Yit long kau oi jin (US title: Beach Spike, Hong Kong, 2011), Bikinisesongen (US title: The bikini season, Norway, 1994), Poveri ma belli (UK title: A Girl in Bikini, Italy, 1957), and Manina, la fille sans voiles (US title: Manina, the Girl in the Bikini, France, 1952, featuring Brigitte Bardot) are some of the films that revolve around the bikini.

Movie poster

The promotional cinema poster for For Your Eyes Only (1981), the twelfth spy film in the James Bond series, featured a woman holding a crossbow photographed from behind in a bikini bottom with half of her buttocks exposed. Morgan Kane, the photographer, achieved the skimpy look bay making model wear her bikini bottom backwards.[80] The poster caused some furore—largely in the US—with The Boston Globe and the Los Angeles Times edited out everything above the knee,[81] while the Pittsburgh Press editors painted a pair of shorts over the legs.[82] There was significant speculation as to identity of the model with three models claimed the thighs in question – Nancy Stafford, Jane Sumner and Joyce Bartle – before photographer Morgan Kane identified the model to be Bartle, though the arm holding a crossbow belongs to Sumner.[81][83]

Music

As people with roots in the Indian subcontinent who reside in the Caribbean were more receptive of the bikini than people of their original homeland, bikinis remain a repeating theme in Calypso music ("Whole day she jumping shamelessly/In a tiny little bikini" etc.).[84] Australian pop-rock band Screaming Bikini (led by Sarah McLeod), Hungarian rock band Bikini, American dance-rock band Bikini Robot Army, punk rock band Bikini Kill and Los Angeles based electropop duo Cherry Bikini – all had names inspired by the bikini. In 1997 the French-German Electronic band Stereo Total released an album named Monokini. Spanish rock band Hombres G released its seventh album Historia del bikini in 1992. In 1994, Martinis and Bikinis, the seventh (studio) album from American singer-songwriter Sam Phillips, came out. Dutch breakcore musician Bong-Ra released his album Bikini Bandits, Kill! Kill! Kill! in 2003.

Songs

"Itsy Bitsy Teenie Weenie Yellow Polka Dot Bikini", a single written by Paul Vance and Lee Pockriss, has become a part of the history of the bikini. Released on August 8, 1960, it was also the first single sung by Brian Hyland to enter Billboard Hot 100. The song features in 1961 Billy Wilder film comedy One, Two, Three, as well as films like Sister Act 2 and Revenge of the Nerds II: Nerds in Paradise. It also features in commercials for Yoplait light yogurt, YWCA, and TV Easy magazine. "Do The Bikini Dance", a single by Dee Dee Ramone, was released on the day Ramones were inducted into the Rock And Roll Hall of Fame in 2002. In the Gang of Four song "I Found That Essence Rare", the bikini is suggested to be "...dressed for the H-Bomb...". "Bikini Girls with Machine Guns" is an song released by the American garage punk band The Cramps in 1990.[85]

Performances

MTV Video Music Award (VMA) 2013 had pop stars Lady Gaga and Miley Cyrus appearing on stage in bikinis. Gaga appeared in a white seashell string bikini and Cyrus in a flesh colored latex bikini.[86] Pop star Britney Spears, who won a Celebuzz poll as the best bikini body over Kate Upton, Jessica Alba and Holly Madison and stripped down a to black bikini in Late Show Top Ten List hosted by David Letterman, performed at VMA 2007 in a rhinestone bikini.[87][88] Pop star Beyoncé Knowles, winner of the VH1 celebrity bikini award in 2012, appeared on the cover of Sports Illustrated Swimsuit Issue (February 2013) and modeled for H&M bikini line (Summer 2013), including a black two-piece bikini with tassels that she helped design.[89][90][91][92]

Music videos

Pop stars Nicki Minaj and Rihanna donned bikinis for the music videos in 2012. Minaj wore a neon pink bikini for "Starships" and Rihanna wore a micro bikini for "Where Have You Been".[93][94]

Print media

Magazines

Since 1964 Sports Illustrated publishes an annual swimsuit issue featuring bikini-clad fashion models on the cover and a pictorial section. The issues has become an cultural icon.[95] For the original swimsuit issue, Sports Illustrated editor Andre Laguerre asked fashion reporter Jule Campbell to help find a model for the issue.[96] She found Berlin-born fashion model Babette March and featured her on the cover, wearing a white bikini, wading in the surf on Cozumel, Mexico. The issue was the first Swimsuit Issue.[54] The Swimsuit Issue became an annual publication of the magazine, featuring fashion models wearing swimwear in exotic locales. Inclusion is considered a stick by which supermodels are measured.[97] In addition, the issue is a media nexus that in 2005 carried $35 million in advertising.[97]

New issues come out around the middle of February or later. First published in 1964, it is credited with making the bikini a legitimate piece of apparel.[98] The issue that got the most letters was the 1978 issue.[99] The best selling issue was the 25th Anniversary Issue with Kathy Ireland on the cover in 1989.[99] Media Watch, a feminist newsletter reported protests at the Time-Life Building. Magazines like Sport and Ebony Man publishes their own versions, while many other magazines imitate the swimsuit issue. Spin brings out a parody of the swimsuit issues.[95]

Urbe Bikini (UB) is a Venezuelan, Maxim-styled monthly created by Urbe's editor-in-chief and creative director, Gabriel Torrelles and publisher, Carlos Lizarralde, who sold the company to Cadena Capriles, the largest publisher in Venezuela. It is the largest circulation glossy in the country and a cultural and circulation phenomenon in itself for more than 10 years. Sports magazines like Inside Sport or automotive magazines like the Lowrider Magazine regularly features bikini-clad women on the cover to appeal to a predominantly young male audience.[100][101] In 2006, Maxim magazine created a 33 metres (108 ft) wide vinyl-mesh bikini in the desert of southern Nevada, United States featuring Eva Longoria from Desperate Housewives, claiming that it could be seen from outer space.[7]

In September 2011, Lilac magazine has become the first Arabic magazine to show a cover with a bikini. The 22-year-old model, Huda Naccache, from Haifa, Israel is pictured posing in a black sequinned bikini.[102] Young Animal (Yangu Animaru) is a magazine published by Hakusensha in Japan that features about 288 black and white pulp pages of seinen manga and scantily clad women. wrapped in about 20 slick pages of color photos of teen age girls (pop stars and gravure idols) topless or in bikinis. Editor of the bulletin of Science Fiction and Fantasy Writers of America Jean Rabe resigned the post on June 5, 2013 in the course of a controversy about sexism[103] cover in the image of no. 200 of the Bulletin, depicting a woman in a scalemail bikini.[104]

Comic books

Bikini in comic books: From Jo-Jo, Congo King published by Fox Feature Syndicate

Most artists depict Red Sonja, a Marvel Comics character created by Roy Thomas and Barry Windsor-Smith who frequented Conan the Barbarian books and was ranked first in Comics Buyer's Guide's "100 Sexiest Women in Comics" list,[105] wearing a very brief bikini-like costume of scale armour, usually with boots and gauntlets.[106][107] Ghita, another character created by Frank Thorne after he ceased work on Marvel Comics' Red Sonja, was drawn both in and out of her armored bikini in the "adults only" graphic novel Ghita of Alizarr published by Eros Comix.

Comic book writer and artist Mike Grell designed the character Shadow Lass in the series Legion of Superheroes wearing a shiny black bikini as the costume for DC Comics. During his leadership, another Legion character Saturn Girl wore a pink bikini as her costume which she continued till 1982. Writer-artist Budd Root created Cavewoman for Basement Comics, a voluptuous barefoot jungle goddess in a snakeskin bikini.[108]

Darna, a character created by writer Mars Ravelo and artist Nestor Redondo for Filipino comics publisher Mango Comics, consistently wore a variation of her classic costume of red bikini with a gold star in each brassiere cap. Rulah, Jungle Goddess, a comic book character created by Matt Baker for Fox Feature Syndicate, wore a bikini made from the skin of a dead giraffe. Kiani, a supporting character of Fathom, a comic book series created by artist Michael Turner for Aspen Comics is traditionally seen wearing only her bikini with barrier reef adornments.

Books

The Bikini Planet is a science fiction comedy written by David S. Garnett and released exclusively in the United Kingdom as a paperback. It was written as a sub-sequel to an earlier story by Garnett in 1994, entitled Stargonauts, and features some of its settings and characters.

Art and entertainment

Games

The Bikini Karate Babes is a digitized 2D fighting game developed by Creative Edge Studios. It features an all-female cast of 19 fighters, all clad in bikinis and played by real actresses. OneChanbara: Bikini Zombie Slayers (for Wii ) and Onechanbara: Bikini Samurai Squad (for Xbox 360) are two games in the OneChanbara series developed by Tamsoft, featrung ample female flesh, gore and violence. In the game Poxnora, all the women wear bikini-like clothing. Dead or Alive Xtreme Beach Volleyball by Tecmo is a beach volleyball game featuring bikini clad women from the Dead or Alive games franchise.

Television

Bikini News is a series of satirical news videos featuring two comedians performing in bikinis in a comedic style similar to The Daily Show and Saturday Night Live available in podcast and vodcast form, as well as in mov and WMV file formats. As of October 2007, over 90 episodes and 80 bloopers/sketches have been created. NCIS, an American police procedural television series revolving around a fictional team of special agents, had an episode on Bikini Wax (18th episode, 2nd season). Bikini Destinations is a travel show on HDNet that takes bikini clad anchors to places where bikini is a common wear.

Bikini Barbershop is an American reality show on AXS TV featuring female hair stylists, at work, wearing only bikinis.[109][110]

Bikini Bottom is a fictional city that appears in the Nickelodeon animated television series SpongeBob SquarePants. Located at the bottom of the Pacific Ocean,[111] it is where the series' main characters live, and where most of the episodes take place.

Theater

In Nissim Ezekiel's one act Indian English moral play The Song of Deprivation, the protagonist becomes a "different woman altogether" as she takes off her bikini and gets into a sari.[112]

Sports

The Bikini Basketball Association is an American women's basketball league, created by Cedric Mitchell and A. J. McArthur in 2012.[113] The players wear sports bras and boy shorts, during games.[114] Commentators found it variously funny,[115] offensive,[116] and smart business.[117]

In 2003, scanty clothing of beach volleyball helped the popularity of Dead or Alive: Xtreme Beach Volleyball, a video game for Xbox[118] and, in 2007, contestants in the WWE Diva contest.[119]

Modeling

When Jayne Mansfield and her husband Miklós Hargitay toured for stage shows, newspapers wrote that Mansfield convinced the rural population that she owned more bikinis than anyone.[120] She showed a fair amount of her 40-inch (1,000 mm) bust, as well as her midriff and legs, in the leopard-spot bikini she wore for her stage shows.[121] Kathryn Wexler of The Miami Herald wrote, "In the beginning as we know it, there was Jayne Mansfield. Here she preens in leopard-print or striped bikinis, sucking in air to showcase her well noted physical assets."[122] Her leopard-skin bikini remains one of the earlier specimens of the fashion.[123]

The Swedish Bikini Team was a group of American female models who appeared in an advertising campaign for Old Milwaukee beer. These commercials ran for several months in 1991 in the United States, playing with American stereotype of blonde and big breasted Scandinavian women. Feminist activists found the ads misogynistic. Though the campaign generated widespread interest, the advertisements were dropped after protests by the National Organization for Women and female employees of the Pabst Brewing Company. The Swedish BIkini Team featured in the 2001 film Never Say Never Mind.

Cosplay

Bikini Cosplay

Actress/model Phoebe Price wore a Princess Leia slave girl bikini at the San Diego Comic-Con International in 2010.[124] Liana K, the Canadian co-host of Ed & Red's Night Party and well-known cosplayer appeared at 2008 Calgary Comic & Entertainment Expo dressed in Princess Leia's slave girl outfit.[73][74][125]

The scale armour bikini of Red Sonja remains a recurring theme in cosplay and comics conventions.[126]

Services

Airlines

In February 1964, Scandinavian Airlines placed an advertisement in newspapers and magazines throughout America. It featured a bikini-clad blonde model exposing her bellybutton posing on a rock above the caption "What to show your wife in Scandinavia." The image that appeared in most publications had the belly button removed to conform to the regulations.[127][128]

Ultra-cheap UK airline Ryanair publishes its Annual Charity Calendar featuring the Cabin crew in bikinis.[129] But when Thai low cost airline Nok Air ran a Facebook contest featuring models from the men's magazine Maxim dressed in yellow bikinis, the brand color of the airline, the Thai Ministry of Culture spoke against it for focussing on Thailand's bad reputation.[130][131] In Russia that same year, the top airline Aeroflot and low cost airline Avianova stirred up a row over bikinis in 2010. Aeroflot published a calnder featuring bikini clad and naked women holding wings, while Avianova's promotional YouTube video showing a model in bikini washing its plane became a hit.[132]

In Vietnam, VietJetAir organized a bikini contest show on its inaugural flight in December 2011, and when a video of the show became a hit on YouTube the airline was fined by the country's Civil Aviation Administration in August 2012 for "local aviation regulations".[133][134][135] In 2009, Southwest Airlines of United States ran a Boeing 737 with a picture of swimsuit model Bar Refaeli wearing a bikini painted on the fuselage.[136][137] In Bolivia, Colombian lingerie company Ronied ran a promotional fashion show of bikini and lingerie wearing models on board a state airline Boliviana de Aviación (BoA) plane during a commercial flight from La Paz to Cochabamba in 2010.[138]

Clubs

Go-go dancers at the Lizard Lounge, Dallas, Texas (2011)

Go-go dancers perform as a dancer to fast, energetic, popular music are employed to entertain crowds in places such as barss, nightclubs and discotheques in a sexually exciting manner while wearing very little clothing, often a bikini.[139][140][141] Go-go dancing originated in the early 1960s, by some accounts when women at the Peppermint Lounge in New York City began to get up on tables and dance the twist.[142] Other accounts claim that go-go dancing originated at, and was named for, the very popular South L.A. rock club Whiskey A Go Go which opened in January 1964.[143] Many 1960s-era clubgoers wore miniskirts and knee-high, high-heeled boots, which eventually came to be called go-go boots, to night clubs. On June 19, 1964,[144]

Carol Doda, a 26 years old Go-go dancer of Condor Club in San Francisco, the Condor's publicist, "Big" Davy Rosenberg gave Doda a "monokini" topless swimsuit designed by Rudi Gernreich.[145][146] She performed topless that night, the first noted entertainer of the era to do so. The act was an instant success.[145] Two months after she started her semi-nude performances, the rest of San Francisco's Broadway was topless, followed soon after by entertainers across America.[146] In 2012, the city of San Antonio amended its city ordinances dealing with "sexually oriented businesses" redefining "nudity" to include "a state of dress that fails to completely and opaquely cover...the entire female breast".[147] Whereas female dancers had previously been able to avoid being classified as "nude" by wearing pasties over their nipples, the new law required that they wear at minimum a bra or bikini top.[148]

Bars

Dancer in a bikini bar at Sacramento, California

"Twin Peaks", a chain of sports bars and restaurants (colloquially referred to as breastaurants[149]) based in Dallas, Texas,[150] is known for having its waitresses dress in revealing uniforms that consist of cleavage- and midriff-revealing red plaid (or sometimes black bikini) tops and khaki short shorts.[151] "Your Coffee Cups" a coffee shop based in the Warm Springs district of Fremont, California,[152] had baristas wear bikinis. It served coffee available in "B cup" (12 oz), "C cup" (16 oz), and "D cup" (20 oz) sizes.[153] "Bikinis Sports Bar & Grill", a former chain of sports bars and restaurants primarily located in Texas,[154] is known for its scantily clad waitresses, whose uniforms consist of bikini tops, cowboy boots, and tight, short denim shorts.[155] The chain is also known for trademarking the term "breastaurant"[156][157] and purchasing a ghost town that was subsequently renamed "Bikinis, Texas".[158] The waitresses at the Molokai Bar of Mai-Kai Restaurant, a tiki-themed restaurant in Fort Lauderdale, Florida are attired in bikini tops and wraparound sarongs.[159]

Cafes

Bikini baristas prepare and serves coffee dressed in scanty attire such as a bikini or lingerie. In the United States, this marketing trend (sometimes referred to as sexpresso[160][161] or bareista[162][163]) originated in the Seattle, Washington area in the early 2000s. Similar phenomena have appeared in countries such as Chile and Japan since at least the 1980s.[164] At "café con piernas" (coffee with legs) style of coffee shops popular in Chile[165][166] the female service staff wears bikini, lingerie or mini skirts with high heels[167][168][169][170] and often walk on a raised ramp behind the bar counter.[171] Three well known café con piernas chains in Chile are 'Cafe do Brasil", "Cafe Caribe" and "Cafe Haiti".[172] Bikini bars Go-go bars are striptease establishments where the female performer or Go-go dancers' breasts and genital area typically remain covered for the duration of their performance.[173][174][175][176][177]

Car wash

Bikini car wash

Bikini car washes are warm-weather events which serve as fund raisers for a school, sport association (such as roller derby[178] or auto racing) youth organization or charity, or as commercial promotion. Women in bikinis promote the event by standing on a roadside with colorful cardboard signs or posters, or wash the cars. Hooters restaurants have bikini car washes in the summer to attract customers. It was the theme for comedy films The Bikini Carwash Company (1992, director Ed Hansen) and The Bikini Carwash Company II (1993).

Online

The project was spawned by an initial hoax movement in January 2014, which attempted to popularize the "bikini bridge" as a trend on social media. As an extension of the thigh gap trend, a bikini bridge consists of a bikini bottom suspended between a woman's hips, exposing a "bridge" on the pelvis. Users of the 4chan board "/b/" posted manipulated images, fake celebrity testimonials, and other content relating to bikini bridges on social networks such as Instagram, Tumblr and Twitter. After generating interest from others, they began to circulate the content on "parts of the Internet known to be biased on the subject of weight" to provoke negative reactions. The meme attracted media attention with some outlets initially reporting on it as if it were an actual trend, such as the Daily Mail, who dubbed it a "disturbing new selfie fad".[179][180][181][182]

See also

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