Once she decided to go through with the photoshoot she set a few ground rules. She wasn’t going to starve herself and she didn’t want any retouching of her photos, except for “a few dimples on her thighs.”
“My grandmother said to me [when I was little], ‘Mother nature was not as kind to you as she was to other little girls. Maybe you need to start wearing makeup.’ I just never saw myself this way.”
She added, “I know what I look like before I go into hair and makeup, so it’s hard for me to go from that to [the cover]. That’s something I have to process myself.”
King had nothing to worry about.

When she arrived at the photo shoot in Mexico, she said photographer Yu Tsai made her feel like “Beyoncé, Jennifer Lopez, Halle Berry all rolled into one.”
“I felt so comfortable and cared for that I didn’t even have time to feel self-conscious.”

“I never in a million years thought I would be standing here in a bathing suit for Sports Illustrated [Swimsuit], but here I am, which says to me that sometimes people can dream, God can dream, the universe can dream a bigger dream than you can ever think for yourself,” King told Sports

Illustrated. “I would have never thought this was possible. This was nowhere on my bucket list. So I’m thinking maybe it was a dream that I didn’t even know I wanted because now that I’m here, I want it bad.”

Gayle looks amazing! I think it’s wonderful how Sports Illustrated showcases all different ages, body types, and races in their issue. We’re not all the same, and everyone deserves to be represented.
MELODY THOMAS SCOTT BAD NEWS
Melody Thomas Scott, famed for her role on “The Young and the Restless,” unveils harrowing details of her past in her 2020 memoir, “Always Young and Restless

Born into a Hollywood tapestry, her early life was marred by dark shadows.Enduring sexual abuse at the hands of her grandmother and neglect from a mother who turned a blind eye, Scott’s home life was a stark contrast to her public success.Her sanctuary was the acting world, where the staged dramas paled in comparison to her personal horrors.
After leaving her toxic household at age 20, she struggled to find peace and forgiveness.Now a mother and advocate, Scott channels her pain into awareness, battling the stigmas of abuse with her own stark, lived truths.
Leave a Reply