These are from other campaigns also for Intimissimi.
We're eagerly waiting to see some posed or candid shots of Leni Klum. To date, there's no news of us having seen those huge boobs of hers.
Unlike her mother, we have seen Heidi several times topless. She has even posed naked several times. Those were different times. Before, posing nude was a sign of empowerment. Now it's frowned upon in the eyes of current feminism and woke culture. Not because they undress, but because if they undress, men objectify them. And we know that socialism, which has always thrived on social conflict, loves to instrumentalize everything. Before, it was the class struggle, and now it's the struggles between sexes, genders, and races. There always has to be a confrontation among the people because that confrontation allows them to perpetuate themselves in power since they present themselves as defenders, and without them, everything would be chaos and darkness. They are the damn religion of the 21st century.
instagram.com/heidiklum
instagram.com/leniklum
The slow motion of the day.
NOW WE’RE BLOWN AWAY BY AI LIKE OUR GRANDPARENTS WERE BY TVCreating images of celebrities with artificial intelligence, seeing them in sexy versions, in scenarios that never existed—just a few years ago, this would have been unimaginable. What once required hours of editing and advanced Photoshop skills can now be generated in seconds with just a few words. This is the new magic of the 21st century.
In the 1950s, people were mesmerized by television. Watching moving images on a screen was a surreal experience, a technological leap that changed the way we consumed entertainment. In just a few years, it went from being a luxury novelty to an everyday household staple, transforming culture and the way stories were told.
Today, AI is doing the same for digital imagery. We no longer just consume content—we create it on demand, manipulate reality, and play with what was once impossible. What you see no longer has to exist to be captivating. It's a new form of creativity, exploration, and for some, a fresh debate on the limits of technology and ethics.
One thing is certain: if people in the ‘50s were amazed by television, future generations will look back and be just as blown away by what we’re experiencing today.
# View Images
The slow-motion shot of the day.