But the problem is not sex and sexism. And all this banality disappointing.
The photos have Dianna Agron (Quinn), Lea Michele (Rachel) and Cory Monteith (Finn), starting with Monteith All-American smile, while grabbing the derrieres two scantily clad young women. So cool. So daring.
Monteith, of course, fully dressed. Not so his female costars, who bare their stomachs and cleavage, bras and panties, thigh-spread, butt-lifting raises to more than a little restless in a girls' school assemblies. Michele, in particular, seems to be an audition for a live-action version of Japanese anime porn.
Of course, Agron and Michele are grown women who only play high school students, and there is some version of satire at work here - the story "happily" refers to all complaints from parent groups tense. But the sufficiency-your-cake-and consumption-is too broad. The result is not so blatant and in your face, as it is predictable and depressing - Oh, look, younger women are called to assume the position, this time complete with pompoms and lollipops. No doubt he did Agron and Michele to be sexy and playful, and not all manipulated by the forces that have generations of young women in exactly the same raises precisely the same reasons - to feed the imagination, promote the show and sell magazines.
And that just makes it worse, right?
Michele is supposed, which are much more aggressive poses suggestive of Agron, also wants a payment for the hours that clearly happened in the gym since it opened the series, or at least a payment larger than its recent issue of Britney Spears. And no one can blame a young actress to want to make clear that, despite the credibility of Broadway, is a theater geek, but a young sexually attractive should not be in as Rachel Shoeboxed.
But honestly, no woman has yet to pull down her panties and thigh highs and extend a bank to accomplish this? That's not exciting or provocative or even retro. That is sad.
It is also very revealing. Although the images do not affect the quality of the show itself, make one thing clear. "Glee" in case you were wondering after the CD and the tour is now a franchise, opening the way into the American pop conscious and portfolios with the same intensity of the Disney machine that once seemed determined to send up .
The good news about the photos of GQ is that, unlike Miley Cyrus when he made the unfortunate "Vanity Fair", vaccines, these artists are all adults. The bad news is that the women decided to strip anyway.
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