Monday 1 October 2012

Kate Middleton

Kate Middleton is still naked
 and just a little bit less blurry 




There’s nothing really new to see here, since most of the photos are similar to the ones published two weeks ago by the French tabloid Closer and Italian tabloid Chi.
But this time the Duchess of Cambridge appears to be shedding her bottoms in addition to her top. However, the photos are so pixelated that you might as well just close your eyes and imagine what that might look like if that’s what you are into.
Kate and Prince William won an injunction against Closer last week. A court ordered the magazine to hand over any and all nude photos of the duchess within 24 hours, or it would be fined $13,000 per day, so one can reasonably expect some similar retaliation from the palace to the Danish press.







 Prince Harry pictures Naked

Prince Harry
photographs of a vacationing Prince Harry in the nude.
The pictures of the prince, showing him naked in a hotel suite while he was on vacation last week in Las Vegas, were widely available on the Internet after website TMZ published them Tuesday. But British newspapers initially declined to publish them.
The Sun's front page, headlined "Heir it is!" -- a play on Harry's status as third in line to the throne -- shows the 27-year-old prince naked except for a watch and necklace, protecting his modesty with his cupped hands.
A second image widely circulated online, which shows Harry hugging a woman from behind next to a pool table, both of them naked, is also printed in the paper, with a large crown superimposed across his bottom.
Ryan Lochte: Glad he missed Prince Harry's after party
The newspaper defends its decision to go ahead with publishing the image as being in the interests of a free press.
"The Sun is NOT making any moral judgement about Harry's nude frolics with girls in a Las Vegas hotel. Far from it. He often sails close to the wind for a Royal - but he's 27, single and a soldier. We like him," the story reads.
"We are publishing the photos because we think Sun readers have a right to see them."
There is "a clear public interest" in making the image available to everyone, regardless of whether they have internet access, so they can join the debate on his behavior, the newspaper argues.
The tabloid is Britain's biggest daily paper in terms of circulation.
A spokeswoman for the Press Complaints Commission, the UK press watchdog, said that it had not yet received a complaint from the Palace in regards to The Sun's publication of the photographs.
Royal officials had urged the UK media not to breach the prince's privacy by publishing the pictures.
A spokeswoman for St. James' Palace said editors are at liberty to make their own decisions.
"We have made our views on Prince Harry's privacy known. Newspaper regulate themselves, so the publication of the photographs is ultimately a decision for editors to make," the palace said. "We have no further comment to make, either on the publication of the photos or on the story itself, concerning Prince Harry's private holiday in Las Vegas."