Thirty Seconds of Boobs…For A Good Cause

pink_ribbon_boobs.jpg

If you don’t mind staring at a quick-cut succession of boobs for 30 seconds on a Monday morning, you’ll love this new PSA for Pink Ribbon Magazine which raises money for breast cancer research. Grey Amsterdam created and Chris Palmer from Gorgeous Productions directed.

You see? There’s absolutely nothing wrong with boobs. Even on a Monday morning. What? You gonna complain about a little nudity? You better not. That’d be like saying the human body is ugly and you don’t care about breast cancer. So watch this thing. Appreciate human beauty. And become ever more aware of the importance of breats cancer research.

Oh OK, breast cancer has it easy. After all, it’s boobs we’re talking about. No one wants to see a :30 filled with disgusting colons, charred lungs, a scarred pancreas or swollen testicle. But breasts> Everyone wants to see breasts. It’s like these breast cancer PSAs write themselves.

Picture of Steve Hall

Steve Hall

RECENT ARTICLES

TRENDING AROUND THE WEB

Psychology says people who can’t seem to feel satisfied aren’t ungrateful or broken — they’re still operating with achievement metrics they absorbed in childhood that were never designed to produce contentment, only compliance

Psychology says people who can’t seem to feel satisfied aren’t ungrateful or broken — they’re still operating with achievement metrics they absorbed in childhood that were never designed to produce contentment, only compliance

Global English Editing

Psychology says the family members you need to release as you get older aren’t the ones who wronged you once — they’re the ones who drain you consistently, the ones whose name on your phone makes your stomach tighten, because that physical response is your body telling you what your loyalty won’t let you admit

Psychology says the family members you need to release as you get older aren’t the ones who wronged you once — they’re the ones who drain you consistently, the ones whose name on your phone makes your stomach tighten, because that physical response is your body telling you what your loyalty won’t let you admit

Global English Editing

I watched my immigrant father spend thirty years becoming fluent in a country that never fully accepted him, successful in a career that never fully valued him, and proud of a child who spent too long being embarrassed by him —and forgiving myself for that is the one thing all my success has never once been able to buy

I watched my immigrant father spend thirty years becoming fluent in a country that never fully accepted him, successful in a career that never fully valued him, and proud of a child who spent too long being embarrassed by him —and forgiving myself for that is the one thing all my success has never once been able to buy

Global English Editing

Psychology says the reason losing a fake friend feels like grief even when you’re relieved is that your brain doesn’t mourn the person. It mourns the version of yourself that believed the friendship was real, and that identity loss is neurologically identical to heartbreak.

Psychology says the reason losing a fake friend feels like grief even when you’re relieved is that your brain doesn’t mourn the person. It mourns the version of yourself that believed the friendship was real, and that identity loss is neurologically identical to heartbreak.

Global English Editing

People who carry an air of genuine sophistication into their later years aren’t the ones who learned the most rules — they’re the ones who became secure enough that the rules became irrelevant, and the habits that remain are simply the natural expression of someone who is completely comfortable taking up exactly the amount of space they need and not one inch more

People who carry an air of genuine sophistication into their later years aren’t the ones who learned the most rules — they’re the ones who became secure enough that the rules became irrelevant, and the habits that remain are simply the natural expression of someone who is completely comfortable taking up exactly the amount of space they need and not one inch more

Global English Editing

I’m 65 and the art of being happy alone took me decades to learn — these are the 8 things I do instead of chasing friendships that were never real

I’m 65 and the art of being happy alone took me decades to learn — these are the 8 things I do instead of chasing friendships that were never real

Global English Editing