USA

I’m showing my boobs at NYC tourist hotspots for gender equality – if you don’t like it, don’t watch

She shows the Big Apple its big apples.

Flaunting her boobs on the subway, atop the Brooklyn Bridge, and in the heart of Times Square isn’t just a naughty pastime for Eila Adams, it’s an act of advocacy.

“If men can walk around shirtless without fear of reprisal, women should do it too,” argued the 36-year-old Canadian content creator.

Adams says showing her breasts is a gesture to promote gender equality. Eila Adams/Cover images

She has spent the last six days giving New Yorkers a glimpse of her assets, both her breasts and her butt, in the name of gender equality.

“It’s okay to be naked,” the blonde insisted. “By showing people going about my day, I just have a little fun and challenge the status quo.”

And this blinking frenzy isn’t just a flash in the pan.

The Knockouts, near and far, have recently taken a liking to presenting their knockers.

Ava Louise, 25, gave Irish residents a huge look in May, revealing her vast endowment to the virtual audience of the 24/7 live stream from unplugged between New York and the Emerald Isle .

“I thought the people of Dublin deserved to see two potatoes grown in New York,” the OnlyFans model shared after her NSFW show.

And Kait, the sexy Oilers fan from Edmond who flashed her plump pucks at a hockey game on May 31, recently signed a deal with Playboy as an Oilers “lucky charm.”

The Toronto native says showing her boobs has become a “way of life.” Eila Adams/Cover images
The self-styled “exhibitionist” says she often receives smiles and thumbs ups from people who catch her in mid-flash. Eila Adams/Cover images
“Nudity has played a very important role in my life. I don’t understand anyone who has negative feelings about nudity,” says Adams. Eila Adams/Cover images

But Adams, a host of Toronto’s Naked News, says her gripping shows are deeply rooted in justice.

“For more than 30 years, it has been legal for women to go topless in New York, which many women have embraced as a demonstration of gender equality,” she said, citing a court ruling. ‘a 1992 New York state court.

“I think flash is entertaining,” Adams added. “But it’s also a way of normalizing topless.”

“For me, it’s a way of life.”

Adams notes that it has been legal for women to go topless in New York for more than three decades. Eila Adams/Cover images

The fit fox further believes that everyone should proudly make their private parts known.

“Nudity has been such a huge part of my life – I don’t understand anyone who has negative feelings about nudity,” Adams moaned.

“We’re all born this way, and we have to accept our own bodies,” the pin-up continued, “and we have to love other people’s amazing bodies.”

Its flashes, however, aren’t always that powerful.

Adams says she doesn’t let negative remarks from her haters stifle her passion for flash. Eila Adams/Cover images

“I was flashing in an elevator and a man came in with my leg up against the wall,” recalls Adams, who refuses to tout his naked bazookas at hallowed sites like cenotaphs and the 9/11 memorial.

“He was shocked and I was embarrassed the rest of the way,” she said of the awkward encounter.

But the mortifying moments won’t stop the self-proclaimed exhibitionist from unmasking her breasts.

“I’ve gotten some negative comments, but I don’t let haters get me down,” Adams said.

Adams believes that women should be encouraged to go topless, just like men are in society. Eila Adams/Cover images

“Most people don’t even notice that I’m doing anything, but if I get caught I’ll get a smile, a thumbs up, a laugh,” she joked.

“T-ts can brighten a person’s day.”

“If you don’t like it, don’t look.”

New York Post

Back to top button