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Brooks Nader suffers ANOTHER wardrobe malfunction in a plunging silk dress while at the ESPYS

Brooks Nader suffers ANOTHER wardrobe malfunction in a plunging silk dress while at the ESPYS

Daily Mail​11 hours ago
Brooks Nader suffered yet another wardrobe malfunction while attending the 2025 ESPY Awards on Wednesday.
The 28-year-old Sports Illustrated Swimsuit Model sizzled on the red carpet at the Dolby Theatre in Hollywood in a plunging cream silk dress.
However, the low-cut design unfortunately ended with Brooks revealing a bit too much.
The braless star suffered a mishap as her dress pulled to the side, resulting in a nip slip.
The model was pictured fixing the issue as she adjusted the neckline with both her hands. Later she was seen holding her dress in place while walking onto the stage alongside Joey Logano.
The incident comes after Brooks also encountered a wardrobe malfunction at Wimbledon, when her menstrual cycle began, causing bleeding that became visible on her white skirt. The mishap resulted in her getting a partnership with a tampon brand.
The model sizzled at the Dolby Theatre in Hollywood red carpet in a plunging dress. However, the braless star suffered a mishap as her dress pulled to the side, resulting in a nip slip
During her red carper appearance on Wednesday, the blonde beauty completed her look with champagne colored heels.
Her voluminous tresses were styled in bouncy waves cascading down her shoulders.
She finalized the look with chunky gold earrings.
She wore smokey eyeshadow and pink blush that accentuated her cheeks before presenting on stage at the biggest night in sports.
Brooks continued to struggle with the dress afterwards while heading to dinner at Craig's in Hollywood.
The ESPYs were hosted by comedian and actor Shane Gillis at the Dolby Theatre in Los Angeles, California.
The event - also known as the Excellence in Sports Performance Yearly Awards - recognize outstanding achievements in sports over the past year.
Earlier this month Brooks demonstrated her healthy sense of humor about herself as she addressed her wardrobe malfunction at Wimbledon.
The star stuck to the themes of summertime and tennis, slipping into a white skirt for the world-famous tournament.
The model was pictured fixing the issue as she adjusted the neckline with both her hands
She wore smokey eyeshadow and pink blush that accentuated her cheeks before presenting on stage at the biggest night in sports
But while she was in public, her period started and she bled through the fabric, with stains visible along the back of the skirt.
She laughed off the snafu on TikTok, posting a video of herself getting confidently up from a table only for her sisters to start cringing at her.
At that point Brooks turned around and the shot ran down the length of her outfit, so that the stains were in clear view on camera.
The Baton Rouge-born clotheshorse poked fun at herself the in text over the video as well, writing: 'tries to be chic,' and then: 'Starts [blood emoji] at Wimbledon.'
Fans leapt into the comments to praise her for being 'real' and 'NORMALIZING it,' with one writing: 'A canon event for all us girlies.'
'The one time you wear something non sheer and maxi,' joked one commenter with crying, praying and heart emoji - earning a like from Brooks.
Brooks waved off the mishap and sat cheerfully in the audience at Wimbledon that day, with her sister Sarah Jane right beside her.
And it appears the mishap paid off, as on Wednesday she reveled her collaboration with U by Kotex, a brand known for making menstrual products for women.
Before heading the the ESPYs she shared an Instagram post with the caption: '#UbyKotexPartner The last time I wore all white, I had a mishap and it made headlines. This time, I'm not taking any chances and brought backup. Thanks for the assist @ubykotex'
Brooks had another wardrobe malfunction in April at the Fashion Los Angeles Awards, where her structured dress drifted forward at one point and exposed her left nipple.
Her latest outing comes three months after DailyMail.com confirmed she has once again split from Dancing With The Stars pro Gleb Savchenko, 41.
Brooks and Gleb started dating while competing as a team on Dancing With The Stars last autumn, triggering allegations they were engaged in a 'showmance.'
They briefly broke up late last year but rekindled their romance, until it emerged in early April that Brooks had decided to leave him.
Brooks' sister Grace has accused Gleb of being unfaithful, which he staunchly denied, insisting he is 'not a cheater' or a 'f***boy,' via E! News.
Gleb was previously married to Russian artist Elena Samodanova for 14 years until she filed for divorce near the end of 2020.
Their acrimonious split played out in the headlines, with Elena accusing Gleb of repeated infidelity and Gleb denying her allegations.
Meanwhile, Brooks was seen chatting with Tom Brady at Michael Rubin's star-studded Fourth Of July party in 2024, setting off an avalanche of dating rumors.
Brooks separated from her husband Billy Haire in May 2024 after four years of marriage.
Brooks first rose to fame by winning the Sports Illustrated Swim Search in 2019, and last year she was featured on the cover of the Swimsuit Issue.
She and her sisters Mary, Grace and Sara are now all starring together on a reality show called Love Thy Nader, slated to bow on Hulu and Freeform this summer.
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Controversial NBA wag Draya Michele, 40, hits out at critics of romance with boy toy Jalen Green, 23
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Ari Aster made a movie about polarized America. 'Eddington' has been polarizing
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The Independent

time25 minutes ago

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Ari Aster made a movie about polarized America. 'Eddington' has been polarizing

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I don't believe any midlife woman who says they don't care what they look like
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Are you a member of the We Do Not Care Club? It's an online sensation started by Melani Sanders, a 45-year-old mother of three from West Palm Beach, Florida, who invites midlife women to tell her what they no longer care about. From her bed, clad in an old, grey T-shirt and baseball cap, she rants about how she doesn't care about bras – 'bras suffocate us'. She doesn't care 'about looking pregnant when we're not pregnant – that's just our perimenopausal or menopausal bodies '. She doesn't care 'about being late, cos we have our own s--- to do'; or having unpainted toe nails – 'I'm going to wear my flip-flops, they are just my feet'. She doesn't care 'if you think I have a s--- attitude, or that I'd rather watch TikTok than clear up'. If she has chin hairs, or ' cellulite in short shorts, that's just how I look, God made me that way'. I have to say I love her attitude – in 2025, it still feels revolutionary to see a woman out and proud, blowing up so many social 'shoulds'. I particularly love that she is taking aim at the kind of dreary, midlife grooming which is expensive, painful and endless. You know what I mean: threading, waxing and toe maintenance that can easily become a full-time job for what the ghastly Gregg Wallace has described as 'women of a certain age'. But while I appreciate Sanders's brand of We Do Not Care sentiments, I'm afraid her credo is not actually what I see in my community of midlife women. The reality of life for my 'Queenagers' (my word, I thought we needed a more positive rebrand), is many of them buckling under a myriad number of 'cares'. View this post on Instagram A post shared by Melani Sanders (@justbeingmelani) My women are holding up the sky. Last week, one woman in our sharing circle talked about how she is only getting three hours of sleep a night and is worrying about burning out because she is single, looking after her mother with dementia, working full-time AND supporting her two sons. The boys are in their early 20s and are working for free as interns in London to try and get jobs in finance. Their mum is paying their rent to help them get on that first rung on the corporate ladder (AI has reduced the number of entry level graduate jobs available by 40 per cent, so competition is ferocious). I said maybe she should let them fend for themselves – but, like many parents, she is committed to helping them get launched in the world. And that is getting harder and harder, because this is a boomerang generation. Unsurprisingly, the poor lady looked close to collapse, and then she admitted she is worried about losing her own job. 'It's amazing how all the women get whacked as they hit 50,' she said. Redundancy is a massive midlife female 'care'. In the last week, I have been supporting five senior women with ostensibly amazing careers who have just been 'let go'. Their crime? To be over 50 in a world where gendered-ageism is real. It's not just the workplace where men have a whole life, and women a shelf life. Research conducted by my company found that, by 50, over half of women have been through at least five of the following: divorce, bereavement, redundancy, caring for elderly parents, or a Gen Z with an anxiety or mental health disorder (not to mention their own health issues, menopause, and other kinds of abuse). The midlife clusterf--- (as we call it). Add to that, the constant bombardment we women face from anti-ageing messages in our youth-obsessed culture, where freakishly young-looking female celebrities, from Nicole Kidman to Kris Jenner, are held up to us as exemplars of how we are supposed to look. And most of us can't just disappear into a We Do Not Care slob zone of stretchy tracksuit bottoms and witch hair chins, if we want to hang on to our already precarious places in the world. OK, if we work from home, we can slob around in work-out gear – but for most midlife women, it's just not as easy as saying We Do Not Care. We're told every day that our value is wrapped up in how we look. I'm all for throwing off the patriarchal programming, which values women primarily for being foxy and fecund. But I see so many women of my generation battling that conditioning. They're facing an internal war between their desire to move into a new phase of autonomy – letting it all hang out and putting their needs first – then oscillating back into caring very much indeed about their dependents, and how they keep their peckers up in the world. Why else is practically every woman I meet dosing themselves with Mounjaro? The tyranny to remain slim and sexy, and lose the dreaded 'meno belly' feels real. And it is depressingly omnipresent. Last month, for instance, I attended a launch at the House of Commons for a new campaign called What Women Want. It's supposed to be about ending violence against women, erasing the gender pay gap – all the big stuff. Ahead of it, Good Housekeeping magazine did a survey of its (mainly midlife) female readers asking them that very question: 'What do you want?' The top answer? 'To lose half a stone.' I told you: They Do Care. So while I love the devil may 'do not' care attitude to chin hairs and brassieres, clearing up after messy relatives and not pedicuring horny 50-something feet, this isn't the reality. We live in a culture where gendered ageism is alive and kicking, the pressures on midlife women are off the scale but nonetheless, we've got to stay in the game, because we don't get our pensions until we are 67 (and women retire with 35 per cent less in the pot than men). I'm afraid We Do Care because we HAVE to care. For now, Ms Sanders's vision is just a fantasy of what the world might be like if we valued older women for all that they are, not just their attempts to stay young. I applaud her mission, but I'm afraid it's not reality for most of yet. We'll know we really don't care when young women look forward to being middle aged, as the time when it all gets good – not dread every wrinkle as an impending sign of doom.

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