Skip to content
Search AI Powered

Latest Stories

Photographer Sparks Outrage After Charging $100 More To Take Photos Of Plus-Size Models

Photographer Sparks Outrage After Charging $100 More To Take Photos Of Plus-Size Models
@sixtinerouyre/Instagram; @modelnexus/Instagram
Make us preferred on Google

People on social media are calling out a photographer after it was revealed he charges an extra $100 for photography sessions with plus-size models.

The uproar began after model and agency owner Megan Mesveskas, who represents plus-size models, reached out to the New York-based photographer to inquire about booking him for a shoot.


The email she received in return left her shocked. See her video about the exchange below.

Plus-size and "curve" models have gained more and more acceptance in the fashion industry in recent years, with models like Ashley Graham and Tess Holliday even becoming household names like many of their traditionally waif-ish colleagues.

But Mesveskas' video shows that old habits die incredibly hard. As she revealed in her video, designers routinely ask for more money to design and create plus-size clothes, supposedly owing to the extra fabric required for the process.

However Mesveskas, a veteran of the industry who represents scores of models, said that this is the first time she's ever encountered a photographer adding an additional charge for plus-size models--$950 for "standard" model versus $1050 for "plus size/curve" models. She chalked the extra money up to the photographer, William Lords, charging for "his dissatisfaction of having to look at them on set."

One of the model's Mesveskas represents, Sixtine Rouyre, was equally disgusted with Lords' move.

She forcefully criticized Lords for his pricing, saying in her video:

“This is just one more example of how awful the modeling industry is to literally anyone over a size zero..."
"...Your fatphobia is showing, and you should be ashamed of yourself."

But when confronted directly about the pricing, Lords defended the practice. Asked about the uproar by Newsweek, Lords said the extra $100 charge is to cover the difficulty in sourcing the kind of clothes that plus-size models usually want to wear.

"Most of them say what they want, and you know what it is? The high-end stuff. They want the stuff that the straight-sized models have..."
"$100 is absolutely nothing compared to what I do for these girls."

As you might guess, none of this has gone over very well with people on social media, who shared Rouyre and Mesveskas' outrage.

@adrianaephoto/Instagram



@the_shire_critters/Instagram



@abiibabyy/Instagram



@remibader/Instagram



@therosereflective/Instagram



@meghantonjes/Instagram

@sofia.gabay/Instagram



@marycfehr/Instagram



@nicolelebriscreative/Instagram



@cocorocha/Instagram


Canadian supermodel Coco Rocha spoke out about the controversy as well, likening Lords' pricing to "being pulled backwards to the early days of the 2000’s" when plus-size models were barely even heard of, let alone accepted. Here's hoping moves like Lords' don't become a trend.

More from Trending

Screenshots from @WallStreetApes' X video
@WallStreetApes/X

Woman Speaks Out In Viral Video After Tech Company Sues Small Ohio Town For Rejecting $1 Billion AI Data Center

People have begun to voice their concerns about the more than 4,000 AI data centers that have been constructed in the United States.

Some, like the people of Dowagiac, Michigan, have filed lawsuits against the companies behind these data centers because of the negative effects of them on their surrounding community, like becoming increasingly ill due to the noise emitted by them nonstop.

Keep ReadingShow less
Screenshot of Donald Trump; Eric Trump and Donald Trump Jr.
TMZ; Chip Somodevilla/Getty Images

Trump Just Made A Bizarre Joke About Having A 'Threesome' With His Sons—And People Are Weirded All The Way Out

President Donald Trump weirded people all the way out after joking that he and two of his sons should have a "threesome" and all receive the Congressional Medal of Honor during his speech at the dedication of the Theodore Roosevelt Presidential Library in North Dakota on Wednesday.

While discussing General Douglas MacArthur and his father, Arthur MacArthur Jr.—one of only two father-son duos to receive the nation's highest military honor—Trump also mentioned Theodore Roosevelt and his son, Theodore Roosevelt III, who likewise earned the distinction.

Keep ReadingShow less
Excerpt of Redditor Positive_Actuary_282's 'New Office Rule'
u/Positive_Actuary_282/Reddit

Sign Warning Workers About Extreme Consequences Of Exceeding Their 30-Minute Lunch Break Has The Internet Sounding Off

Work-life balance isn't something to laugh at. In fact, employees tend to work more diligently and stay at workplaces longer when they feel respected and cared for by their work community.

But according to one Redditor on the "Interesting" subReddit, some workplaces don't look at it that way.

Keep ReadingShow less
Seth Rogen; Keanu Reeves
Esquire/YouTube

Seth Rogen And Keanu Reeves Spark Debate With Resurfaced Comments About How Wealthy People No Longer Do Things For The Public

We've all heard the saying, "The rich get richer, and the poor get poorer." In today's economy, with rising prices, tougher job markets, our first trillionaire, and even social media influencers becoming millionaires, the saying feels too true for comfort.

Seth Rogen, Keanu Reeves, Keke Palmer, and Aziz Ansari, who all starred in the film Good Fortune, directed by Ansari, appeared for an episode of Esquire's Table Read, and a major point of conversation was how the film's message applies to real life.

Keep ReadingShow less
SONY PlayStation showcases its fun scenes in home consumption at AWE2026 in Shanghai, China.
CFOTO/Future Publishing via Getty Images

Gamers Are Furiously Sounding Off After PlayStation Announces End To Physical Discs

Physical media fans just got hit with a game-over screen.

Sony announced Wednesday that it will discontinue physical PlayStation game discs starting in January 2028, a move that has already sparked backlash from gamers who aren't exactly thrilled about handing over the last remnants of ownership to digital storefronts.

Keep ReadingShow less