1. I can sorta agree with that one. There are kids running around that have no clue that anime existed before 2003.
2. Well that doesn't mean much anymore. Tristen Citrine was a stripper and she got past it. What makes it a moot point is that most cosplayers under 30 these days are strippers in training anyways, so the shock value is gone. ;-)
3. When you have an "eh" costume, attitude and the pose go a long way in this hobby. That and being female, reasonably good looking and having 5% body fat or less. But then again, isn't that the world in general? ^.^
OMG i remember her, i actuall made a costume of hers back when i was a budding crossplayer, i sold it but now that i look back i did a bad job (used cloth glue instead of sewing and ribbon instead of spandex) Ya know i almost want to remake the costume now.
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1. She was ahead of her time: she's just like today's anime fans, all "style" (if you could call it that) and no substance.
2. I thought her previous career was stripper? She was spotted doing lap dances for money at AnimEast.
3. She demonstrates the difference between Cosplay and Masquerade: Cosplay's all about the POSE, and not about the CLOTHES.
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2. Well that doesn't mean much anymore. Tristen Citrine was a stripper and she got past it. What makes it a moot point is that most cosplayers under 30 these days are strippers in training anyways, so the shock value is gone. ;-)
3. When you have an "eh" costume, attitude and the pose go a long way in this hobby. That and being female, reasonably good looking and having 5% body fat or less. But then again, isn't that the world in general? ^.^
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Ya know i almost want to remake the costume now.
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