http://www.latimes.com/business/la-fi-models11may11,1,3995366.story?coll=la-headlines-business

Trade Show's Skin Policy Prompts Quick Coverups
But some models at the video game convention manage to skirt its new 
costume regulations.

By Dawn C. Chmielewski
LA Times Staff Writer

May 11, 2006


At daybreak Wednesday, with just hours to go before the Electronic 
Entertainment Expo's fashion police hit the beat, their effect was already 
being felt: alterations.

In a conference room above the exhibit floor, a model named Jackie assessed 
the Greek tunic-like costume she was supposed to wear to promote THQ's 
video game "Titan Quest." It was red, see-through, skimpy and, according to 
the new rules of the video game trade show known as E3, out of bounds.

"We're like, there's no way we're going out there," Jackie, who does not 
use her last name, and another model recalled telling the seamstress who 
was on hand to help address this type of sartorial snafu.

But when E3 opened its doors at 9 a.m., Jackie was at her post at the THQ 
booth — saved by a quick-thinking seamstress who had made her outfit more 
demure by piecing together a lining out of white tablecloths.

Costumes at this year's annual trade show at the Los Angeles Convention 
Center were more sedate — at least by E3 standards — because of tougher 
enforcement of an existing ban on sexually explicit or provocative booth 
materials. New rules impose a maximum $5,000 penalty for exhibitors whose 
models are nude, partially nude or wearing bathing suit bottoms.

And to make sure the rules were followed, there were enforcers whose job it 
was to roam the aisles making sure "booth babes" didn't reveal too much.

But rules, of course, are made to be bent. And it turned out E3 has 
provided a way to do just that. In short, models are allowed to show more 
skin if they are embodying a particular provocatively dressed video game 
character.

THQ seized on this loophole Wednesday to dress model Dionne Hudson as a 
prostitute who appears in its "Saints Row" game — complete with a short, 
black leather skirt, fishnet stockings and tank top.

"Last year, I was more covered up," Hudson said.

Show organizers refused to discuss the costume crackdown or permit a 
reporter to watch the wardrobe patrol in action.

A nonscientific survey of the models on the floor Wednesday revealed some 
newfound modesty.

Meriah Nelson, a model at the Funcom booth, said she was instructed to wear 
"booty shorts" — undergarments that provide more coverage — to ensure 
against southern exposure. And before she and another model, Tiffany Selby, 
were allowed to don their lace-up sandals and Xena Warrior Princess-like 
tunics, the seamstress stitched their necklines to guard against too much 
cleavage.

And it was a good thing, too, Selby said, "because my [breasts] were coming 
out."

Not everyone was happy about the outbreak of relative tastefulness. Outside 
the convention center, Roisin Taylor and Niki Nicholson — both dressed in 
short skirts and white midriff T-shirts that exposed their navels — were 
protesting the new rules, holding placards that said, "Booth Babe Protest: 
I'm Rated 'E' for Everyone."

But inside, another model applauded E3's sudden restraint.

"I'm glad they're drawing the line," said Brittany Evans of Redondo Beach. 
"As a trade show model you're kind of at the mercy of the booth you're 
booked with. It can get out of control."

Evans was dressed as a character from Webzen's Huxley video game — a 
futuristic shooter in which women are clad in decidedly retrograde 
skin-tight black vinyl dresses that expose lots of leg and cleavage, 
fishnet stockings and knee-high boots. But she has worn less. She said auto 
shows are notorious for putting their models in "pasties" and skirts "so 
short their butts hang out."

"You leave it to men to costume, and this is what you end up with," Evans 
said of those auto show gigs. "If I'm supposed to be carrying on 
conversations with people, give me some clothes, please."


================================
George Antunes, Political Science Dept
University of Houston; Houston, TX 77204
Voice: 713-743-3923  Fax: 713-743-3927
antunes at uh dot edu



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