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A Page Three girl is a woman who models for nude and topless photographs published in the UK tabloid The Sun.

The Page Three girl was introduced in 1969 when Rupert Murdoch relaunched The Sun after buying it. The Page Three girl was topless for the first time on November 17, 1970, when editor Larry Lamb unveiled the change while Murdoch was out of the country. The first topless model was Stephanie Rahn. The change was credited for a subsequent increase in sales, which rose 40% to 2.1 million copies within a year.

Page Three is considered sexist, demeaning, and exploitative by feminists, and Clare Short, the MP from Birmingham Ladywood, led a failed campaign against Page Three girls in 1986. Others, including many Page Three girls, dismiss it as harmless.

The writing that accompanies the Page Three girl picture usually explains the model's name, age, where she 'hails from', and some brief details of her personality. The models are usually shorter than fashion models, typically under 1.67 m (5 ft 6 in) tall. The Sun initiated an all natural policy where models, such as Jordan, who obtain breast implants are "retired" from Page 3.

Recently, articles accompanying the photos (headed "News in Briefs" by The Sun) attempt to tie in with the news, perhaps for humorous effect, with the models notionally being given a chance to comment on topical items.

Models in other newspapers

In the 1970s The Daily Mirror also had topless models, but these were dropped as sexist in the 1980s. In some German newspapers, such as Bild, the equivalent is found on the lower part of page one, and is thus called Seite-eins-Mädchen. In 1976 the Danish newspaper Ekstra Bladet introduced topless models on page nine, referred to as Side 9 Pigen. The Daily Star, which is often seen as a slavish imitation of The Sun, naturally has its own topless models as well, known as Starbirds. Topless models in tabloids were taken to their logical conclusion by the Sunday Sport, which later added a daily edition and strayed into pornography, owned as it is by a company which publishes top-shelf titles.

Canadian tabloid newspapers in the Sun Media chain such as the Toronto Sun, Calgary Sun, and Edmonton Sun feature a daily "Sunshine Girl", usually on page three (in fact, the Calgary Sun has permanently moved the Sunshine Girl to the sports section; while the Sunshine Girl is a daily feature, the Sunshine Boy feature only appears sporadically). The full-page, full-colour photo is of a woman in tight, revealing clothing, lingerie, or a swimsuit. Some editions have moved the model to the last pages of the issue, or into the sports section.

The American supermarket tabloid Weekly World News regularly features a bikini-clad "Page 5" girl.

The Australian niche sports and racing newspaper Sports Truth also runs a page 3 girl, but is often lifted from other publications, and the model given a new name and biography.

The Australian men's magazine "Ralph" features a bikini-clad "Page 29 Girl".

The American author, poet, blogger, and satirest, Billy Jones, AKA: Billy The Blogging Poet, features his own "all nude" parodies of Page 3 Girls on his weblog, BloggingPoet.com. [1]

Yes-Weekly, a local on-line and print publication in Greensboro, North Carolina features Page 3 Talent sometimes featuring men as well as women. [2]

Well-known Page Three girls