The 63-year-old singer teamed up with nonfungible token extraordinaire Beeple to create a series of X-rated graphics showing her fully nude and giving birth to butterflies, insects and trees. Called “Mother of Creation,” the NFT collection, which will be sold for charity, also includes a 3D model of Madonna’s vagina — which is on full display in cartoon form on the collection’s highly (don’t say we didn’t warn you) NSFW website.
“I wanted to investigate the concept of creation, not only the way a child enters the world through a woman’s vagina, but also the way an artist gives birth to creativity,” Madonna said in a statement, noting that “all works were conceived with a 3D scan.”
Madonna and Beeple created an NSFW NFT collection featuring the singer fully nude.motherofcreation.xyzCalled “Mother of Creation,” the NFTs include a 3D model of her vagina.motherofcreation.xyzOne work, called “Mother of Evolution,” shows her giving birth to butterflies.motherofcreation.xyzThe shocking NFT for “Mother of Nature” shows her in labor with a tree.motherofcreation.xyz
“In a cold laboratory setting, with no sign of life, an opening gives way to a branch that transforms into a full vibrant tree,” the site reads. “It pushes against gravity and flowers bloom. The tree may bend or even break, but it continues to re-create and flourish. This work features new text by Madonna.”
If that wasn’t enough to shock, the second work, called “Mother of Evolution,” shows the “Material Girl” birthing butterflies, which the artists call “one of the most beautiful creations in nature, and a sign of hope.”
“The butterflies are a metaphor for the paradox that the world is burning down in a post-apocalyptic scene, but there is still evidence of life,” the site reads. “We continue to give birth, no matter what destruction is going on, no matter what oppression we face. It relays the important message that if you are waiting for the world to be perfect or for your life to be perfect to create art, it will never happen. We have to do it, for our own survival in this chaotic, unpredictable world.”
“Mother of Technology” depicts her delivering insects.motherofcreation.xyz“The butterflies are a metaphor for the paradox that the world is burning down in a post-apocalyptic scene, but there is still evidence of life,” she explained.motherofcreation.xyz“We continue to give birth, no matter what destruction is going on, no matter what oppression we face,” the creators wrote.motherofcreation.xyz
That work also features the Queen of Pop’s song “Justify My Love” along with original music by Igor Bardykin.
Rounding out the trifecta of weirdness is yet another video, called “Mother of Technology,” in which Madonna’s lady bits are prominently featured, this time birthing insects to demonstrate “the way science can also give birth light into the world, but only if used with the right consciousness.”
“We can do whatever we want, but there are consequences to that. Nature will ultimately win in the end,” the artistic duo declares.
According to the website, Madonna and Beeple, whose real name is Mike Winkelmann, collaborated for years on the raunchy “Mother of Creation triptych,” which aims to “represent a different form of birth in our contemporary world.”
Birthing insects, Madge explained, demonstrates “the way science can also give birth light into the world, but only if used with the right consciousness.”motherofcreation.xyzMadonna created the collection with Beeple, whose real name is Mike Winkelmann.motherofcreation.xyzProceeds from the NFT auction will benefit three charities.motherofcreation.xyz
“When Mike and I decided to collaborate on this project a year ago, I was excited to have the opportunity to share my vision of the world as a mother and an artist with Mike’s own unique point of view,” Madonna says. “It’s been an amazing journey building this together from an intellectual idea to an emotional story, giving birth to art.”
“These 3 NFTS are a labor of love a year in the making, as both artists partnered to connect to the idea of creation and motherhood through these visualizations,” the pair adds.
“It’s been an amazing journey building this together from an intellectual idea to an emotional story, giving birth to art,” Madonna said in a statement.motherofcreation.xyzThe auction opens Wednesday on SuperRare.motherofcreation.xyz
Madonna says that “proceeds from the sale will benefit three nonprofits” — the Voices of Children Foundation, the City of Joy and Black Mama’s Bail Out — all of which are “focused on supporting women and children around the world.”
She-Hulk has met the most formidable, daunting force in all of the MCU: dating apps!
The newbie superhero attempts to navigate the worlds of family, career and, yes, dating in her 30s in the new trailer for Disney+’s She-Hulk: Attorney at Law.
Emmy winner Tatiana Maslany stars as She-Hulk (a.k.a. Jennifer Walters) in the series,”a single, 30-something attorney who also happens to be a green 6-foot-7-inch superpowered hulk,” according to the streamer.
“I’m Jennifer Walters,” Maslany says in the trailer. “I’m a lawyer. I have great friends. A demanding job. And a frustrating family.”
That family, of course, comes in the form of cousin Bruce Banner (a.k.a. The Incredible Hulk/Smart Hulk), played by Mark Ruffalo. “Being a superhero is a trial by fire,” he says in the trailer. “Who’s going to protect the world, if not people like you?”
You won’t like this family when they’re angry!
After she is made the face of the Superhuman Law Division by her boss, Bruce works with Jennifer to bridge the gap between Jennifer and She-Hulk. “The transformations are triggered by anger and fear,” Bruce tells her.
“Those are like the baseline of any woman just existing,” Jennifer tells him.
Jennifer does her best to ease into the She-Hulk persona—just don’t put a label on her.
“I’m not a superhero,” she says. “That is for billionaires and narcissists. And adult orphans, for some reason.”
While being a giant, green lawyer doesn’t exactly allow her to blend in, she does to get lift up men by barely lifting a finger. Sounds like a decent trade-off.
“Baby- so proud of you for giving such a vulnerable and emotional performance,” Megan wrote in a May 17 Instagram post. “You are magic.”
During the May 15 event, MGK performed his track “twin flame” on the BBMAs stage. Before beginning the song, MGK noted, “I wrote this song for my wife.” And halfway through his performance, the “Emo Girl” singer added, “And this is for our unborn child.”
In another tweet, MGK shared that the song was written in two parts, seemingly referencing the two dedications he provided during the performance.
“i recorded twin flame 2 years ago today, the second half came a year later,” he shared. “beautifully serendipitous getting to sing it for you tonight.”
The exact meaning of MGK’s onstage dedication has not been confirmed. What is certain is that Megan and MGK are in full wedding-planning mode.
While walking the red carpet at the 2022 Billboard Music Awards, Machine Gun Kelly exclusively told E! News their nuptials are going to be “completely out of the box.”
ABC via Getty Images
They also plan to keep celebrating Megan’s 36th birthday.
“Well, it’s my fiancée’s birthday at midnight,” MGK shared with E! News on the 2022 BBMAs red carpet. “So we’re celebrating her wonderful life being here on planet earth.”
In her May 17 Instagram post, Megan—who previously hosted the Travel Channel’s Legends of the Lost —reminded the world that despite her glam Hollywood image, she’s a nature girl at heart. “Vegas it’s been nice but you are my version of the innermost ring of hell,” she wrote. “Off to the wilderness for my birthday.”
“I think marriage is always the endgame at my stage of the game,” he told hosts Justin Sylvester, Bobby Berk and LoniLove. “I’m not in the business of wasting anybody’s time, and I think the good thing about our relationship is we go at our own pace. And you’ve seen with other couples—they force the engagement and they’re not together anymore. So, I think what we got is a working recipe and we’re gonna get there.”
The two met on James’ season 25 of The Bachelor in 2020, in which he made history as the series’ first Black lead. But he was unaware of the importance of his casting for quite some time.
“Listen, I was fully consumed in quarantine. That wasn’t really my focus,” he said. “I thought I was going on The Bachelorette. And when I first got that call, I thought that Tyler [Cameron] and someone in the house was messing with me.”
He continued, “When they offered it to me, I’m like, ‘Oh, bet,’ like, ‘Who’s messing with me?’ And then, you know, as the process furthered, I’m like, ‘Oh, wow, okay. This is monumental.'”
James’ experience on the ABC dating series is the main inspiration behind his debut book.
BSE Global
“There was a lot of things that I talked about that I shared on the show that never made it to everybody else’s television boxes,” he shared, “and I’m hoping that they can resonate with my story a little bit more once they’ve seen and felt everything I’ve gone through.”
He shared that he always “talked about real s–t with the people on the show” to give them insight into what life with him post-show would be like, only some of those moments didn’t make the final cut.
“When a lot of that didn’t come across, it just lacked depth,” he shared. “I feel like we could have capitalized on being the first Black Bachelor and having important conversations.”
Long before he joined the franchise, Rachel Lindsay made history as the first Black lead of The Bachelorette in 2017, a role which she’s used to call out the series’ issues with representation.
“Listen, Rachel Lindsay is a force,” James said. “I don’t think I could ever step into that light and take on everything that she’s taken on, but I have had conversations with her in terms of, you know, the things that I—she prefaced her experience with mine and said, ‘Watch out for X, Y and Z,’ and without that context, I think that the show could have played out completely different.”
Check out the full interview in the clip above.
First Impressions: Off Screen Conversations With a Bachelor on Race, Family, and Forgiveness, is available now where books are sold.