Model flashes boobs in see-through top
The 28-year-old Sports Illustrated model was spotted arriving at a restaurant for a girls' night out, joined by her friend and newlywed Lauren Sanchez Bezos, as well as her sister, Sarah Jane Nader.
Nader's ensemble featured a completely sheer black top with an oversized bow at the neckline.
Her bare chest was toned down ever so slightly by the addition of silicone nipple pasties, which were nude but prevented her from completely flashing her breasts.
She completed the striking look with on-trend black capri leggings, strappy black heels, and a snakeskin clutch.
Her makeup was kept minimal and dewy, and her blonde curls added a touch of effortless glam.
Tiny Parisian chic sunglasses finished off the all-black ensemble.
Lauren Sanchez Bezos, 55, who recently celebrated her wedding with Nader in attendance, also turned heads in a figure-hugging red leather dress with a corset bodice and a scoop neckline.
Her flashy new wedding ring was on full display and matched her sparkly diamond earrings.
Meanwhile, Sarah Jane, 22, opted for a black and white satin maxi dress with a dramatic plunge neckline, rounding out the trio's eye-catching looks.
Silicone nipple covers are typically designed to create a smooth, discreet silhouette under clothing.
However, Nader's decision to make them visible beneath her sheer top turned them from a hidden wardrobe accessory into an intentional part of her outfit.
This isn't the first time Nader has used fashion to make a statement.
Just days ago, she went viral after sharing a candid video from Wimbledon, where she experienced a period stain on her long white skirt.
Rather than shying away from the moment, Nader poked fun at it head-on, using TikTok to normalise the relatable period mishap.
Nader first rose to fame after winning the 2019 Sports Illustrated Swim Search, quickly becoming a regular in the magazine's swimsuit editions from 2020 to 2022.
In 2023, she graced the cover of the iconic publication and cemented her status as a model to watch in the industry.
Now, with her upcoming reality show ' Love Thy Nader ' – which follows the four Nader sisters as they chase their modelling dreams in New York – she's no doubt going to continue to be in the headlines.
Hashtags

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles

ABC News
29 minutes ago
- ABC News
The best-selling album that nearly didn't happen: Keith Jarrett's The Köln Concert, 50 years on
Today it's the best-selling piano and solo jazz album of all time. But 50 years ago, Keith Jarrett's The Köln Concert nearly didn't happen. Between the substandard piano, an exhausting car journey, missing meals, and chronic back pain, Jarrett's iconic performance in the Cologne Opera House had the makings of a disaster. Instead, Jarrett turned it into something that has captured audiences for half a century. As the Köln Concert turns 50, the jazz world explores Jarrett's remarkable legacy and pays homage to an album that has inspired countless pianists. Jarrett was born in 1945 in Pennsylvania, USA. His parents fostered his early musical abilities, with the young Jarrett having perfect pitch and a knack for improvising at the piano. Jarrett started lessons at age three and gave his first recital when he was just seven. The young artist was a fan of classical music. Throughout his career Jarrett has noted the influence of classical composers like J.S. Bach. Jazz became a part of Jarrett's musical world when he was in high school, starting with artists like Dave Brubeck. "Brubeck taught Jarrett about form and structure in jazz, and he could see how it behaved in a similar manner to the classical styles he'd already been mastering," shares Jazz Legends presenter, Eric Ajaye. Keith also became a fan of jazz artists pushing the boundaries, like pianist Paul Bley. When he was 16, Jarrett had the chance to further his classical music studies in Paris with Nadia Boulanger, who taught some of the most famous musicians of the 20th century, from Daniel Barenboim to Quincy Jones. The young pianist pulled out at the last minute and took a different direction. Jarrett "knew that if he really wanted to have an impact as an artist, he'd have to make his own discoveries and forge his own path," says Ajaye. Instead, Jarrett went to New York in 1964 and got his first big break playing Art Blakey's Jazz Messengers. "Blakey wasn't Boulanger. Instead of teaching harmony and form he simply built bands around the energy of his youthful musicians," Ajaye says. From there, Jarrett's work spans the who's who of jazz. He worked with musicians at the top of their game like Charles Lloyd and Miles Davis, as well as producers including George Avakian who worked with artists from Louis Armstrong to Edith Piaf, and Manfred Eicher, founder of the renowned ECM record label. Ajaye credits Davis as the first person to encourage Jarrett to perform solo. Davis's trumpet improvisations would also have a significant on Jarrett's future solo style. "Both rely on extreme discipline and command of instruments and audiences, but both also required the daring to know when to abandon technique and simply play on impulse," Ajaye says. That daring would go on to help create the biggest-selling solo jazz album of all time. The events that lead up to the Köln Concert hardly seem the right mix to create a record that would go on to sell over 4 million copies. But somehow it became a career-defining performance. "This is a gig where everything went wrong, but the music still carried the day," says Ajaye. 18-year-old concert promoter Vera Brandes invited Jarrett to perform the first-ever jazz concert in the Cologne Opera House. The pianist arrived in the city in the late afternoon after an arduous car trip from Zurich. Jarrett had been suffering from chronic back pain and turned up at the venue in a back brace to help him manage it. Instead of the full-size concert grand piano Jarrett had requested, the venue provided a baby grand from a rehearsal room that was in poor shape. It was out of tune, the sound quality wasn't great, and the pedals weren't working. Jarrett already had a reputation for being demanding, but somehow Brandes and Eicher convinced him to go ahead with the sold-out concert, and to keep the recording engineers around to document the performance. Jarrett and Eicher left for dinner while the piano technicians to tried to make the instrument playable. After a missed meal thanks to a restaurant error, at the very late starting time of 11:30pm, Jarrett started the performance that would go on to make history. In the Köln concert, "Jarrett produced one of the most profound improvised concerts of his career," says Ajaye. The pianist took the confines of the "shoddy" instrument and worked around them or even using them to his advantage, "drumming up improvised rhythms on the noisy pedals and using the tinny upper registers to create new texture." "Jarrett was able to find some sort of magic within the confines of that old piano producing a brilliant performance full of lyrical melodic moments all on the fly," Ajaye says. Australian jazz pianist Matt McMahon agrees. "I think in a strange way, what happened with the Köln concert, and this piano that was subpar, is it really clarified his playing," he shares with The Music Show's Andrew Ford. Like much of Jarrett's work, The Köln Concert encompasses sounds that echoed then-familiar American musical traditions, like blues and gospel. McMahon believes this might be a part of the album's success. He suggests that "even though from second to second, no one knows exactly where this is going next," the sounds of familiar genres help the audience feel more comfortable with the uncertainty. Jarrett was already popular by the time of the Köln concert, but the success of the recording really put him on the map. His career continued to grow with solo and group performances and an enduring, fruitful relationship with ECM. His output spanned classical composers like Bach and Shostakovich, as well as his original work. Following disruptions to his career from back pain and chronic fatigue, in 2018 Jarrett had a series of strokes that caused some paralysis. After rehabilitation, Jarrett regained enough mobility to play piano with his right hand, but "we may never see the master perform a live concert again," says Ajaye. However, Jarrett's incredible influence on jazz is still being felt today. "Keith Jarrett will forever be remembered for the way he elevated not just the piano but also jazz as a whole, taking the art of improvisation to places where it hadn't gone before," says Ajaye.

News.com.au
2 hours ago
- News.com.au
Sad truth behind iconic TV show wedding
Whether it's the real kind (such as the fairytale 2011 union of Kate Middleton and Prince William) or the fictional sort (such as Scott and Charlene's memorable 1987 nuptials on Neighbours) people love a wedding. Mostly. The AU$76 million June spectacle that saw Jeff Bezos and Lauren Sanchez say 'I do' in Venice in front of Oprah Winfrey, a clutch of Kardashians and a newly single Orlando Bloom certainly drew a crowd. But not in a good way. Venetian locals protested the gauche three-day affair, which they felt had turned their city into a three-ring circus. Interestingly, the similarly star-studded 2014 wedding of George and Amal Clooney in the Italian tourist mecca didn't make waves in quite the same way. It's not only the Venetians who were unimpressed to see the Bezos wedding party cruise into the city on the US businessman's superyacht. Charlize Theron was also snarky about Bezos and Sanchez' OTT, no-expense-spared extravaganza. As the who's who of Hollywood gathered in the Italian city for the fancy affair, Oscar-winning Theron was in Los Angeles, hosting a fundraiser for her South African outreach program aimed at bettering the lives of people in her home country. 'I think we might be the only people who did not get an invite to the Bezos wedding,' the actor remarked wryly to the attendees. 'But that's OK because they suck and we're cool.' The backlash to the Bezos bash is the exception to the rule, however, as weddings are typically a source of joy for spectators, even when the road to the TV altar is beset by drama. Case in point: Izzie Stevens (Katherine Heigl) getting up from her hospital bed to attend the wedding of her dreams in Grey's Anatomy, and Hugh Grant's bumbling best man efforts in Four Weddings And A Funeral. Until recently, Friends fans believed the biggest shock at the 2001 screen wedding of Chandler (Matthew Perry) and Monica (Courteney Cox) was the revelation that Rachel (Jennifer Aniston) was pregnant. But behind the scenes of Monica and Chandler's much-hyped big day, Perry was struggling with the addiction that would ultimately claim his life in 2023. 'I married Monica and got driven back to the treatment centre … in a pick-up truck helmed by a sober technician,' Perry wrote in his 2022 memoir Friends, Lovers And The Big Terrible Thing. '[It was] at the height of my highest point in Friends, the highest point in my career, the iconic moment on the iconic show.' The wedding of Carrie and Big (Sarah Jessica Parker and Chris Noth) in the first Sex And The City movie also raised eyebrows (and not just because of the bird headpiece perched atop the bride's head). Series creator Darren Star revealed in a 2016 interview that he wasn't thrilled to see Carrie get hitched to anyone. 'I think the show ultimately betrayed what it was about, which was that women don't ultimately find happiness from marriage,' he explained. 'Not that they can't. But the show initially was going off-script from the romantic comedies that had come before it. That's what had made women so attached.' Kylie Minogue is yet to make it up the aisle herself, but if she does, the singer won't be taking inspiration from the wedding dress she donned on Neighbours (now housed at the Tasmanian Museum and Art Gallery). 'It was very of the time and we all have a big laugh about it now,' the popstar said of the high-necked lace gown during a 2017 interview on This Morning. One performer who has worn more than her fair share of bridal gowns is Jennifer Lopez. The singer has tied the knot eight times on film and four times in real life. A serial bride – on screen and off – Lopez, is always up for walking down the aisle, if the script (and the man) is right. Now with four divorces under her belt, Lopez hasn't given up on marriage, telling TV host Hoda Kotb in 2022: 'You know me. I am a romantic. I have been married a few times. I still believe in happily ever after, for sure. 100 per cent.' In the mood for some big-day drama? Say 'I do' to these unusual unions: Dream Weddings: Across the USA: This 2023 reality series gives you a front-row seat to real-life weddings, from waterside ceremonies to barnyard parties. Camp Wedding: A destination wedding becomes a nightmare when a bridal party is targeted by a killer in this 2019 horror-comedy film. 4 Wedding Planners: When Lily returns home to help save her family's wedding planning business her loyalties are tested when she discovers her ex-boyfriend is a client.

News.com.au
3 hours ago
- News.com.au
Ex-partner roasts Wayne Carey as new video emerges
Wayne Carey's ex-partner has publicly mocked the retired footballer in another twist to this week's bizarre scandal. Kate Neilson on Saturday night couldn't help herself from taking a sly dig at her former partner when she re-enacted the viral video featuring the former footballer, sharing her performance on Instagram. The fallout to Carey's so-called 'toilet tryst' drama continues to swirl after the woman pictured walking out of a bathroom ahead of the North Melbourne premiership winner on Friday revealed the episode has taken an immense toll on her personal and professional life. Marketing executive Kate Aston, 38, and Carey have publicly said they are pursuing legal action after the video quickly spread across cyberspace. Neilson, who dated Carey or four years before their split in 2009, was not subtle in re-enacting the video with her own partner while holidaying in Europe. Neilson posted a candid clip of herself walking out of a bathroom covering her face before her partner shortly exits the same bathroom while appearing to use his phone. The video on Neilson's Instagram stories included a duck emoji watermark. Carey's nickname during his football career was 'Duck'. The clip was set to the Bloodhound Gang's The Bad Touch hit. Neilson said she hoped the video was merely a misunderstanding. 'It's really too hard to tell what went on. I just hope for the sake of everyone involved there is no truth to it,' she said, per The Daily Mail. Aston and Carey said this week they are consulting with lawyers. 'What has happened to me could happen to anyone, and no one should have to go through what I have been put through – the damage, the speculation, the impact on my livelihood, all from the malicious actions of a small few,' Aston, who has denied anything happened in the toilets, said, per The Herald Sun. 'Overnight, from footage of me simply exiting a toilet at a bar, I've had my life turned upside down. 'From a professional perspective, my ability has been put into question which has had immediate financial repercussions, one that is costing me every day with the effects likely to be long term and irreversible … while I appear strong, those closest to me know that my suffering over recent days has been colossal.' Watch the viral Wayne Carey footage in the video player above Aston said she will be pursuing legal action after she was filmed at Toorak Cellars in the Melbourne suburb of Armadale last Friday leaving a bathroom about 20 seconds before Carey, 54, walks out. As the recording unfolds, one voice behind the camera can be heard saying 'she looks embarrassed' before a second ponders 'what's he doing in there?'. 'I have been put in this situation simply because of the cyber-bullying actions of other people,' Ms Aston said. 'There needs to be some sort of accountability for their actions. 'The actions of these women have meant my name is now in the public realm, and I am now the subject of immense ridicule. It has already affected my ability to earn an income with other far-reaching negative consequences to come.' Carey has also hit out at the footage, with the premiership winner demanding action and also labelling it cyber-bullying. Carey spoke about the footage with Sam Newman, confirming he had been in contact with Victoria Police and the AFL Players' Association. 'Annoyed is the wrong word, I've gone through 10 different emotions in the last three days,' he said on Newman's podcast. 'One has been disbelief, that's not an emotion, but I've gone through disbelief, sadness, I've gone through anger. 'I've had empathy, I've had all sorts of things go through this body and this mind. 'This woman has been thrown into this just because I could kick a footy. And you've got two vile, disturbing women who want to do this to another woman. 'That's all they were doing, they were slut-shaming another woman,' he said. 'If two men had done that they would be raked over hot coals, it would be the biggest story going around if that had occurred. 'But because it's two women doing it to another woman … you don't know what's going on, this other woman has had all sorts of stuff going in her life I've since found out.' The former North Melbourne captain said he and his partner, Jessica Paulke, had been in contact with the woman in the video and they had all teamed up to hold those behind the footage accountable. 'I know who they are, the police know who they are, my lawyers know who they are. I have contacted these people just like the footballers have contacted these people because they've been abused online,' he said. 'You talk about vile and disgusting, what they have done and who they have affected by a few s**ts and giggles drinking their chardonnay sitting up there doing whatever. 'Once again I'm not going to name them because that would be as pathetic as what they are. I'll let the law take care of it.' Carey, a great of the North Melbourne footy club, has a track record of incidents away from the playing arena. The most famous was his affair with former teammate Anthony Stevens' then-wife Kelli, which led to Carey's sacking from the Kangaroos. He has also been hit with indecent assault, domestic violence and misdemeanour battery allegations, along with issues with drugs and alcohol, and has been sacked from a number of media roles. Carey was in 2007 involved in a 'glassing' incident with Neilson. Neilson last year went public to refute claims Carey made about the incident, where he described reports as incorrect and 'ludicrous'. Neilson has always maintained: 'I can say with certainty the glass of wine was intentionally thrown into my face and smashed my mouth pretty bad.' Neilson has now come forward to accuse the footballer of changing his story. 'Wayne's story about the glassing in Miami has again changed from when he did the Andrew Denton story (in 2008) saying he didn't mean to break the glass on my face, but now he is saying he threw the glass on the ground,'' Neilson told The Herald Sun. 'Which is all lies. He was locked up in jail for a reason. Not because he poured wine on my face. I was bleeding profusely and the FBI took photos, which I have. 'So to say I was hardly a girlfriend is insulting when I lived with him for years and he flew to Tasmania and met my family, wrote about my dad in his autobiography and I was engaged to him. 'I'm extremely insulted by the downplay of all of this.'