Miley Cyrus isn't exactly the shy type, but seeing her get naked for the cover of Wmagazine may still raise a few (bleached and unbleached) eyebrows.
The Bangerz singer was interviewed by Ronan Farrow for the mag's March "Social Media Issue," and along with posing for racy photos for the spread, Miley touched on the negative attention surrounding her upcoming tour, her controversial sex appeal and much, much more.
"I just don't get what half the girls are wearing. Everyone to me seems like Vanna White. I'm trying to tell girls, like, ‘F--k that. You don't have to wear makeup. You don't have to have long blonde hair and big t--ties. That's not what it's about. It's, like, personal style.' I like that I'm associated with sexuality and the kind of punk-rock shit where we just don't care," Cyrus tells the mag.
"Like Madonna or Blondie or Joan Jett—Jett's the one that I still get a little shaky around. She did what I did in such a crazier way. I mean, girls then weren't supposed to wear leather pants and, like, f--king rock out. And she did."
The blond singer is known to rock out, too, and her upcoming Bangerz tour has made numerous headlines—both good and bad. However, in case you had any doubt in your mind, Cyrus doesn't let the negative attention get to her.
"I don't give a s--t," she said, when asked about the bad press surrounding her tour, including accusations that she is exploiting her minority backup dancers. "I'm not Disney, where they have, like, an Asian girl, a black girl, and a white girl, to be politically correct, and, like, everyone has bright colored T-shirts. You know, it's like, I'm not making any kind of statement. Anyone that hates on you is below you, because they're just jealous of what you have."
Regardless of where her career goes from this point forward, Miley says she's content. "You know, I've made my money. If no one buys my album, cool. It's fine. I've got a house, and I've got dogs that I love. I don't need anything else."
And that includes a boyfriend, at least for now.
After explaining that guys don't need to "impress me" because she'd really just rather chill at home than go to a fancy restaurant, Cyrus says that she's in no rush to find a man. "That's why I'm, like, not trying to jump into a relationship…I love my music so much, and I love what I'm doing so much that that has become my other half—rather than another person. And so, yeah, I feel like I had to be able to be 100 percent."
For more of this interview, you can grab the March issue of W, which hits newsstands February 12.
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