US Singer Usher Charges iPhone in Woman's Genital at Exhibition
American singer Usher charged his iPhone in a woman's genital at an exhibition in Miami. The woman apparently had a battery pack inside her.
Usher attended the "Vector Gallery" at Art Basel in Miami to discover a naked woman at the exhibition with a iPhone charger inside her. She was apparently trying to prove how much human had become dependent on technology. She wanted to prove her point by allowing people to charge their iPhone from her genital. However, Android users must not have been disappointed to find that only Apple users could take advantage of the unique charging facility as the woman had a spare battery pack ready for Android phones as well. According to TMZ, the woman claimed that she "could take two phones at the same time." An NSFW photo shared in media outlets show that the blonde woman is sitting on a stool while white wires have gone inside her genital and the other part of the wire is apparently charging a mobile. The woman's hands are in Yoga-like positions as she looks Usher straight in the eye.
The U.S. singer has apparently become an art collector recently. The celebration in Miami was about artist Daniel Arsham's two new projects. The Mercedes-Benz event also had an installation in the yard in front of the venue where photographic artist Ventiko had a project called "On Beauty." The artist, along with several of his friends, posed completely naked with a life-size sex doll and a live peacock. Ventiko said that The Real Doll Company was kind enough to give him the doll for a week.
Usher, whose claim to fame was in late 1990s when he released his second album "My Way," ordered a Moscow Mule at the venue. He said that everything would taste better with absinthe, while he considered having Sactown fish eggs. He said that his choice of being an art collector came with growing up. "As you get older and have children, your reflections on what matters being to change," Vulture quoted him, ""I started slowing it down enjoying the places I went, going to museums, understanding the nature of what artists were trying to say."
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