Mia khalifa Lifestyle,Net Worth, Salary, House, Cars, Awards, Education,..
Musaebe Rahat
The remaining six surviving whales have been returned to sea. Thank you to all involved for your amazing efforts today.pic.twitter.com/BDZ7kgNaEm— Parks and Wildlife (@WAParksWildlife) 23 marzo 2018Mia Khalifa (Arabic: ميا خليفة; born February 10, 1993), also known as Mia Callista, is a Lebanese-born American social media personality[3] and webcam model,[4] best known for her career as a pornographic actress from 2014 to 2015.Born in Beirut, Khalifa moved to the United States in 2000. She began acting in pornography in October 2014, and by December was ranked the number 1 performer on the website Pornhub. Her career choice was met with controversy in the Middle East, especially for a video in which she performed sexual acts while wearing the Islamic hijab. After three months, Khalifa left the pornographic industry to pursue other interests. Khalifa entered the pornographic film industry in October 2014.[8] She had been working at a Whataburger when she was approached by a customer who asked if she had ever considered appearing in pornographic films.[9][10] With more than 1.5 million views, the 22-year-old Khalifa became the most searched-for performer on the adult video sharing website Pornhub.[8] On December 28 that year, Pornhub revealed that she was the No. 1 ranked performer on their website. She received online death threats after she ranked No. 1 on Pornhub, including a manipulated image of aIslamic State of Iraq and the Levant executioner preparing to behead her, and a message warning her that she would go to Hell, to which she replied “I’ve been meaning to get a little tan recently”.[13] Lebanese newspapers wrote articles critical of Khalifa, which she considered trivial due to other events in the region.[14]In an interview with The Washington Post, Khalifa said the controversial scene was satirical and should be taken as such, claiming that Hollywood films depicted Muslims in a far more negative light than any pornographer could.[13] Among those who publicly spoke out to defend her decision to become an adult performer was British-Lebanese author Nasri Atallah, who stated, “The moral indignation … is wrong for two reasons. First and foremost, as a woman, she is free to do as she pleases with her body. As a sentient human being with agency, who lives halfway across the world, she is in charge of her own life and owes absolutely nothing to the country where she happened to be born.”[13] Khalifa herself said of the controversy: “Women’s rights in Lebanon are a long way from being taken seriously if a Lebanese American porn star that no longer resides there can cause such an uproar. What I once boasted to people as being the most Westernized nation in the Middle East, I now see as devastatingly archaic and oppressed.
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