A new documentary about Samantha Hudson, ‘Will I be a work of art?’, It premieres on August 1 in Filmin. In the film, Hudson wonders if she can be a work of art while touring emblematic museums in Spain such as Queen Sofía in Madrid or Guggenheim in Bilbao. Filmin describes it as “12 hours of verbiage and” mamarracheo “that will change your way of feeling art.”
The creator of the series, David Navarro, signs today an article at eldiario.es to denounce a curious fact: LinkedIn has censored the poster for considering it “adult content.” In the image, Samantha Hudson poses with a semi -transparent black dress that shows her nipples. However, the label with the title of the series, placed on his chest, lets them see only partially.
This subtle “nudity” has been enough for the professional social network to eliminate the image, claiming that “breaches our policies for the professional community on adult content.”
Navarro explains in his article that LinkedIn has warned them that “if we continue teaching the poster of our documentary on contemporary art, we will have restrictions on the account,” and points out that “right now, in fact, we cannot access normally.” Navarro argues that LinkedIn confuses “anatomy with provocation”, such as other platforms such as Instagram or Facebook.
«This is the usual debate, but we always leave halfway. Is the female nipple content for adults and the male is mere anatomy? ”He asks in the interesting opinion. A similar controversy recently lived by Inés Hernand that puts the classic question of Rigoberta Bandini on the table: “Why are our tits so much fear?”

