The specific model featured in this session. She was part of the roster of models who filmed for the site around 2009.
Accessing media through unverified sources can involve copyright infringement or the distribution of non-consensual content. Utilizing established, licensed platforms helps ensure that content creators and performers are protected and that the media is being distributed legally.
Then there’s “MP4” — a contemporary suffix that shifts the imagination from riveted steel and coal-fired boilers to pixels, codecs, and streaming timelines. An MP4 file is a container: it holds video, audio, metadata. The format mediates how we experience the ship now. Where once an album of black-and-white photographs or an oral testimony transmitted a ship’s story, today a short video clip can compress decades into minutes: launch footage, interviews with an aging sailor, a storm sequence caught on deck, or a time-lapse of rust reclaiming steel. The MP4 makes the ship present and portable, ready to be shared across platforms, woven into documentaries, or tucked into personal archives.