You pay to chat and view pictures of the women and they get free breast implants.......I dunno man it just doh seem right to me.
http://www.elle.com/Beauty/Health-Fitness/Breast-BuyFive thousand dollars is a lot of scratch. It will pay for more than 8,475 Glow Sticks. Or buy two pairs of Manolo Blahnik Alligator Halter pumps (including tax!). Or cover three months’ worth of emergency medical supplies for almost 20,500 people in Darfur, according to UNICEF.
It’s also enough for a pretty decent set of breasts.
But what if a woman wants them—no, needs them—and doesn’t have five grand lying around? What is she to do? Save, borrow, take food from her children’s mouths, or, now, create a profile on MyFreeImplants.com. The less-than-subtly-named website is a “charity” started by two 29-year-old men to assist women who, yes, can’t afford boob jobs. Women such as Karren Schafer, a “professional model”—bikini contests and boxing matches—who posted this plea: “I feel that I am at a disadvantage to the other [models] because they all have implants.… I am not looking to go to a huge size.… I just want to have more to get an edge on the competition.”
Hoping to stir up interest, Schafer, aka “Eye Candy,” included a fetching photo of herself crouching, catlike, in frilly lingerie, and, like nearly all of the 1,500 implant-hopefuls who have joined the site since it began two years ago, she posted her vital statistics: age, measurements, and fundraising goal. “Support Karren!” her profile reads, like a parody of a “Save the Children” brochure.
Once their info is up, the real labor begins. Here’s how the site works: Donors, or “benefactors,” as they’re known in free-implant land, pay $1.20 to e-mail women whose plights, or bodies—even sorely unenhanced—move them. (The women get to hold on to $1 of that; the site takes the rest, minus credit card processing fees.) The key for the bust-deprived is to keep the cyber-conversations going—some log as many as eight to 12 hours a day at their computers—because each time one of the 7,000 men registered on the site (nicknamed MFI) hits send, another dollar goes into his chosen charity case’s account. “If you’re not on there, you’re not making money; the messages just dry up,” says Schafer, 25, who is also an interior design student in Seattle. “It’s like a full-time job. There’s nothing ‘free’ about it.”