This Morning fans tuning into the ITV show today were left slightly baffled at a man and woman sat on the sofa completely naked. The guests, who are campaigning against abuse towards naturists, spoke candidly about body image during the segment "We're naked and proud". Responding, Mark said: "It's about seeking that acceptance and your point about body shape is really important because we've got a lot of people that are feeling intimidated by society because of how they look. During the interview presenter Rochelle Humes admitted she didn't know where to look and said she wasn't used to seeing somebody walk into the studio naked.
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This Morning presenter Rochelle Humes got a tad flustered as two naked guests graced the sofa today — and we don't blame her. Rochelle, who was standing in for Ruth Langsford on today's March 13 episode, interviewed naturists Pam Fraser and Mark Bass on the episode. The pair are campaigning against the abuse towards naturists, and naturally both appeared on the sofa completely naked. Related: This Morning's Ruth Langsford drops out of the show due to illness. However, when co-presenter Eamonn Holmes brought up the subject of people staring, Rochelle admitted she had been guilty of looking as well. Revealing that producers were "laughing in my ear at me", Rochelle then appeared to get rather flustered as she admitted she had looked where she maybe shouldn't have once again.
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The ideal, in my opinion, is that she discovers what we all know about the lies the church tells her. Break up with her. Not every LDS person does, unfortunately. It is much easier for the Holy Ghost to influence good people. I only hate one thing in the planet, and that's the Mormon church. You can always expand these into group dates by inviting other couples along, which may make her more comfortable in the early stages of your relationship. I think more than anything, the thing that gets me is this feeling of being marginalized in his life. About eight years ago, I dated a Radiology resident and I vaguely remember it being intense, but this rises to a whole new level. I explained to her that from my perspective, if a religious person does something good, you can't trust them because they're doing it for the wrong reasons: When an atheist does something good, you know they're not doing it for any reason other than to help someone else.