Aimee Mullins is a fashion model, celebrity, champion runner, student, and double amputee. Mullins was also one of People Magazine's 50 Most Beautiful People of 1999. An icon of disability pride and equality, Mullins exposes- in fact calls attention to- the mark of her disability in order to pass for nondisabled. The public version of her career is that her disability has been a benefit: she has several sets of legs, both cosmetic and functional, and so she is able to choose how tall she wants to be. Photographed in her functional prosthetic legs, she embodies the sexualized jock look that demands women be both slender and fit. In her cosmetic legs, she captures the look of the high fashion beauty in the controversial shoot by Nick Knight called Accessible, showcasing outfits created by famous fashion designers such as Alexander McQueen and more. In the shots, her legs are brazenly displayed, and even in the voguishly costumed shot, the knee joints of her artificial legs are exposed. Mullins uses her conformity with beauty standards to assert her disability's violation of those very standards. As legless and beautiful, she is an embodied paradox, invoking an inherently disruptive potential. However, the adherence to beauty standards reinforces the larger notion of how beauty and acceptance is for the able bodied.