Esquire named Mila Kunis 'Sexiest Woman Alive' of 2012. Check out what the star had to share in the November 2012 issue.
Mila Kunis was named
Sexiest Woman Alive by Esquire magazine replacing Rihanna who held
the title last year. Such a flattering title couldn't have come
without some pictures to prove it, so the November 2012 cover of
the magazine shows the star wearing only jeans. Along with even
more sexy poses which prove she rightfully earned this year's
title, the diva sits down and chats about other aspects.
This is how we manage to find out that the star considers that
being funny is a learnt skill rather than a natural ability: “I
think I stumbled upon doing funny things, but I’m not funny. I just
know how to deliver a joke. There are people who naturally exude
humor and are constantly saying funny things, and there are the
people who know how to deliver a joke. It’s a learned skill.
Through twenty years of doing this, I practice it. I think that the
second you think that you’re funny is when you stop being
funny.”
Though the industry she works in has a strong influence on her
career, she states she managed to learn to stay true to her self
over the years: "So much of who you are in this industry is based
on what that critic says, what that director says, what that actor
says. People start believing all that, and they become what
everybody else wants them to be. And I think that I’ve consciously
separated my two lives. I love what I do. I couldn’t imagine doing
anything else. But when I’m done with work, I’m done with work. I
think that if I bought into the hype, I would lose all sight of who
I am, and so much of who I am is what my parents went through and
instilled in me. And I never want to lose that. Ever. Because I
would be so disappointed if I didn’t make them proud.”
Though she often gets asked about her immigration story, she
feels very uncomfortable taking about it: "I feel awful talking
about it, because my parents should sit down and talk about it.
They're the ones who went through hell and back, who gave
everything up. I didn't do anything. I was eight years old, and I
tagged along. And my parents made me feel safe. I didn't make those
decisions. So I can't take responsibility for it. Every immigrant
has a story. And in 1991 during the fall of communism... Everybody
has a story. Let me just repeat: I was eight years old. I didn't
know what was happening."
Though it might come off as a surprise to some, the "Friends with
Benefits" actress is quite political: I find it all to be
incredibly entertaining. I went to the White House Correspondents'
Dinner with Wolf Blitzer. It's weird: You get invited by people you
don't know — and I never wanna go again, because I had the most
incredible experience. Ever. I watch CNN or MSNBC all day long,
every day. So I meet with Wolf, and I was like, "Oh, my God.
There's Wolf Blitzer." Like two drinks in, I just start talking.
"So, about Ahmadinejad's nephew ..." Wolf was surprised I followed
politics."
Read more about the star in the November 2012 issue of Esquire.
Photo courtesy of Esquire


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