Playboy and Maxim model Masuimi Max’s cause of death revealed

Authorities have revealed an official cause of death for Playboy and Maxim model Masuimi Max. The model died in January.

According to TMZ, Max died from a combination of cocaine and fentanyl. Authorities have ruled Max’s death accidental. The official cause of death is known after more than a month of investigations.

Authorities discovered the deceased model in her Las Vegas home on January 25. They did not expect that a crime had been committed at that time. Max began his modeling career at the age of 18. He ended up appearing in magazines like Playboy, Maxim and Bizarre Magazine. His fire-eating talent made her stand out among his competition.

In an interview with Desired Looks, he talked about his career.

She said: “My modeling career started when I was 18 years old. I was an actress for Torture Garden and often traveled to fetish events in places like London, Germany, Ireland and Japan. When I became a regular, the designers met me and asked me to model her latex outfits. Inner Sanctum was the first company that approached me. Thanks to my early beginnings and the Internet, that led me to many other jobs.”

She continued: “The fire-eating performances were a big part of what got me started. I’ve been on the cover of Strange magazine seven times and the first cover said: ‘The sexiest fire-eating fetish model in the world!’”

Masuimi Max also appeared in movies and online as an influencer

Max also appeared in several films such as Cornman: American Vegetable Hero, Giantess Battle Attackk, and xXx: State of the Union. Outside of acting, she became an online influencer thanks to her makeup tutorials and burlesque videos. Fans knew Max for his tattoos and his signature style. For one thing, she got her name tattooed. The model revealed that Masuimi Max was her birth name.

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“These [tattoos] Say my name. There is a lot of controversy about this because Japanese letters represent sound, like you know we have a, b, c, d, e, f, g? They don’t have that,” he explained in his interview. “In Japanese it’s ‘ma su mi’, so I understood it exactly how it’s pronounced. And people say, but it’s missing the i, but if I put an i there people will say ‘ma swee mi’. It is not a literal translation. This figure represents ma, the sound. It is not alphabetical.”

Categories: Biography
Source: vcmp.edu.vn

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