JULIANA Cameron walked into a photo shoot as a “celibate, nonsmoking, nondrinking” glamour model.

She walked out an exhibitionist.

Well, sort of.

The glamour model has slammed popular lad’s mag Zoo for promoting “gender based discrimination” against women and is demanding a public apology after a feature story went horribly wrong.

Ms Cameron starred in a “glamour” shoot in Zoo’s July issue last year, where she was shown posing in numerous styles of swimwear, and using a watering can to drench herself.

However, she was shocked to find an interview accompanying the pictures had misquoted her to reflect the sultry theme of the spread.

Twelve months after the story was published, she received a personal apology letter from its editor, Shayne Bugden, but she says that it was a “cop out” and calls out the magazine for displaying “a male abuse of power”.

“I went through quite a routine to get an apology and a retraction,” Ms Cameron told news.com.au.

“When you don’t have the money, resources and profile that Miranda Kerr has, it takes a lot longer to stand up for your rights, but I didn't let it stop me.”

“It’s my body, and it wasn’t up to Zoo to dictate what I do and don’t do with it.

“Zoo was making all these false representations about me and as a result I ended up getting sexually harassed by the male readers of the magazine.

“It ended up putting me in a situation where my safety was at risk.”

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As well as the sexy six-page spread, an accompanying video from the magazine shoot is even racier, with Ms Cameron touching her breasts and body. At the request of Ms Cameron, Zoo and news.com.au have removed the footage.

“I think the female body should be celebrated, I’m an artist and I don’t see it as a sexual object,” Ms Cameron. said.

“I see the female body as a form of art and beauty and like all forms of art and beauty it should be appreciated and celebrated.”

In the spread, titled “Bum’s the Word”, Cameron alleges she told the magazine at the time: “I’m actually not a party girl, I don’t drink alcohol, I don’t smoke and I’m also celibate too.

“You’ll see more at the beach then what you will see in any of my photo shoots as I’ve never posed nude.”

But instead, the magazine printed: “I’ve got absolutely no problem with being naked anywhere.”

In Zoo’s personal apology to Ms Cameron, Mr Bugden agrees “the article did not accurately reflect your actual views as expressed to the interviewer, specifically by the quote, ‘I’ve got absolutely no problem being naked anywhere.’ For that, I apologise on behalf of the magazine.”

Questions asked of Ms Cameron for the feature include these corkers:

How do you loosen up when you’re feeling a tad stiff, Juliana?

So what you’re saying is, you love a bit of morning wood?

We tend to drool uncontrollably and have a terrible work ethic. Can you deal with that?

Ms Cameron, who describes herself as the “Erin Brokovich of women’s rights”, is so outraged by Zoo’s lacklustre response, she has started a change.org petition — “Make women's safety a man’s issue too” — calling for men’s magazines to “display [a] duty of care towards models in mens magazines [and] give public apology/retraction of sexually violent & false representations”.

“As a society we need to rise to repudiate violence against women and stop promoting a rape culture,” she writes on the petition.

“Women can have both body confidence and boundaries too. Women deserve to be safe regardless of whether they are wearing a bikini or an eskimo suit.”

THANK YOU to everybody for sharing & signing this petition! http://t.co/tZrP3xd5C9 via @ChangeAUS — Juliana Cameron (@JulianaCameron) July 20, 2014

— news.com.au has tried for several days to obtain a response from Zoo Magazine. Emails, calls and tweets to the publication have gone unanswered.