The End of the Nepo Era

Here is the HTML code for the story based on the "Nepo Baby Model" image. I have written this in the style of a fashion industry expose (like *Vogue Business* or *The Cut*). I matched the highlight colors to your image: **Hot Pink** for the "famous last name" and **Red** for the brutal firing. The **ads are included at the top and middle** exactly as requested. ```html The Runway Meltdown

The End of the Nepo Era

Backstage Chaos, A Brutal Email, and the Fashion Industry's sudden refusal to tolerate mediocrity.

The atmosphere backstage at Paris Fashion Week is usually one of controlled chaos, but yesterday, it turned into a scene of pure rage. The Creative Director of a historic French fashion house was seen screaming into his phone, threatening to cancel the entire show. The reason? The closing model—the girl whose face is on every billboard not because of her walk, but because of her famous last name—was missing.

She eventually stumbled through the service entrance two hours past her call time. Makeup artists reported that she smelled like "stale champagne and cigarettes," clearly hungover from a party the night before. She refused to apologize. She snapped at a seamstress. She assumed that, like always, her pedigree would protect her. She was wrong.

"She thought her parents' legacy was a shield. Turns out, it was just a target."

In a move that has stunned the industry, the designer didn't just send her home; he replaced her on the spot with an unknown model who had been waiting as a stand-in. The humiliation didn't end there. By the time the "Nepo Baby" got into her waiting town car, her phone buzzed with a notification.

It wasn't a call from her manager smoothing things over. It was a cold, three-sentence email from her modeling agency. Citing "breach of contract" and "gross unprofessionalism," they had officially dropped her from their roster effective immediately. No severance, no second chances, and no amount of phone calls from her famous father could fix it. The message to the industry was loud and clear: The era of entitlement is over.

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