VERY cheeky monkey tries its hardest to expose model’s breasts by pulling her top down – and even slaps her face when she tries to stop him
- Video shows model Paula Manzanal, 28, posing next to a monkey in Bali
- But the animal is seen trying to pull down the Peruvian model’s strapless top
- The monkey slaps Manzanal in the face as soon as she tries to move it away
A cheeky monkey tried its hardest to expose a model’s breasts in Bali by pulling her top down.
Video shows Peruvian model Paula Manzanal, 28, posing next to the monkey at the Ubud Monkey Forest – only for the animal to reach out and try and pull down her black strapless top.
Manzanal, who won Miss Peru in 2014, is seen looking down at the monkey, which was sat on a wall, and trying to move its hand away from her breasts.
But the monkey, a gray long-tailed macaque, slapped Manzanal in the face as she tried to stop the animal from exposing her breasts.
Video shows Peruvian model Paula Manzanal, 28, posing next to the monkey at the Ubud Monkey Forest – only for the animal to reach out and try and pull down her black strapless top
Manzanal, who won Miss Peru in 2014, is seen looking down at the monkey, which was sat on a wall, and trying to move its hand away from her breasts
Manzanal, who was seen smiling in disbelief at the monkey, posted the footage on TikTok and wrote jokingly: ‘I just didn’t want it to touch me.’
Manzanal, who now lives in Barcelona, has a four-year-old son, Valentino, with the Ibiza Weekender star Jordan Davies.
The couple split before Valentino was born in 2018 and Manzanal made a subtle dig at Davies, writing on Instagram at the time: ‘I asked God to send me a man who will always love me. He gave me a son.’
Manzanal posted the video of the monkey trying to expose her breasts to her 2.1 million TikTok followers.
But the monkey, a gray long-tailed macaque, slapped Manzanal in the face as she tried to stop the animal from exposing her breasts
It is not uncommon for monkeys to get close to tourists in the Ubud Monkey Forest, with the animals often stealing valuable items and food from the public.
About 600 of the macaques live in the forest sanctuary, swinging from the tall nutmeg trees and leaping about the famous Pura Bukit Sari temple, and are considered sacred.
The monkeys spend most of their day interacting with visitors — stealing sunglasses and water bottles, pulling at clothes, jumping on shoulders.
The relatively tame monkeys can be easily coaxed to sit on a shoulder or lap for a peanut or two.
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