Flashback: Katherine Heigl Does June, 2000 Maxim Magazine

And the Wiki says…

Despite Heigl’s constant reassurances that she is “quite boring… really,”[27] Movie Entertainment called Heigl a complex individual with many contrasts, referring to her as an “ex-model with a strong feminist streak” and an “actress known for her dramatic roles who really wants to do comedy.”[28]
In the wake of widespread media attention to accusations of sexism (including articles in New York Magazine, The New Yorker, Slate, The Los Angeles Times, USA Today, The Guardian, Vanity Fair and People) against director and producer Judd Apatow and his film Knocked Up, Heigl has been tagged as a potentially important and assertive modern proponent of women’s rights.

In a highly-publicized Vanity Fair interview, as one of the lead actors in the hit film Knocked Up, Heigl admitted that though she enjoyed working with Apatow and Rogen, she had a hard time enjoying the film itself. She called the movie “a little sexist,” claiming that the film “paints the women as shrews, as humorless and uptight, and it paints the men as lovable, goofy, fun-loving guys.”[36][37] Following Heigl’s controversial comments, an online survey of 927 individuals was performed by lifestyle publication Buzzsugar (a media product of Sugar Publishing) in which the majority (59%) of movie-goers agreed that Knocked Up was sexist or could be viewed as sexist (although 38% were not personally offended) while 37% of viewers saw the film as devoid of sexist aspects.[38] In his review for The Guardian, humorist Joe Queenan called Knocked Up “the latest in a new genre of romantic comedies in which an unappealing hero gets together with a gorgeous, successful woman.”

Heigl’s comments spurred widespread reaction in the media, primarily consisting of personal attacks in which she was called “an ungrateful traitor,” “hypocrite,” and “assertive, impatient go-getter who quickly tired of waiting for her boyfriend to propose,” in some cases debasing her religious beliefs and criticizing her private relationships.[40][41] Heigl clarified her remarks to People magazine, stating that, “My motive was to encourage other women like myself to not take that element of the movie too seriously and to remember that it’s a broad comedy,” adding that, “Although I stand behind my opinion, I’m disheartened that it has become the focus of my experience with the movie.”

The Guardian noted that Heigl’s comments “provoked quite a backlash, and Heigl was described as ungrateful and a traitor. Some people even suggested she would never work again,” remarks which in retrospect were not only proved demonstratively wrong but the publicity and promotion in the wake of her comments may well have propelled Heigl’s career.

Following her newest film release, 27 Dresses, the New York Post expressed some disappointment with the mismatch of Heigl’s talent with the “chick-flick” triviality of the film, suggesting that Heigl might be more compatible “with female directors such as Kimberly Peirce (Boys Don’t Cry) or Tamara Jenkins (The Savages)….”[44] On the other hand, her newest project, The Ugly Truth, has been touted as “a battle of the sexes.” [Wiki]