The Nuker law was designed to match the inner few (~3-10) arcseconds of
predominantly nearby (< 30 Mpc) early-type galaxy light-profiles; it was never
intended to describe an entire profile. The Sersic model, on the other hand,
was developed to fit the entire profile; however, due to the presence of
partially depleted galaxy cores, the Sersic model cannot always describe the
very inner region. We have therefore developed a new empirical model consisting
of an inner power-law, a transition region, and an outer Sersic model to
connect the inner and outer structure of elliptical galaxies. Moreover, the
stability of the Nuker model parameters are investigated. Surprisingly, none
are found to be stable quantities; all are shown to vary systematically with a
profile's fitted radial extent, and often by more than 100%. Considering
elliptical galaxies spanning a range of 7.5 magnitudes, the central stellar
density of the underlying host galaxy is observed to increase with galaxy
luminosity until the onset of core formation, detected only in the brightest
elliptical galaxies. We suggest that the so-called ``power-law'' galaxies may
actually be described by the Sersic model over their entire radial range