Sunday 16 December 2012


However, another studies show that showing more plus size models actually helps in reducing women's obsession with thin bodies.


Study provides new evidence that more plus size models could change women’s obsession with thin bodies



This is a research study done by the Durham University researcher who studied over 100 women, provide evidence to back calls for models in adverts to be more representative of the actual population.  This move could ultimately help girls and women to develop a healthier attitude to eating, the researchers say.

- British women’s obsession for thin bodies could potentially be changed if advertising showed more plus size models, suggests a new preliminary study.

In the preliminary study, women who habitually strongly preferred thin body shapes were significantly less keen on thin bodies after they had been shown pictures of plus size catalogue models.  Conversely, showing slim models increased women’s preference for thin bodies. 
The effects could be found whether the women were shown catalogue models or ordinary women of either size.
The findings provide research data for policy-makers and support for on-going calls from Government and health charities to ‘normalise’ female models in the media. 

Lead author Dr Lynda Boothroyd, from Durham University’s Department of Psychology, said:
 “This really gives us some food for thought about the power of exposure to super-slim bodies. There is evidence that being constantly surrounded through the media by celebrities and models who are very thin contributes to girls and women having an unhealthy attitude to their bodies.
“Although we don’t yet know whether brief exposure to pictures of larger women will change women’s attitudes in the long term, our findings certainly indicate that showing more ‘normal’ models could potentially reduce women’s obsession for thinness.” 
Susan Ringwood, Chief Executive from the leading UK eating disorders charity, Beat, commented: 
“This study points towards an important aspect of our modern lives.  We see an average of 2,000 images a day in advertising alone, and most of these include bodies that are more slender than average.  Increasing the diversity of body shapes and sizes portrayed in the media could rebalance our views about our own bodies in an emotionally healthy way.”

Dr Boothroyd added: 
“Thinner bodies are definitely in vogue and within western media, thinness is overwhelmingly idolised and being overweight is often stigmatised.  Although the media doesn’t directly cause eating disorders, research suggests it is a very powerful factor in creating body dissatisfaction.
“Furthermore, it seems that even so-called ‘cautionary’ images against anorexia might still increase our liking for thinner bodies, such as those featuring the late French model Isabelle Caro, who gained worldwide publicity for posing nude for an anti-anorexia campaign while suffering from the illness.  These campaigns may not have the desired effect which is a sobering thought.”

The images used in the study were of thin and plus size models from high street catalogues and beauty contests, and of ordinary women photographed in plain grey leotards.  The thin models shown were a standard size for catalogue models and the women in leotards had a Body Mass Index (BMI) of between 11 and 14.  The plus size models were a minimum of clothes size 16 and the women in leotards had a BMI of between 36 and 42¹.
The study also looked at the influence of positive and negative associations with weight.  When women were shown the ‘aspirational’ images of larger models, paired with the plain images of underweight women, their preferences also shifted away from thinness.  This supports the idea that, in the West, our associations between thinness and good health and high status may play a part in strong preferences for thin bodies. 
This is in contrast to some developing countries where being overweight is generally perceived as an indicator of health, wealth and femininity, and many people tend to prefer women who carry more fat.

¹ The World Health Organisation regards a BMI of less than 18.5 as underweight, while a BMI greater than 25 is considered overweight.

Rachel Cowey
Rachel Cowey is 25 years old and from South Shields.  She is the co-creator of Team Recovery Ninja, an online resource aimed at supporting people through recovery from eating disorders, and is also a volunteer for Beat.  Rachel developed anorexia when she was 16 years old and now considers herself 90 per cent recovered.
Rachel said: “There were lots of factors which led to me developing my eating disorder such as school pressures and expectations, bullying, family issues, not feeling good enough and the need to be ‘perfect’.
“Just like there were many factors which led to the eating disorder, there have also been a number of elements which have helped me recover.  I am determined and stubborn in nature and I have used those character traits in my focus to recover.  I have also put myself out in the real world; at university, working for charities, travelling and ultimately accepted myself for who I am. 
“I was discharged from hospital treatment three years ago although I consider myself to be 90 per cent recovered.  Recovery is an ongoing process.
“In order for me to have got to where I am now, I have had to take very small steps and overcome huge challenges.  The media’s portrayal of women has not helped in that.
“There is an immense pressure to be seen to have it all and be perfect at everything.  Within the media, being thin and attractive is linked to being successful. 
“The doctors told me it was impossible to survive at the weight I was, yet the media constantly showed skinny celebrities who were apparently absolutely fine.  That was hugely unhelpful for my mindset and recovery.
“I think this research is incredibly important as anything that can help us understand eating disorders is valuable.  It also helps to highlight the media’s impact on people, and that what they print can sometimes have devastating consequences.
“As well as the media’s constant focus on weight loss and looking thin and ‘perfect’, the often sensationalist portrayal of eating disorders also makes it more difficult to speak out.  The publication of people’s lowest weights and their pictures when ill causes damage, hurt and stigma.  It gives the perception that eating disorders are only about weight and appearance which is not the case.”




Source: 

Study provides new evidence that more plus size models could change women’s obsession with thin bodies (2012). Retrieved on 16 December 2012 from 

http://www.dur.ac.uk/news/newsitem/?itemno=15821


Personal opinion: In this article, the information indicates that by showing more image of plus size model is able to assist in reducing people's obsession of wanting to be thin. I truly agreed that media has been bombarding with images of thin models walking on the runway. We've seen many thin models being on the magazine cover, runway, print advertisment. Indeed, this has reflected that only the thin models have the opportunity to be in that position that in other words being successful, well known. Is it so?








Friday 14 December 2012

Does celebrities contributing in promoting the idea of being plus size?



Maroon 5 singer Adam Levine: Stop fat-shaming Christina Aguilera

Through some reading on newspaper, watching news on TV, i just realised that there are actually quite a few celebrities who are quite plus size, some of them originally are but some used to be skinny.

Celebrity singer like Christina Aguilera, the small-boned, 5-foot-2 has gained so much more weight in 2010 after splitting from musiz executive husband Jordan Bratman.

Regardless of some nasty, fat-shaming comments about her body, Christina has insisted that sex appeal is about self-confidence rather than being a certain size.

"I happen to be very confident in my own skin," she said. "It takes time to get to that place, but it's all about embracing yourself and your body.


“The challenge I’ve always had is being too thin, so I love that now I have a booty, and obviously I love showing my cleavage. If you can work it and you can own it, that confidence is going to shine through [regardless of your size].

Source:

Chang, S. (2012) Maroon 5 singer Adam Levine: Stop fat-shaming Christina Aguilera. Retrieved on 14 December 2012 from http://www.examiner.com/article/maroon-5-singer-adam-levine-stop-picking-on-christina-aguilera-s-weight-gain?CID=obinsite



Lady Gaga is fat (Photos)

Another celebrity singer would be the famous pop singer, Lady Gaga, whom recently have been putting on weight as well. 

“I love eating pasta and pizza. I'm a New York Italian girl. That's why I have been staying out of New York. My father opened a restaurant. It's so amazing . . . it's so freaking delicious, but I'm telling you I gain five pounds every time I go in there. So my dad wants me to eat at the restaurant, and I'm, like, I've got to go where I can drink green juice."
Although she states she doesn’t care, she has been careful to cover herself up when going outside in public and adds she is now dieting. Seems like she cares.
“You know, I really don't feel bad about it, not even for a second. I have to be on such a strict diet constantly. It's hard because it's a quite vigorous show, so I tend to bulk up, get muscular, and I really don't like that. So I'm trying to find a new balance."


Source: 

Chelsea-Seifert, R. (2012) Lady Gaga is fat (Photos). Retrieved from 14 December 2012 from  http://www.examiner.com/article/lady-gaga-is-fat



Kim Kardashian: I've always accepted my curvy body (Photos)



Kim Kardashian is another example of plus size celebrities.


"I've always accepted my body," Kardashian says in the November 2011 issue of InStyleSouth Africa. "If you don't have fun and go with it, you'd be miserable, always trying to change into something you're not."
Kim is 5'2'' whose weight is fluctuating in between 109 and 129 pounds. She admitted that she was not always happy with her oversized butt and ample breast.
She used to be teased by her sister, Kourtney for having big and ugly breast. 

'Your boobs are so big and ugly!' She was so mean and then I would have to wear a bra and she would say, 'Who wears a bra? That's so disgusting.' It was so embarrassing."



She was also being called a "fat donkey" by former Miss USA Shanna Moakler even her former BFF Paris Hilton's snarky comments that Kim's butt was "disgusting," and looked like "cottage cheese stuffed in a garbage bag."
However, Kim's uniquely voluptuous looks have spawned a multi-million-dollar empire that includes four hit reality tv shows, exercise DVDsdiet pills, fashion boutiques in New York, Miami and Los Angeles, a clothing line, jewelry and handbag collections, fragrances and her own makeup line.



Source: 
Chang,S (2011) Kardashian: I've always accepted my curvy body (Photos). Retrieved on 14 December 2012 from http://www.examiner.com/article/kim-kardashian-i-ve-always-accepted-my-curvy-body


Personal opinion: Indeed, with the famous fashion icon or pop star portraying voluptuous body and even giving positive review about their own body. I believe this has somehow indirectly giving a confident boost for the plus size people. However, in a long run it might encourage them to be fat and forgetting the fact that it might threaten their body health.


Study says using plus-size fashion models could make women fat


a new study insists that promoting images of heavy models is actually worse for women's health in the long run.

The research predict that using overweight models may result in encouraging women to become fat by influencing them to think that it is normal and healthy to be overweight.

Dr. Davide Dragone and Dr. Luca Savorelli of the University of Bolognia in Italy mention this in their paper Thinness and Obesity: A Model of Food Consumption, Health Concerns, and Social Pressure


"To promote chubby fashion models when obesity is one of the major problems of industrialized countries seems to be a paradox.
Everyone has to trade off in life a number of things like the pleasure of eating and going to the gym as a cost, so if you just fix the average healthy weight, then maybe you will throw up some incentives to be thin."
The research claims that countries where the fashion industry is more accepting of plus-size models (like the U.S.) have heavier populations.
..the fashion industry is a powerful trend-setter that influences society's behavior and standards of beauty, so the increased use of heavy models may desensitize people to the reality that being overweight is bad for one's health.


The researchers specifically took issue with a 2006 agreement between the fashion industry and Italy, Spain and Germany to require a higher minimum size for models and to increase the production of larger sizes for fashion labels.
"When reading the content of the agreements, it is clear that both the government and the fashion industry agree that fashion is a powerful trend-setter. It not only influences what clothes, styles and colors are trendy, but also determines how a person should appear to be desirable.
If being overweight is the average condition and the ideal body weight is thin, increasing the ideal body weight may increase welfare by reducing social pressure. By contrast, health is on average reduced, since people depart even further from their healthy weight.
Given that in the US and in Europe people are on average overweight, we conclude that these policies, even when are welfare-improving, may foster the obesity epidemic."
Basically, the researchers claim that promoting a healthy-weight ideal benefits society as a whole because seeing skinny models may influence people to watch their weight, and this will result in lower overall healthcare costs.
In 2008, the medical costs of treating obesity-related diseases in the United States totaled some $147 billion.


Source:

Chang, S. (2011) Study says using plus-size fashion models could make women fat. Retrieved on 14 December 2012 from http://www.examiner.com/article/study-says-using-plus-size-fashion-models-could-make-women-fat



Personal opinion: This article can be a support statement for the bad impact of using plus size models. This is based on the fact that, in this articles it mentioned that fashion is a powerful trend-setter. It not only influences what clothes, styles and colors are trendy but also determined how a person should appear to be desirable. Therefore,  by publishing many images of plus size models will indirectly leading the people especially women to be fat or continue to be fat because it is a common thing.




Tuesday 4 December 2012

Plus-Size Model Excited to Inspire Fashion's Next Generation



Aussie Robyn Lawley is one of the successful plus size models in the current fashion world. In this article, Lawley mentioned that she actually struggled with confidence issue due to her body size. She experienced pressure in losing weight. 

Signing to a model agency, Lawley hopes to be a source of inspiration for others. She hopes to inspire women in her size that they are able to look amazing even in lingerie and it gives them hope.

She is excited to have her body representing the “real woman,” too.

She also mentioned that she hopes that the companies will start to realize that who really is their customer and she hopes she is able to break down those barriers. In other words, the customers are not just the small size but it should also include the plus size people.



Source:  

Hogan, K. (2012) Plus-Size Model Excited to Inspire Fashion's Next Generation. Retrieved on 4 December 2012 from http://stylenews.peoplestylewatch.com/2012/08/20/model-robyn-lawley-plus-size-fashion/





Personal opinion:

Plus size model is getting more and more happening in the current fashion industry. This has showed that sizes are no longer a hindrance for plus size people in becoming a model. In the article, it also triggered me to question how should we actually define the real women? Is fashion world clinging back to promote the natural beauty? In a sense that, fashion world is no longer about skinny model? It is about looking amazing in your natural body size?