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Reply to "Kelly Ripa - just right or too thin?"
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[quote=Anonymous][quote=Anonymous][quote=Anonymous][quote=Anonymous][quote=Anonymous][quote=Anonymous][quote=Anonymous]This thread is from 2011. It’s a disgusting topic and shame on you for commenting on women’s bodies.[/quote] +1 Women are so horrible to each other. [/quote] She has an obvious problem: waaayy too thin. [/quote] The problem here is you. She is a real person with real feelings. Not an object for you to tear down because you feel like it. [/quote] I get what you're saying. But this could be said of every celebrity and famous person. [b]Gossip, speculation, and rumors[/b] come with being a celebrity. [/quote] All gross behaviors because some people feel entitled to intrude. You are not actually required to do any of that. Life will actually go on if you MYOB. [/quote] DP. Will it? This isn't a private citizen walking down the street minding her own business. She is a public figure who is held up as someone with a life and body for little girls to aspire to. Role models with eating disorders in media have a direct impact on the prevalence of anorexia in young women. https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC2792687/ Field et al (16) found that the importance of thinness and trying to look like women on television, in movies or in magazines were predictive of young girls (9 to 14 years old) beginning to purge at least monthly. In another prospective study (17), this same group found that both boys and girls (aged 9 to 14 years old) who were making an effort to look like the figures in the media, were more likely than their peers to develop weight concerns and become constant dieters. One study measured indicators of disordered eating in a “media naïve population” of Fijian schoolgirls after the introduction of Western television. The key indicators of disordered eating were found to be significantly more prevalent following prolonged television exposure, suggesting a negative impact of this media. Among the narrative data was the frequent theme of subjects reporting an interest in weight loss as a means of modelling themselves after television characters (18). A study of the relationship between media and eating disorders among undergraduate college students found that media exposure predicted disordered eating symptomatology, drive for thinness, body dissatisfaction and ineffectiveness in women, and endorsement of personal thinness and dieting in men (19).[/quote]
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