Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Don’t feel bad OP. Most people would agree with you.
This.
No, actually they don’t. The people that agree are UMC To UC white women who spend all day judging others for everything from their waistline, to the car they drive, to.. well whatever banal thing they can judge someone on that isn’t any of their business and doesn’t impact their lives.
Their sole existence is to feel superior to everyone else.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Don’t feel bad OP. Most people would agree with you.
This.
Anonymous wrote:Don’t feel bad OP. Most people would agree with you.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:OP, I agree with you 100%. Obesity is a disease and it should not be normalized.
If obesity is a disease, then we need to put all of PepsiCo in jail (because they deliberately create and advertise foods so that people will overeat) and we also need to put the USDA in jail (because they promote the dairy industry through cheese marketing, which is a huge %% of US excess calories).
If you don't think we should do that, then STFU and realize that in a capitalist system, businesses advertise to their audiences. Are you some kind of commie or what?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Don’t feel bad OP. Most people would agree with you.
+1 I hate seeing obese people in the Target ads. I agree, it's asif we've given up.
+2 I’m a 45 year old woman and I at least try to keep a healthy body weight. We shouldn’t celebrate obesity in the guise of inclusion. It’s unhealthy. It’s raises. your cancer risk. It decreases your overall lifespan.
Yep. I'm okay with models who are +10 lbs. I do not want anorexic models. Just normal healthy women please!
It's very sad going past high schools. I'm in my 30s and high school students didn't look like this. They are sooo much heavier than what I remember.
I grew up in the 80's and only remember 1 or 2 overweight or obese people in my class the whole way through. It was an anomaly. Nowadays, obesity is commonplace so much so, that average or thin people look "anorexic" even though they are healthy by all measures. It's bizarre.
Anonymous wrote:I'd much rather see an overweight, healthy model than an anorexic model. And, I'd much rather see a full variety of body shapes modeling clothes than the size 2 5-9 models they always use. People who have normal variants (like shorter, pear-shaped, BMIs over 19) ought to see how clothes will look on them!
Anonymous wrote:OP, I agree with you 100%. Obesity is a disease and it should not be normalized.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Many professional modeling agencies that deal with big fashion brands only have two divisions--traditional models and plus-sized. So anything not in those two is basically ignored.
Anytime you see a woman who doesn't fit into those buckets in high fashion print or runway it is almost ALWAYS an exception and some special celebrity appearance by a woman who has done something amazing, like win multiple Oscars, like Kate Winslet.
https://www.eonline.com/news/285235/nailed-it-kate-winslet-s-new-st-john-ads-are-stunning
I'd love to more professional models that looked like her in high fashion--neither traditional model build nor plus size. Her body looks amazing in the clothing.
Have you ever looked at LL Bean? Those models look healthy and a normal weight.
https://www.llbean.com/shop/shopByCatalog/index.html
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Many professional modeling agencies that deal with big fashion brands only have two divisions--traditional models and plus-sized. So anything not in those two is basically ignored.
Anytime you see a woman who doesn't fit into those buckets in high fashion print or runway it is almost ALWAYS an exception and some special celebrity appearance by a woman who has done something amazing, like win multiple Oscars, like Kate Winslet.
https://www.eonline.com/news/285235/nailed-it-kate-winslet-s-new-st-john-ads-are-stunning
I'd love to more professional models that looked like her in high fashion--neither traditional model build nor plus size. Her body looks amazing in the clothing.
Have you ever looked at LL Bean? Those models look healthy and a normal weight.
https://www.llbean.com/shop/shopByCatalog/index.html
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:First off - I realize I am a mean and horrible person for even thinking that. Which is why I’m saying it on an anonymous board and not asking actual people on social media.
I just don’t like seeing swimsuit, underwear, and other kinds of ads that feature obese women. I know it sounds horrible but it makes me uncomfortable to see it and I just don’t like it. I understand why they do it but it just makes me uneasy. And I get it - the modeling industry sucks. Anorexic models aren’t good to look at either. I wish they would use normal people, like size 4-10.
But I keep seeing ads geared toward me, just because I am a woman ages 18-60 who wears clothes, and I try to hit hide ad by different companies and update my settings but I just can’t get around being bombarded by obese women in their underwear. One advertisement for some kind of period panties or whatever showed an obese woman with tons of cellulite spreading her legs and showing her underwear with a pad hanging out. I’m sorry, but that’s gross. I wouldn’t even see that at the beach, why do I have to be subjected to it on Facebook?
I get that people are progressive and inclusive and all about feelings and comfort, but I’m just not there yet. Seeing this makes me feel uneasy, like we’ve given up as a society to fight obesity, or that we’re so politically correct that you’re not supposed to fight it, that beauty is now the patriarchy and obesity is beauty. I wish we would stop normalizing it. It’s the opposite extreme from photoshopped or anorexic models. Advertisements should promote health instead.
Lastly, I resent the term “body diversity” in this context. Unless you are talking diverse as in athletic/curvy/thin/tall/short etc and not as in including fat to morbidly obese people. Diversity is a GOOD thing. Body weight is not the same thing as race or gender or sexual orientation. Being a person of color or gay is a characteristic and an identity and something to be proud of. Obesity is not, it’s a disease, stop glorifying it.
I’m sure I’ll get hate for saying all this, but I had to get it out of me. This is just how I feel.
What about the people who feel comfortable seeing people of color or mixed couples in ads? What would you say to them?
You really don't get it, do you?
A mixed couple is not a physical defect! They can have a loving caring relationship and raise a family! A mixed race couple isn't promoting diabetes!