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Re: Portrayal of women: (split)
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I did mention to him that I was puzzled about how I had managed to anger you and Tinkerbelle in the 'intermittent custodial sentences' thread without intending to as it seemed that way when one of you quoted my post and added a comment about the thread being closed and the other said that exprssed her anger in a far nicer way than she could have. I mentioned that because I was baffled by why you were both angry when all I had done was refer to a quote one of you (Tinkerbelle) had made earlier in the thread about the idea having been adandoned. |
Re: Portrayal of women: (split)
I just hope that you can see that no-one was actually having a go at thin or fat people but trying to avoid people thinking they couldn't be in Gayle's fashion show if they didn't look like Kate Moss. The point being that probably no-one in Accrington looks like Kate Moss and 99.99% of the women in the Uk don't look like Kate Moss.
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Re: Portrayal of women: (split)
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And actually before the last meet I would never have known you even if I had have fallen over you.......but I would never have described you as the FATEST person I ever met.......not only would that be awfully bloody wrong.......but it is something I would never ever say in the first place. |
Re: Portrayal of women: (split)
Right now thats sorted can we get back to the thread PLEASE:)
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Re: Portrayal of women: (split)
Right, so on the actual subject of this thread can I please ask if you, Slinky, think this looks attractive?
http://omeuescape.blogs.sapo.pt/arquivo/anorexia41.jpg This is what I preume Gayle doesn't want in her fashion show and what she was saying no-one needs to look like to be in the fashion show because she needs real people with real normal bodies of whatever various shapes and sizes, but NORMAL. You'd have to serously crash diet to look like that! The above image is what Garinda meant by "stick thin annorexic". No-one at any time ever implied that they thought you or any other AccyWebber is a stick thin annorexic. Someone who starves themselves in order to look like the person in that photograph (because that image has been portrayed as ideal on the catwalk) in my opinion does need help because no way is it natural to harm your body in order to acheive that. Back in the 60s (you're too young to remember) there was a famous model by the name of Twiggy. She called herself Twiggy because she was slim. She described herself as thin as a twig. By Kate Moss standards however she would probably been seen a slightly plump! That's how mad things got. People tried to emulate Twiggy because she was the icon of the day - then they tried to outdo her, then it got stupid. |
Re: Portrayal of women: (split)
Now that some of the posts have been removed it unfortunately makes some of the responses to those posts looks as foolish as posts which respond to those which have been subsequently edited. :(
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Re: Portrayal of women: (split)
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GET SOME STEAK PUDS DOWN YA WOMAN! YUK!! |
Re: Portrayal of women: (split)
I know a 14 year old girl, already slim, who is dieting because she looks at people like that and thinks that she herself is fat!
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Re: Portrayal of women: (split)
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There was a program on TV tonight about this very issue - not about naturally slim and attractive women but about those who have shortened their lifespan and damaged their internal organs by trying starving themselves into a size 6 or 8 at 5ft 10 or more. Even Sophie Dahl succumbed to pressure to conform. Medical experts described these women in similar terms to those which have been cricicised in this thread. I have a friend whose naturally slim 14 year old daughter has dieted herself into a scary frailty and yet still sees herself as fat and still wants to lose more weight! I admit that I'm fat, or to be more accurate, obese. I don't enjoy it and I don't stuff my face with pies and chocolate 24/7 as is the popular misconception. It may seem ironic for me of all people to worry about this girl but I do worry about her and I'm thankful my girls aren't as stupid. I wish the fashion industry in general had the approach that Gayle has and would show normal people of all sizes and admit that we come in short, tall, slim and rounded shapes all of which are natural instead of portraying the unnatural as an ideal to be aimed for. |
Re: Portrayal of women: (split)
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I'm not going to be responding Willow, between you and Gary you'll only manage to twist and turn it to make me look the bad guy ;) Delete it Len ....... Thick skinned and don't give a shi ....... damn! :) |
Re: Portrayal of women: (split)
Oh well I'll just confirm again what I've said before, that I for one don't think you or Slinky could ever be described as stick thin annorexic and for anyone to do so or to insult either one of you to the other, or indeed anyone else of a similar size or smaller for that matter is inexcusable. If someone is naturally slim then that is their natural shape and shouldn't be ridiculed.
I don't know what it's like to be a very slim person who would like to gain weight and can't. I've never been there. It isn't something I've experienced. I do know what it's like to be a fat person and then an obese person who has tried to lose weight and only ended up gaining more and I do know what it's like to be ridiculed and told that I'm a liar and that all I need to do is eat less. I even believed that all I needed to do was eat less, and then less than that when it wasn't working and couldn't understand why it wasn't working until I finally learned only a few months ago how metabolism works and how the human body stores fat from the most meagre resources. I do still go along with the sentiments of the TV program last night that presenting artificially thin women who diet in order to get even thinner as a norm to be aspired to is unhealthy, dangerous and very, very wrong. I'm talking about slim people who want to LOSE weight, not about slim people who are happy with their weight or slim people who want to gain a bit. This is about how they are endangering their health and presenting a role model to young girls who are then endangering their health and even putting their lives at risk by trying to emulate them when they already have lovely slim attractive figures. Maybe kids like that need to be 'insulted' to shock them into looking at themselves and realising what they are doing to their bodies with the dangrous dieting when they are already thin. I'm not twisting anything Tinkerbelle. I'm just trying to explain to you that neither I nor Gary nor Gayle ever set out to insult you, Slinky or anyone on AccyWeb or even anyone not on AccyWeb by referring to the general public's preconceived idea of what a model should be and Gayle simply saying that wasn't what she was looking for for her fashion show. BTW you can both call me fat if you like. You do better to call me obese as that is more accurate but please don't call me a cow. I don't mind you speaking the truth. That isn't an insult, it's merly factual and I know that fat people look ugly. I've been told that before. However, I also think that annorexic models look ugly. Slim people on the other hand look attractive and you two as slim attractive people surely cannot imagine that anyone could ever class you alongside the ugliness of the superwaif catwalk model image. |
Portrayal of women
Listen you lot,
I am the only stick thin anorexic in the village so the rest of you can sling yer 'ook. I think it is time for the media to stop printing pictures and airing TV programmes of these stick thin anorexic type models as shown above. Maybe then us, the public can show these 'few homosexual designers' (as Rindy said above) that we don't want to see this type of model and we don't want our daughters unhealthily starving themselves trying to achieve that look. Until the media start giving a damn about the health of these (and our) young girls then we can vote with our wallet's and TV remote's. Don't buy the magazines and turn over the TV when the fashion shows come on. If you really care enough then why not email the magazines and TV companies stating you view. Maybe someone on here could get together and post a list of email addresses for all the fashion type magazines and TV shows. We could write an email with picture attachments and we can all send emails to them. |
Re: Portrayal of women: (split)
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Re: Portrayal of women: (split)
It's actully been pointed out to me before Neil that I'm fat and therefore ugly and I don't dispute that. How could I? I look at photographs of myself and I don't like what I see. I look at photographs of what I once looked like and wish that I still looked like that. I'll find a couple of contrasting images of myself to show you what I mean.
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Re: Portrayal of women: (split)
Personally i think this is a no win arguement everybody even me have some form of hang up over our own bodies so you should all kiss & make up!:D
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