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I understand that being healthy is very important however being super skinny is not. The only reason that I can think of is because people let the media run there lives. Being skinny doesn't make a person healthier or live longer etc... The cells in our bodies can multiply a maximum of 50 times, and then they die. So, know matter how skinny a person is, they are going to die at the end of their 50th cell division. So, why do people let the media control how think and treat their bodies! I mean is this primal behavior? I would hope that our species has evolved past that point, but who knows maybe we are just getting ahead of our selves. What do you think.

2007-01-26 08:59:44 · 3 answers · asked by Anonymous in Society & Culture Other - Society & Culture

3 answers

"Thin may be in, but fat is where it's at!"
Society's views are massivly askewed in this era. When we allow ourselves and our youth to be swayed by the likes of Paris Hilton, Lindsey Lohan and the like, we build false impressions on what is normal or healthy
In Sept of 2006, Spain’s top fashion show banned the use of ultra skinny models, prompting a worldwide debate about the influence of the fashion media on girls’ body image and eating disorder rates.

Later in Oct. 2006, the Federal Communications Commission and Congress announced the formation of a joint task force to examine the media’s contribution to America’s childhood obesity epidemic.

So which is it?

Counterintuitive as it might seem, research has shown that the media contributes to the prevalence of both eating disorders and obesity.

“These trends might seem paradoxical, but studies have shown that the media can have a major impact on kids’ health, both in terms of eating disorders and obesity,” said Jim Steyer, Common Sense Media CEO. “When you think about all of the time that kids spend with the media, and all of the food messages they see on TV and even through ‘advergames’ on the Web, it’s not surprising that researchers say media use can be a big risk factor for obesity.”

“On the other hand, when you consider the unrealistic, ultrathin image of beauty that the fashion industry promotes, it makes sense that the media can contribute to eating disorders, especially among girls and young women.”

“What you see here are two extremes of the same issue: the media’s huge impact on kids. It’s really a matter of what kind of media messages the kids are exposed to, and how they process those messages.”

Below are fact sets about the media and its relationship to obesity and eating disorders.

OBESITY AND THE MEDIA:

• Studies show that ads targeted to kids 12 and under lead them to request and consume high calorie, low-nutrient products.
• For each hour of TV that kids watch per day, they eat an average of 167 more calories than their non-TV watching peers.
• A pre-schooler’s risk of obesity jumps 6 percent for every hour of TV watched; 31 percent if the TV is in their bedroom.
• American kids consume more than one-third of their daily calories from soft drinks, sweets, salty snacks and fast food.
• The food and beverage industry spends $10 billion per year marketing to youth alone.
• Kids see one food commercial for every 5 minutes of TV on Saturday mornings.
• 83 percent of foods advertised during TV shows targeted at kids are for fast food, snack food, and sweets.

EATING DISORDERS AND THE MEDIA:

• By the time a girl is 17, she has seen more than 250,000 messages about what she is supposed to look like.
• Twenty years ago, the average model weighed 8 percent less than the average American woman. Today, the average model weighs 23 percent less.
• The average American woman is 5’4” and 140 lbs. The average American model is 5’11” and 117 lbs.
• A survey of college-aged women found that those who read magazines and watched television shows glamorizing thinness were more likely to have an eating disorder.
• 27 percent of girls openly admit that the media pressures them to have a perfect body.
• A Harvard University study showed that up to 2/3 of underweight 12 year old girls considered themselves to be too fat.
• By age 13, at least 50 percent of girls are unhappy with their appearance.
• As many as 10 million females and 1 million males are currently struggling with an eating disorder in the United States alone.
• 40 percent of newly identified cases of anorexia are in girls aged 15 to 19.

2007-01-27 07:25:24 · answer #1 · answered by ~The Medieval Islander~ 5 · 3 0

I agree with you. I guess some people "let the media
run there lives". I am a twenty seven year old mother of
three boys, and my ten year high school reunion is coming up this summer. I am trying to lose twenty pounds- and if I don't
I am not going to stress out about it. I like the way I look
I am healthy, I eat right, and at I get my exercise every day even
if it's just chasing after my two year old son.

2007-01-26 09:22:48 · answer #2 · answered by georgia_peach 6 · 0 0

i might ought to decline. If something it could be somewhat overweight, yet physique types are distinctive. additionally, at 14 this could not be a difficulty, the "infant fat", if she is even obese, will start to circulate away around 18 or 19. it is as long as she is careful correct to the freshman 20. The freshman 20 has taken down lots of the terrific of them. To all women beware for the freshman 20, that's no fantasy. I even have been in college for 6 years and you will continuously tell the Freshman 20 women. they're all bloated an stuff and their nonetheless attempting to in fantastic condition into the clothing they have been donning in intense college, as quickly as all of us be attentive to which you ought to dress otherwise while your overweight. You do be attentive to that girls, do no longer you? you ought to dress otherwise while your overweight, no person desires to work out that **** all out and approximately, tuck it in.

2016-09-28 00:50:38 · answer #3 · answered by ? 4 · 0 0

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