The-F-Word.org

This is why our perceptions about weight are so distorted

8th October 2007

This is why our perceptions about weight are so distorted

posted in Body Image, Pop Culture |

Sarah Hartshorne - Plus size America's Next Top Supermodel

Meet Sarah Hartshorne. She’s the new plus-size model on America’s Next Top Supermodel.

Yes, really.

Weighing in at a hefty 5′10″ and 150 pounds, size-8 Sarah seems to be the show’s one and only token plus-size model this season.

“I’m a little nervous because I am the plus-size girl,” admitted Hartshorne in an interview with Entertainment Tonight seen here on YouTube. Sarah Hartshorne - plus size america's next top supermodel

“Sarah’s our plus-size model, but I have to say, I don’t think Sarah’s necessarily a true plus,” said Banks, executive producer of the show in the same clip.

“Necessarily a true plus?” Try she’s hardly a true plus. Plus-size models usually wear a size 14 or above - Sarah wears a size 8. Her height and current weight puts her BMI at 21.5, well below the BMI cutoff of 25, which signifies overweight. And to be considered obese, Sarah would have to gain 65 pounds.

If “normal” weight is the new plus-size, where does that leave the majority of American women who, on average, wear a size 14, as well as the one-third of all American women who wear a size 16 or larger?

Click to Bookmark
This entry was posted on Monday, October 8th, 2007 at 8:48 pm and is filed under Body Image, Pop Culture. You can follow any responses to this entry through the RSS 2.0 feed. You can leave a response, or trackback from your own site.

There are currently 48 responses to “This is why our perceptions about weight are so distorted”

Why not let us know what you think by adding your own comment!

  1. 1 On October 8th, 2007, lavaladyNo Gravatar said:

    She’s in NO WAY plus sized, except when in comparison to the very very very thin women who populate modeling.

    She’s at the mid-range of her weight for her height, and by the time she leaves the competition, I’d wager she has lost 10-20 lbs.

    I have to admit I was never a fan of ANTM, but I’m definitely even less of one now.

  2. 2 On October 9th, 2007, Ashley BrookNo Gravatar said:

    I knew everyone would be freaking out over this. Tyra said time and time again, she’s not REALLY plus sized.

  3. 3 On October 9th, 2007, downtownvenusNo Gravatar said:

    I’m sorry, are you expecting a reality TV show to depict actual reality??

    Plus-size models, even at a size 14 are constantly picked on as not representing larger women because they ‘aren’t big enough’. How big would you have them be? Because we all know that women all have different bodies and carry their weight differently, so how are individual models supposed to represent all the possible customer body types to begin with??

    So tell me - visibly chunky with a ton o’ rolls? A certain weight? A certain BMI or BMI category, such as obese? Would you subject a woman to the humiliation of being weighed to prove she’s ‘fat enough’? If you want it for the smaller girls to prove that they are healthy, then should a larger model have to do it to please the braying crowds? Would YOU want to have to do that in order to work at your job?

    If the current thinking is that the media is pushing unrealistic images of women on adolescents and impressionable females, then surely this healthy looking young woman IS big enough. Forget that they are calling her a plus-size and look at her as a considerably better role model than so many of the other contestant. Yes, it is lamentable that Sarah is smaller than previous plus-size contestants, but her smaller size actually gives her a better chance of staying on the show longer, and even winning, as she will fit into more of the clothing and they can’t willfully make her look bad next to the other contestants. The only thing that will let her down is going to be her ability to learn to be a model. And I don’t believe that Tyra will let her lose weight, because then her cause to include larger models loses face.

    Whether you watch ANTM or not, you have to have the hope that viewers and media observers will see Sarah and begin to adopt the attitude that it isn’t necessary to starve to be beautiful. That’s the whole point of her being there in the first place, innit?

  4. 4 On October 9th, 2007, SarahNo Gravatar said:

    In the fashion world, Sarah would be considered a “plus-size” model. Typically, “bigger” sizes start at 8, even though that particular size is still sold in the “misses” section of department stores. It’s not abnormal for a size eight girl to model size fourteen clothing. The average runway model is usually a size 2-4 and is usually underweight. Ignoring all that nonsense, Sarah looks great. It’s a shame that more women like her are missing from the top runways.

  5. 5 On October 9th, 2007, RachelNo Gravatar said:
    Downtownvenus: :I think you totally misperceived the point of my post. I’m not saying a plus-size actress ought to be the circus fat lady; but if they’re going to label her as a plus-size actress - and yes, they have already typecast her - then, well, she ought to be plus-size. And plus-size is not a size 8.

    That’s the whole point of her being there in the first place, innit?

    Actually, no. I don’t think so. I think Tyra and show producers are taking cues from Dove’s successful Real Beauty campaign and are introducing these so-called plus-size models in a feel-good attempt at drawing in the scores of women who would be better able to see themselves in such a competition. If altruism was their true goal, we’d see a lot more size diversity amongst contestants.

  6. 6 On October 9th, 2007, BeckyNo Gravatar said:

    Whether you watch ANTM or not, you have to have the hope that viewers and media observers will see Sarah and begin to adopt the attitude that it isn’t necessary to starve to be beautiful

    Or they’ll hear that Sarah is “plus” (code word for “fat”) and think: “Oh my God if she’s plus, so am I, I need to get thinner”.

    Plus-size models, even at a size 14 are constantly picked on as not representing larger women because they ‘aren’t big enough’. How big would you have them be?

    Big enough to wear the clothes being modelled. If the range being modelled is a plus size range that goes from size 14 to 26, the women modelling it shouldn’t wear a size 8, 10, or 12. And they shouldn’t just use women who fit the smaller end of the clothing range, they should also have women who fit the size 20 or size 26. Same with regular sizes - if the clothing line ranges from 0-12, the women modelling them shouldn’t only wear 0s and 2s, there should be some who wear 6s or 10s or 12s.

  7. 7 On October 9th, 2007, apricotmuffinsNo Gravatar said:

    gosh. becky, they cant do that. then it would be glaringly obvious that the clothes that fit a size 0 look terrible on a 12. they’d actually have to, you know.. CUT clothes properly.

    other than that, the culture of the fear of fat strikes again. sigh.

  8. 8 On October 9th, 2007, Ashley BrookNo Gravatar said:

    I think even if there was a contestant on there that was a size 10, 12, or 14…there would be women going, “Omg I’m that size and she looks huge, I need to lose weight.” I’ve already seen it happen with a few of my friends in commercials. So really, what are they supposed to do? No one is ever going to be happy. People wil always find some excuse to complain.

  9. 9 On October 9th, 2007, RachelNo Gravatar said:
    I think even if there was a contestant on there that was a size 10, 12, or 14…there would be women going, “Omg I’m that size and she looks huge, I need to lose weight.”

    Or, on the flip side, they could look at such women and think “Oh, wow, she looks beautiful and vibrant and much healthier than some of the super-thin, size double-0 models. Maybe I’m not so fat and ugly after all.”

  10. 10 On October 9th, 2007, Ashley BrookNo Gravatar said:

    That could be true too. I don’t know. I personally think too many people are pretty much holding TV shows like this responsible for the self esteem of viewers, as if they *have* to have a model who is a size 14 or else they are being terrible because some 15 year old girl might be comparing herself to the models and start thinking bad things about herself. But that’s not their job. Why are people acting like it is??? But if they don’t, they are subject to all this scrutiny.

  11. 11 On October 9th, 2007, YellowhammerNo Gravatar said:

    Wouldn’t it be great though, Ashley Brook, that instead of reinforcing the status quo, if some one in a position to do so were challenging it?

  12. 12 On October 9th, 2007, JegraNo Gravatar said:

    This is absolutely nauseating (seriously, I feel the urge to go throw up after reading about this). I know it’s (un-)reality TV, but are the judges BLIND? or TOTALLY LACKING PERCEPTION/COMMON SENSE!?! How could someone with a BMI of 21.8 be considered plus-size? THis is the most f-ing depressing thing I’ve read in a long time. I hate this f-ing society. If a 5′10 woman is considered plus-size at 150 pounds, I must be obese (what with being 6/1, 170 pounds, and having a BMI of 23 I think). I hate Tyra Banks now. I hate Top Model. I hate our society. *What’s especially sad is that I feel this way and I’m a grown-up (at least chronologically speaking, at age 30). But the main viewers of this stupid show are impressionable 11 and 12 year olds. Don’t Tyra and co. feel any responsibility?

  13. 13 On October 9th, 2007, annietNo Gravatar said:

    I see your point and I agree with the idea that the idea of “plus sized” in modeling is messed up, but I have to correct you on one thing. Plus models ARE size 8. Not size 14. I’ve worked on casting models for magazines and TV shows, and Plus models are nowhere near a size 14. More like a size 8, MAYBE 10.

    In this case, Top Model actually is reflecting the industry.

    I remember needing to cast a model for a swimsuit shoot, and I said, “We need to get a Plus model because I don’t want the girl to look too small.” My boss freaked out and kept saying, “We can’t have a size 16!” over and over again. Finally, I said, “Let me get some comp cards and show you.” I did, and she realized that “plus” in the modeling world does not mean “plus” in real life.

    To put it in perspective: I’m a size two, and I once had a plus-sized model tell me that if I gained 10 pounds, I could be a plus model. That should give you an idea of how small the average model really is.

  14. 14 On October 9th, 2007, TariNo Gravatar said:

    I dunno if it’s so much holding this TV show responsible, as recognizing that this is another brick in the wall. This show, along with all its buddies in print and other media (not to mention the various industries that dovetail with fashion so well), perpetuates an idea that “beauty” looks a certain way, and that self-worth and happiness only come with beauty. If everywhere I look, I see that beauty is limited to x, y, or z (you know, for a hypothetical)…it takes tremendous strength of mind to believe something else.

    I keep being torn when it comes to Tyra and ANTM, though, because while I think they’re not going far enough when it comes to showing the breadth of human beauty…I think they are pushing things a little. And baby steps are better than no steps. In this instance, I am saddened that what’s considered “plus” is smaller than it has been in the past…because that trend leads to less diversity of size.

  15. 15 On October 9th, 2007, RachelNo Gravatar said:
    Ashely: To a degree I think you’re right. Personally, I don’t watch this show or most shows on Primetime and I don’t think we can hold this show or Tyra personally responsible for the self-esteem and body image problems besetting our nation’s women. This show is a reflection of our values, not necessarily a creator of those values.

    On the other hand, television and the media does hold considerable sway over the way we perceive our world. There was a social study done several years ago which revealed that the exclusion of people of size from the media is tantamount to rendering them social pariahs. And remember the Cosby Show? The simple fact of it showing a black family defying racial and demographic boundaries had a significant impact on race relations in America.

    While ANTM doesn’t hold any legal obligation to show that beauty can come in all sizes, as humans, I think show producers have an ethical and moral obligation to do so. You don’t have to watch the show or be an impressionable 15-year-old girl to feel the ramifications of these kinds of actions.

  16. 16 On October 9th, 2007, RachelNo Gravatar said:
    Plus models ARE size 8. Not size 14.

    Anniet: That may be so, but it doesn’t change the fact that plus-size clothing starts at a size 14. I don’t consider size-8 women who model size 14 and above clothing true plus-size models. Just because it’s the industry standard doesn’t make it right. I find it abhorrent that a “normal” weight range is now stigmatized as fat.

    Like Becky said above, if the range of clothing being modeled is a size 14 or larger, the model featuring it should also be a size 14 or larger.

    As one who works in this field… of the plus-sized models out there, what percentage would you put at a size 14 or larger?

  17. 17 On October 9th, 2007, downtownvenusNo Gravatar said:

    AnnieT, it’s not one or the other, plus size models are BOTH 8 and 14, and also other sizes inbetween and above 14. I disagree further with you and say that the majority of larger models, when viewed with an international (US, Canada, Germany, UK, France, Australia) perspective, are indeed size 14.

    However, in the same way that there are sizes 0, 2, 4 and 6 to fill varying needs, the plus size sector encompasses sizes 8 and upwards to cater to clients needing lifestyle and non-fashion product images, as well as fashion.

    “Plus-size” is a relatively new term for this sector of the industry. It used to be called ’specialty’ modeling, and was lumped together with the hand and foot models. It changed so that people knew it denoted size, rather than parts. It has only ever meant ‘over a size 8′ to the fashion industry, and that’s pretty much how it’s going to stay for a long while yet.

  18. 18 On October 10th, 2007, clarityNo Gravatar said:

    It has only ever meant ‘over a size 8′ to the fashion industry, and that’s pretty much how it’s going to stay for a long while yet.

    Well, I guess that means I’d better hurry up and buy that island where women aren’t made to feel like shit for how they look then.

    This is just so, so nauseating. I’m 5′5″ and a size 5, and I’ve been called fat several times before. So, this shit DOES affect women in our everyday lives, because I can’t imagine where else anybody would get the idea that someone my size could possibly be fat. The complacency surrounding the modeling industry’s hatred for women is really fucking depressing. (And no, I’m not in the modeling or acting industries — these comments have come from random strangers and from friends, and from one boyfriend.)

    One really sad thing to think about as well is how this affects young girls. When I was eight I was invited to be in a pageant, and I begged my mom until she let me go (against her better judgment). As a little girl I was totally brainwashed by media images and Disney movies, and when I didn’t win anything in the pageant, I stood in front of the mirror in our hotel room crying and screaming that I was ugly and stupid and I hated myself. With the pressures on little girls now being even worse than they were then, I can’t imagine what it must be like. I really think I would have killed myself by now (or tried to) if I were a little girl growing up in this culture.

  19. 19 On October 10th, 2007, downtownvenusNo Gravatar said:

    Clarity, what’s the fuss? The other women’s inability to correctly discern your dress size because you are petite is not your problem, it’s theirs. People think I’m smaller than my size because I’m tall. It’s a trick of the eye. You know they are wrong, you know what size you are, so why let them get to you?

    Becky, you said this:
    Or they’ll hear that Sarah is “plus” (code word for “fat”)
    It is?? Who decided that ‘plus’ codes as ‘fat’? Is THIS the real issue here - that so many women have adopted the phrase ‘plus-size’ to euphemize their bodies away from stigma of ‘fat’ that it now cannot mean anything else to them, hence anything ‘plus-size’ that doesn’t obviously mean/look like ‘fat’ (like the photo of the model) must be protested?

    Ladies, plus-size is NOT synonymous with fat and neither is ‘curvy’ for that matter. Fat is the material in your body that gives us all our unique shape. ‘Curvy’ generally means that you’ve got boobs, a visible waist or a prominent booty or a combination of them, and that’s at any size be it big or small. ‘Plus-size’ is a industry-decided term for a size range, be it bodies or clothing and nothing says they have to match each other’s numbers exactly. Don’t head to the island Clarity on that account. A dress size number shouldn’t have the power to do that to your head. Anyhow, the term ‘Full-figured’ makes more sense to me than ‘plus size’ when talking about the shapes or sizes of women’s bodies. Why hasn’t that been more widely adopted? It’s truer than ‘plus size’ anyway.

    I really hope that what I am saying is taken in the right way. We are all SO much more than just our bodies and the size of clothing we wear, and I am discouraged to hear so many women getting so wound up on account of what is, at the core, a misappropriated phrase. ‘Plus size’ should have only meant ‘clothes’ and not been applied to anything else.

    *suffering from inverted comma fatigue*

  20. 20 On October 10th, 2007, AshleyNo Gravatar said:

    I completely agree Becky. No one is calling Sarah fat, overweight, chunky, or anything. It’s obvious that many of women are connecting the term “plus size” with negative connotations. That would kind of be like me ranting about the fact that petite models are under 5′6 and “Why is this 5′5 model considered petite when the average woman is only 5′4?!! Are they saying she’s some sort of midget?! Those assholes!” You know what I mean? They are just terms, that’s all….words that designers need to use in order to know what type of model and clothing they are going to be working with.

  21. 21 On October 10th, 2007, RachelNo Gravatar said:
    I don’t think it has anything to do with fat or negative connotations. I think it’s much more straightforward that that. Plus-size clothing denotes clothing which begins at a size 14. Ergo, models who model plus-size clothing ought to be at least a size 14.
  22. 22 On October 10th, 2007, G.G.No Gravatar said:

    Not to mention, words and terms in contexts like these are rarely “just” words. If “plus” is just a term, with no value attached, then why does the show itself make such a big deal about including a “plus-sized” model in the first place, as if it’s something they have to defend or apologize for?

  23. 23 On October 10th, 2007, J.A.No Gravatar said:

    They are just terms, that’s all

    I call shenanigans. Words have meanings. “Plus” connotes “bigger than normal”, and the fashion industry (which, as we all know, loves and respects women so much) has apparently decided that only women size 6 and smaller are normal. Too bad that the vast majority of women would have to diet unhealthily to meet this standard of normal, if they could even do it at all.

    Also, it *is* stupid to have “petite” models who are taller than the average woman. It’s also stupid to have “tall” be the smallest coffee you can get at Starbuck’s. Marketing makes people stupid.

  24. 24 On October 10th, 2007, RachelNo Gravatar said:
    I agree that “plus-size” is not an innocuous term. By its very definition, it denotes clothing in sizes 14 and larger, which is commonly accepted as being fat. There’s no shame in being fat or plus-size, or perhaps I should say there should be no shame in it. It is what it is.

    The larger issue here is that a woman of an average weight is being considered as plus-size, or in other words, as fat. Not only does it reveal how distorted our collective ideas are about fat, it goes to show a larger, more disturbing trend in how we define and thus stigmatize fatness. The standards defining what is fat and what isn’t continue to be lowered, thus seriously flattening the bell curve.

  25. 25 On October 10th, 2007, JegraNo Gravatar said:

    Thank you, Rachel in the above post, for your statement in the 2nd paragraph about what the REAL issue (or “larger issue”) is. What so annoys me about this story is that the model in question looks to be perfect weight. She is not in the least bit fat, not even what one would call “big-boned”, certainly not “chunky”, “chubby”, or any other adjective suggesting that she is slightly overweight. Well, that’s how I see her at least. But apparently THE INDUSTRY sees something I do not. They look at her and see someone who is overweight. (Because, let’s not beat around the bush, the term “Plus Size” is interchangable with “Overweight” in the minds of every American woman; it’s not just innocuous INDUSTRY Insider terminology for someone above size 2 or 8 or -3 or whatever the standard model size is these days.) I am so horrified and disgusted that people can call this woman overweight. She looks perfectly healthy to me. I don’t think you could even “pinch an inch” anywhere on her body. How on earth is a woman supposed to look? Is she only considered a Regular Model if she starves away her a** and breasts; if her manubrium (not just ribs) is prominent; if you can wrap your hand around the protuberances of her collar bones and her ileac crests…? Is this what we as women are willing to accept, so some a_hole designers can sell ridiculously overpriced clothes and glossy magazines can make money? ANTM’s classification of this model as “Plus-Size” is undeniably damaging to every little girl, teenager, and grown woman who watches the show. Yes, Tyra and Company are INDUSTRY professionals, but they are not blind. Brainwashed maybe, but they’re not really, physically blind; nor are they demented or psychotic. They can make a consious choice to set a new, intelligent standard for themselves and the show. They woud do some real good by not adhering to industry standards in this one case and just let this fat girl(sarcasm) with the 21.3 BMI slip through as normal weight instead of tagging her a Plus Sizer.

  26. 26 On October 10th, 2007, downtownvenusNo Gravatar said:

    No, you’re still not getting it. Plus-size models do more than model clothes. They are being made, whether they like it or not, to be the standard bearers for a whole new movement of self-acceptance, this ‘real’ (shudder, we are all real!) women’ ideology, and as such should represent a broad range of sizes over an 8, not just where the plus-size clothes ’start’. Why should women between an 8 and a 14 not be represented somehow?

    Obviously this girl is normal. I dare say she does have fat on her, you just can’t see it in these photos because they are trying to make her look smaller than she is. You can tell from the camera angles. But she is in the category of plus-size for modeling, just as Carre Otis was even though she was a size 8 at the time she was working. You CAN be both normal weight and a plus size model, just as you can be overweight and obese and be a plus-size model; one does not exclude the other. There are many different body types represented by the plus models themselves. Many of them are tall and wide, but when you turn them sideways they look really thin - some aren’t as wide or tall, but turn them sideways and then you see the landscape of boobs, belly and butt.

    As for BMI ‘normal’, well a lot more of us would be if some bright sparks haven’t decided to move the BMI index to lower the number from where it used to be:

    From Wikipedia: “In 1998, the U.S. National Institutes of Health brought U.S. definitions into line with World Health Organization guidelines, lowering the normal/overweight cut-off from BMI 27.8 to BMI 25. This had the effect of redefining approximately 30 million Americans, previously “technically healthy” to “technically overweight”.

    So there you have it. That’s what caused the ‘obesity crisis’. We didn’t all just suddenly start getting fatter, it’s because a group of people decided for us what was ‘normal’ based WHO guidelines, whatever they are and however they apply. I’d love to know what/which weightloss corp/pharma co triggered that decision. I mean, you don’t just sit there thinking, “hmm, I’m bored, what population health index needs fixing today?”

  27. 27 On October 11th, 2007, RachelNo Gravatar said:
    To elaborate on my comment above… instead of seeing this size-8 model as “plus-size,” I suggest that we look at her as the average size (although, like I said the average U.S. woman is a 14, but whatever). Thus those size double-0 models would be perceived as what they are: underweight, and true plus-size would be viewed more proportionately.
  28. 28 On October 11th, 2007, JegraNo Gravatar said:

    DowntownVenus: I admit I wrote yesterday’s rambling post with too much emotion clouding my logic. I read the blog, and I was horrified. But I was basically trying to write exactly what Rachel wrote much more coherently in the post directly above this. That is, we should “look at this size-8 model as the average size…thus the size double-0 models would be perceived as…underweight.” I wish! What a wonderful, healthy world it would be if people (even Industry people) would do this.

    Also, I know that BMI has been under a lot of fire from health professionals for not being an accurate measure. So forget her BMI; just judging from the two pictures posted on this blog I do not see this model as being in the slightest bit overweight. In fact, for someone as tall as she is, size 8 is pretty darn small…I mean, she seems to have hips- that is bone structure- not FAT; I do not see any fat on her. And I refuse to watch that insipid show just to try to scrutinize this gal for fat.

  29. 29 On October 12th, 2007, KatieNo Gravatar said:

    Wow. After reading all these comments, I hardly know what to say. As someone who was only “thin” as a child, I have been bombarded with the “industry” of fashion, magazines, celebrity lifestyles, etc for a long time. I recently lost twenty-five pounds and got down to a size ten or twelve (depending on where I shop). I can’t tell you how good it felt to get out of the “plus” section. The reason for this is that when I hear the terms “plus-size” or “full figured”, I think MORE, BIGGER, etc. If you have something and you add something (plus) you have MORE. If the glass is full, you have MORE. I wish there were other ways to say this, because when I have had shop in plus size stoers, I’ve felt as though people must be watching me go in and knowing I’m big because of that. At my heaviest, just after pregnancy, I was still under 200 pounds. I have never worn bigger than a size 18, and again, that was during pregnancy. On average, for a number of years now, I have been a size 14. In most stores where average women shop, that is the size that plus size starts at. And let me tell you, very few companies I’ve bought clothes for have known how to make clothes for people my size and bigger that accentuate our beauty. They give us tents to wear and add a few bows or a little lace or make it bright red so that it looks like fashion.
    How does this relate to this particular model? It totally relates! I may not be affected by this at this point in my life because I’m confident, have a husband who absolutely loves my curves (after my weight loss, he said I was getting bony!) and I’m not a teenager, but I can guarantee that a lot of young women out there will be very bothered by this designation. If size eight is plus size (even if they are referring to the Industry standards…most girls will not understand this), than what does that say about the thirteen or fourteen year old who is tall for her age and wears a size ten, or the seventeen year old who has been called fat one too many times and wears a size twelve? And how do you think it will make girls feel who ARE plus size. I’m not even talking about those on the line, like I’ve always been, but girls who are size sixteen, eighteen, twenty, and so on. If they were fat before, they’re really fat now, thanks to someone being stupid and giving the designation of plus size to a small, proportionate, lovely girl.
    One thing we have to remember is what the media does to men as well. It was once a sign of beauty, health and fertility to be a larger woman - oh, how I wish sometimes that I lived in those days. There is such a standard set out in movies, television, magazines, etc. for girls under a size ten, that it has become what men expect. It is rare to find a man who truly likes a woman with curves. A lot of men will be happy with their wives after they’ve put on weight and have been married for some time, but not many men would have married that woman if she had weighed that when he met her. Again, I’ve been blessed by having a man who loves my body even when I’m nine months pregnant, but a great deal of men out there just aren’t like that. I knew a whole lot of them when I was in school…guys who would look the other way when I walked by because (I believe) they didn’t want to make eye contact and realize that I was just another girl despite my size.
    I’ve ranted about this in the past to plenty of people, but when I read something like this and the other things that mamavision.com has linked to or posted herself (since that’s how I got here), I feel sick. It is just unbelievably sad that people in the media are allowed to do this.
    My advice: stop watching TV unless it’s PBS, stop reading tabloids (yes, even People magazine is essentially a tabloid), look in the mirror and be happy about who you are even when you know it doesn’t match up to what you see in the media. Spend time with people who appreciate you in this way as well. Easier said than done, I know, but it’s the only way I’ve survived.

  30. 30 On October 14th, 2007, LillyNo Gravatar said:

    (One thing we have to remember is what the media does to men as well. It was once a sign of beauty, health and fertility to be a larger woman - oh, how I wish sometimes that I lived in those days. There is such a standard set out in movies, television, magazines, etc. for girls under a size ten, that it has become what men expect).

    And she IS under a size 10! I don’t know many men who expect that! In fact, in my experience, they appreciate the curves.

    Sarah is NOT plus-sized nor is she the regular MODEL-sized. She is normal, curvy, gorgeous and - REAL. You can’t pinch a oz. of fat bec, she hasn’t it to pinch. She works out, runs circles around most of us, and is busy in the way most of us would like to be. She, whether she wins this show or not, is a wonderful example for our teens (and the rest of us!) who are obsessed w. being thin because we don’t think we are “good enough.” She can model clothes for the rest of us - normality seems to be “norm” everyone is looking to aspire to - can not only appreciate but look at and say, “Hey, THIS is someone to aspire to…and I hope Tyra and the other judges judge her on her looks and personality. She has made it this far and let’s just encourage her for what she is!

  31. 31 On November 7th, 2007, AllieNo Gravatar said:

    This is the email I just sent to Tyra Banks:

    Dear Tyra,

    I’m sure you will never read this, one of your interns will screen it for you, but on the off chance that this makes it to your desk…

    I just want to tell you that I think that eliminating Sarah from ANTM because she dropped to a healthier weight was not just a mistake, it was a major step backward in the campaign for female empowerment and healthy glamour. You essentially told this woman (and millions of impressionable, insecure young girls across the country) that in order to be beautiful, you either have to be super skinny or overweight. I know you blamed it on the industry, but you are one of the elite few people in the world with the power to make a difference, and CHANGE the industry for the better. Instead, you let it go on, and buy into it. You’re just as guilty as the industry, if not more so.

    The few extra pounds that Sarah was carrying at the beginning of the season were probably enough to cause some fairly serious health problems later on in life, but you want her to keep the weight on to fit the plus-size mold? That’s almost worse than telling a size zero “regular” model that she needs to lose five pounds.

    I’m so disappointed that you didn’t take advantage of this opportunity to make an impact on the industry standard for body types… who knows, maybe you could have even saved a few lives, prevented a few girls from developing bulimia or compulsive eating disorder.

    But you didn’t. You did what the industry told you to do. With great power comes great responsibility, Tyra, and you may have just cost some young girl her life, by communicating to her that it’s not okay to be a medium size.

    On behalf of all the size 8 recovering bulimics out there who almost went crazy trying to be industry-beautiful, we hope you’ll rethink this issue, and give the “normal” girls a chance someday.

    What do you say… should I starve myself or eat three cheeseburgers per day?

    Love,

    Allie
    Houston, TX

  32. 32 On November 7th, 2007, RachelNo Gravatar said:
    Allie - No offense, but are you INSANE?

    Few extra pounds? Overweight? Enough to cause serious health problems? Dropped to a “healthier” weight?

    Are you delusional?

    With a BMI of 21.5 - well beneath 25, which indicates overweight - and a size 8, Sarah is FAR from overweight. In fact, she would be classified as AVERAGE-SIZED. Your perspective on weight seems to be seriously skewed.

  33. 33 On November 8th, 2007, John ZachNo Gravatar said:

    I’d kill to be Sarah. I think she has beautiful skin, a beuatiful face and a beautiful personality. Real-size it up gurl!!!! I’m rooting for ya!!!

  34. 34 On November 19th, 2007, dNo Gravatar said:

    Is Sarah a UK size 8 or a US size 8?

  35. 35 On November 20th, 2007, RachelNo Gravatar said:
    A US size 8, D.
  36. 36 On January 9th, 2008, AmandaNo Gravatar said:

    I think it’s ridiculous. I’m a size 10-12, and to them that’s fat! I won’t lie, I’ve got some extra baggage per se, but this girl is not a plus size girl! Plus size would be at least 14, at least. I’d wish that the thin models would be there, but I also wish that regular size would be there too!

    What happened to the days when large women was a beautiful thing? Not something to be hated :/

  37. 37 On January 21st, 2008, NadaNo Gravatar said:

    I am only 13 years old and yet i still feel like i need to lose weight. This woman is a lot skinnier then me and that make me feel like i have to be skinnier then her to be known as skinny. I have tried to be skinny, i was bulimic for 3 months. I know that not all skinny models have eating disorders but some of them do. And then ones that do think that its OK but its not and i learned that the hard way. People may think that just because I’m only 13 I don’t know what I’m talking about, well i do. I stopped being bulimic when my hair started to fall out, don’t let that happen to you. If you want to talk more then contact me at sweetserb94@yahoo.com

  38. 38 On February 21st, 2008, wandaNo Gravatar said:

    watching that clip sarah to me looks like cindy crawford in her day back in the 90’s.(size wize)
    in my opinion sarah is beautiful and possibly the perfect size. i’ve watched top model now for a couple of years and i do like the show but i’ve got a sneaky feeling they only have “plus size” girls to be politically correct. we all now that high fashion girls are minus size and that “plus” size girls are normal. when it came to the elimination of sarah i remember the bald guy saying… ” are you plus size or are you not?? where do you fit in to the industry??…”( he really had a puzzled look on his face like he was searching for the meaning to the universe!! everyone nodding in agreement.. she fits in because a:she is stunning b:she photographs beautifully.. what more does a model have to to.. what difference do a few pounds make to a stunning girl like sarah? it shouldn’t make a difference to any of us, as long as we are happy and content that shines on through to the world on the outside:)
    and to the young lady above nada.. my dear it is what you and only you think about yourself that truly matters.. not how you are known as skinny or not skinny. it may not seem like it now but trust me because i have been there in the “battle” of fat n’ thin and the truth as i see it is that either way, your size cannot determine you happiness. there is so much more out there to life passed this media mad world we live in. when i was my thinnest i was believe it or not my unhappiest & i only know this now looking back. it is not all it is cracked up to be so try to be happy with you just as you are now and live day by day and start loving yourself a little more. i hope you are better still.

  39. 39 On February 22nd, 2008, ImogenNo Gravatar said:

    These models serve an industry which, in its turn, is supposed to serve us! They are modelling products and ideals that are supposedly aimed at women - surely it lies with all of us to say no, stop buying the designers who promote distorted body images and lobby our governments to legislate against the promotion of unreal and damaging body images.

    We have to take on the power we have as consumers and send a clear message to the fashion industry that we will not put up with it.

  40. 40 On February 22nd, 2008, LillianNo Gravatar said:

    I look at Sarah and see no fat. I don’t even see curves. She is a healthy weight. I think other models look like clothes hangers. I think it’s so wrong to call this slender woman, plus size. It gives the wrong message to our children.

  41. 41 On February 25th, 2008, RachelNo Gravatar said:

    I am a plus size model but guess what, I am exactly the same size as Sarah. Being a plus size model means modeling clothes that are plus size, not that you are plus size. I am a size 8 and I model clothes up to size 18.

  42. 42 On March 4th, 2008, claireNo Gravatar said:

    It’s cotour modeling. not commerical. high fashion is a totally different ballgame

  43. 43 On April 2nd, 2008, RavenNo Gravatar said:

    reading some of the responses kinda hurts my brain. i’m not sure if folks are being intentionally obtuse or if they’re just too enmeshed in ‘the industry.’

    i’m not sure anyone can say it more clearly than rachel has when she said that if the clothing is size 14-26 then the person modeling them should also be size 14-26. it only makes sense. why would i care what a size 22 dress looks like on a size 8 frame? it most likely won’t look anything like that on a size 22. nor would a size 22 model be an appropriate choice to model something in a size 4. it won’t look the same as it would on a size 4 frame…

  44. 44 On April 2nd, 2008, JoyNo Gravatar said:

    The perfect proportions of a model have more than just size. I wear a 2-4 and could not be a model. I am only 5′6. Dont forget that these women are very tall. This plus sized girl on the show is a very tall size 8. That looks totally different than a woman of average height. She is skinny.. very… not plus sized at all. Calling her plus sized makes other women around feel FAT.

  45. 45 On April 20th, 2008, SofieNo Gravatar said:

    Society is so fucked up. This girl is completely thin and beautiful. I understand that most girls want to be “thin.” I know I do. I want to be HER thin. I don’t want to be as thin as those anorexic models with no thighs because their legs are all one length. I think all models should be as “thin” as her instead of sticks.

  46. 46 On June 18th, 2008, rose_colouredNo Gravatar said:

    I think that my thoughts on the idea that this woman could ever be considered plus-sized have pretty well been covered by others. I find it insulting. I always thought that models were supposed to be size 8-10. But then I’m not form the US, so hearing a size like 0 doesn’t make sense to me, I can’t imagine it. In Australia the lowest we go is about a size 6, and even that has only been introduced recently. It’s pretty damn small in my opinion.
    What I do want to talk about is not the models but the clothes themselves. I was thinking the other day about the fact that I can’t think of any major designer (you know, one that is a household name) that makes plus-sized clothes. And I mean real plus-sized, the ones starting at size 14. I like original, unusual clothing, and I always feel that all I can ever find in my size is kind of boring. Does anyone else share my frustration?

  47. 47 On June 19th, 2008, GinaNo Gravatar said:

    WOW! I’m 5′10″ and 168 lbs. I must just be a friggin’ COW then. If she’s considered plus size in a size 8 the rest of us are in trouble. (Sarcasm) GET OUT THE TREADMILLS!

  48. 48 On August 10th, 2008, CelesteNo Gravatar said:

    (I call shenanigans. Words have meanings. “Plus” connotes “bigger than normal”,)

    Woah wait a minute..Just because Plus means bigger doesnt mean bigger that NORMAL..bad choice of words..No one looks like that in real life and if you do you get called anorxic. Look there is no perfect in this world. Some thing is wrong with every one..My measurments are 48-26-46 [breasts-waist-butt] and I weight 167 pounds and I am 5′7 so um yeah and I am 16 so reall I am not perfect. my boobs are too big and I am ..lets say over weight and I try everyday to do something to change that and one day I will actually like to look at myself naked until then I am guna love myself because this is the way I guess I am supposed to be for now But love yourself because chances are someone out there loves you for you. :]

Leave a Reply


Socialized through Gregarious 42