Monday, April 7, 2014

Final Paper Topic


            One topic that interests me the most is body image and advertising.  People try to push the “limits” of their body as far as it can go.  The mass media is one way people advertise, usually famous people’s bodies and how “perfect” they are.  To most women and men, models are who the average person aspires to look like.  While everyone wants to look like these models, they don’t realize that some are photo shopped and others risked their lives, health-wise, to look the way they do.  Even social media has shaped the way people look at their own body image.  There are so many ads, or tweets that say “try this new diet” or “shed 30 pounds in a month” to have a transformation like this person.  The media puts models in the special light that glorifies how they look.  So many little kids look up to famous people and are their role models.  They shouldn't be advertising themselves to little kids when they know that maybe that's not the best thing for them.  There is one thing to be thin, fit, and in shape, but theres another thing to be model thin.
            Another direction to go with body image and advertising is through sports.  There are so many athletes that look perfect so people want to be like them but a professional athlete body is so different from a “normal” body.  Even athletes have to deal with body image and advertising, because their own body might be the body in the media.  Also, athletes can have eating disorders too.  They aren't exempt from having problems like other people have.  Two sports that come to my mind is wrestling and gymnastics.  Wrestlers may have to loose a couple pounds in one night to make sure they are on track with their weight for a match.  Also, gymnasts have such little body fat that they have to make sure they stay as lean as possible.  This is not a good way to treat a body and in the end may even hurt the person.
            I think there is a split viewpoint on body image and advertising.  Those people who want to have the perfect body and look like those people that are advertised see it as a positive thing and something to help reach their goal.  On the other hand, the people that know that it is very hard to be model skinny think that this advertising puts a negative affect on people.  I personally think that the media places a negative idea in people’s minds.  They make it seem like it’s a bad thing if you don’t look like a model, or are really thin, or have an athlete’s physique.  Everyone is made differently and it’s okay to look however you were made.
            I think photos could help develop the idea that body image in the media puts a negative idea in people’s minds.  There could be a before and after picture of someone in the process of becoming a model and reaching that size zero or even double zero.  Another photo could be a model next to a “normal” person that still is considered skinny to mostly everyone.  Interviews of models or athletes of how they got to where they are and what they look like could help develop this paper.  One television show that comes to my mind when talking about body image and adverting is One Tree Hill.  In a couple episodes it shows a girl named Millie who was originally an assistant of Brooke Davis who owned a fashion line called "Clothes over Bros".  One night they were short on models and Millie stepped in.  Brooke came up with this new advertising campaign stating "zero is not a size".  Millie looked great in these clothes even though she was a size 2.  Throughout some of the episodes she started hanging out with other models and they got her thinking that zero is a size, and that is what size she should be now that she is a model.  Millie got into drugs and turned for the worst.  I think this is a perfect example showing that models aren't always perfect and to actually look like them you have to hurt your body, which is something that shouldn't be glorified through advertising.

2 comments:

  1. This is a great paper topic because there is so much you can talk about on this issue, and it's something we've been talking about in class. The media definitely plays a huge role in the way people think they need to look, the way they want to look, and the actions they take because of this influence. It's sad that many people fail to realize that perfection is almost impossible to obtain no matter how hard someone tries, and that more than half of the photographs we see in the media are photo shopped. I also like your idea of including photographs of the before and after pictures--it will definitely emphasize the extremities people go to to obtain these bodies. Lastly, I like that you want to discuss sports as part of your topic, specifically wrestling. I remember someone in high school telling me that he wasn't allowed to eat or drink anything but water for four days straight so he could meet the weight limit, and I thought that was ridiculous. You could talk about how that is a type of "forced" eating disorder, and that sports should not allow people to starve themselves. Good luck on your paper!

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  2. This related perfectly to our class, I am sure it came out great with the pictures and all.

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