Thursday, October 15, 2009

eat your feelings

Every news anchor, radio host and fat person has their XXL panties in a knot over Fillipa Hamilton getting canned. I haven’t been able to watch a stitch of my regular morning programming without seeing those eight paltry words flashing along the runner:

Ralph Lauren Model Fired For Being Too Big

Ahhh, the great weight debate. In light of recent concerns regarding feather-flimsy models, later aggravated by Lagerfeld's 'curvy woman' snafu, designers have tried putting chunky chicks on the runway. The reaction? Anything but favourable, or fashionable. An example: Mark Fast (the models, not the line itself). But still, does society put too much pressure on models' broad, boney shoulders to be skinny? How thin is too thin? Where should we draw the line? And, for Christ's sake, IS ANYONE THINKING OF THE CHILDREN!? So many (de)pressing questions.

So, here’s a new one. How about, who cares?

Big girls are beautiful too. I'm sure there's a bumper sticker for that. But modeling is a job reserved for people of specific qualifications, just like being a doctor, or a teacher, or at the opposite end of the spectrum, a sumo wrestler or Prima Donna. To be a model, you don't necessarily have to be smart, or politically minded, you don't need to blow your load on a four year degree, only to dig deeper into dept, just to grasp at a Masters before dropping out to deal with your QLC/AKA working on that non-existant "extended thesis". You don't even really need to know how to spell your own name. There is very little a model must do. Walk strait. Eat less. Be thin.

If being thin, and thin according to industry standards is anything between a 0-2, isn't exactly your forte – then why not train horses, build houses, open a bed and breakfast. The possibilities are endless! You don't see genuinely stupid people kicking and screaming because they didn't get into MENSA? Why not? Well, probably because they're off enjoying their job as a daycare attendant somewhere. But that's besides the point. It's really because there are things in life that shouldn’t be challenged, but rather accepted.

I'll never be Jourdan Dunn, and not just for the obvious reason that I'm 5'7, Jewish and white. I'm not a size 0. I never will be. And it's never bothered me. Instead of focusing on what I can't be, I focus on what I can be. And I would recommend that Ms. Hamilton do the same.

So, Fillipa, if you’re reading this, you're a beautiful, talented, skyscraper of a girl who simply outgrew the sample sizes. No need to fret, or cause a media geyser to erupt in your honour, and in the honour of other lowly size fours in the world. (P.S. cry me a freaking river). Don’t focus on what you can't do (anymore), and start thinking about what you can do!

And, what does an ex-model do when she's too cumbersome for the catwalk?

I've heard this works.

7 comments:

Anonymous said...

models that are too skinny on the runways of fashion make a bad example for young girls that look up to them. this post is stupider then the people who can't get into mensa (and p.s. daycare workers DO go to college)

Highwaisted said...

don't you love it when people write negative comments and then choose to be anonymous. show yourself you coward!

hyphenated - i liked this post. well written, perfectly put and i totes agree.

Anonymous said...

Attempting to become a sample size (via unhealthy measures), when you're not built for it, isn't really acceptance though, is it? It's quite a challenge to say that to all the young girls that think a model is the epitome of glamour.

Anonymous said...

"It's really because there are things in life that shouldn’t be challenged, but rather accepted."

This is an interesting statement. Embracing the status quo simply because "it's always been that way" has always seemed a little ass backwards if you ask me. I understand that we insist on models being skinny because we like to see them as idealized versions of ourselves. After all who wants to buy clothes that a fat person wears? But wait.. what's that? Most people ARE actually fat themselves, at least comparitively. Lets not call them fat even, categorize them as "of realistic body shape". Well that presents a bit of a problem. If the models wearing the clothes are perpetuating a set of useless cultural parameters, then I don't see what's so bad about challenging the paradigm. Granted, fashion has always tried to embrace it's vogue, high-brow snobbery aesthetic, and I'm sure being a skinny bitch smoking a long cigarette goes hand in hand with that, but at what cost? I've never really considered models to be human in the first place, so I'd guess anyone looking to them as some template of ideal body image has a serious perceptual problem. They've always just come off more as someone groomed into being a walking, talking coathanger; completely thoughtless and vapid. So if they end up in the hospital, 10 pounds shy of 100 and hooked up to a respirator with the lining of their esophagus worn paper thin from puking up brunch, I won't be losing any sleep over it. I guess what I'm getting at here is (and not trying to sound too bitter, though I'm sure I've failed at that)... size 4, fucking seriously? FOUR. christ.

Anonymous said...

I agree with the above. This is a very difficult topic to address - but i think our writer here, although obviously making light of the situation, has made a good point. who ACTUALLY feels bad for this woman? I'm not a size 2, but I've done something with my life. its about time people stop bitching about the size of a model, and how this affects "society". If the only person you have to look up to is Agnes Deyn, I think you have more to worry about than your weight. Missed the mark a bit on this one, but good blog.

Anonymous said...

models are thin. deal.

Anonymous said...

Wow. Young girls and women aren't bombarded with the IQs of doctors and made to feel the pressure to get their grades up. Do you REALLY believe that the problem with super skinny models (also actresses, pop stars, etc. - any celebrity)is that girls who aren't a size 0-2 feel bad because they can't be models themselves? It's the ideal of beauty that's thrown in women's faces by these fashion-types and such - a girl may grow up to be a doctor or a lawyer or a succesful writer of novels, but they are still made to believe that they are too fat to be beautiful by these types of images (and too fat to wear the clothes). You're an idiot, but you probably don't care because the people in your pretentious fashion circles share your opinion.
-Jasmine