Monday, April 16, 2012

Advertisement


Twitter: @Strong_4_life
Facebook: http://www.facebook.com/S4LGA

Dear strong4life,
I understand the reason for your campaign is to prevent obesity from occurring in young children, but by posting images like the one on the right is obscene! Just by the few words, “It’s hard to be a little girl if you’re not”, makes children who are overweight even more self-conscious about themselves, don’t want to show their faces at school because they’re afraid of getting picked on and bullied, and makes them have a higher chance of becoming depressed and eventually having some kind of eating disorder. Regardless of how overweight a child may be, they still can have a childhood and don’t need advertisements like this showing them that they can’t just because they’re overweight. I was once that young, overweight girl myself and I can tell you from my own experience, my childhood was ruined whenever I saw images like this one or advertisements on TV because I never felt like I was good enough and would never be excepted unless I lost weight. I would constantly wonder what people were thinking about me, I’d always have my hands rapped around my stomach, I was socially awkward, and ended up doing whatever I could to try and lose weight. I remember one summer all I wore were sweatshirts because I thought that that would be a good way to lose weight. Even in high school my sophomore year I could hear people talking about me, and stuff like that hurt. It’s not fair to this girl by displaying an image of her thinking she, or any other overweight girl for that matter, won’t be able to cherish the same childhood as those who aren’t overweight. I know your website means well and is trying to send a message that obesity rates in children are increasing,  but don’t do it in such a hurtful way. In my opinion, try to approach it in a supportive and positive way so overweight children can have a normal childhood and become more motivated to lose weight for themselves instead of feeling pressured.



Sincerely,



Danielle

Monday, April 9, 2012

Effect of Media


I always knew the media is very stereotyped towards woman but I never realized the extent of it. Woman are constantly being contradicted for what they wear, how they display themselves on television, who they're dating, and what happened here that they could have done differently, but what bugs me the most, and always will, is why just the woman? Why not the men? In my opinion, I feel like it's the whole double standard where men have the power to do anything and what ever they do is okay, but if a woman does it all hell breaks loose and it's the next big thing being covered in the media. For example, that whole thing about newscaster Katie Currac, who only is trying to prove that woman are just as confident as men and know just as much as they do, where the media focuses on her hair or how much leg she's showing instead of the important things she's covering in her newscast.


 I found it interesting when the person stated how media plays a crucial roll in defying who we are. The reason I found this so interesting was that the only reason media defines who we are is because it's what they want to see. If there are woman who don't look like the ones displayed on television or in magazines, and the media is saying that that is what you need to look like to be accepted into society, then those woman are going to go out and do what they can so they feel accepted and all are long letting media shape and define who they are.