It’s Come to This: Plus-Size Models Just Aren’t ‘Plus’ Enough for Some People
Posted on | January 11, 2014 | 47 Comments
Not big enough? Plus-size model Laura Wells
Before we get to the latest lunacy, let’s ask an obvious question: Has anyone ever heard guys complain that the male models in GQ are “too rugged”? I mean, why must all male models be tall and muscular? Isn’t the male fashion industry’s insistence on using these mesomorphic freaks in their ads inflicting body-image issues on men? Why haven’t men started a protest campaign to insist on having more male models who are spindly geeks or chubby bald guys?
The very idea is absurd, of course, and yet the women who complain that fashion models are too thin have now begun complaining that plus-size models aren’t legitimately fat enough:
It’s hard to believe that the very women who are meant to empower plus-size ladies by showcasing body diversity might just be posing yet another impossible standard. But it seems even plus-size models are alienating their target demographic.
Alex LaRosa, a self-proclaimed “plus-size model who’s visibly plus-size,” stopped by HuffPost Live on Friday to talk about the impossible standards that plague her sector of modeling just as much as the size zero benchmark plagues the straight size industry. She explained:
“In a world where you’re telling women that plus-size is sizes 4 and up, you’re causing body image issues. You’re causing unrealistic expectations that every one — every woman — should be a size 4. To bring that into the plus-size community, where you’re using sizes 8, 10 and 12, when sometimes the stores don’t even start carrying the clothes until size 14, you’re telling women, ‘You want to look like these models. This is what you should look like, but it’s never going to happen.'”
Look, I’m sympathetic. Like a lot of guys, I don’t find anorexic scarecrows particularly attractive, and I’d be happy to see more fashion models with some biscuits-and-gravy appeal. But does anyone really expect designers to start sending plumpers jiggling down the catwalk just to placate a bunch of feminist ideologues? It’s never going to happen.
Get over it. And fix me a sandwich.
UPDATE: Welcome, Instapundit readers!
Comments
47 Responses to “It’s Come to This: Plus-Size Models Just Aren’t ‘Plus’ Enough for Some People”
January 11th, 2014 @ 3:51 pm
Hear, hear!
PS: Mrs. B. just made me a sammich – unprovoked – and so all’s right in Belvedere’s World.
January 11th, 2014 @ 4:00 pm
You mean the “fix me a sandwich” part?
January 11th, 2014 @ 4:00 pm
Damn it, did I miss the memo? Am I now supposed to have “body image” issues provoked by male magazine models?
Guys don’t think that way. And as for women tormented by unrealistic images provided by the fashion industry, how about you stop taking your cues on personal appearance from gay men?
January 11th, 2014 @ 4:07 pm
Exactly! It’s not the “heteronormative patriarchy” that’s doing this stuff.
January 11th, 2014 @ 4:12 pm
Obesity in America? Hell, we’re mainstreaming it.
January 11th, 2014 @ 4:27 pm
The thing is… women models are not meant for you. They are meant to be a fantasy identification object for WOMEN.. I’ll repeat, female models are meant to appeal to women. Men barely notice their looks, other than with a bewildered start. Any woman crawling around in her underwear will get a man’s attention, but frankly, most men prefer a woman with breasts and an ass.
I could claim that women are naturally insecure in their attractiveness, since attractiveness is so important to a woman’s prospects and security, just as men are naturally insecure about their physical strength and earning power. But I don’t claim that.here.
So, feminists, stop blaming me for your self-esteem and “body image” issues. If you want fatter models, buy products advertised with fat models. Capitalism will take care of the rest if there are as many of you as you claim there are.
January 11th, 2014 @ 4:35 pm
High fashion models are supposed to be coat hangers in order to highlight the clothes. It’s pretty much always been that way.
January 11th, 2014 @ 4:50 pm
Hummm that model looks pretty yummy to me just as she is
January 11th, 2014 @ 5:43 pm
She has a little more on her waist and hips than the present ideal. But, then, so do I. And I run and do martial arts. But I’m 50….
January 11th, 2014 @ 6:29 pm
The War on Beautiful Young Women And The Men Who Appreciate Them™ will never end. It’s too convenient for the resentful Marxists of the feminism-industrial complex. #LifeIsntFair #CantRedistributeEverything
January 11th, 2014 @ 7:12 pm
Does a sandwich usually contain that much Raid?
January 11th, 2014 @ 7:13 pm
I’ve hated my body since Ron Jeremy died and I lost all that stunt-double work…
January 11th, 2014 @ 7:54 pm
That skinny, weed of a guy from “Criminal Minds”? His previous job was as a fashion model.
January 11th, 2014 @ 8:13 pm
Enh, if you’re going to be a plus size model, I don’t think it’s unreasonable to ask that you actually be big enough to wear the clothes that places like Lane Bryant sell. I’m not tall enough or big enough to model for Big and Tall men’s catalogs and stores, so I wouldn’t apply for that kind of job.
January 11th, 2014 @ 8:25 pm
Dude, we’ve hated your body a lot longer than that!
January 11th, 2014 @ 8:25 pm
So it’s the, uh… “homonormative gaytriarchy” doing that?
January 11th, 2014 @ 8:49 pm
Some of the ladies look like they have been noshing during sandwich making…not that there is anything wrong with that!
January 11th, 2014 @ 9:17 pm
Women sometimes claim this is a feminist issue. If so, it doesn’t reflect well on them.
I can leaf through Esquire, see a picture of a male model who is slender and think, “Hey, buddy, lookin’ good!” without thinking I need to run out and look like him. I know that models need to be thin for photographic purposes, generally.
And I may look at a guy with a great physique…I don’t know, The Rock or someone, and I might think, “I should work out more.”
But I don’t run around whining that “society” has told me I have to do either. That women do, that if you see a petite model (I don’t know what size 4 is) you are being told to look like that–by whom?
By the way, although the feminists like to blame this on men, they can’t. As far as I know, the fashion industry is mostly run by women and gay men.
January 11th, 2014 @ 9:33 pm
“It’s hard to believe that the very women who are meant to empower plus-size ladies by showcasing body diversity…”
Er… I thought that plus sized models were meant to sell clothes.
January 11th, 2014 @ 9:59 pm
No, this Miss is a Plus.
But that is better than a stick, any day.
January 11th, 2014 @ 10:37 pm
You’re doin it rong.
I get to carry a little extra weight, and I don’t have to suffer through running and martial arts to maintain my cushiony contours.
January 11th, 2014 @ 10:42 pm
Bob, I am a woman who really loves martial arts. Running, not so much, but it helps with my breathing and other things. I find my weight issues irritating, and that they get between me and what I enjoy doing – but I’m not apt to get up in arms about my “body image”.
January 11th, 2014 @ 10:43 pm
“Madest thou look. Here endeth the trick.”
(Sorry. I found that commercial pretty funny)
Anyways, you encouraged me to look. You’re right. They definitely looked “plus” size to me.
January 11th, 2014 @ 10:48 pm
My daughter is fat – and a gym addict. It’s going ’round. Besides our constant ‘3 squares a day’ there are other possible culprits. http://www.prevention.com/food/healthy-eating-tips/gmo-foods-linked-weight-gain
January 11th, 2014 @ 10:48 pm
Well, I like Bruce Lee movies, so I’m doin it rite. I used to sing, so I still have really good lung capacity from that. Highly recommended.
But good on ya. I was only funnin.’
January 11th, 2014 @ 10:50 pm
No fat chicks
January 11th, 2014 @ 10:53 pm
– Manuel Garcia O’Kelly-Davis
January 11th, 2014 @ 11:39 pm
Women are beautiful; they don’t have to be perfect physical specimens. Just stay healthy, enjoy being yourself. A good heart, sense of humor and open friendly smile. Hey, if she has a great bod; tiny to buxom it’s ok with me.
January 11th, 2014 @ 11:51 pm
Ron Jeremy is dead??
January 12th, 2014 @ 12:55 am
Marketing isn’t about improving the self-esteem of those receiving the messages. It’s about making them want to buy the clothing being marketed.
You can bet the major manufacturers and retailers have tested all sorts of approaches and models before sampled audiences. If people bought more clothes from bigger “plus” models, we’d be seeing them all the time.
January 12th, 2014 @ 1:07 am
She’s a good girl and would never think of doing anything like that. Although…she does watch a lot of shows on Investigative Discovery…hmmm…
January 12th, 2014 @ 1:38 am
Good for her that she is a gym addict. If she exercises right, she will keep her heart in good shape, build muscle, and help her metabolism. And hopefully she will work out her diet and lose the extra weight someday, but then she has all the rest already fit.
January 12th, 2014 @ 1:42 am
But they used to tall and slender. Now they are tall and anorexic. Most of the runway ones have a beautiful face and a horrendous “just bones” body.
And nobody walks in a more clunky way than current runway models. It’s deliberate but still quite ugly.
January 12th, 2014 @ 1:45 am
That’s right, Jeremy is dead, and McEnroe is alive! Another triumph from Obama and Biden!
January 12th, 2014 @ 1:45 am
Hah! Must, must read the short story mentioned here:
http://alessandrareflections.wordpress.com/2013/09/12/my-first-evelyn-waugh-reading-very-nice/
January 12th, 2014 @ 1:48 am
“Guys don’t think that way.”
Because they are never tormented by an “appearance obsessive” environment like many girls and women are. You have no idea how crazy and warped the mind of zillions of people are in that respect, and they constantly react to women based on their obsessions with thinness. It’s relentless and can be very noxious for young girls who don’t have alternate reinforcements around them.
Social conditioning is a brutally powerful thing.
January 12th, 2014 @ 6:10 am
[…] Robert Stacy McCain Not big enough? Plus-size model Laura Wells Before we get to the latest lunacy, let’s ask an […]
January 12th, 2014 @ 9:05 am
As a plus-size woman (currently an 18, down from a 24), I prefer actual plus-sized models. It makes it much easier to envision a dress or sweater on me when the model is actually, you know, fat. This is not to make me feel better about myself, but to help me shop online. When Nordstroms uses a woman who is a size 12 to model clothing that they are marketing to women who are a size 22, it just makes it more difficult to shop.
January 12th, 2014 @ 9:56 am
Yes, but his penis lives on!
(Actually, he’s still very much alive.)
January 12th, 2014 @ 1:24 pm
But, we can’t allow them to discriminate against stick insects and midgets.
January 12th, 2014 @ 2:50 pm
Personally, I prefer women with “curves”…because they are real, not some pinup doll. Give me a real woman any day of the week.
January 12th, 2014 @ 4:44 pm
I hate that walk. It ‘s like something from Monty Python.
January 12th, 2014 @ 8:12 pm
Miss Ashley Graham awaits you…
http://thecampofthesaints.org/2010/04/24/rule-5-saturday-13/
January 12th, 2014 @ 10:26 pm
Bob, smokin’ hot women like that don’t go for ol’farts like me…[big sigh]…more’s the pity…
January 13th, 2014 @ 4:49 pm
Nothing says “Fen’s Law” quite like supposedly “feminist” rags shoving unhealthy body images down girls’ throats to appeal to the heteronormative patriarchy.
January 19th, 2014 @ 3:37 pm
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