Victoria Mueller Com 161-15 11/11/17
General Purpose: To persuade people that putting their kids into beauty pageants is wrong
Outcome Statement: At the end of my presentation, my audience will understand why beauty pageants have a negative impact on young girl's self-image and behavior urging them to look at pageants in a different light.
Thesis: Beauty pageants cause psychological problems in young girls. Beauty pageants are all a contest over physical attractiveness. Contestants try to sway the judges by having the brightest smile, cutest clothes, and prettiest hair. Pageants make them think that beauty is being anyone but yourself.
Attention:
Big hair, fake nails, too much makeup and over the top outfits. No, I’m not talking about celebrities, I’m talking about toddlers.
Have you ever seen the show 'toddlers and tiaras'? Well if you haven’t it's a tv show where parents teach their toddlers that in order to be beautiful you have to wear makeup at the age of five. I see pageants as a "let's see whose kid can where the most makeup and the tiniest bathing suit and win money for it" contest. These little girls are robbed of their childhood by being put into these pageants, sometimes without having fair say. Pageants are more for the parents than the actual kids. Some mothers like to try and live vicariously through their little girls.
According to my audience analysis 100% (10/10) of the people believe if the toddler is willing to be in the pageant and enjoys it then let her.
But I believe parents have no one but their selves to blame when their child has the wrong idea about beauty when they’re older. So, if you’re a parent and entering your toddler into a pageant, don’t do it for the money, think of your child.
Need:
According to my audience analysis 100% (10/10) of the people agreed that child beauty pageants negatively affect how young girls behave and dress.
Any parent placing their child in these types of pageants, based solely on looks, is giving their child the attitude that appearance can get you anywhere in life. According to psyhcentral.com, the emphasis on physical appearance may put the young girls at risk for body image issues as they get older.
Is being beautiful an
It’s hard for children to understand this at a young age but it will help them down the road. Pageants play a huge role in developing self discipline. This is where parents come into play. By parents showing their children how to prepare and what it takes to win, children learn this crucial lesson. It
Beauty pageants have been around for a long time, making people believe that nothing could go wrong in such events. Nevertheless, when I consider women who glide across the stage, I recall skinny women, in specific, who appear to have unrealistic features such as: perfect teeth, skin, and bodies, putting pressure as only women who appear that way are in magazines, television, and movies. Subsequently, this begins when young women participate in beauty pageants. [ Dante Ultius] Society today thinks that entering young children in beauty pageants can help self esteem. Society believes it will make them feel beautiful, perfect, socially involved, discipline, self confidence, and so on. Well it turns out thatś the exact opposite of what they think. Putting children in beauty pageants at a young age can cause health issues like depression, low self of esteem, anxiety, eating disorder, and also the absense of a normal childhood. Research shows that over the past 10 years, there has been a 270% increase in the number of girls being hospitalized for eating disorders, some of these girls are as young as 7 years old [Kelly Kammer]. Competitions can display adult body dissatisfaction in their later years, and that it is also possible for them to suffer from various eating disorders [Psychologist Martina Cartwright].
The opinion that beauty pageants are all fun and games is a very dangerous one to have. The lives of participating children are never the same because of the long term emotional and psychological effects that are brought on by early
The child does not even want to be there, and is visibly upset because they do not want to be there (Yap). This is a problem. The parents force their children to compete, when there can be children, young enough to take naps that cannot take them. This actually damages the health of the child. Parents devoted multiple hours a day to preparing their child(s) to enter in a beauty pageant, but with that practice, they take away the time for their kid to live a fulfilled childhood.
For years, beauty pageants for young girls was considered a way to boost self-esteem in young girls. According to the article Child Beauty Pageants: What Are We Teaching Our Girls? in Psychology Today beauty pageants today have changed from the way they were years ago. Young girls now are being seen in outfits that are normally worn by adults and their faces are plastered in makeup. Some of these young girls grow up thinking that natural beauty is a thing of the pass and to be considered pretty you must have on a full face of makeup. According to Martina M. Cartwright the "The Princess Syndrome" as I like to call it, is a fairy tale. Unrealistic expectations to be thin,
First, we will talk about how child beauty pageants started. The upbringing of child beauty pageants is very interesting. It started off with “Pageants celebrating female beauty and charm being fixture at fairs and festivals the U.S. since the 19th century”(Hilboldt), and then “Their rise in popularity probably dates back to 1954, when the miss America pageants was first broadcasted on TV”(Hilboldt). “In 1960, a miami broadcaster hosted the first locally televised pageant for children, Little Miss universes”(Hilboldt). Around “The 1980’s child pageants had become an inextricable part of life in the South…”(Hilboldt). Pageants have dated back for centuries, but did not rise in popularity until it was first broadcasted on TV. Furthermore, the number of kids that participate in beauty pageants is eminence. A majority of little girls wanted to be in pageants, because “They began dreaming of one day becoming Miss America”(Hilboldt). With so many kids in pageants “It’s estimated that 25,000 children compete in more than 5,000 pageants in the U.S. each year”(Hilboldt). It is crazy how many little girls participate in beauty pageants each year just so they can hopefully become the next Miss America. While beauty pageants are still relevant and legal in the U.S. France is trying to ban them. “France is considering a move to ban beauty pageants for girls under 16 as a way to fight the hyper-sexualization of children”(“France”). While,“Under the proposal, organizers of beauty pageants aimed at young children...could face up to two years in prison and fines of $40,000”(“France”). Also, “The measure is a part of of a wider law on gender equality and was approved by the French Senate after garnering 197 votes in favor of the ban,
Child beauty pageants started in the 1960’s, and have been increasingly more popular in the past decade. Currently, there are over two hundred-fifty thousand children under the age of fourteen competing in beauty pageants (Triggs et al 2012). There are no age limits in place; age groups range from zero months to eight months all the way up until eighteen years of age. Parents who enter their children in pageants can damage their children for the rest of their lives. However, pageants do help the beauty industry, and essentially create jobs.
“It doesn’t matter if you can breathe. All that matters is if you look good”. Just Googling the search term “beauty pageants coming up,” will result in 2,710,000 results appearing in 1.18 seconds. Children are the fastest-growing segment of the beauty pageant market, with annual children's competitions attracting an estimated 3 million children, mostly girls, ages six months to 16 years, who compete for crowns and cash. Infants, carried onto the stage by their mothers, are commonplace. April Brilliant, reigning Mrs. Maryland and the director of Maryland-based Mystic Pageants, says pageants give little girls a chance to "play Cinderella." However, playing ‘Cinderella’ can cause children to develop insecurities or self-hatred if they don't
Zinzi Williams explains the downsides of pageantry in “Do Pageant Children Behave Differently than Other Kids?” The central claim is that there are many psychological differences between children who compete in the world of pageantry and children who don’t. Williams states the minor claims that children who compete in beauty pageants put beauty ahead of schoolwork and play time. Her other minor claim is that beauty contests affect the way the children who compete view their bodies and there overall appearance. She states that statistic that if there are 20 girls competing in the pageant, that each contestant only has a 5% chance of winning, which is very slim! Williams explains that in her research she found that on WebMD, a medical website,
Title The popular show, Toddlers and Tiaras on TLC, might be amusing to watch now, but once the viewers find out the ugly truth to pageants, it will make them never want to watch again. The stress, the jealousy, and getting compared to others causes many unhealthy, life-long disorders, that all pageant parents should be aware of. For example, as these girls get judged on who's the prettiest out of their age group, they are losing confidence in themselves and building up body image issues as they don't go home with 1st place. These girls parents are paying over a thousand dollars just to get told they're not pretty enough and as the winner gets praised, they are ashamed that they weren't good enough.
Why is that we are told everyone is beautiful in their own way yet society pressures us woman to be prettier than the next. Women are taught as little girls that being beautiful is important but there is more to life than being beautiful. I believe parents should not let their daughters compete in beauty pageants because it sexualizes young girls, affects child development and discourages self worth. Is exploiting your child really worth some cash, a sparkly tiara and trophy taller than her. If you don’t believe me check out TLC’s hit show toddlers and Tiaras. Toddlers and Tiara is show about child beauty pagents where it looks like little girls throwing tantrums are forced to compete. The show
Girls at such a young age have to power to say no to pageants. Often moms
When I hear the word toddler I think of little girls walking around in mommy’s shoes, and miss matched clothing (because she’s getting to the age where she likes to dress herself.) And of course a cute smile that’s missing a few teeth. The word glitz, glamour and sashes don’t come to mind. Nor does the image of a little girl who’s fake from head to toe. Wearing wigs, flippers (fake teeth), inappropriate /reveling attire and fake tans. I don’t think of little girls dancing around a stage in front of hundreds of people getting judged on their “beauty.” Well, that is exactly what children’s pageants consist of. Pageants exploit a child for their outer beauty, their talents and over all perfection or as pageant judges would call it having” the
These pageants create narcissistic people in society. These little girls are too young and immature to understand the greater deal of these particular contests. Although, beauty pageants may seem fun, fabulous and exciting for a little girl who thinks she is playing princess, it is sickening how far is society is using them as entertainment. Parents open your eyes and look at the repercussions of beauty pageants. Show your daughters the real definition of a queen.
Pageants are costly and Parents will spend upwards of five grand on a dress that will probably only be worn once. Entrance fees, travel, hotel rooms, makeup, and coaches are thousands of dollars per year that parents spend on their children to compete in a contest that most children don't have a choice if they compete or not. These children have