Today’s society thinks that a size zero woman and a man with perfect six-pack abs is the ideal look. Why is that? That is because the media shoves it in their viewers’ faces at any chance they get. In recent years, society’s standards have become much thinner. This makes it more difficult for women and men to reach the “ideal” body image. The desire for perfection is unrealistic and even dangerous. This generation is purely based off of the media. The media puts these crazy ideas out there and society takes it without any questions. The media will do whatever is takes to sell their products, and they see showing off good-looking, fit women or men with their product is the best way to do just that. Clothing advertisements are a major …show more content…
The commercial starts off by saying, “Do you have the body you’ve always dreamed of?” As they are saying this, it shows Khloe lying on a bed in only a white t-shirt, making sure they are showing off her long, slim, tanned body. The commercial is trying to push the viewers to buy this product so they can look exactly like the Kardashians. The commercial goes on to say to the viewers that they can change their body and that they deserve a better body. Kim Kardashian goes on to show off her toned stomach by getting out of a pool in a little bikini. The commercial ends by Kim saying, “How hot can you be? QuickTrim live your dream.” By saying this, it makes women feel that they need to be a size small to be beautiful and that their goal in life should be to shrink themselves to fit what the media feels is beautiful (QuickTrim). Hydroxycut is another weight loss solution claiming to better their customers’ lives. The commercial has background music singing the words “I wanna live free” saying that by being thin one now has freedom that they didn’t have before. As the music is playing, it begins showing a various number of their customers dancing in their brand new, perfect bodies holding a picture of their old self. It also shows how many pounds they have lost from their product. Many weight loss products that show before and after pictures photoshop the pictures and just use actors. The weight loss company wants to make their
advertising until the end when she is taking a small bite of the burger. This ad gives clear image of what woman's body should
For women, advertising exemplifies the ideal female body. According to Kilbourne, young girls are taught from a very early age that they need to spend lots of time and money to achieve this “physical perfection.” But realistically this cannot be achieved. The ideal woman’s body is Caucasian, very skinny, big breasts, no flaws, and pretty much no pores. This cannot be achieved because it is physically impossible to look like this; the illusion comes from the secret world of Photoshop. No woman is beautiful enough so they leave it to technology to create perfection. The supermodel Cindy Crawford said, “I wish I looked like Cindy Crawford!” She knew the realities of Photoshop and body image, and more women and girls need to become aware of this as well.
Many fitness advertisements proclaim the idea of the "perfect" body. This is done in ads targeting both women and men. This constant display of the "perfect" body causes women and men to feel like they have to look like the featured models to be accepted, which can often lead to negative body images. One source of advertising where the idea of the "perfect" body can often be seen is in print advertisements featured magazines. These fitness advertisements are usually for athletic shoes/clothes or weight-loss products and often feature a model who is thin and toned. As mentioned by Chandler and Sabiston (2009) there are two types of fitness advertising; model-focused and product- focused (Chandler and Sabiston, 2009). With
This commercial is intended for working women who want to be healthy in general. This is determined based on how the woman in the commercial is portrayed. This woman is a white collared worker who has a busy work day. As a woman who works she is presented with typical food choices anyone sees in an office setting, deciding between fruits or brownies, or the stairs or escalator.
Real guys ripped results is what this ad says.Hydroxycut the perfect diet pill/fat burning pill, a pill that will boost energy and at the same time burn fat and increasing the muscle definition. We all want to lose weight and get that body back that we had as a young adult or in our youth, this is what the advertisement says to the consumer. What caught my eyes as I turned the pages of the flex magazine were of course the ripped up models that were on the pages. The ad shows you all these perfect body models that say they have taken this pill to help them look this way with a before and after picture.
Advertisement of diet pills generally entails one or both of two appeals: their 'quick fix' strategy, and their composition of 'natural' substances. Magazine advertisement of Hydroxycut, which can be found in many women's magazines, focuses on the first method. At first glance, the full-page ad presents a young woman, obviously pleased with the effects of the treatment. Beside her smiling facade are photographs comparing her figures before and after taking the pills. The 'before' image depicts an unhappy, overweight, unfit, pale, disheveled individual. In contrast, the 'after' photo shows a happy, thin, fit, tan, made-up woman. Above these pictures, in bold type, is the quotation, "Losing 31 pounds was so easy with Hydroxycut!" Under this statement, the advertisement claims that Hydroxycut helps you "lose fat fast."
The media group that retouches images skews the “normal” body image of people through many of its outlets, including models in advertising and magazines, and actors in TV and movie productions. “The average model portrayed in the media is approximately 5’11” and 120 pounds. By contrast, the average American woman is 5’4” and 140 pounds” (Holmstrom, 2004). This statistic shows how the media manipulates consumers into believing that because they are not what the average model looks like, they are not living up to a certain standard which implies that they need to look like that to be beautiful. Another research fact that shows a similar concept is that, “In the United States, 94% of female characters in television programs are thinner than the average American woman, with whom the media frequently associate happiness, desirability, and success in life” (Yamamiya et al., 2005). This association of female thinness and happiness, desirability and success makes consumers believe they must achieve this unrealistic thinness to achieve more ultimate goals and fulfillment in life. “The media also explicitly instruct how to attain thin bodies by dieting, exercising, and body-contouring surgery, encouraging female consumers to believe that they can and should be thin” (Yamamiya et al., 2005). This idealization of thinness in the media is seen so much, and is extremely harmful to women’s self confidence and is often associated with body image dissatisfaction, which can be a precursor to social anxiety, depression, eating disturbances, and poor self-esteem (Yamamiya et al.,
Walter Fisher said that “Humans are essentially storytellers” (Fisher). The two commercials are stories that are told by two females. Gisele’s commercial is interesting because it is set in an empty boxing gym. She walks in and is dressed down, and that is the complete opposite of the way we normally see her. Her narrator is different, because as she starts to hit the bag there are real world online comments on the empty wall of the gym. The comments are “Gisele is just a model,” Gisele is old,” “Stick to modeling sweetie,” etc. The story is being told in the present day and how the comments anonymous online can hurt even a celebrity like an international super model. She also does not have any make up on, while she is hitting and kicking
Images of female bodies are everywhere. Women, and their bodies, sell everything from food to cars. Women's magazines are full of articles urging women to fit a certain mold. While standing in a grocery store line you can see all different magazines promoting fashion, weight loss, and the latest diet. Although the magazines differ, they all seemingly convey the same idea: if you have the perfect body image you can have it all the perfect marriage, loving children, great sex, and a rewarding career. The media, whether TV, print, or Internet advertising, seems to play a huge role in influencing women of all ages; from adolescence and teens, to women in their twenties and thirties, as well as
As you’re walking down a street you may notice a young group of girls or women walking and they see a huge billboard of a beautiful model. They might stop and stare at her and then discuss about her perfect her body is. Not knowing in the next five minutes they’ll be comparing their bodies to the model and feeling bad about themselves wishing that they had her body. Not to mention, that the photo may be photoshopped to make it seem as her body is perfect, or she had plastic surgery to fit the idea of having the perfect body. The fact that the media thinks they’re encouraging young girls and women to embrace their beauty, they’re influencing them that they have to have a perfect body in order to get attention. The media has put a lot of pressure on young girls and women to look perfect and second guess their bodies, when plastic surgery is never the answer to build their self-esteem up.
“To be happy and successful, you must be thin,” is a message women are given at a very young age (Society and Eating Disorders). In fact, eating disorders are still continuously growing because of the value society places on being thin. There are many influences in society that pressures females to strive for the “ideal” figure. According to Sheldon’s research on, “Pressure to be Perfect: Influences on College Students’ Body Esteem,” the ideal figure of an average female portrayed in the media is 5’11” and 120 pounds. In reality, the average American woman weighs 140 pounds at 5’4”. The societal pressures come from television shows, diet commercials, social media, peers, magazines and models. However, most females do not take into account of the beauty photo-shop and airbrushing. This ongoing issue is to always be a concern because of the increase in eating disorders.
Today 's society is constantly presented with misrepresentations of the ideal body image through the advertising of diet plans and supplements. Companies in the fitness industry scam people into buying useless products or services by advertising with individuals that have, what the mass media sees as, the 'perfect ' body composition. In addition to getting consumers to buy into a product or service, these companies also aid society with the spreading of this fake idea of what classifies as the perfect body. They portray a body image that is unattainable for most individuals in society, despite how many of those supplements being advertised they buy. The models used in these advertisements, are in most cases, starving themselves, enhanced via illegal substances, or are photo-shopped to the point where even they do not look like the model displayed in the ad. All this has led to many people wanting to strive for that perfect body, that in reality, is impossible to achieve. In order to show the affect these advertisements play in our society, I will be deconstructing multiple ads in the fitness industry, as well as multiple peer-reviewed scholarly journal articles centered around the impact media has on an individual 's self-image.
Basically, the media is doing nothing but using subliminal messages. The way they portray the models in magazines, it only confuses a human’s mind. This makes them believe that they must look like them to be considered beautiful. Often in magazines, when positive values, success, love, and happiness, a thin person is shown. This not only completely lowers a “healthy”, or a plus sized person’s self-esteem, but the media also tries to make it seem as if in order to be happy and successful, a person must be skinny (Piazza). Every day, companies come up with a new beauty product, or a new diet product to leer someone into buying it to make themselves beautiful. New products every day completely sets aside the idea that natural beauty is already beautiful enough. According to the media, though, people need these products to look more humane, or look younger and thinner. The media also using editing and
“Burn it up and Flush it out !” The prominent Kim Kardashian commercial regarding the weight loss supplement, QuickTrim aired on television years ago, in order to display that it is easy to have one’s dream body in a blink of an eye through one commercial. This method of twisting the truth is then applied when a person logs onto Twitter a few hours later and sees pictures of the Kardashian sisters posing and showing off their bodies, the ones that they achieved simply from the use of QuickTrim. It makes one believe this product has the ability to make one look desirable. Advertisements and the Internet have the power to do this through different techniques. Jack Solomon mentions in his passage “Master of Desires: The Culture of American Advertising” the different advertising methods that promoters use to get people to buy their products. In the passage “Everything is Trolling” Daniel D’Addario mentions America’s use of the internet analogously through those methods that are used in advertisement. One method being through manipulation, another way through fantasies, and lastly, through illusions.
Considered by many to be the perfect embodiment of having the perfect body, Jennifer Lopez was chosen as a fitting narrator of the one-minute commercial. Being an all-around celebrity and a sex symbol, Lopez is widely popular enough to be recognized by almost everyone, which makes the commercial more eye-catching. Conveniently enough, this commercial targets both teenagers and middle-aged women who either possibly adore Lopez or just know her in general. The commercial tries to show understanding of women’s dilemma about body image and evokes a sense of hope by advertising their product as a means to lose weight effectively. However, this commercial also provokes and uses insecurities that women