Apologies for the low resolution. It was a mobile ad and all I could get was a screenshot.

    • Bonehead@kbin.social
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      11 months ago

      It’s also distasteful to encourage eating disorders to enter the modelling industry by exclusively featuring models that are extremely underweight, but I guess who are we to judge…

      • Terces@lemmy.world
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        11 months ago

        We are the society and judging other people’s behaviour is what defines morality. Not speaking up about things that are clearly fucked up as the model industry just shifts the whole moral-scale in their favor.

        • Bonehead@kbin.social
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          11 months ago

          The fact that you choose to take personally what was a comment about a model in an industry that specifically selects for extremely underweight models regardless of how they achieve that weight doesn’t mean that it was an insult directed at you. You are not the subject here. You may have a unique metabolism, but the industry projects an unhealthy and largely unattainable image for the vast majority of people.

          We aren’t ridiculing the model, we’re concerned for their health…

        • EatYouWell@lemmy.world
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          11 months ago

          That’s not skinny, that’s starvation thin. The person in the picture is clearly not eating enough, any suggestion otherwise is just giving power to the notion that it’s healthy to be that underweight.

          Not eating enough food is an eating disorder, regardless of the cause of it.

      • EmoBean@lemmy.world
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        11 months ago

        But when they’re extremely overweight from their eating disorder, that’s body positivity and needs to be included for those people to not feel excluded?

        • Bonehead@kbin.social
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          11 months ago

          Why are the only options the extremely underweight or the extremely overweight? What wrong with just using people of average weight? Or even just a healthy weight?

          • Very_Bad_Janet@kbin.social
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            11 months ago

            The fashion business seems to thrive on either body positivity or body negativity, but not body neutrality. If you feel neutral.about you body, I guess that doesn’t prompt you to spend a ton of money on products to celebrate or disguise it.