This month, Glamour's June cover features three models in swimsuits bearing the headline "Curvy? Skinny? It's All Good!" with an accompanying feature on the models and a sexy summer swimsuit spread inside. Glamour makes an interesting pitch: One of the women is sought-out plus-size model Crystal Renn, one is a 29-year-old mother who was one of Prada's token "curvier" models at their spring show, and one is a traditionally beautiful Sports Illustrated model who is blond and has "big boobs" and is married to tennis pro Andy Roddick. Only problem: It's a little hard to tell which model is supposed to be plus-size.
Attribute it to the lull between cups of coffee, but this writer had to check the caption and verify hair colors to distinguish: "Oh, that's Crystal Renn." If one closely scrutinizes the cover photo, one can see that Renn is a little larger than the other women ... but not at all large enough to devote the magazine's cover to making a point. (In fact, an outline of Renn's ribcage peeks out on the cover photo.)
Memo to Glamour: There is really nothing revolutionary or subversive about running photos of three hot models in swimsuits, with long hair, big boobs and undimpled, cellulite-free legs.
Besides, this Glamour feature feels like a repackaging of previous spreads and features on loving your body at every size that
the mag ran in February, last November, last September and last May. This isn't a huge problem -- Cosmopolitan, for example, is definitely guilty of recycling their sex advice -- but just as Cosmo has sex tips, is Glamour's preaching of the importance of using a wide variety of models, then running photos of small to average-size women becoming their calling card?To give Glamour some credit, it's great that they're not making like Ralph Lauren and showing us Photoshopped photos of models whose heads appear wider than their waists or putting Heidi Montag on the cover to talk more about her 10 plastic surgeries in one day.
But Glamour readers seem to be expecting more. On the Web version of this month's cover story, the third commenter on the post, named "Conflicted" wrote:
"It's disappointing how thin Crystal is. For a cover and editorial supposedly showing variety, there is actually very little body variety here. Crystal doesn't even look like a size 12 (and a size 12 is pretty small anyway). If you'd used at least a size 16, like the model in the Lane Bryant commercials, that would have offered an actual range of figures."
Minutes later, a fourth commenter wrote:
"I have to admit I'm disappointed with this as well. Crystal is very beautiful, but there truly is very little variety here. As for the 'curvier' models at fashion shows, it seems to me that it was just skinny women with large breasts. It would be nice to see a woman with some hips or booty every once in a while!"
Crystal Renn -- that's her as she appears in the shoot, above -- herself told Glamour, "Women will accept themselves when they see more [body] types ... This is the new normal." And she's right: She looks like a normal, healthy woman, which means there's room for models a little smaller -- and a lot of room for models larger -- than she is.
Don't worry, Glamour -- there's more than enough space on your cover for a size 16.
Liz Funk is a New York–based author, freelance writer and speaker. Her first book, "Supergirls Speak Out: Inside the Secret Crisis of Overachieving Girls" was published last year by Simon and Schuster.More Good Stuff on the Web:
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Wednesday 05 May
By mustang sally
She doesn't look plus size to me.
Is size 6 plus size? I think not!
Women are supposed to be curvy, it's kinda sick that society wants women to look like 12 yr. old boys.
What is a women without T&A?
a model
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Wednesday 05 May
By Kate
What is a woman without t&a, mustang sally?
Still a woman.
Women shouldn't be bashed either way. Please don't refer to women as looking lie 12 yr old boys or blimps or cows or anything. Let's embrace different body types. Let's play nice.
Wednesday 05 May
By !@#$%
What do 12 year old boys have to do with thin models?
Thursday 06 May
By fangfang213
"It's disappointing how thin Crystal is. For a cover and editorial supposedly showing variety, there is actually very little body variety here. Crystal doesn't even look like a size 12 (and a size 12 is pretty small anyway). If you'd used at least a size 16, like the model in the Lane Bryant commercials, that would have offered an actual range of figures.".I'm 35 ,rich but still single.It's hard to get a girlfriend in my town ,most of them like my money more than like me.Ijust want to find my true love.so i uploaded my hot photos on agelesscupi d .c ooo m under the name of hot561. a nice and free place for younger women and older men, or older women and younger men, to interact with each other..if you girls see this comment,i hope you will check my photos out there.maybe you are the one who i'm looking for!!!
Thursday 06 May
By John
I agree with mustang sally and Kate.
I agree that women with curves are better but I also believe we should embrace women of all body types. And since we already embrace skeleton-thin-models in the media this means featuring more curvy women on the covers of magazines and in movies. Give me Christina Hendricks over Megan Fox any day.
And I understand what mustang means when she says that too many models look like 12 year old boys. Often, when I see a picture of a model, I think about the fact that you could put a picture of a young boy's face on her body and it would just look like a boy with a swim suit on. And I just don't find that attractive.
Thursday 06 May
By Simzee
Hey Kate....anyone with NO tits & arse is called a SIX O'CLOCK. Thses models are an epitome of a six o'clock. What the wrticle is saying is that if you have kids....you're fat.
Thursday 06 May
By rex
society doesnt want woman to look like 12 year old boys
society doesnt want them to look like you.
full of excuses why your overweight.
every woman in the news that is huge when they start out all try to lose weight
for example quue latifah, jordan sparks to name two.. ultimately they say how much better they feel . their healthier.
you just keep sitting on the sofa and complain about how women who are slender llok like boys.
take a good look in the mirror and tell us how you think you look good with all that flab hanging over you pants
Tuesday 11 May
By bronto
Sheesh ... they all look just lovely. What is this "sizing" thing anyway. I was a size 12 McCall's pattern at 14 and 120 pounds ...Today I am a size 4 at 140 pound. Who's kidding who?????
I have a warning for all people posting on these AOL boards. There is a hyperlink under each of your names in blue. When you click onto it, you will probably be surprised ... or horrified ... to find the name you originally used when you wrote your first letter to an AOL site listed as your "profile"
You will also find every letter you've ever written listed. You may also have this "profile" picked up by Google and be instantly searchable on the entire Worldwide web.
AOL has created an 'archives' of all your letters which may appear under your real name if you didn't provide a pseudonym for your very first post. Every single subsequent letter, no matter what pen name you use ... will appear in that public profile. Anyone can click onto the name youv'e used in any one of your letters and get ALL your letters. Try it here and see.
This is a major breach of privacy since we are not informed when asked for name and email to "verify" our comments. I believe it is vulnerable to prosecution. Be careful!
Wednesday 05 May
By bunny
Echoing what Kate said, I full acknowledge the need to have a bigger variety of body types on modelling. But this doesn't mean skinny-bashing.
I'm 5'2" (if I'm lucky), with a waist but not too many curves to speak of, and I am an Australian size 6 (I think that's US size 2) - I often end up looking gaunt and like a kid playing with her Mom's clothes, which sucks and kills my self-esteem in a similar way to my younger sister who is taller, heavier and has issues about her hips. Women of lots of different shapes and sizes are let down by the homogenized models with practically identical bodies; obviously there are women who exist who are shaped like these models, but anybody else is left out.
As for cellulite, I'm not fussed. Any woman who has been in a change room at the gym or the pool knows that everybody either has it or will get it at some point. A friend who works as an exotic dancer even confessed that she can't think of a single girl at her work who doesn't have some! I think airbrushing some cellulite on a magazine cover is akin to wearing makeup - we wear foundation to pretend we have completely even complexions, if you are going to have thousands of people looking at your butt, I don't see such an issue with pretending that it completely smooth.
But ultimately, to say that only curvy women are 'real women' is ridiculous - I am real, the models are still real women, but we are not everybody, just as curvy women are not everybody. So here is to variety, as opposed to another narrow definition of what women should look like.
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Thursday 06 May
By Shutter
Very well said!!
Wednesday 05 May
By Jez
I've been following Crystal Renn's career for a while now, and unless she just suddenly lost weight, I think these pictures suffer from photoshop-slimming. She is normally a ravishingly beautiful size 12, and is shown not too long ago in European magazines with more distinctive curves. I think these photos are beautiful and I agree, she doesn't look plus sized.
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Wednesday 05 May
By renee
I honestly think that women period, whether a size 2 or size 22 are BEAUTIFUL, plain and simple.
In America that girl isn't considered plus-sized, BUT you have to consider the fact that America is one of the heaviest countries. So yeah, to US a plus sized woman is considered normal and average, but in other countries that's not the case.
It doesn't make her any less pretty, though.
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Thursday 06 May
By Kristy
Renee, actually the United States is one of the few countries in the world that puts 'curvy' women or women over size 6 (according to modeling agencies) into the 'plus-size' category. In Europe, Australia, and Africa, it is considered very attractive for women to have shapely legs and thighs, hips, and a curvy bustline. Models are the exception, because overseas models need to cater to American fashion markets, not just their own. So models are, in general and for the most part, universally tall and fairly thin. Even though the U.S. is certainly having more problems with obesity than most places in the world, women in the U.K. are dealing with the same exact problem. I agree with your sentiment of appreciating every woman's beauty, but I just wanted to open other people's eyes about how the rest of the world views curves in a very positive light.
Thursday 06 May
By renee
I do have to mention that I personally do not see that girl as plus-sized, just trying to put things into a worldlier perspective..
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Thursday 06 May
By katrngs
Yup...when did a size 12 become plus size? That's ridiculous.
Wednesday 05 May
By the930wnzsdom
What nobody bothers to mention is that a woman who is a Size 12 today would've been about a Size 18 a couple decades ago.
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Thursday 06 May
By Laurel
Uh actually a size 12 today is probably more like what a size 8 used to be not a size 18.
Wednesday 05 May
By Elizabeth
Well. also if you notice, the two thinner women are standing very close together and farther away from the "plus size" gal. They probably did this on purpose to make her look larger by having an open space there. Also, notice that she is making a bigger angle with her elbow and turned even more in the torso than the others with her arm hanging down to draw attention to the curve of her thigh. If you look at the straight on shot of her below, she looks just as skinny as any model I've seen. They were trying to be tricky to get away with saying they are embracing all sizes by making the "big girl" look bigger.
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Wednesday 05 May
By Corrinne
I think she looks wonderful but I picked her out in a split second. Someone else said this and I think they are right- I think this had some photo shop slimming and creative posing. They shouldn't have. She is a beautiful woman but she looks skinnier than she usually does.
And people, stop bashing skinny girls! Yes, anorexia is not healthy, but not every skinny girl has an eating disorder. Just like not every heavy girl is lazy. Come on now! Stop with the bashing on both sides.
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Thursday 06 May
By Jones
That's plus size? I guess I'm plus size then. She looks to be an average weight.
It's great that they're trying to be more diverse. But why be so subtle? Throw a shorty in there with those tall chicks. Put a darker skinned model in the mix. Be more obvious!! Beauty is diverse.
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