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Thursday, March 22, 2007

Our culture is sexualizing young girls

Last summer, my 5-year-old niece was hell-bent to persuade her mom to buy her a bikini swimsuit. So, while shopping one day and listening to the harangues, my sister reluctantly agreed to let her try one on. After wiggling all 40 pounds of herself into the wee two-triangles top and side-tie bottoms, she stared openly in the dressing-room mirror and then, never taking her eyes off herself, performed what can perhaps best be described as an exotic-erotic pole dance to show off the ensemble. It was quite a sight.

My sister and I hurried her into her T-shirt and shorts and out of the store, making lame excuses like, "One-piece suits are better for little girls; they're easier to manage." Back home, deftly pulling a tiny bikini top onto her Bratz doll, she was visibly disgruntled. She had no idea what all the fuss was about.

My sister is one of many parents, teachers, child advocates and journalists who have expressed concern in recent years over what appears to be an increasing sexualization in our culture of girls and girlhood. Because I do research on the consequences of the sexual objectification of girls and women, I was asked to serve on a committee named by the American Psychological Association to examine the prevalence of sexualizing treatment in the culture, and its consequences.

Our research was sobering. In study after study, we found ample evidence for a widespread cultural contribution, through media and merchandizing, to the sexual portrayal and treatment of girls. In some cases, we see girls sexualized through thong underwear or T-shirts emblazoned with slogans such as "Eye Candy" and marketed to 7- to 10-year-olds. We also are presented with adult women or celebrity partiers "dressed down" as young girls, in pigtails, with their cleavage busting out of pink ruffles.

With the proliferation of media, such images saturate the culture - and the message to girls and young women is clear: Being female has become nearly synonymous with being a sexual object. And perhaps the most disturbing feature of the bill of goods sold to our daughters is the equating of sexual objectification with power and popularity.

But the media and marketers are not solely to blame. Parents often encourage the maintaining of a sexy, attractive physical appearance as the top goal for their daughters, some even paying for plastic surgery for pre-teens and teens to help them reach that goal. Girls police each other. Boys harass. And these societal influences combine to form self-objectification, or what my niece so vividly demonstrated in her string bikini. Girls come to view and treat themselves as sexual objects, internalizing an observer's perspective on their bodies, and styling their identities after the sexy celebrities who populate their cultural landscape.

OK, but is this really that big of a deal? You betcha.

My studies and many others have shown that the self-objectification that follows carries significant psychological and physical health costs. Girls and young women who have this view of themselves have a poorer self-image, are more likely to suffer from eating disorders and depression, throw a ball less effectively, fail to use proper birth control if they have sex, are more likely to take up smoking and do worse on math tests. It would not be a stretch to say that sexualization functions to keep girls "in their place" as objects of sexual attraction and beauty, significantly limiting their happiness, free thinking, safety and movement in the world.

And those are just the consequences of the more benign end of the continuum of sexual objectification. At the more extreme end, we have child pornography, trafficking and abuse. One pernicious effect of the constant exposure to these images is that we may be "trained" to perceive sexualized girls as "seductive." Studies have shown that adult men often misperceive friendliness in women as sexual interest. We shouldn't be surprised if young girls who are made to look like adult women evoke similar responses.

So my colleagues and I take very seriously the sexualization of girls as a pressing public health concern. I fear we're fighting an uphill battle, however. The trouble is, sex sells. And pointing fingers at dolls or T-shirt slogans seems prudish and moralizing.

In a recent USA Today story, the CEO of the company that manufactures Bratz dolls scoffed at our APA report, saying that his dolls were not sexy, but rather looked like the typical school girl today. The school of what?

One of my daughters and I were riding the street car in Berlin, Germany, when I noticed we had entered an area where prostitutes solicit openly. My then 7-year-old daughter was enchanted by one of these women, who had very long hair and wore thigh-high vinyl boots. "Mommy," my daughter sighed reverently, "she's so pretty. She looks just like a Bratz doll."

The work I did with the task force convinced me we're not just talking about a little bit of second-hand smoke. We're in a smog-filled room, and we're all inhaling and exhaling. Of course, one doll isn't a problem. And maybe one bikini-clad 5-year-old gyrating before the mirror isn't, either. But a culture saturated with a view of femininity that focuses on sex appeal to the exclusion of other characteristics, and increasingly applies this standard to our youngest female members, is a problem we need to take seriously.

Cigarettes have warning labels. Maybe we should consider putting them on Muppet thongs and size 6 "Booty Call" tiny-Ts. Warning: This item is dangerous to your daughter's health.

Alicia Mayer wears a lettuce bikini for PETA

The FHM cover model agrees to be covered in lettuce for the pro-vegetarian ad of People for the Ethical Treatment of Animals (PETA).



Sexily clad in a bikini made of only a few lettuce leaves, actress and FHM cover model Alicia Mayer posed for a brand-new ad for People for the Ethical Treatment of Animals (PETA) Asia-Pacific.

Alicia urges people to embrace a healthy, humane, and delicious meatless diet. The star of Lagot Ka, Isusumbong Kita posed provocatively while holding a placard that says "Let Vegetarianism Grow On You!"

"I'm asking people to turn over a new leaf and go vegetarian," she says in a statement. "With so many delicious alternatives now available, it's easier than ever to enjoy great food without causing animal suffering."

Alicia follows the likes of Diether Ocampo, Ornussa Cadness, and Borgy Manotoc in stripping off to highlight the pro-animal campaigns of PETA.

Last November 2006, Diether made a bold statement for the animal-rights group when he posed with a placard placed strategically on his private parts that says "Naked Truth: Animals Don't Belong in Zoos."

The two models—and real-life sweethearts—Borgy and Ornussa agreed to be covered in tiger body paint last September for PETA's ad advocating the tagline: "Even the wildest animals don't belong in zoos."

According to PETA campaigns manager Rochelle Regodon, the stars who pose for PETA agree to do so without receiving any payment in return for their advocacy. Ace photographer Raymund Isaac volunteered to shoot Alicia's pro-vegetarian ad for PETA.

Anyone who wants to help PETA out can call 8175292, 8183668. Or reach these animal-rights activists through telefax 8183556.


Bare Essentials for Bikini Season

NEW YORK (March 22, 2007) -- Stars look irresistible by choosing the right suit for their body type. We show you how to do the same with styles from Victoria's Secret's new Swim 2007 catalogue at New York's Hotel Gansevoort.



"You really want to stay away from a one piece if you're a boyish figure because a one piece will just accentuate the straight up and down silhouette," Mitro said.

If you have a tall, straight figure like Cameron Diaz and Naomi Campbell, emphasize your bust with a halter style just as they do! Victoria's Secret has a Miracle bra push-up halter-top for unparalleled cleavage enhancement.

"And it has padding," Mitro said. "The padding actually pushes the breasts up and in with the band so it gives you extra cleavage."



An hourglass figure, which is a very small waist with a larger chest and hips, will benefit from a two-piece with more coverage. Victoria's Secret achieves the look with a tankini. Beyonce emphasizes her enviable waist with boy shorts.

"You want a little support," Mitro noted of this body type. "Sometimes a string bikini doesn't give enough support."



And, America Ferrera and Jennifer Hudson can contour their curves with Victoria's Secret's Magic Suit. It's made with a special fabric that accentuates your shape by firming.

"It's $130 but in comparison to a lot of other suits and designer suits it's still very affordable," Mitro said.

Tuesday, March 20, 2007

This advert isn't sexist. Yeah right.

In a flashback to the 1970s, breasts and bikinis are again being used to sell everything from cars to hamburgers. Is feminism truly dead, or this time are the women on the billboards in on the joke too?

The invitation is for a top-drawer corporate social function - drinks while cruising on Auckland harbour. The man boards the boat and is greeted by several pretty young women in tight, skimpy outfits, handing out T-shirts.

"Ooh," says one, pressing close to him and stroking his arm firmly, "you would be an XL, wouldn't you?," before breaking into giggles.

XL sounds too big, he protests. "Oh no, you would be at least a large," says the girl, widening her eyes and squeezing his upper arm.

These are promo girls, the must-have marketing accessory seen at an increasing range of sporting events, alcohol promotions, and now as part of corporate hospitality.

They sell trayfuls of shot glasses in bar promotions, are paid to enter pub bikini contests, play hostess for law firms in corporate boxes and pose for pictures with happy male staff at Christmas functions.

"It used to be all around liquor, then cars, but now it's creeping out into everyday brands, it's more and more acceptable to use pretty girls to sell products," says Paulette Edser of VMA Model and Talent. This week, two of her models, replete in tans, bikini tops and hotpants, were stationed at Auckland University with a mechanical bull as part of promotions for Burger King.

Promo girls are the bikini-clad weathervanes for a new climate of sexual explicitness in advertising. In a bizarre cultural U-turn, we seem to be back in the 1970s, when blokes were men and women were there to smile and look available.

In Hamilton this month, a billboard above the Bendon shop featured the usual visual feast of a reclining woman in bra and undies. But more than usual was on offer. She was pulling at one corner of her briefs, with a catch-line reading, "feel free to poke around downstairs".

Motorola's current campaign features a barebreasted woman as a decorative backdrop to a cellphone. And in a Burger King television commercial, young women in bikinis bounce along on horseback on a beach, prompting media commentator John Drinnan to dub it "the most blatant example of using sex to sell burgers and fries in the 21st century".

At times, what is presumably supposed to be post- feminist irony gets downright stomach-churning. Local fashion house World has been selling pink baby T-shirts, presumably intended for baby girls, emblazoned with the logo "Future Porn Star".

Young women, far from sternly rising up to form feminist action groups to throw Burger King and the bikini girls off campus, appear to be themselves enthusiastic players in the slapperisation of New Zealand. In bars, managers have found that if they provide poles they don't even have to hire pole dancers, because female patrons will do it for free.

And yet, the same generation of young women who are happy to wear Playboy T-shirts are beating the boys at NCEA and university. All this is happening at a time when we are on to our second female prime minister and women are leading the Maori Party and the Greens.

Er, what's going on? Are we failing to recognise a new wave of damaging and oppressive sexual stereotyping? Or are these images harmless post- feminist nonsense, at a time when nothing can hold women back?

To find out, the Sunday Star-Times went to what should be the beating heart of right-on feminism - a women's rights officer at a university. And we found disarray.

"I see myself as a woman and as a feminist, am confused by these things," said Naivasha Moore, women's rights officer at Auckland University. "The women walking around in bikinis selling Burger King - I guess they're getting paid for that and if they're comfortable doing that..." She tails off.

She does wonder whether some women her age feel they must play the sex kitten, because all the images they see suggest that is what is expected of them. But she's not sure.

Auckland University senior lecturer in marketing Rick Starr says New Zealand is not unique. We are caught up in an intensification of sexual imagery sweeping the west. Pornography is available at the click of a mouse. Celebrities such as Paris Hilton and Pamela Anderson are famous for sexual exploits which would once have been seen as shameful.

"Things that would virtually have resulted in an honour killing a decade ago, now just result in increasing people's celebrity," he says.

American writer Ariel Levy has dubbed the trend "raunch culture", arguing that soft-porn culture has invaded representations of women because of a mistaken belief that slutty behaviour can be a form of empowerment and self-expression.

In an environment such as this, the twin objections of feminism and moralistic concerns have become muted, leaving advertisers with a free hand. Only the most ludicrous or awful displays of women's bodies arouse complaints, such as a recent Auckland billboard for muesli featuring a pair of giant female breasts. The tagline was "need something real?"

The billboard was ruled unacceptable by the Advertising Standards Authority after office workers complained the giant breasts were ruining business meetings.

Ads like these, says Starr, capitalise on what is known as the "involuntary attention" phenomenon. Like a train wreck, there are some sights you cannot not look at.

"Pretty much anything involving bodies of either sex is going to have some involuntary attention because it's hard- wired in," says Starr.

Ads that grab attention are particularly effective for products that people don't much care about, called "low- interest" products, says Starr. For a "high-interest" product such as a computer, consumers will research their purchase, carefully weighing up competing products before making a decision.

But no one spends much energy deciding which burger or beer or muesli bar they will buy. For low-interest products such as these, advertisers have to attract attention and create a buzz by using colour, sound or imagery. Or bodies.

Even if society as a whole has become largely indifferent to ubiquitous sexualised imagery, some eminent psychologists say we should care, because children are being affected.

In a major report released last week, the American Psychological Association argued that raunch culture's influence is being felt in the youngest age groups, teaching girls as young as 12 to objectify themselves as sexual beings.

Girls "learn to treat themselves as objects to be looked at and evaluated for their appearance", said the report.

The cultural influences are everywhere - from highly sexual music videos, to Bratz dolls dressed like hookers, to girl mags with their focus on boys and "crushes", to sexually exhibitionistic celebrities such as Britney Spears. In school playgrounds, eight-year-old girls can be heard singing The Pussycat Dolls' "Don'tcha wish your girlfriend was hot like me".

The result is that little girls and young women want revealing clothes and accessories that make them "sexy".

A focus on physical attractiveness by girls and young women isn't new. But there is evidence that it wasn't always the prime currency for social success.

The APA report cites a 1997 study by social historian Joan Brumberg examining the diaries of adolescent American girls over the past 100 years. Brumberg found that in earlier eras, girls were focusing more on improving their studies or becoming well-mannered. In the past 20 years, however, "girls almost exclusively described changing their bodies and enhancing their physical appearance as a focus of their self-improvement".

"The consequences of the sexualisation of girls in media today are very real and are likely to be a negative influence on girls' healthy development," says Dr Eileen Zurbriggen, chair of the APA Task Force on the sexualisation of girls. Possible outcomes include anxiety, emotional problems, eating disorders and low self-esteem.

Meanwhile, back in promo-girl world, Paulette Edser is busy screening 93 entries from women eager to enter the Miss MagWarehouse bikini contest, which will be fought out in pubs around the country.

Edser does worry a little about where the pervasive raunch culture may lead her daughter. But she sees no problem with her role in helping women pursue their God-given right to don scraps of clothing and parade in front of crowds of leering drinkers.

Edser says she has faith in men. They always reject the heavily made-up contestants "who have spent a fortune on their boobs". Instead, if a contestant is "naturally beautiful and she's got a good figure, and it's all her own, they go for the natural one every single time.

"I don't really think it is degrading for women because at the end of the day we've all got choices."

Mismatched Bikinis

It may have been a complete accident when Britney Spears donned a mismatched bikini that last fateful weekend before she went into rehab for good. But when trend-setters Cameron Diaz and Kate Moss are also spotted wearing this relaxed fashion look, it can be no accident.

Spain questions Armani girl in bikini ad

Spain questions Armani girl in bikini ad

Tuesday Mar 13

A Giorgio Armani advertisement showing a young girl in a bikini has drawn the attention of Spanish authorities who are debating whether it depicts a child in an improperly sexual manner.

The Madrid regional government's child protection chief said he would ask the advertising industry self-regulator to consider whether the image visible on the Italian fashion house's website (www.armanijunior.com) should be withdrawn.

The decision was taken a few days after Dolce & Gabbana was forced to pull an image from Spain showing a fashionably dressed woman pinned to the ground by a man as other men looked on.

Parents have complained about the Armani Junior advert, Arturo Canalda, head of child interests for Madrid's regional government, said.

"It's an advert where little girls aren't portrayed in the attitude of little girls," he said. They are wearing make-up and they are about six or seven."

The black-and-white Armani Junior poster shows two little girls, one wearing a bikini top and with her arm around the other.

In an email statement the Italian firm, said: "The matter will be reviewed once complete information has been received concerning the specific complaint."



Faculty Bikini Carwash Generates Controversy

"This is an outrage, Brother," English Professor Jerry Watts mumbled, as he reluctantly slipped into his thong in the crisp February air. Nearby a few professors from other departments were distinguishing themselves in the most unlikely of ways. As Russell Simmons, and other NYC celebrities who supported the charity event, stood by chanting, "Put 'em on the glass!" Philosophy Professor Saul Kripke along with Professor Stanley Aronowitz of Sociology could be seen doing exactly that: rubbing their man-tits all over the windshield of Simmons' '07 Escalade.

In the final installment of its "innovative" fund-raising efforts, not only did Graduate Center officials and faculty pull out all the stops, they also took off all their clothes. "New York is full of cars, and many of those cars are incredibly dirty," explained a university official speaking on condition of anonymity.

"Our illustrious faculty are here today to lend some of their luster to the cars of average New Yorkers," said another official. "At the same time, that dirty feeling the cars had is being transferred to our faculty. I mean, is there a better way to build solidarity between people than to have them suffer the same humiliating ordeal?"

"As everyone knows," said a shivering, goose-pimpled Douglas Lackey, the Philosophy Department's Hegel scholar, "there are two types of Bikini Car Washes. On the one hand, there is the amateur variety, typically employed as a fund-raiser by students at high schools. In this case, the pretty girls hold the signs on the street corner, while their male counterparts do the work. Talk about false advertising!

"On the other hand, there is the professional Bikini Car Wash, familiar to anyone who has watched Cinemax at three in the morning. Here you do get to watch sexy girls wash your car, but your conscience is troubled by the fact that your money, excluding tips of course, enriches another pervert like yourself."

After losing consciousness due to hypothermia and then being revived by paramedics standing by, Professor Lackey continued, "With this project we want to synthesize the happiest aspects of both these archetypes: on the one hand, the camaraderie, the enthusiasm, and the false advertising of the amateur kind; and, on the other hand, we wanted to make money hand over foot by exploiting sex-workers and pandering to the basest desires of the consumer."

But would it work? This question was haunting university officials as the day of the first wash approached. Insiders confirmed that there was a lot of concern that the project would fail both morally and financially. "Ethics can of course be put aside from time to time," said Joan Nix of the Economics Department, who looked fetching in her neon green Borat-inspired ensemble, "but as every thugged-out middle school child in the suburbs knows, 'If it don't make dollars, it don't make sense.'"

But the plan was allowed to proceed when it became clear that many fans of the GC faculty's UFC reality show and of President Kelly's grizzly calendar would be sure to wait on line to get a revealing glimpse of their favorite local academics.

As the frigid day worn on, this intrepid reporter caught up with Professor Watts again, "It's strange, Brother; in a way this makes me nostalgic for the struggles of my people. We didn't land on this Bikini Car Wash; this Bikini Car Wash landed on us!" After pausing to squeeze soiled water from his sponge, he continued, "But then this also gives a whole new, grotesque meaning to the old spiritual, 'No more water, the fire next time.' If we don't get that fire soon, those skinny white women from Comp Lit are likely to freeze to death!"

Bikini News: Ursula's 007 bikini sold in auction

Ursula's 007 bikini sold in auction

The bikini worn by the actress, Ursula Andress, in the first James Bond film, "Dr No", has sold at auction in London for sixty-thousand dollars.

The white cotton bikini was part of the largest sale ever held of clothing, posters and other 007 memorabilia.

It was bought by the owner of the Planet Hollywood restaurant chain Robert Earl.

A silver Aston Martin driven by 007 in the film "Golden Eye" was sold for nearly a quarter of a million dollars.










Laetitia Casta's Fur Bikini


Runway Fashion 01

I like the dangling and the fact that its strapless. It could prove to be annoying when actually swimming however. Obviously something that is more for show than for practicality. The dangles would get in the way if you try to pull jeans over them.

This one reminds me of 007 movies. I half expect to see the knife on her belt.

This is a nice design. I like the built-in detachable skirt. Great colours too.


This one has a more "naughty kitten" look to it. Not really meant for swimming, back I could see wearing it go for a walk on the beach, go shopping, rollerblading, etc.

I have a thing for fur bikinis and bikinis made out of strange materials (ie. sea shells).

The History of the Bikini



If you click the image above it will take you to a website about the history of the bikini and its origins.

Mission Statement

This is a fashion oriented blog for people who appreciate the beauty of a nice bikini.

Items of interest will include:

The Latest Fashions
Swimwear & Swimming
Where to Buy a Bikini
How to make your own Bikini
The History of the Bikini
Comfort Vs Looks
Extra info about beaches, travel info, etc.

And yes, there will be pictures of bikinis and girls in bikinis.