Kelly Osborne Calls Christina Aguilera Fat and some other choice Words

Ladies —and I stretch the word. Stop! Enough is enough. I just don’t get it I know that Kelly and Christina have never really liked one another bu this low blow is sure to start up a fire storm of hatefulness that both these ladies are too old for and you would think above. Why is it that women attack one another about their appearances? Because we know that it will land, and hard. How is it that someone who has been ridiculed for their weight can go after someone for theirs and so publicly, it’s distasteful, sets a bad example and speaks to the persons character. I fear that Kelly will have to eat her words, someone is surely going to slam her for this- and that will be a highly caloric dish when she sits down to it!!! And for the record where Christina has put on weight, I still think she looks good and can still sing circles around almost anyone in the industry. If the show isn’t over until the fat lady sings and you think Christina is “fat” then she is about to blow the house down and close the show!!!

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Kelly Osbourne certainly shy in revealing how she feels about her nemesis Christina Aguilera.

While shooting a segment for E!’s Fashion Police segment, the reality star criticised her rival’s fuller figure by calling her a ‘fat b****.’

Fired up: Kelly Osbourne called Christina Aguilera fat on E!'s Fashion Police Fired up: Kelly Osbourne called Christina Aguilera fat on E!’s Fashion Police

 

Curvy girl: Ozzy's daughter mocked The Voice judge for having a slightly fuller figure as she promoted her new fragrance Royal Desire in Munich last monthCurvy girl: Ozzy’s daughter mocked The Voice judge for having a slightly fuller figure as she promoted her new fragrance Royal Desire in Munich last month

Commenting on a photo of the singer wearing a tight black dress, the 26-year-old sniped; ‘Maybe she’s just becoming the fat b***h she was always born to be. I don’t know. She was a c*** to me.’

Curvy girl: Ozzy’s daughter mocked The Voice judge for having a slightly fuller figure as she promoted her new fragrance Royal Desire in Munich last month

The cattiness didn’t stop there. ‘She called me fat for so many f**king years, so you know what? F**k you, you’re fat too!’ she added.

She wasn’t the only one on the panel to criticise the 30-year-old singer, whose weight has yo-yoed since the birth of her son Max in 2008. Joan Rivers laid into the blonde bombshell, saying: ‘She looks like Snooki’s Scandinavian cousin. It’s a pretty dress but she’s stuffed into it.’

Meryl Streep: The Queen of Transfromation! see her her Margret Thatcher

I have long been a fan of actress Meryl Streep, and for obvious reasons she is one of the best actresses of her generation. One of the most amazing thing about her is her ability to utterly transform herself. Actors and actresses are challenged with transforming themselves into characters, often it takes more than wardrobe to do that sometimes accents are required, often they have to learn a whole new skill set, firing a gun, speaking other languages, medical or scientific jargon, dancing, playing a sport or gaining or losing weight. We have seen both men and women, train their bodies to look like dancers, navy seals, couch potatoes, concentration camp survivors you name it. It takes an immense amount of discipline to take on a particular physical appearance and acquire those skills and perform them as if they have been doing them all of their lives. Sure they get paid the big bucks for their efforts but the point is that is that is is achievable. It got me to thinking,if an actor or actress can transform themselves, then why can’t we as everyday people?

What makes it possible for them to transfom? Actors have a clear goal and intention as to what they are aiming for, we have seen Renee Zellweger plump up to play Bridget Jones and Adrian Brody slim down for his role in The Piano, Linda Hamilton was uber buff for Terminator 2 and Angela Basset got ripped to play Tina Turner. Sure they all had a support team complete with trainers and nutritionist but isn’t it possible that we with a gym membership and a dream could do the same thing? They have to do it because it’s their job, but can’t we do it because it’s our lives? Do we not, with clear intentions, a plan, and consistency have the capability to transform ourselves? No we may not ever be the picture we have of our ideal self, but we certainly move closer to what it is that we desire.

It’s just a thought….


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Kirsten Dunst talks about her body “I don’t have any real body issues…” in ELLE

Kirsten Dunst graces the cover of the September issue of Elle Magazine, and apparently this is the only “issue she has. Frankly it’s nice to hear of  an actress who is secure in her body even when a role requires that she shed her clothes. She even talks about her snaggle teeth, and her ability to embrace them and the fact that they (especially in the veneered world of Hollywood) set her apart.

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On going naked in “Melancholia”:

One of the surprises about Melancholia is Kirsten’s curvaceous body. She is naked in several scenes and as Von Trier refuses any form of retouching or airbrushing, surely it caused some anxiety? ‘I trusted everyone and the lighting was beautiful. I didn’t work out beforehand, it was all very natural. I don’t have any real body issues. I never really overeat, I shed weight in the summer, put it on in the winter and yes, I do have big boobs. People don’t realize because I cover up a lot, but they are there. Big boobs.’ She shrugs and smiles.

On her teeth:

‘I love my snaggle fangs,’ she laughs. ‘They give me character and character is sexy. People comment, but the only person who ever told me to fix them was my mom. Mothers are always like, “Wear lipstick, put on rouge!” They can be s****y about that stuff because they love you. I just went my own way, like daughters do.’

read more of what she has to say here

Ellen Degeneres on body image and beauty-VIDEO


The Ellen DeGeneres show is one of my favorite talk shows. I don’t watch it all the time but when I do, Body image (mostly with women) is one of the issues she talks about. In this video of with Katie Couric Ellen talking about her concerns and ideas on body image and how she incorporates it in her show on CBS. Its short, but it is another person’s perspective on today’s body image and it was very interesting to listen to. Check it out:

MR

Otherness…

Our whole lives we work to meet a standard or expectation. As small children we are slowly introduced to the ways our specific tribes (families). Each family has their methods of interaction, rituals and ways they have of doing things. Everything from the way we speak, what we eat, dress, as well as our moral codes is taught to us in these foundational relationships. Instinctively we are eager to please our “tribe” and quickly learn to fit in. We are so young our exposure is limited, and our view of the world is relegated to those we come in contact with. We hardly know or realize that there are other ways of being. Since we have very little contrast in our lives or the capacity to comprehend what that is, without thought we emulate the examples surrounding us. Slowly, and gently our world expands as we begin to socialize in other arenas (play dates school etc.) it is at this point that alternative information in introduced and we begin to experience contrast or other ways of being, and this is the beginning of our realization that something else, something other than what we know exists, it is at this point that we start the cycle of questioning and choice.

When I was a very little girl I did not know who Elizabeth Taylor (dubbed the most beautiful actress in the world) was, but I knew whom my mother was, and in my eyes no one could have been more beautiful or elegant than she. My Mother even after having nine children (one at a time) had managed to maintained her waistline, with ample breasts and hips in perfect balance, she was noted for her curvy legs and had the most beautiful hands I have ever seen save for her belly mapped from childbirth she was unmarred. My mother is very fair, I am a nutmeg brown in complexion and were I grew to have her legs (thanks mom) my physique is more that of my father’s side of the family. Though I did not directly look like my mother somehow it was fine. As a family brothers and sisters and I are like the colors of the rainbow ranging from what is called “high yellow” to my nutty complexion. Our body types are divergent as well, from short and round, to tall and lean. As a little girl when I sat around the dinner table I could see bits of myself in all of the faces and bodies surrounding me, and though I always wished I were lighter in complexion I never felt uncomfortable or inadequate.

My world expanded rather quickly and exponentially, at the age of three I started Montessori school and was thrust into to a world where people not only came in different colors but ethnicities. Who knew that people came in so many shapes and colors? One of my fast friends during that period was a girl named Rya Silverman. She was possibly the whitest person I had ever seen. She had pale, translucent skin, blue eyes and white blonde hair. She looked like all of my baby dolls. She was frail of body and emotion quite the opposite of me. Both Rya and I moved on to Baldwin Academy for Girls in Bryn Mawr the suburbs of Philadelphia.

It was in this environment that I learned to hate my hair. Every Wednesday was swimming day. This was pre-Revlon hair relaxer days and I knew that my carefully pressed out ponytails were going to be puff balls by the end of the day once the water hit them. I was smart enough to know that after swimming my best bet was to stand under the hairdryer, my hair still bound in pigtails and dry them the best I could. To release them was to unleash a mane that, as a seven years old I had no skill to handle. One day my teacher, concerned that in the winter weather my hair would not dry thoroughly, insisted that I take my hair out to dry it. I looked up at her skeptically knowing full well what was going to happen. But she had already started to undo one side. A limp puff was released, and as my hair dried it became a tsunami of an Afro puff. Now without the proper tools to comb through the mass we both stood there trying to figure out what to do. I gave her the “See, I told you so” look annoyed at the fact that knew that I was right, and because she was bigger and older I had to obey. Now, not only did I look a hot mess, but also I would be forced to go through my day looking like the pick-a-ninny that being the only black student from k-9th grade I already felt like. Add to that the fact that my mother was going to kill me because I knew better, in this simple act of taking out my wet hair I had just created an hours worth of work for her combing out my rat’s nest that evening. Chagrined, my teacher, now fully aware of her mistake and in ignorance at how to deal with this expanding problem left me there and feigned busying herself with the rest of the children. I was left alone to wrangle my hair into some sort of order the best that I could. She never came near me again on swimming days when I stood defiantly under the dryer with my hair in ponytails. This incident was one of the most indelible of my childhood. I had always known that I was black, and “different” from girls like Rya but moments like this confirmed it in a negative way. My teacher knew instinctively how to help my white classmates with their hair but was clueless as to how to help me. I was on my own. This was one of the first times I can remember wanting to be something different, to have different hair, to be like the rest of my classmates to be the same, not to be “other”.

After school I went to Pennsylvania Ballet where I trained 3-5 days a week. I was once again one of the only Black children in the program. It was there that my desire to look like my white classmates not be “other” was fully formed. In the dance studio where you are exposed physically and emotionally, trying to master a technique that hinges on aesthetics, the perfection of line and placement, when you do not have the ability to blend in appearance (meaning skin color, hair type and style) it puts undue pressure on you to be perfect on another level. The only way I could blend or look like my teacher was to perfect my technique and line. When I looked in the mirror even if I managed to create the correct line, my brownness got in the way, somehow it always looked wrong. At least at my dinner table I could look around and see aspects of myself, in the ballet studio there was nothing like me, once again I was on my own, other.

This two worlds, my academic and artistic created a separation that I had never experienced in my household with my tribe but and odd thing happened as a result, those two environments created a separation for me in my household and my neighborhood. My family new little of my talk of dreidels, Passover and bat mitzvahs (common occurrences in my predominantly Jewish school) the kids on my block looked at my Lacrosse stick like it was a medieval instrument of torture, nor did they know what a Ronde de Jambe or Grande Allegro was. In an effort to educate me to the best of their ability, my parents had unwittingly created another level of isolation. I had through the years grown into the “Other” in my home. My interests expanded, my references grew, my aesthetic changed so did my ability to connect with my family and neighborhood friends, and I began to segment the areas of my life. I began to want to look like a “dancer” with not behind, and arched feet, I spoke of people like Gelsey Kirkland, Kyra Nichols and Baryshnikov, where they understood the world I was speaking and dreaming of, they did not, could not understand it. Even to this day my family as no concrete idea what my life as a dancer, as an artist consists of, they are still perplexed by my traveling the world to dance, or teach. It is a world apart from them, they are proud, but they stand outside of my world looking in.

If I were to truly look at the source of my sense of otherness its nascent roots would stem from my body, both inside the tribe of my family to my schooling and my dance training. From being the brownest member of my family, and then becoming a dancer, to being one of the only students of color in school and in the dance studio I was always slightly different. I could change elements of my personality to blend, an ambivert by nature (believe it or not when I was younger I was quite shy when I was in public) I remember the day I consciously decided to exercise my extrovert, and use my humor as a protective shield to be liked and accepted, my thinking was, “If you make people laugh they won’t want to hurt you.” In the world I could be smart, funny, I could use my talent as a way to “fit in” but still my body as it was set me apart. With my family I could fall into our shared tribal ways of being, but the desire of my heart in terms of what I wanted to be (a dancer) was far from them, there was always going to be a part of me that I could not share and experience with my siblings with an intimate level of understanding (except on a level with my father who worked to educate himself as to the world of dance). This sense of isolation has stayed with me; it has informed every aspect of whom I am. Standing on the outside while being in the center of these worlds as giving me the perspective I hold now hold about race, and education, dance, art and the world and yes even the body.

I am, and have always been “other”. Other is a term to describe not being apart of the majority, the norm the status quo. I have been “other” in body all of my life, and later as my world began to expand through education (both academic and artistic) my thinking and philosophy about life and the world relegated me to the realm of “other” as well. As a youth I did not understand it, I resented it; it was painful, isolating and lonely, I have since learned to embrace what my “otherness” offers me, the ability to be a part of and yet set apart from concomitantly, to see things from multiple angles all at once, it has helped me arrive at a place of acceptance instead of mere tolerance for things unlike myself or anything else, and especially of myself. My Otherness has been for me the beginning of Understanding.

What Does It Mean to Be ‘Beautiful?’

I thought that Dr. Diller’s article was very telling. What does it mean to be Beautiful and where do we [the average woman] fit into that and how much do our opinions matter? Diller discloses that the survey shows that the trend of “beauty” is skewing towards people of mixed race, after all “mixed” children tend to end up with what is considered to be the best of both of the worlds that have collided. I suppose that sounds good, but the idea still irks me a bit as I feel that the subrosa truth is that the blend makes it “better” the darker of the two might provided perm-a-tanned complexion, and the fuller lips that so many Caucasian women spend thousands of dollars to obtain and maintain, the lighter race makes sure that you are not too dark (as not to be mistaken for the pure darker race) and the ability to claim small portion of “White skinned privilege”. I always wonder if the people who think that “mixed” or “Bi-Racial” people are “more” beautiful can see the beauty in the individual Pure Races that produced them? Is that mixing a sort of upgrade? I think this also highlights Chimamand Adichie’s argument about the Danger of the Single Story, where the image of beauty is changing and broadening for most women the Magazine covers and media beauty icons have pretty much stayed the same over the years, I can name only three women of color who have held cosmetic contracts with consistency over the recent years Halle Berry, Queen Latifah and Beyonce (I may be missing a few but if I have to reach then…) This is an interesting read with information that will make you take stock of what you believe beauty to be, and then I ask you to stretch into the thought of WHY?…..

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Vivian Diller, Ph.D.

Vivian Diller, Ph.D.

Is blonde and bubbly Jennifer Aniston your ideal of beauty? Or is it sultry Angelina Jolie, the woman Brad Pitt seems to favor? What about Serena Williams, America Ferrera or even Betty White?

According to CNN contributor, Alana Dawson, our beauty icons have become more diverse, a topic she wrote about after visiting the “Beauty CULTure” — an exhibit of more than 170 images by renowned photographers at the Annenberg Space in L.A. Aimed at getting people to question the influence of society on female beauty, the show left her asking, “What is Beauty and Who Has It?” She concluded that standards of attractiveness are rapidly changing — “from blonde to brunette, from fair skinned to deep.” Americans, she says, are ready to embrace beauty diversity.

Evidence for this trend was raised years ago, when Time magazine’s 1993 cover story featured a computer generated image that mixed several ethnicities which they declared was “The New Face of America.” Allure magazine offered support for this new trend when their 2011 Beauty Survey found “64 percent of all our respondents think women of mixed race represent the epitome of beauty.” Some respondents said they wanted darker skin, fuller lips and curvier bodies. According to Dawson, “that’s a far cry from 1991 when most Allure respondents chose blonde haired, blue-eyed Christie Brinkley as the ideal beauty. The all-American look today is much more of a hybrid.”

Having just viewed the Beauty CULTure exhibit myself, I left with a very different perspective — struck less by diversity and more by the ever-narrowing definition of beauty not just in America, but across the globe. I wondered if Dawson noticed how little variety actually graced the magazine covers posted all over the exhibit walls? In fact, when I looked up the recent history of American Vogue Covers , I saw that only 18 percent were non-white, and the average age was just 27, a similar ethnic and age imbalance on display at the Annenberg show.

I also looked more carefully at the actual survey conducted by Allure in 2011. It was designed to revisit the same question that they had asked their readers 20 years ago — “What is beautiful?” Among the two thousand men and women who responded, the majority said they were eager to see beauty icons who were more like them — of different color, race, size and age — a hopeful turn toward diversity. But upon a closer look, the survey reveals less “colorful ‘stats.

  • While 73 percent of women said that a curvier body type is more appealing than it had been in 1991, 85 percent still said they wish their own hips were narrower.
  • 93 percent of women said the pressure to look young today is greater than ever before.
  • In the 1991 beauty survey, men said women were at their most beautiful at age 31. In 2011, that ideal age had been reduced to 28.
  • 86 percent of men said that they wanted to weigh less as compared to 97 percent of women.
  • Women listed their top five appealing male attributes as a guy’s face, body type, smile, eyes and height (in that order). Men listed a women’s face, body type, breasts, smile and butt.

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