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Theresa Ruth Howard Dancer/Writer/Teacher Theresa Ruth Howard began her professional dance career with the Philadelphia Civic Ballet Company at the age of twelve. Later she joined the Dance Theatre of Harlem where she had the opportunity to travel extensively throughout the United States, Europe and Africa. She has worked with choreographer Donald Byrd as a soloist in his staging of New York City Opera's Carmina Burana, his critically acclaimed Harlem Nutcracker, as well as the controversial domestic violence work The Beast. She was invited to be a guest artist with Complexions: A Concept in their 10th anniversary season. In 2004 she became a founding member of Armitage Gone! Dance. As a writer Ms. Howard has contributed to Russell Simmons’ One World magazine (art), and The Source (social politics), as well as Pointe and Dance Magazine. While teaching in Italy for the International Dance Association she was asked to become a contributor for the premiere Italian dance magazine Expressions. Her engaging, no nonsense writing style caught the eye of both the readers of Dance Magazine and its Editor in Chief who not only made her a contributing editor and has collaborated with Ms. Howard in See and Say Web-reviews. Her articles about body image prompted her to develop a workshop for young adult (dancers and non-dancers) My Body My Image that addresses their perceptions both positive and negative about their bodies and endeavoring to bring them closer to a place of Acceptance and Appreciation. She recently launched a blog by the same name to reach a broader audience (mybodymyimage.com) As a teacher Ms. Howard has been an Artist in Residence at Hollins University in and New Haven University in addition to teaching at Sarah Lawrence College, Marymount, Shenandoah, and Radford Universities, and the historical American Dance Festival. As a result of her work at ADF Ms. Howard was invited to Sochi, Russia to adjudicate the arts competition Expectations of Europe and teach master classes, and in Burundi, Africa where she coached and taught the Burundi Dance Company. Currently she on faculty at The Ailey School but also extensively throughout Italy and Canada. Ms. Howard's belief in the development, and nurturing of children lead her to work with at risk youth. At the Jacob Riis Settlement House in Queensbridge New York, she founded S.I.S.T.A (Socially Intelligent Sisters Taking Action) a mentoring program for teen-age girls where she worked to empower them to become the creators of their destinies. In addition she developed a dance program, which lead to an exchange with the Dance Theatre of Harlem. Through her teaching and travels Ms. Howard began to observe a universal disenchantment and disconnection in teenagers that disturbed her, thus she set out to address it. Combining her philosophies of life and teaching, with the skills she garnered through outreach programs with diverse communities, she developed the personal development workshop Principles of Engagement: Connecting Youth to the Infinite Possibilities Within which gives teens a set of workable tools to increase their levels of success at tasks, and goals not only in dance, and all aspect of their lives. Theresa Ruth Howard is certainly diverse and multifaceted as an artist, and is moved to both write and create work; however she sees every student she encounters as a work in progress, and the potential to change the world one person at a time. The only was to make this world a better place it to be better people in it!

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WTF!? Woman’s Body Swallows her Breast Implant While Exercising

It sounds like something out of a horror movie and I guess it is horrific if you went into Downward Facing Dog with 2 breasts and came up into Cobra with 1!  Now all you plastic surgery finger wavers before you judge, just know that the woman is 59 a breast cancer survivor and had implants after breast reconstructive surgery…

But still it’s kins freaky!

Hosted by ABCNews.com

Pilates is intended to realign the body. With every focused breath and movement, the physical fitness system is supposed to help you achieve balance as you reach deep into your body’s core.

But all one 59-year old woman found in her core was her right breast implant, which shifted when she engaged in a deep exhale.

The case of the pilates-session-turned-breast-disappearing act was published by Johns Hopkins’ University emergency medicine doctors in the New England Journal of Medicine.

The woman, who had not been identified, had a history of breast cancer and had undergone a bilateral mastectomy and breast reconstruction.

But while forcefully exhaling while keeping her mouth closed and nose pinched shut — called the Valsalva maneuver — the woman lost her implant somewhere in her body.

“I remember her saying, ‘My body swallowed my boob,'” Dr. Tiffany Fong, resident physician in the Department of Emergency Medicine at Johns Hopkins Hospital, told ABCNews.com.

An ultrasound performed in the emergency room helped doctors find the implant, which was lodged between the lower part of the woman’s right lung and ribcage.

“When she would do the breathing maneuver, we saw a part of the chest bulge out,” said Fong. “We found that it was a part of her lung that was protruding.”

But for this woman, it didn’t hurt as bad as it sounds, the emergency physicians wrote in the case report.

“She could’ve had a hard time breathing because it would’ve taken up space in her lungs,” Dr. Gedge Rosson, director of breast reconstruction at Johns Hopkins Hospital, told ABCNews.com. Fortunately, she didn’t.

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Your Hand Bag your Body…Your Fridge ,Your Mind!

I have a theory. I think that there are a few external indicators to your internal state of mind, (and therefore your body) they are your handbag (or work or gym bag for men) and your refrigerator!
Think about  it for a moment… It’s kinda true right?
If you are one of the millions of women who carry there lives (and half of her kid’s and husband’s too) on her shoulder you know what I mean. As the day goes along you toss random odds and ends in, and then one day, when you’re stuck on the subway between stations and the batteries of all your gadgets are drained,  you begin to amuse yourself by rifling through your bag. Well it starts as amusement and quickly sublimates to horror. Often I find that my bag is  it’s like a crime scene in there, you can tell exactly where I have been, and what I have been doing (and eating – due to empty Cliff bar wrappers and restaurant receipts). I have found a lone sock (the mate of which I washed earlier and thought I lost the other) rings, loose tampons rolling around and panties (no I am not a hooker, but as a dance teacher I do change my closes several times a day in various places).  When the inside of  my purse looks like a cyclone hit, often I look and feel like a cyclone HIT ME! The same is true of my Fridge when I have it clean and organized I am more centered, cooking more for myself, and therefore eating better. When I open that door and see a wasteland of containers from either take out or left overs left WAY OVER, I know that something in my life is out of balance. So these two places are like microcosms of the way that are lives are functioning at the time. Perhaps we just are like that regularly, or we are having a hectic week, or month but it by looking into our handbags, we can gauge what might me askew in our lives.
I found this cool article about how to organize your handbag, and though it is just an external effort, it can really be a start to shifting something internally. I know that whenever I clean my apartment, handbag or refridgerator (it’s best when I do all three at the same time) I always feel calmer, like I have a grasp on things, it may be temporal but sometimes a little bit is all I need to feel like I can do my life… Check it out!

 

Stylelist Home Editor Brie Dyas, 4.5 lbs
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and what’s inside…
hosted by stylist.com

How To Be Organized: What The Average Purse Weighs And How To Organize It

“Do you have a pen?” my friend asked.

“Yeah sure, just go into my purse,” I said.

But what my friend found wasn’t a pen, but approximately 5 handfuls of receipts, a small notebook and 4 lipsticks/lip glosses. There was at pen, at some point, in this fashionable garbage pail that I call a purse. And even worse, I had actually downsized from a larger satchel to the smallest purse I could get without it being a clutch, because I had noticed that the former just attracted stuff like a junkyard magnet.

Let’s be honest: We put lots and lots of stuff in our purses, without even thinking about it. My most vivid memory of my friend Adrienne isn’t the time we tried to find the best burger in Manhattan, but the time she upended her tote en route to a lovely restaurant in an effort to find her wallet. There, on a perfectly smooth marble step, she went through 3 (hardcover) books, a makeup bag, two journals, packs of gum and a water bottle. I had to ask her how it all happened.

“I’m not really sure…” she said.

And that’s another thing. A messy purse isn’t a time capsule of the day you decided to throw in the contents of your junk drawer. It’s a work in progress. A teeny tiny taxi receipt, tossed into a purse, will soon become…well, five handfuls.

Though I know I wasn’t alone in this, I had to see just how much I was carrying on an ordinary day. Out came the scale. Then, I made all the Stylelist, Huffington Post Style and Stylelist Home editors around me weigh their bags. And then I made them show me everything that was in there.

How did everyone fare? See the slideshow below.

read the rest here

here is one common problem, and a solution!

So how can we lighten the load? “I make a point of tossing those anything made of paper every morning before I leave my house, keeping important receipts and notes in my wallet or in my notebook,” says Stylelist intern Jada Wong, who had the most well-organized bag in the bunch.

The receipt issue seems to be a big one. Stylelist Home cleaning experts Stacey Platt and Sarah Nina Hayon collectively had this to say:

Rather than haphazardly tossing things into your handbag, take an extra minute to put cash or change in your wallet, receipts in their designated place, or a colleague’s business card in your planner or notebook. Aim to have nothing floating at the bottom of your bag except larger items like your wallet, eyeglass case, or planner.

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Dance has no “Short Cuts”-There’s no APP for That!

 

Sometimes when I am teaching and passionately explaining an element of the technique, I look up to see my students watching me like I was a cable television show. As I walk around the room observing them, often I will spot someone falling back, or struggling to balance and they are looking at me as if to say, “What’s going on? Help, save me!” I look back flatly and say, “Wow, what are you going to do about that?” It might sound insensitive, but it’s actually an effort to get them to realize that they not only have the information to “save” themselves, but the responsibility to try to solve the problem on their own. Their passivity towards finding a solution vexes me. The idea that they are in a sense waiting, expecting me to fix the problem in their bodies makes me adamant not to become an enabler to that passivity.  You might be saying to yourself “Well, isn’t that your job? You are the teacher, it’s your job to fix them” In a sense you are right, however my primary charge is to teach them how to fix themselves by giving them the tools they need, it is not to do the mental work for them.

Dance, like life is a series of problems that need solving. Dance is a physical puzzle, if you can’t fall in love with problem solving you will never be able to truly fall in love with dance, or for that matter life.

Over the 15 or so years that I have been teaching I have observed a slow shifting in the way students approach the work. There is a generational shift that has taken place. I have found that today’s students have a difficulty inserting, and asserting themselves into the process of their development. This issue is not so much the comprehension of the information (intellectually and conceptually they are more advanced) nor is it the translation of the concepts from thought to action (making a thought a movement). The problem is the process of translating, the thinking their way systematically through the technique with consistency. Today’s student are so used to information (solutions, answers) being delivered to them via two dimensional computer screens where they merely have to point and click to retrieve possible solutions that they are sorely lacking the ability to work things out independently. You might be able to Google, Yelp, Ask almost anything, but it won’t help you stand up and pirouette. The body just doesn’t work that way. Your brain is the original computer, and your body is like a vessel that needs to be piloted. You sole pilot of your vessel. Sometimes I feel today’s students are trying to dance in autopilot before they have learned to manually fly their plane, or they dance like they are playing a Wii, following along. They are seeking the shortest, quickest, easiest way to solve the physical puzzles of their bodies, and the reality is…

“There is no App for that, YOU are the App!”

“You are your own Search engine; all the information is in there you just have to access the appropriate files to successfully complete the task.”

To be fair, it is not quite 100% their fault, (no, I am not making excuses for them) This generational issue. These students are growing up in intrinsically different world and set of circumstances then those of generations before them. People who grew up before the technical revolution process information differently. The two brains are just built differently, literally.

Over the last 30 years the world has been drastically altered by the technological advancements that we all enjoy. The world, once shrunken by air travel is now even smaller with information at one’s fingertips, and the ability to have eyes around the world in real time. Technology has not only changed the way we disseminate and receive information, it has vastly altered our relationships and social interactions. But these are the obvious effects of modern technology. There has been a more insidious effect that modern technology has wrought. Let me explain. There was a time not so very long ago when people held numerous names, addresses and telephone numbers in their heads, a time when children were drilled on the memorization if their parents names, their addresses and telephone numbers just in case they got lost.  It was not unusual to solve problems with brain power, legwork or by connecting the dots of information, with simple deduction and sometimes, basic common sense. This was also the time when you had to be at home to receive a call or wait returned to check an answering machine (pre-remote retrieval). It was also time when you had to honor your commitments, if you made an appointment to meet someone, you had to show up, as there was no way of getting in touch with someone in transit to cancel. In a time pre-cell phone, pre-email and Internet human beings were quite independent creatures. Today, in a world were any and everything is a touch or click away, it seems that all this “progress” in a way has “regressed” us in terms of our ability to independently hold certain information in our heads, or rely on ourselves to figure things out. And why should we when we can literally hold a solution to almost everything in the palm of our hands? In addition our diminished capacities to independently problem solve, our ability to independently trouble shoot has all but dissipated. The reality is, the Modern brain looks vastly different then that of a brain 20 years ago.

 

MAPPING THE BRAIN

When we are born we are born with a certain number of synapses (pathways by which information is transmitted). At birth, the number of synapses per neuron is 2,500, but by age two or three, it’s increases to about 15,000 per neuron. Here’s the thing, where there is an exponential increase, the brain eliminates connections that are seldom or never used, this is a normal part of brain development. Science has revealed that there is what is called, “Windows of opportunity” this is when synapses can be developed and strengthened. These are sensitive periods in children’s lives when specific types of learning take place. For instance the neurons for vision begin sending messages back and forth rapidly at 2 to 4 months of age, peaking in intensity at 8 months. It is no coincidence that babies begin to take notice of the world during this period.  Now think about today’s parents introduce electronic devices to small children sometimes as young as 6-8 months old (be they for entertainment or education) with single parent homes or both parents working the DVD has greatly replaced the time that parents read to children, and the prevalence of video has all but eliminated the need for children to use their imagination to visualize their favorite characters, today their “imaginations” are 2 dimensional and lit LED bulbs. Therefore the visual stimuli that help create and strengthen the visual synapses today are greatly different from the stimuli of the past. Since the brain learns to respond and relate to what is comes in contact with (and is less familiar to information that is seldom encounters) is stands to reason that we are creating a brain that is wired differently then those of the past. The same applies to the way we learn to work through problem solving, with the advent of the Internet and search engines the way in which problems are solved today has been revolutionized: Ask, Point, Click and within seconds hundreds of possible solutions appear. Once the information is obtained there is no reason to actually store it in our heads because all we need do is click again and it will be saved and will be forever just a click away. Hence the modern brain looks and functions differently than the brain of 20 years ago.

Technology has created a world, and now a new generation for whom “shortcuts” are a way of life. We are all become accustom to the hyper speed of the modern world.  We get irritated when an Internet page takes to long to load, or a subway creeps through a tunnel, or you have to wait 5 minutes for your fast food French fries to come out of the grease cooker. True, the speed of life is easy to get accustomed to, but if you are old enough to remember when Snail Mail was the only mail, or to research something you would have to go to the library, battle the Dewey Decimal System and the stacks, and if you wanted to have someone’s telephone number you either consulted the one ton phone book or pay a fee for 411, then there is something within you that remembers what it was like have to wait. If you are a child of the tech-boom then you are just pissed and irritated!

Technology has rendered us all impatient and for lack of a better term, Lazy Brained. For those of us raised in a pre-technology era we are experiencing a sort of Alzheimer effect, we can no longer remember those telephone numbers and addresses we once held in our heads and have to consult our mobile phone. As we adapt to the rapidly changing technological landscape, in our struggle to keep up, we must leave things behind. We have to; the world is moving faster, the immediacy of today demands that we operate a certain way within it. So our embracing technology has results in a fading of skills that were once necessary, now rendered useless they wizen like a of kind of like the appendix. For those born in this era, it is not so much the loss of skills, but the fact that those skills never developed. The Generational Lazy Brained Effect is glaringly evident in certain areas. Generally it is not a problem as most things in the world have progressed with, and through technology and so they are complementary, i.e. there are computers in the classrooms, and the internet is used as a research tool, files and records are now all computerized. However the t’ruth is we have figured out how to truncate almost everything we do, travel, getting information, cooking, weight loss, relationships, youngsters even develop are a younger age! Albeit there are a few things that still take the same amount of time and we have not been able to alter, and the is, it still take 9 months (give or take) to have a baby, and it still takes about ten years to make a dancer (give or take). And they are both done in relatively the same ways that they have always been done (give or take). The body- the way it learns takes the same amount of time now as it did in the 1700’s.

The Lazy Brain and Ballet (Dance)

Ballet is a technique that is centuries old and for the most part is still taught in 2011 the way it was in the 1800’s. Though the aesthetics, functionality, and facility of the body may be vastly different from those of the past, the rules if the technique are the same. Add to that, the (mentally and physically) body still develops and learns in the same way, and at the same rate, and the kinesiology and the physics of the form are still the same. Over the last few years I have been convinced that because the students (and their needs) are changing so rapidly due to technology, that I as a teacher must shift to meet them where they are. I would I have to create modern references to help students connect and relate to the origin of the ballet of Checcetti, Vagonova and The French and Royal Schools and make it relevant and relatable to their 21st century sensibilities.

Dance is a physical puzzle that requires the blending of technical mastery with spatial awareness, musicality, and artistry. To dance well one must multitask all those elements and make adjustments in split seconds. You must pilot your body. Although the modern brain can intellectualize dance concepts more quickly, the act of processing that information and translating that in to movement takes longer. I find that students can talk about dance (in theory or concept) all day long, they get it, but dance is not verbal, it’s physical. Year by year my students were becoming more and more passive in terms of approaching the work, instead of actively searching for the physical solutions to their problems they were happy to wait to be corrected. Most times they begin to move before thinking about what they need to or how to do it. They make the big shapes with no thought to detail, quality, or consistency. Often, instead of trying to make adjustments on their own, after experiencing a problem they would be quick to ask, “I’m falling back, what should I do?” where the answer should obvious because it’s a bit of common sense (bring your weight forward) but also because the information had been reiterated numerous times, somehow without verbal and constant prompting the concepts eludes them entirely. It lands but does not stick or permeate, they do not take ownership of the information, and instead they save it to a file, but forget what they saved it under, or where, and simply forget to open the file when they need it.

I find today’s students tend to want to simply get through something as opposed to really investigating how to get through it, thereby learning and developing the technique. They tend to seek externally (looking towards the teacher) for the solution that is quick, and easy. They have to be prompted to independently query themselves about possible solutions (the answers to which has often already been presented to them in class repeatedly). In the studio like in life they are seeking the shortcut. It’s not that they are wholly uninterested in actually learning; I think the real issue is how much effort (mental and physical) it takes to apply the solution that taxes them. I think when the reality of amount of the mental and physical rigor hits them, the ante is a bit too high and they bail out on themselves. This is when they start to try to negotiate and haggle with themselves, thinking, “There has to be a way around this.”

Unfortunately, when dealing with the body in this capacity, passivity and shortcuts do not exist. The process of learning, especially when training the body takes time. In this instant gratification based world we live in where most things can be obtained in shorter periods of time, the biological clocks of today’s younger generations run much faster. They are impatient and restless, and when things take too long they get frustrated and lose interest. In the world of technology there usually is a way to get things done faster, something you simply download, sit back wait for to run. Well the body doesn’t work that way.  There simply isn’t mental or physical App for this!

I realized that I was going to have to help them to create the necessary synapses for them to approach the work.

WHAT TO DO:

I have accepted the fact that one of my roles as teacher now it to teach my students how to “think”. The first thing I had to do was get them off of their mental butts! Here are some tools I found very effective in getting their brains in the game.

Ask Don’t Tell:

I stopped giving out the answers (on how to fix things or properly execute) this enabled their passivity instead I started asking them! When I started you could have heard crickets in the middle of New York City! Then when they realized that I wasn’t just and information booth they could saunter up to and get the snippet they needed, they started to check in. After teaching certain concepts, or technical elements, and reiterating several times, when I revisit them I ask “Now, how are we going to get this done?” or “What are we going to think about when we do this?”  For a while it is the actualization of a racist joke in the making “How many students does it take to explain a Fondue?” and at first it usually took about 3-4 students (and some prompting) but eventually you get more hands and an eagerness to tell. It makes them responsible for the information.

Do it Yourself Corrections:

Another tool I used to get their brains fired up was to make them build their own corrections. I ask “what is wrong with that, why didn’t that work?” generally they have a vague idea of what went wrong, so I ask them “based on what we have been working on how would we fix that?” If they are stumped, I ask the class to weigh in. Let me tell you kids might be passive about fixing themselves, but they are always eager to tell someone else what’s wrong with them! Of course they have to be respectful, supportive and helpful, and this gets them using their eyes to deconstruct and understand and gets their brains in the game.

Well-Laid Plans:

One the keys to effective dancing, is being able to in a sense “plot” your way through a combination and have a plan for the parts that will give you trouble. By assessing each element and the transitions between them, you can make certain that not only you are prepared for the technical requirements to execute the combination, but you can also prepare for what your personal issues and trouble spots will be, timing and dynamics (speed and inertia) can throw you off and change the simplest of movements. When presenting combination I will “plot the course” for them by step by step verbalizing what they might be thinking about in every moment – essentially speaking the internal monologue that takes place as we dance. As they become familiar with this process of breaking down the combination (technically, rhythmically, musically) I give them a moment before exercises to do it on their own. Before they do a combination I always remind them to plot their course, or make a plan (of execution)

Your Body is not Problem It’s Your Mind

Since your brain is the original computer, if you enter the information correctly and completely, and you understand all of the components that make up an element of movement, your mind can (if you get yourself out of the way) flip it to the left, reverse, retrograde or change the facing in space without too much drama, but trick is you have to use your brain. The brain in also the GPS for the Body, if you put the right directions in you will get to your destination. If you are vague, drive straight, turn, turn again… you will be lost. The more precise you are, the more details (with technical information, musicality, rhythm, body facings, port-de-bras, quality) the better and more accurate your results.

When something is not working I often ask students “What are you thinking?” It’s a layered question, because if they can’t answer—well then that’s a huge reason why it wasn’t working. If they can answer, you will often be able to show them why the step failed. i.e. when people try to pirouette, they think turn, so they often spin around perhaps with to much force and in a poor position, when someone says “I was thinking turn” it’s clear because that’s what they did, they spun around, but they did not pirouette. When you ask them to think about balancing—the results are different for a number of reasons, first in order to balance you have to maintain both your center and your position, already those two things are resolved, the other thing is when you think about balancing, going into the revolution you are more mindful to not push yourself off. Getting students to redirect their focus is a key factor in getting results, and it makes them in engage with a mental direction and clarity!

Teachers, These are some of the tools that I use to try to get my students to think about the body, dance, and movement differently and to get them to use their brains in the fashion that will support them getting this old world art form done in modern times. I hope they work for you as they have worked for me. Students, you can use these tools on your own even if your teacher is not asking these question, you can take them into all of your classes to support your work!!! Good luck and I would love to hear any feedback on results if you try it out!

Androgynous model Andrej Pejic featured in ad for Push Up Bra (seriously??)

This is a Man. It is androgynous model Andrej Pejic was chosen by Dutch lingerie company Hema to model Mega Push-Up Bras in their latest campaign. Now let me say I think that he is amazing, absolutely gorgeous. You would even suspect that he in fact was a male, and the question is should it matter? I think that pushing the envelope, questioning, deconstructing or even destroying gender concepts is necessary and where we ought to be as a society. When we challenge the standing boundaries we as society are forced to self examine, grow and change. When we ask what is Gender really, what role does it play? It is the portal to change through re-definition.

That’s all cool, I have no problem with androgyny when is comes to the way a person chooses to live, art, or a fashion shoot. But I WILL be DAMNED if a man  dressed as a woman is going to sell me a PUSH UP BRA!  You have to draw the line somewhere!  Come on now! You don’t even have breasts to lift! Personally this for me has gone to far, especially when we bring in the discussion about body image, and the Media created aesthetic of the female body and beauty.

As a woman looking at this, what is it that I am supposed to feel? Are we that replaceable? What am I supposed to infer from a man that looks like a woman (and better then a lot of actual women) selling me a personal undergarment that he in fact does not need to wear. What would men think or feel if they had a woman passing as a man selling jock straps?

What does it say about the brand that hires a man to sell women’s lingerie, what are they saying to their customers?

I think he looks beautiful, and if I was a woman I would want to look just like him (wait, I AM a woman) ok.. but stay out of my panty drawer. Then next thing you know he’s going to be encouraging me to go get a mammogram and ensuring me that it doesn’t hurt a bit. All I can say is Hum.umm,umm SMH!

Please tell me what you think!!!

andrej-pejic-hema-push-up-bra-ad-1__oPt.jpg

Arianna Huffington Interviews Vogue Italia Editor Franca Sozzani (VIDEO)

Everyone already knows how much I admire Vogue Italia’s Editor Franca Sozzani for her passion for redefining the female body in the fashion industry. She has started an campaign against pro-anorexia websites, and has made very conscious decisions about the models she employs in her magazine. She was responsible for the June 2011 curvy girl cover and the Black Girl issue of Vogue Italia. Just the other day Arianna Huffington invited Vogue Italia editor-in-chief Franca Sozzani for a conversation with the Huffington Post staff and talked about from fashion, body image, celebs on covers to plastic surgery.
here is a clip of her discussing her vigilance concerning anorexia, the fashion industry and her responsibility

Here she talks plastic surgery! I lovelovelove what she says about when it makes sense… she is just the BOMB!!!

to see the rest of her lengthy interview (very interesting) JUMP!

UK: Ads Banned for Promoting Breast Implants to Young Girls

Well we all know the saying “You get what you pay for” and when it comes to things like brain surgery and boob jobs you kinda don’t want to skimp. Just sayin’. I mean have we learned nothing from the woman who thought that getting $700.00 butt implants was a deal? She got a tuckus full of cement  and Fix a Flat! I am still trying to wrap my mind around that one (who does that to another human being?) anyway..

The UK’s  Advertising Standards Authority, is at it again they have banned an ad for cosmetic surgery that they feel is aimed at young girls. Some feel that the ASA has been going way to hard with the banning of advertisements like Hailee Steinfeld Prada ads (below)

However the reasons for banning their latest target might be a bit less ambiguous here is what they had to say about the ad below:

 

ASA rules ads suggested breast surgery was ‘risk free’ and were likely to be seen by young girls

Spire Healthcare’s cosmetic surgery posters have been banned by the ASA

The advertising watchdog has banned a poster campaign for cosmetic surgery that featured a woman in a skimpy top in posters designed to look like the cover of a glossy women’s magazine, after deciding it trivialised breast augmentation and would be seen by young girls.

Spire Healthcare ran the fake magazine cover in a poster campaign in outdoor locations including bus stops.

The ad appeared to be for a fictional glossy magazine called Cosmetic, with the masthead across the top of the poster and text below including “same day surgery”, “get more, pay less” and “boob jobs” written in the style of coverlines as if promoting features inside.

The ASA received 10 complaints that the ad was irresponsible because it trivialised cosmetic surgery and was unsuitable to appear as posters that could be seen by young girls.

Using the ad across bus shelters was an “untargeted, uncontrolled medium, visible to all passing the ads”, the regulator ruled.

The ASA said the image of “the woman with large breasts and a top which accentuated that”, coupled with the style of the ad and the text “conveyed the message that breast surgery was a straightforward, risk-free lifestyle decision”.

Given that the ad could easily be seen by children, Spire had not promoted its cosmetic surgery “in a sufficiently responsible manner”, the regulator added.

The ASA said the emphasis of the ad was on the speed of the procedure and its low cost, not about important consultations prior to surgery, which was “likely to be seen as trivialising breast enhancement surgery”

continue here: guardian.co.uk

Here’s the thing, I am a fan of the ASA, I think that what they are doing is commendable, they are sending a message (yes sometimes it may be a bit extreme) to advertisers that says “This is not okay, this is imagery/ message is potentially harmful and we are going to protect people from it” and it’s about time. I know that people think that this is censorship and that they, at times have been nit picky and gone overboard, but guess what, you can’t have it both ways and you can’t have it all.  You can have a little of a lot of things, but you can’t say you want to protect children and alter the female body image and not give things up. You can’t have complete freedom and be protected at the same time, that’s why there are laws, to make sure that we are all safe, and able to exercise our personal freedoms without doing harm to other or having harm done to us.  Look they may not get it right all the time, but at least they are trying, and that effort should be applauded. Eventually there will be a new standard created and hopefully it will not be misogynistic, and exploitative to women and young girls, or to anyone. So I am so Team ASA!  Thank you!

The Bodies in H&M Ads- Not REAL, Computer Generated

As if having to look like models wasn’t enough, now models are falling beneath the standard. H&M has admitted to photo shopping the heads of models to bodies that are computer generated!

hosted by Huffington Post:
H&M has been sticking real models’ heads on computer-generated bodies, reveals Swedish tabloid Aftonbladet (no, we don’t usually read Swedish tabloids — Jezebel tipped us off).

The head-body disconnect was first noticed in Norway via Bildbluffen (“Photo Bluff”), a site that identifies when photos have been doctored. But once they pointed out that a bunch of lingerie product shots from H&M’s Christmas campaign featured fake bodies with real heads, we started to notice it ourselves (see below).

Check it, same pose, and fake looking hand!

Luckily, H&M has fessed up. The company’s press officer Hacan Andersson told Aftonbladet, “It’s not a real body, it is completely virtual and made ​​the computer. We take pictures of the clothes on a doll [mannequin] that stands in the shop, and then create the human appearance with a program on your computer.”

While this doesn’t seem to apply to the ad campaigns featuring, say, Karen Elson and Abbey Lee Kershaw, it does happen with the models on H&M’s e-commerce site.

The point seems to be that real bodies would be totally distracting for shoppers looking at product shots. “We do this to show off the clothes,” says Andersson.

Not so fast, H&M. Aftonbladet writes that the model fake-out is actually occuring because H&M is simply not satisfied with the slew of models coming through its doors. Commented Norwegian Broadcasting Corporation’s Helle Vaagland:

“This illustrates very well the sky-high aesthetic demands placed on the female body. The demands are so great that H&M, among the poor photo models, cannot find someone with both body and face that can sell their bikinis.”

Oy. So now we have fake, computer-generated models to make us feel bad about our bodies? This is an uphill battle, ladies — and just another sign that models should not be looked to as examples of ideal physiques.

Check out the product shots below — can you tell that there’s a fake body attached to those real heads?

 read full article here

This is ridiculous  but sadly not shocking. How long did we think it would take for someone to move from photoshopp­ing body parts to replacing the whole body. Actually this might be a healthier option for everyone involved. The models won’t have to be unhealthil­y thin (just have a thin face) and women looking at the ads could relax in knowing that, the body is not real and not feel that they have to emulate it! It could be just like regarding a mannequin.­..who am I kidding for some reason women will knowingly compare themselves to just about anything be it a plastic frame, a computer generated image image of a person or and animated character, how many of us wanted to look like Jessica Rabbit…W­e (women) have to take charge of our personal images ourselves, clearly no one is going to do it for us!

What do you think?