
Vogue Magazine said on May 4, 2012, that it’s banning too-young and too-thin models from its pages! (finally!!)
The move by Vogue magazines to no longer work with models under the age of 16 or who appear to have an eating disorder is a big step in the right direction, the head of a Canadian eating disorder organization says.
“Really, for them to come this far is huge,” said Dr. Robbie Campbell, associate professor of psychiatry at Western University in London, Ont., and president of the Eating Disorder Foundation of Canada.
“It’s a move toward healthy modelling, healthy eating, healthy lifestyle, healthy habits, healthy temperament, which all leads to a healthy body image.
On Thursday, Condé Nast International, the publisher of Vogue magazines, announced that 19 editors of magazines around the world made the pact to project the image of healthy models.
But the new policy only applies to Vogue magazines. A spokeswoman said there no current plans to implement these guidelines across the company to include other magazines like Glamour and Allure.
Still, Campbell said the Vogue magazines should be praised for taking that first step.
“They’re making a huge effort and we should applaud them.”
Campbell slammed the use of some of the models in magazines who portray a “sick image for our well girls to try and identify with. It’s horrid.”
Problems remain
Campbell said there are still problems within the 16- to 18-year age group as well and that Vogue’s guidelines should consider using older models and factor in their body mass index (BMI). He said 75 per cent of girls suffering from anorexia have a BMI of 17.5.
“I would rather them be 18 years old with an 18.5 BMI.”
But he still offered high praise for the efforts by “an international consortium, who thrive on promoting thinness, who thrive on promoting unwellness.”
Campbell said the images of models in those magazines are a major contributing factor to eating disorders. But other factors also play a role, including genetics, relationship issues, personality factors, and mental health issues such as depression, bipolar illness and obsessive compulsive disorder.
“All these things are part of the big picture. You can’t say it’s one thing. But the media is driving the one thing that seems to keep it in front of us all the time. So actually the media serves as a constant trigger as we’re trying to move these girls toward wellness.”
Campbell said it’s estimated that around two million women suffer from eating disorders in Canada. (from cbc.ca)
What a GREAT step in the right direction!








1 Comment User Comments
Add a commentRainbowRay
May 5, 2012
10:38 am
All said and good, but the fact still remains and I’ll say it again, DON”T RELY ON MODELS, SINGERS or ACTRESSES as role models (this goes to all the kids and teens out there). The best thing to be is “yourself”. You don’t know who you are yet? That’s okay, no need to panic, but there are many ways to find out and as RainbowRay says, “be resolved and get involved”. Find something that interests you and you are PASSIONATE about and “GET INVOLVED”; don’t sit around letting “life pass you by” when there are opportunities out there (“Volunteer, like in high school you need that experience now in order to graduate; wish I had that when I was in high school, it would have helped me at list a little bit).
Reading also will help you find out who you are (don’t read what the ACTRESSES, MODELS and SINGERS are reading; read what “YOU WANT TO READ”, that will help you know what you like and as a result, you’ll learn about who you are; the same goes for music, movies, hobbies and even “career”. They say that “experience” is the best teacher and I agree (now that I have plenty and I can say confidently and without doubt what’s on my mind because I know who the hell I am and what I want to do WITHOUT the help of ACTORS, MODELS or SINGERS). This will bode well when it comes to have family and I can pass on this knowledge to them. Knowledge really is power.
You also the power to be “who you want to be and who you really are”l the thing is you have to be “hungry” and have the passion to want to know who you are and find out about who are you are by getting involved and trying different things to find out (nothing wrong with that),. RainbowRay says, “Be resolved, get involved!” which is so true for parents, to get their kids involvd (no wonder their are so many obese kids in Canada; how many of them are truly involved in meaningful activities after school or outside the home? If there were alot of them, how come there are so many obese kids around?)
My dream is for us to have an active family so our kids can learn and find out who they are, what their interests and grow up to be well rounded, confident, experienced individuals (nothing wrong with that) and of course, to make up for years lost and lost opportunities due to sacrifice for family growing up in Scarborough. Some dream!
Know who you are, be yourself. If you don’t know who you are, never to late to find out, but you have to be “hungry and thirsty” to find out (things that interest you and once again, DON’T rely on ACTRESSES, MODELS and SINGERS as they all lead their own lives. Have a life to call your own and don’t depend on theirs (doesn’t matter how old you are or how experienced you are in life–GO FOR IT!)
LOVE
RainbowRay
“Experience is the best teacher!”:
Sharing is caring and caring is sharing; living is giving and giving is living