IS 90S THINNESS COMING BACK?
VloĆŸit
- Äas pĆidĂĄn 27. 05. 2024
- Head to squarespace.com/minale to save 10% off your first purchase of a website or a domain!
PODCAST
Spotify: open.spotify.com/show/3wvGhhd...
Apple Podcasts: podcasts.apple.com/us/podcast...
for extra content every Wednesday đ
SUPPORT
Newsletter: gremletter.substack.com/
Donate: ko-fi.com/minale
SOCIALS
Instagram: / gremlita
TikTok: / gremlita
Letterboxd: boxd.it/7YgX
business email: MinaLeTeam@WMEAgency.com
SOURCES
From Dirty Realism to [Redacted] Chic: How Fashion Becomes a Scapegoat for Cultural Anxieties by Jenna Ledford
[Redacted] chic by Rebecca Arnold
Tracking [Redacted] Chic: The Abject Body Reconfigures the Rational Argument by Christine L. Harold
www.thecut.com/2022/10/intern...
www.refinery29.com/en-us/2022...
diatribe.org/how-ozempic-beca...
www.vice.com/en/article/epz93...
www.dazeddigital.com/beauty/a...
www.dazeddigital.com/beauty/a...
www.refinery29.com/en-gb/body...
www.vox.com/2018/6/5/17236212...
www.vogue.com/article/what-is...
www.nytimes.com/2022/11/10/op...
0:00 - intro
2:44 - the origins of [redacted] chic
15:19 - the waif comes back - Jak na to + styl
I think the ideal of thinness never left. The high fashion industry never changed, the skinny models on the runways never changed...
Yup. The BBL voluptuous body was just a trend
Well, the hips were 88, then they allowed 92đ
@@maverickbull1909
Every body is a trend but I truly believe that the bbl will stay, but it will be more conservative.
Like the skinny bbl it's not obvious and many celebrities had it done.
True
And that's good because body possitivity is toxic
i'm suprised that kpop skinny culture is not involved in this video, kpop has reached a lot of platforms all through out the world and being skinny is always a topic in the industry of kpop. it may also been contributing why h-chic is going back since Y2K themed outfits are in in kpop last year
Omg yes!! Being a kpop fan when I was young and going through puberty sent me straight into an ED. I think the international fame of kpop and super skinny celebs like pretty much all of Blackpink definitely helped bring the resurgence of the heroin chic/super skinny look
Lol, kpop is the reason why nowadays hollywood celebrities also becoming obsessed with thin body, all the time everyone prefer thin people over curvy people, but kpop brings more obsession with thinness.
I don't necessarily think so
all east asian countries show extreme preference of very thin very pale women kpop is just under that influence
Yeah I agree, but in a negative way being a kpop fan helped me, I was at the verge of being obese, started getting into kpop and am in the process of losing weight, I don't think it's an Ed or anything, but now I eat only when I'm hungry it might seem like starving but I have so much energy now, and it helps me not over eat, but not eat too little when I do eat
if you're even slightly overweight, you know that skinny has never gone out of style and you're reminded of it every single minute of your life. I'm at my heaviest after covid and finding clothes that not only fit me well but also ones that I like has been near impossible, even from brands that push "body positivity". Sometimes it genuinely makes me want to jump off a bridge.
I have to shop for clothes now and then. And nothing, no other shopping experience, makes me need to curl up into a ball for a while and fight off my ed thoughts
So relatable! Everyone around us will make sure we know we got FAT đ€Ą as if we are blind
Omg I feel the same. I went on birth control and gained a lot of weight and I cry when the biggest size in the fast fashion brands don't fit me. It's so hard to find pants especially! Losing weight is so hard too
Stop complaining about it and make a change. I went from 5'4" 198lb to 128lb through consistent diet and exercise. Coming onto CZcams and ranting instead of being proactive and taking the steps to change your life is what is holding you back. You've got this!!
@@bootdownthedoor how about you mind your own business. I was simply sharing a common frustration. Also, how do you know Iâm not working on it?? Why do you just assume? Keep your ignorant commentary to yourself, itâs not helpful.
I was a teen in the 90s. People werenât doing the drugs because of the fashion industry. Itâs so much deeper than that. The fashion was following the angsty music culture⊠and the angsty music was mirroring the angst everyone felt.
This! How many popular artists from the grunge era are still alive today? It started with the death of Andrew Wood of Mother Love Bone and didnt end for another 20 years, until it took Chris Cornell from us. đ„
@@MaliciousMalcontent Seattle had a serious heroin problem at the time. That wasnt manufactured by a recordy company exec, it was real and killed many people. The execs just jumped on the bandwagon, exploited the scene and started signing third rate copycat artists like Bush.
@@susiex6669đź
Same. Iâm a Xennial and none of us were pouring over Vogue. However, we were being raised by baby boomers who never dealt with their problems. We also had some heavy stuff happen like Columbine (happened the year before I entered high school). It was also the rise of the 24 hour news cycle, which I donât think is good for anyoneâs mental health.
For me, the "grunge" fashion and alternative music just had the feeling of "cool.' Because that was the idiom of the time. Also, there's a good argument that the "angst" and the "grunge" (in fashion, music, etc.) was really sold to us, we didn't create it. I honestly feel a lot more angsty and pessimistic about the world now, lol. Finally, I was never aware of "heroine chic" or body trends back then. I was inculcated with the ideal of thinness more from my mom and specific people around me, who had learned the same (I think the white "thin" ideal goes back to the 1920s or so).
The thin never left. It has always been the most sought out for body shape. How much fat you CAN have varies over time, but being super thin has always been a valid option. Other body shapes have not.
Sorry but skinny and fat are not body shapes . Itâs not the correct word because body shape refers to the literal shape of your body (hourglass, apple, rectangle, etc) you can be fat or skinny and still have the same body SHAPE.
@@leraplaksyva2031 thank you for this.
being skinny is not a body shape. hourglass, rectangle, triangle are body shapes. your body shape generally doesn't change no matter how much weight you gain or lose. it just determines where you are more likely to carry fat if you gain it.
@@skrittle555 !!!!!!!! Yes.
Great way to put it. Even when being thick was in it was only in the ârightâ places. Still couldnât carry fat in your stomach, arms, back
Instead of trying to pick between plastic surgery and starvation, why canât Hollywood just accept that different body types (and ageing) exist đ
Acceptance doesnt bring in the cash from products and content that make us broke and then rich đąđą
Because that doesn't generate money .. profit is the ultimate goal
It's the influencers. Influencers are normal people once they acheive the body they wanted which most of them desire to have a slim thick body through hook or by crook, they show it off online such as in tiktok, Through trends such as small waist check or small nose check.
đItâs because we know that our time here on Earth is limited and seeing someone age means they are closer to death.đ
A WORD
Different perspective here: as a Black girl who was a thin teenager at the HEIGHT of the "slim thick" era, I 100% hated my body because I did not have the hips or boobs. I was bullied in the locker room by classmates and by my own family for being a "string bean", I stuffed myself with peanut butter shakes and had such an excessive and unhealthy workout regimen to attempt to "thicken up" my hip dips. It makes me so sad to think about how I wasn't even giving my body a chance to develop; I was so fixated on looking like an IG Baddie that I almost bought Apetamin to force myself to gain weight. I never felt feminine or sexy enough and I made some...troubling decisions to overcompensate for this insecurity. Yet even with all that, I'll still echo what most are saying here that thin never really went out of fashion. It is always socially acceptable to be thin these days, even though big butts and boobs are in, too. Fatshaming is so pervasive and quite literally humiliates and kills people in ways that skinny shaming does not. There is absolutely privilege in being thin and it's so shitty that women's bodies are even subjected to these fashion cycles in the first place. Just let women exist and make clothes that fit everyone and stop glorifying eating disorders or fad diets or deadly surgeries just so we can feel like we are worthy. I'm sending much love to all women struggling with their body image at this time: you're beautiful, you're loved, you're sexy, you're incredible and wonderful. A good body is a healthy body in whatever way that looks or feels like for you.
Your beautiful, in case you need a reminder
This I feel this đ
This is so my experience. I agree with everything you said
That was a beautiful statement and so are you. You are far wiser than your years.
Black culture is different than general American culture so that 100% makes sense. It was like that even in the 90âs for black folk
When you said âskinny had always been inâ is so true. Iâm a Latina woman and the majority of us are curvier and genetically are not meant to be super thin because thatâs just not how weâre built. I used to be so insecure of my body and I would try so hard to lose weight until a few years later when the âslim thickâ or âcurvierâ bodies were in âtrendâ. Iâm now comfortable in my body as Iâm older, but the idea that bodyâs are now âtrendsâ is so bizarre it reminds me of my younger self trying to be skinny so bad.
@@Meganangel11 Yes and I mentioned that there are latina women that are thin, I'm just referencing that a majority of us are curvier. I am no way favoring one body type over another, its just an observation on how bodies are "trends" these days.
This is such an interesting point i went to a predominantly latinx high school outside of LA around 2016 when âthiccâ was in and hated my body because i had no figure. Now Iâm grown with hips and a butt and seeing the pendulum swing backwards.
â@@st1nkylulu i live in Mexico im latina too, and no, the curvier body has always been the standar, im naturally very skinny and i always recived comments about how flat i was, that i looked anorexic and that i should eat more to have a good body, here being curvy is better than being skinny and now even more with the reggaeton culture where the "latina body" (a curvier body) is glorified and is what everyone is looking for
@@itzywitzy2467 thatâs super interesting and Iâve always wondered what the standards are like in other countries.
My experience is completely the opposite of yours. I'm very tall and skinny and I've always had people make fun of my body type, particularly because of how thin my thighs are. In Latin America (for context, I live in Mexico) the beauty standard is for women to be curvy, even if you're on the chubbier side as long as you have a good fat distribution most people will think you have a nice body type.
Aside from Kim Kardashian's weight loss and the resurgence of Y2K fashion trends, I think that the obsession with Timothée Chalamet (and his "Victorian orphan" look) is another indication that extreme thinness is en vogue.
Its a "sick" waifish look that's coming back for sure. I wonder how men will react or if they'll want to get skinny too?? đ€
@@dw9524 i think so!! although of course ed's are generally more common in women
And Zendaya, and the girl from Stranger things
@@LoXena doja cat and ariana grande are also the thinnest they've ever been right now
@@dw9524 oddly enough (from what I have seen) its been the opposite for gay men. The bear body type has been getting super popular since the pandemic. The standard has always been, and still is tbh, super muscular, but this time with a belly instead of abs.
Reminds me of those type of "whisper girls" who thinks that being mean and having ED is cool đ„Ž i'm glad you brought up this hăŒn chic topic!
They're probably mean cuz their blood sugar is low from hunger.
Wait I just saw the exact same comment under yours
@UCm4LbKR4VFR-C4LpXt5Vyxw ohhhh right
I mean some whisper girls are definitely very toxic but there is also a positive community hidden in there
not all âwhisper girlsâ are toxic! there is def a part of the community thatâs cool and unproblematic. but yes at the same time, just like almost any group/fan base/etc, thereâs a super toxic side that romanticizes edâs and drug use and whatever
As a dietitian who often deals with ED in practice, you also need to remember that up until recently, many doctors would not actually diagnose ED unless there was anorexia and/or purging involved. Body dysmorphia and compensatory eating behaviours were overlooked or even encouraged in people who were categorised as overweight even in the medical community (sometimes seen as normal in those categorised as healthy and underweight too). The current discourse around ED is more aware of these things, which probably has had an impact on increasing ED diagnoses.
Even now, I have friends whose doctors refuse to diagnose them with bulimia because they are overweight. The behavior is there but they aren't emaciated, so apparently they don't have a disorder?
THIS I used to purge a lot a few years ago (sometimes I relapse but not as bad as I used to) and because Iâm not skinny and have a bit of a belly, everyone especially professionals would dismiss it. I still had/have crippling body dysmorphia but I wasnât skinny enough to be taken seriously
I work as a phone counselor at a college peer mental health hotline, and it's true-the dietician who did our training passed around sheets on how to recognize eating disorders that said, of a hypothetical patient "she has a preoccupation with being overweight when she is actually thin". Flashback to two weeks before that training, and I was reading an article about fat patients nearly dying from eating disorders, and after she left I opened my phone to find more videos of gym guys on "bulk/cut" cycles (some clearly describing binging/restriction). Like, clinicians can recognize "it's not about the food, it's about your reaction to it" until the food is protein shake peanut butter binges followed by zyns starvation "cuts", or they'll know "it's not about what your body actually looks like," until your body is fat. People are so much more likely to get noticed for their disordered eating when they're skinny white girls with coke zero eating disorders, and nobody notices the people struggling from the exact same physical and psychological effects when they're actually fat or male.
I recovered from my ED using weightlifting (because if you wanna lift heavy, you gotta eat *a lot*) and I gotta say, itâs really interesting to watch what (mainly) women at my gym come in to âwork on.â It went from cardio only to some pretty intense leg days and now cardio is coming back in a big way.
Iâve also noticed comments on the way I look changing this past year. Iâve got some pretty beefy muscles and used to get a lot of praise, but now itâs veering more toward commenting on how âbigâ I am. And I know this is not comparable to the struggle of fat women (and I take âbigâ as a compliment) but it is a shame that even a body like mine that Iâve built truly focused on strength isnât seen as desirable. Itâs also a shame that so much weight training content for women is focused on fat lossâŠit should be about getting stronger!
That's interesting. In my gym (I'm from England) the women are still VERY MUCH lifting weights. I seldom notice women doing cardio and not touching any weights.
I fell you on tht, i gain weight and I was worried bu it was because I'm getting stronger, but the media o people do not reconize muscles!!!
I hope this kind of comment won't make you feel uncomfortable as it's not my intention, but as a bi girl I find toned and muscular girls cool looking, I think that it's just cool seeing someone putting that much effort on working on their bodies and being healthy in a way of letting your body to grow in muscle
I used to be a solid brick unit in school. I had comments of how big and fat I was. I benched 120+ and leg press was maxed at 345. I ranged 125-135 so I wasnât overweight at all. I developed an eating disorder and am still working on recovery after over 20 years of suffering in it. I still want to be super thin and being healthy is super hard because I will never forget the things said to me. Being strong isnât ideal anymore. It was a brief moment in time a few years back..and it pisses me off.
Ngl, as someone who's currently working towards getting muscular in a way to recover from an ED, I actually could not care less if people think I look too masculine or big. I like androgyny, I don't care if people are so pathetic they have to project their own insecurities onto me, I wanna be strong and also look it. I got bullied for years for being fat until I got skinny, and all it taught me was that people suck and they shouldn't dictate how I feel about myself.
Thin never went completely away AND it is on the rise again, we just LOVE being miserable way too much to ever stop striving for the unachievable.
It's capitalism
@Draalttom That don't help any, true
@@annnee6818 in fact the issue is that all it does is help 1% real intensely but let the rest starve
@@draalttom844 no, is feminism... just a reaction to all the fat positivity movement.
@@draalttom844 No, Capatalism is stuffing your greedy, fat face with rubbish "food" until you resemble a potato.
something that you didn't mention at all and i think is REALLY WORTH MENTIONING is the raise of east asian beauty standards. kpop/ idols diet challenge, trends in china / korea japan such as the paper thin waist challenge are also having a huge influence internationnaly, and needs to be looked into. lets just not have an all western look at this matter.
I donât think the Asian body type is going to leak into the US because we have diverse people here and not everybody wants should be skinny, and some of us are very secure and not insecure
@@mariama9037 I am personally not from the US, so I'm not looking at all perspectives through an all USA prism at all times, but I'm glad you guys are holding on.
@@bangchanswebbrowsinghistor5145 Where are you from?
True
@@mariama9037 It has due to the influence of Kpop. Just youtube kpop diet and there are various people doing these diets of different ethnicities; in English.
I'm tired of our bodies and faces being a trend.
as someone who is on a lifelong journey recovering from ana, i can confirm that skinny never went away. i think media got caught up in the glamor of curves, but with the exception of still having a flat tummy, no cellulite, a chiseled jawline, etc⊠however, i have seen the rise of pro-ana posts and communities, the glorification of being thin, and iâve seen more of my friends fall into EDs over the past two years than iâve ever seen previously. i personally had to delete all forms of social media in this past year because itâs been immensely triggering. stay safe, stay healthy, check in with yourself, and donât be afraid to ask for help because support is out there
I meanâŠIâm skinny (not anorexic skinny. Healthy skinny, but I donât have the desired curves) and I still get ridiculed for being flat and that I need to eat more (I eat more than my obese father. Literally) I think no matter what body shape you have or what size you are youâll always be made fun of (ofc some body shapes are made fun of more than others. And yes obese people have it much harder, but people of all shapes and sizes get made fun of too. Society is stupid like that. Way too obsessed with other peopleâs bodies and faces.
â@@moon_0207 If youre really eating that much more than your father you should get your thyroid checked.
@@ichich1716 oooor maybe itâs the fact that heâs older with a worse metabolism than me, the fact that he eats so unhealthily, that he doesnât work out, drinks a lot of alcohol đ. And maybe Iâm skinny after eating all that is because I have a better metabolism, I eat a lot of healthy foods, Iâm active, I work out by swimming. Yea makes more sense now doesnât it?
@@moon_0207 why so aggressive?
@@moon_0207 If he constantly eats dense unhealthy foods and drinks a lot of alcohol chances are you donât in fact consume more calories than him
i was praised most for my body when i could barely eat one meal per day bc i was on adhd rugs, with severe anxiety. i couldn't stay awake, i constantly dissociated, and i was frequently told i had gotten sooooo beautiful... good food definitely tastes better than skinny feels my dudes.
Yeesh. I hope you're doing better now
depends if the "skinny" is achieved in a healthy manner or not. hearing that expression as a food addict in recovery, i would have to agree with it. when food is your drug of choice, being healthy still feels better than your drug will ever make you feel. you can be healthy and skinny. can't believe i'm pointing out something so obvious but i think the media has warped our perception of health.
@@skrittle555 it's almost as if people shouldn't comment on other people's weight/weight change in general, especially while linking it to their beauty. that shit creates a complex.
@@skrittle555 also i'm still skinny i'm talking about when i was starving and could almost count all my ribs. it's not like i'm saying being skinny in any way is completely unhealthy? but a supermodel saying skinny feels better than any food tastes? she's talking about starving yourself
@@electriksheep1508 i mean, it depends on the individual person and where they are with their disordered eating. i WISH someone had called me out for gaining 100+ lbs. they were all too afraid to offend me and i had to suffer a stroke before i woke up. personally i can't wait until being mentally and physically healthy becomes "on trend." i'm so sick of all of this fake woke lying to yourself and feeding your eating disorder shit, on both ends of the weight spectrum. but your original comment that food tastes better than skinny feels is based on YOUR experience with being skinny and YOUR experience with eating. it's more subjective than that. and i'm sorry but for me, being fit does feel a hell of a lot better than stuffing my face with addictive processed foods. there has to be a balance and that's what a lot of ED discourse is lacking. moderation is the key to ED recovery, not excess in the other direction. then you're not really recovered. you just swapped your ED for another one.
I really hate the idea of "trending bodies" but it's hard for someone like me to not fall into a hole like this where your body type is never glamorized or seen as beautiful. I try to stay away from media that glamorizes skinniness achieved by unhealthy habits, but it gets harder & harder istg.
I hĂąte this too! Bodies are not trends!
Finally, someone said it
Blame the algorithm.
@@johnglow7845seriously? This video is called â90s thinnessâ is back. This isnât a new issue
@@Imxel21 it's getting harder and harder to ignore trends because the algorithms on social media feed us this stuf 24/7 7 days a week now, it was never this bad before your mind wont get a break as long as you use the internet and we all have to now for workand school.
I think thinness never left, but as a millennial who was a teen in the Kate Moss era, I can say that the body positivity movement is a huge improvement. In the 2000s the only options for women were to be thin or hate your body. That said, we were not flooded by constant media the way young people are now. Thin and youth will always be in, but I do think that we have a much more accepting society now. And as a big booty girl, I love that butts have been celebrated for a decade- never would have happened a generation ago â€
100% agree!
Yess
Body positivity is also toxic
â€
As a 20 y/o woman whoâs always been on the heavier side, i feel like i need to put armor around my brain to protect it from the impact the body trends of the coming years will undoubtedly have on my mental health.
I feel the same. My perception of myself was fcked up during my teenage years and I thought I was over it but the other day I tried on some pants and I almost cried. We really need to take care of ourselves and try to love our bodies :) stay strong and safe and remember you're valid, beautiful and capable :)
The background, the fit, the makeup... literally stunning
Yea, I think she rocks. Her esthetic is so cool
The fit is stunning!
Ngl she looks scary to me.
looks like shit
Her hair looks crazy (messy finger waves on top and straightened on the bottom? Should have keep the finger waves throughout) and it looks like a two year old did her eye makeup and her eyebrows are non-existent. Looks like she tried to do a 20s style look and kinda gave up halfway through
iâm so tired of 90âs thin beauty standards. like, world, just let me live now..
True
I am sick of any body âbeauty standardsâ. Just let me be me in my skin.
I remember 90's interviews with supermodels and seeing a "diet tip" by all these top models like Turlington, Valetta, Moss etc. that they were eating small-medium portions of pasta and that's how they remained thin lol. Carbs! Nowadays people treat carbs as if it's the source of all the world's issues. It's so funny and sad at the same time.
You can always live as you are! Beauty standards arenât built to be depended on, they arenât stable. But authenticity is :)
@@sandrabollocks16 yes, but itâs very hard to be and feel like yourself when you canât became a best version of you. Iâm recovering from ed and thatâs so hard to know that my old body was the best body i could ever have.
After an accident in 2015 that almost killed me, I couldn't eat properly for months, which made me lose a drastic and unhealthy amount of weight. I was always very private on social media but I had appeared in the background of a friend's instagram story. The reactions were disgusting. Instead of asking how I was or being happy I survived, people praised me for FINALLY being skinny. So yeah, sadly the ideal of being skinny never really left. I hope for a future in which body types are just a description instead of a trend.
I had a similar experience. I have always been heavy but I developed a bacterial disease that prevented me from eating without vomiting. I was constantly praised for losing weight (including nurses at the doctors office) when I was very sick. I hope you are doing well. â€
@@TheLawnine I'm great, thanks :) back to doing sports, being healthy and enjoying life. I really hope you're well, too đ
@@laribou4104 Thatâs wonderful! Iâm slowly on my way to recovery as well. đ€
During pandemic I lost A LOT or weight because I was just plain depressed and couldn't leave home. I wasn't eating at all, just coffee and maybe 1 (poor) meal per day and my health was so compromised even small cuts wouldn't heal. It was awful but what was worst was both my mom and boyfriend saying I looked great. They said I should stay like that. I remeber telling them "this isn't natural, I need to gain weight" and so far UP TO THIS DAY I am still hearing about how fat I am NOW. Now that I'm healthy and happy and eating normal amounts of food.
My point here is, this thin fashion affects your relatives, too. They will put pressure onto you looking a certain way because they don't stop and educate themselves about the implications. Anyways, thanks for reading my rant.
Iâm sorry that happened to you and I hope youâre doing okay now
@@Berkkv thank you. You're very kind
Ex-boyfriend, right?
I lost almost a stone (that I didn't need to) due to covid killing my appetite & giving me a weird full feeling all the time. I felt truly awful. My energy was completely sapped & I felt very unwell for about a month. Had to keep sliding down walls to the floor before I fell down, taking breaks during walks, falling asleep at random times & places but a family member's response, "Yeah but your cheekbones look great".
The really sad part is, while my first reaction was sadness & disgust that they'd completely dismissed how ill I felt, a small part of me took it as a kinda sick compliment, even though I didn't think I looked good at that weight. It's years of programming I guess.
Sorry your family aren't more considerate of your feelings & hope you're in good mental & physical health X
Please tell me you're far away from those poeple now..
Oh dear God no. I've finally gotten comfortable in my own skin, I dread those days when I got bullied from my own family/peers during my entire teens for having a moderately bigger butt compared to then conventional skinny girls.
If people who are supposed to care about you make you feel less of a person for your size, then itâd be best to distance yourself from them
you got bullied for having a big ass?!? thats- wow. being thick and natural is what ive seen most people praise. im chubby and obviously bigger than my female friends but ive never gotten bullied. some people just arent as lucky, sorry that happened
I'm sorry that happened to you, but flat girls are also sometimes bullied and judged unattractive so we shouldn't care about trends. They are not beneficial to all girls.
It's hard to believe that there are young people out here who don't remember a time when big behinds were seen as ugly. Wow.
@@johnglow7845 The bullies were ruthless when hero*n chic was in. I was constantly told I was fat for having more than a completely flat rear end. I was healthy! Skinny even, but with some curve. I thought I was a huge, hideous cow though. Now I am overweight due to autoimmune issues and I wish I was as "fat" as I was back then.
As a young person who is not either slim thick nor 2000âs/1990âs skinny (I have a pear shaped body) I find both trends bring out my insecurities, and both have been damaging to my mental health. Iâll never have the breast without implants to be seen slim thick, I find the hour glass shape so unachievable. At the same rate, I canât imagine myself being so so skinny in the waist (that one body check tiktok u should really made me feel sick) without going threw unhealthy stuff to achieve it. Iâm glad I really filter out my feed to not show me things Iâd be insecure about
i have the same dilemma! itâs upsetting how trends always lean towards extremes which are unrealistically achievable for most people
I have an hourglass shape, and my sister is a pear. It's funny, I've always been jealous of that body type. I think it's really lovely and soft. I also notice that as hourglasses get thinner, the hips look narrower. Just my preference, though. The greener grass for someone isn't green enough for someone else haha
Although I hate body trends, Iâve been kinda waiting for pear shaped bodies to become the âitâ body
Idk something about yâall just gives the vibes of one of those baroque paintings or smth
Whatever you do just make sure to stay off social media from time to time and appreciate your body as is!â€and remember that just cause itâs not represented by the mainstream doesnât mean itâs not adored!!
OP, that's a great idea to filter out that junk. Also - and surely you know this - but remember that most people use Photoshop and video versions of it to look thinner, hide skin "imperfections", etc. (The bigger the fame, the more they do this. Nerd City's "Thot Patrol" one on Lele Pons described it better - and it was kinda funny. And also not misogynistic in spite of the name [which seems to be a joke].)
Cheers from another pear, and stay strong! â€ïž
Its honestly exhausting being pear shaped with thicker thighs/legs. Especially if you want to wear boots or thigh high socks. Trousers (unless stretchy) simply don't go past your thighs/hips. I'm a UK size 8/10 but my pear body doesn't fit anything lol
I was watching older movies recently like white chicks and mean girls and I noticed the negative mentioning of âfat assesâ, where regina is made fun of for having a big butt and karen says âmy hips are hugeâ in a negative sense, and in white chicks when one of the girls goes âheres back fat sally, look at my huge badonkey!â
I think weâre still at a stage where bigger butts and boobs are popular, but the flat stomach never left in the first place
Fr I notice that too
yeah its like a flat stomach is the mark for a desireable body no matter what
As an older gen Z (25), on the cusp of being a millennial, i grew up in the 2000s mainly but was heavily exposed to 90s stuff too and thin never left for me. Even when the 2010s came in and Kim K, i was still in the "thin is in". I spent my whole teen years with very troubled eating habits and body perception. I spent that decade being thin while people told me to eat a burger or two. And now since the pandemic i've become obese. Becoming obese has showed me how much my body dismorphia was severe. Because only now do i see that i was fine as i was. When i was thin i saw myself as i am today. Mind you i weighed 50kgs for 162cm. Which is totally normal. I think the thin obsessed era i grew up in is partially to blame.
I had exactly the same experience. I couldn't see my body right when I was a teen, and even if I wasn't fat I used to buy my clothes two sizes bigger because that's how I saw myself (I still don't understand it). I hope you're feeling better now :)
Literally same
Me toooooo
Actually 50kg on 1.62m is already bordering on underweight, so Iâm not sure Iâd call it totally normal. But I do hope that youâll come to a healthier perception of yourself and take good care of your body - we only have this one :)
Same for me.
I donât think this is mass hysteria. Perhaps itâs because Iâm Asian living in an Asian household, skinny has never went out of trend. Even when the âslim thickâ trend was at itâs peak (2017-2019), my parents and literally everyone around me still treats bone skinny as the âperfectâ body type. I truly believe that these body types going in and out of trend type of thing only really exists among influencers and those that are obsessed with them lol.
yeah as an asian also living in asia, the standards definitely differ with different races. i think the standard to be thin has already been so ingrained in us. the 'tiktok trends' that exist online won't change anything much in real life. with relatives constantly commenting about weight and comparing you to others and even other children fat shaming their peers (personal experience lol we love childhood trauma) the standard has ALWAYS been to be skinny. i also feel like kpop has had a part to play in further highlighting this standard
slim thick has never been a thing in china lol. we had chopstick legs, A4 waist trends instead.
same for me as someone from Rwanda. For some reason, 90% of women have naturally tinny/flat waists, small boobs, and good-sized butts. They have the bbl bodies naturally and it looks way better than the fake one. So, if you don't have that body type, at least you're supposed to be skinny. Anyone in the middle with average weight/not skinny but not slim thick either is completely invisible and too fat. Aunties don't even pretend, they just straight up call you obese even when you weigh like 145 lbs and happen to be 5'8
@@natalyaakselaleksander4502 lmao aunties are there to make your self esteem worse fr in every culture, they are always the one to judge you by looks
then it is hysteria because it's not "suddenly reappearing"
Just wanted to add that the medication in the video that are abused by celebrities, to lose weight, are also used to harmonize periods and treat poly cystic ovaries syndrome. Not only are they depriving diabetics of effective medication but they are also removing one of the few treatment options for very painful menstral disorders. Those with menstrl disorders like PCOS have very few options already, maybe three or four, with most medications possibly negatively affecting mood.
Which one is for pcos??đź my doctor has never mentioned these to me and my symptoms are so bad!! đđŒđđŒ
Thatâs very true I work in a pharmacy and thereâs actually a huge back order on Ozempic (just recently got our hands on a few). People who really need it for diabetic needs per say canât have it because so many people are getting it prescribed for things such as âweight lossâ and a lot of it is influence from these celebrities. There was a point when it was so bad that we had to call other stores (pharmacies) for a box or two for extremely urgent situations and we prioritized the people who actually needed it because this can affect someoneâs health (life). Remember guys itâs insulin meaning some people can die w/o it.
@@valf156115 the ones i use are metformin and aldactone, you should bring them up with your doctor so they can see if that's a good fit for you
The few always ruin it for the many... đ
I have PCOS and could not get my medicine. It messes so much with my hormones when I donât have it
As a pharmacy student who watches Mina's videos to disconnect after studying I'd never had guessed the day would come when Mina would talk about semaglutide on her channel. I guess pharmacology is hunting me.
I just wanna say, Iâm someone who has been chasing the âthickâ body type for at least 3 or 4 years. I am still thin and couldnât get there as hard as i tried. Weight lifting 5 times a week + meal prep, school and a full time job. I just burned out. It wasnât until a couple months ago that I decided to stop fighting myself. Whether thin is popular or not, I just wanna be happy with who I am.
same here, thank you for sharing with us
Good for you! You're already perfect! â€
me too. 5 years thus far. im happy to see other women coming to the realization that we should appreciate our bodies the way they are. and also relieved to know im not the only one who has struggle to be thick all these years. it seems like it was never enough and I never was satisfied with how I looked. as someone who was bullied for having no curves, it was really hard to come to terms with the fact that I was never going to be as thick as the influencers. but funny enough, most of them use photoshop or its not real...
Same here
And have been chasing the thick body type for 7 years
I'm skinny and financially terrible can't even afford basic necessities anymore
Part of the obsession with skinny is about obsession with youth. Skinny or short are visual cues for adolescent. Short hasn't grown to full height. Skinny has just grown, but not yet filled out. This is also why there is almost always some skinny celebrities. Movie and tv industry needs them. They need actors with skills, range and legal rights of older people, to play the parts of adolescents. There is also this image of dumpy middle aged mom that pushes older women to diet.
For woman, it's not only about youth, but also being "virgin-like", not experiencing pregnancy, childbirth and motherhood, that influence the body in terms of youthness and body weight, and are considered too "real" and biological. That, while the model, celebrity and basically every young woman is inspired too look less human and more like an unreachable angel that only the rich and fortunate can be. If your body changes, you're a flawed human and you should be ashamed.
Except that there plenty of short women who are fully grown.
@@letitiajeavons6333 that's the point. Lot of short actors played teenagers to their 30's. With makeup and styling you can fool the audience. All adolescents start as short and after their growth spurt lot of them are skinny because they spent all the excess calories to the growth. So short and/or skinny actors and actresses are used to play adolescents. If they are good at acting they become really famous celebrities. So there is always going to be celebrities with that body type. Not all adolescent have that body type, but adults without it are glaringly obvious in teen role.
@@holographicwing depends my mom is skinny but she has some baby face fat and good bone structure so she looks young still in her 50s
Im glad you brought out that point. Everyone keeps saying the kardashians are trying to be skinny just to be skinny, i dont think is true. They are getting older, they cant be young forever. Skin sags, stretches, and with all their surgeries, it makes sense as to why they removed some things to preserve their body. They remove it and tighten up their skin so it looks as youthful as possible. If they could keep their bbls and tiny waists, they would. But they want to be young. Thats what i think tho đ€·đœââïž
This video makes me both sad and angry. I was a young teenager in the early 2000s. In junior high I was a size 6 and convinced I was fat from comparing myself to the models and socialites in pop culture. We all did it. It was ridiculous. And took me literally decades to overcome that self hatred.
You ever think back about The Devil Wears Prada and how much they make fun of Andy for being a size 6?! I don't blame you for having felt that way.
@@Tsuki04wolf Size 6 on a woman who is 5'10"" like Anne Hathaway is like a size 2 for ladies that are 5'4"". I didn't think she looked fat at all, but I did think that her pre-makeover look just needed a good iron and a hair-brush.
@@reikun86 the taller you are, the more dangerous the size 0 obsession gets
I was a young teenager in the early 2000s and stick thin. I was mocked ruthlessly in the predominantly Hispanic city I grew up in. I remember being confused at all the skinny and pale people on magazine covers. It gave me weird body dysmorphia to make that make sense: I must be truly hideous and disfigured and incorrect in my comparison because my community had pecked at me like a runt they wanted to die off.
I get that this is triggering right now. But all "body weight trends" are toxic AF. You might fit it perfectly, like me, and everything is still trash
I was a teenager in the 2010s and thick or slim thick was in. I felt just like you because I thin when it wasnât in. Now it seems to be dying down. These body trends are ridiculous.
back when i was in early middle school being thin was huge. the 'victoria's secret model body' was in and being the biggest in my friend group i always felt insecure. but by late 8th grade up into highschool the 'kim k' body and curves were suddenly a trend and now i had people starting to like me and ask me out... but now that the trend of being thin is returning to mainstream media I've gotten comments on my weight again. like how "there's no way you can fit in a size small." (direct quote from a friend i dropped.) the crazy part is that I'm not even that big- i just have a more curvy body type. its sad seeing people being so influenced by trends like this so many people who i know are starting to diet again and its just concerning at this point
About Ozempic- my sister is pre-diabetic and hasnât been able to get her prescription for Ozempic for months. She called our local pharmacy and they literally laughed at her because they have been out for months.
How unprofessional and insensitive of them
Thinness is always the âitâ body type. It only dependends if itâs more âbone thinâ or âmuscle thinâ.
Edit: and yes, the latest trends showed that the more curvy bodies can also be consider attractive, nevertheless there is always some part of womens body that have to be flat/thin to be esthetically pleasing
Hard disagree. During the curvy era no one wanted to seem hard and muscley âthinâ..also itâs always been having more fat or a fatter body was always the It body, since mankind, the acceptance of thin bodies is relatively a new thing.
Bingo
Legit !!!!!! Skinny has never been out đ€§
@@MaimV but the thing was that the curvy body was only curves on the right places - You have seen a lot of curvy models with relatively flat stomaches and fit curves without flaws - it was more of a standard like ânot too thin, not too curvyâ.
Yeah... as a chubby/fat women, I can attest that my fat belly has never been in. It was large ass and boobs and hourglass without the belly, or H looking figure skinny. And the ideal was still white too. So...
Rich people taking medication from people who actually need it to save their lives, just so they can be skinny is so dystopian. It honestly sounds like a plot from black mirror or something that would be satirized in a Knives Out movie.
Just wanna pop in here and say that as I a child my thinness was constantly praised. And when I hit the height of puberty at 15-16 I gained 'a lot' of weight and 'filled out' and that lead me down such a spiral of trying to diet and hide my fat when my body had just reached a new point. I wasn't even fat, I literally just gained 20 pound and now look like an average adult. It makes me so angry that teen me had to go through years of mental struggle to accept my body and wear clothes I liked because everything and everyone around me was stressing an unobtainable level of thinness
I'm going through t hat struggle right now.. I gained weight a few years ago during COVID, and I hate myself for looking back and idolizing how skinny my body looked.
@@COVID--kf3tx I understand you so much. If it's helpful, try not to hate a past version of yourself. Hate and healing can't coexist, try and be gentle and understanding with your past self. Self love is a long journy, and I'm right there with you. I wish you all the best
I was a teen in the 90s, and with an hourglass figure that didn't fit the preppy in crowd, I fully embraced grunge and was a fashion tomboy until probably my thirties. I truly thought traditionally feminine clothing wasn't for me. When I discovered my hourglass figure in my thirties it was like a revolution. What a shame I was convinced as a teen that dresses, skirts and fashion wasn't for curvy tall girls like me.
fashion is not designed for Hourglasses even if hourglass is always pushed as the most beautiful body.
@@gadeaiglesiassordo716 this is so true! Even if weâre the most âdesiredâ body type/shape, regardless of weight, most fashion is designed for up and down rectangle shape bodies by gay designers. Thatâs not me being homophobic- itâs just the truth.
@@s_fashionlover usually fashion is intended for inverted triangles. You know big shoulders tiny waist and small hips. Simply becaus this is what manequino are.
@@s_fashionloverhow you know most of the designers are gays?
Please don't let it be, I'm still in recovery
u got this!! ur health is worth more than any body trend always
Ignore these trends and love you.
Don't stop recovery. I hope for a world where little kids don't grow up hating themselfs because rich people told them to. You deserve more than that. You and everyone else deserve to live happily.
Trying to fit everyone into âconventionalâ sizes is the issue. Clothes should be made for the body not vice versa. Womenâs clothing never really accommodates anything that isnât a straight narrow frame. Even in my skinnier days, I couldnât find clothing to accommodate my shoulders and torso equally. My best advice is learn to sew or make friends with a tailor.
I agree, knowing how to sew and alter clothes helps so much. In the early 2000âs when I was in high school, the trend was very slim fitted shirts. My issue was having a thin frame, but a larger chest. So all of my shirts fit awkwardly. I started buying one size up and altered it myself.
I think another issue is companies praying on womens insecurities through algorithms, used to be the magazines now it's social media.
I mean not everything CAN fit everyone. It makes sense for companies to accommodate (mainly) the majority. Everyoneâs bodies are just so different. It would be impossible to accommodate them all
this is what bothers me about universal sizing so often. They jus add extra numbers to the patters, rather than reshaping the pattern to fit bigger bodies. I think we should all be aware that the way clothes hang off of smaller and bigger people is vastly different, so the patterned need to be changed to accommodate that and have the correct silhouette.
Considering over half of americans are overweight I truly dont understand how few plus sized clothing brands there are. It's crazy. I deserve cute clothes too, just cause I'm fat doesn't mean I'm not cute!
@@chidiogoikeh4550 except they're not. Very, VERY few people are shaped the way brands are making clothing. Off the rack clothing only looks the way it does due to a combination of laziness, greed, and discrimination.
i became a teenager in the 00s and I think the thing that sticks with me the most is how developing large breasts made me feel not feminine. Like I wasn't a real (or pretty) woman since I developed curves. Which is... kinda messed up in hindsight. I was just becoming a woman...
Funny, I had the same experience in the 90s but in my case I had no boobs. I'm over it now and actually like my small breasts.
Big boobs rule bestie! That's the epitomy of feminine
@@leonore3349 What how is that funny ew
@@ashortsimp1255 Did you not understand the comment??? đđ
Omg same I hated my curves and breasts I wanted to be sickly think. I still do I have times when I love my shape and then others I wanna starve. It's exhausting đą
Iâve been currently struggling with anorexia for about two years now I used to be 82 lbs but Iâve gotten so much better and I gained 10 lbs! It was really scary for me at first but knowing that Iâm taking care of my body now and my mom telling me I look beautiful noe that Iâve gained and Iâm glowing really helped me notice weight has nothing to do with beauty and I feel so much better now I hope u guys are proud Iâm still trying! And if anyone struggles with an Ed I hope you get better soon and just know your beautiful inside out and you deserve to love your body because it makes you smile!! I hope everyone is doing well I hope everyone has a beautiful day!!â€ïžâ€ïžâ€ïž
U r awsome!đœđâ€
@@mikionaruse thank you!ââ€ïž
I just watched a video by Stephanie Lange on the buccal fat removal. I showed my husband and was like theyâre trying to bring back heroin chic! Ty for covering this! Also, ps I used to be an addict and the âheroin chicâ thing is so laughable. I assure yâall neck deep in a heroin addiction is not a look anyone would purposely seek out.
Lol right. When everyone's rocking swollen hands and can't wear short sleeves well talk.
I've watched close friends succumb to that substance and yes - it doesn't often look like the fashion trend. It's someone's image of what that addiction looks like. The reality of it really freaking blows, and at often as that can be stressed, it's still never enough.
The buccal fat removal thing is absolutely bizarre to me. I have a thin face and all I want is a cute round face âčïž
@@ajc94 SAME. I don't understand why people would want that look at all
Is heroin chic just grunge?
When I was in high school, early mid 2000s, I was considered the âfat oneâ in my group of friends. I was 5â1â and 120lbs. It was mentally draining always being reminded in a time when being this size was too big for a teen girl; and I was forced to wear clothes from the womens dept because teen girls could not be allowed to have boobs or a butt. No girl should experience this.
Im so sorry⊠I was also a teen then and 5.5 with 100-110 and I got called fat all the time⊠Ironically I had a tiny waist but got a bit of ass and boobs and immediatelly considered fat đ I distinctly remember envying girls that didnt have a difference between hips and stomach as I did
There was this girl whose nickname was an endearing term for âchubbyâ in our language
She had a little bit of a stomach that is literally all. And no one even thought of it in a mean way, it was just âwe have three girls with the same name, there is the nerdy one the chubby one and the folklore paying oneâ but I cant imagine how ir affected her psyche being called that all the time (I was the nerdy one)
I was trying to explain I kind of know how you feel
We cant go back but we can make it better for ourselves and others now
Same. I feel you. In my teen I weight 54kg (hourglass shaped big boobs kinda girl) and felt fat. Kept starving myself to fit in because my friends are thinner (we're Asians so..). I'm much heavier now but I still feel traumatised from my teen years. I'm super sensitive about weight conversation..
How is it any worse than the skinny girls being made to feel like theyâll never be sexy because they donât have boobs or ass? Yâall are so biased on who you feel sorry for. Is always fuck the skinny girl right? My sister attempted suicide several times cause she was always told no one would be attracted to her for not having curves but nobody cares and theyâll still call her a âstickâ and tell her she needs to eat more. The double standard disgusts me.
@@hypatiakovalevskayasklodow9195the amount of body shaming and humble bragging on this is disgusting. The girls that you are envying also get bullied for not having these parts and have been for the last decade. I love how peoples sympathy only goes their own way but they donât care about the struggles of others people.
@@nitely2345 Past tense everywhere... This was two decades ago... we are talking about our teenage bodyshape related trauma and how ridiculous and unreasonable it was and by extension is, and you're telling us we are bragging?Bragging? About living with unnecessary shame and body dismorphia and EDs, some of us our whole lifes? If you think people sharing traumatic experiences is bragging, or that our bad experiences somehow invalidate opposite bad experiences, please work on yourself and reconsider why are you actively making Mina's comment section a hostile environment
I remember that when I was younger I used to wish I were skinnier, even fantasized about getting sick to lose weight faster. Now I am really recovering from sickness, way under my healthy weight and I canât help but reflect on how stupid that fantasy was. I canât wait to be recovered and put on weight again. Thin isnât pretty if it is not natural. And media has always pushed those kind of unnatural trends.
so true
A good history of heroin chic and its successors, with one little nitpick. I was in my 30s in the 90s. There was no "mass hysteria" over heroin chic. The vast majority of people never even heard about it. It's important to understand that newspapers, magazines, and now digital news and podcasts are about selling their product. And claims of "mass hysteria" sell. Always have, always will. Nitpick over. Also in the 90s, I was in the early years of my career as an English professor, and one of the assignments I routinely gave was to analyze fashion imagery and beauty advertisements. The kernel of the assignment was to show my students that the beauty and fashion industries work hard to create and stoke women's and girls' beauty insecurities, and then to offer their products as the solutions. Without women's insecurities, these industries would collapse. You got that absolutely right.
Oh thin for sure never went out of fashion! But I have definitely noticed in last year or so, every time I go shopping, the clothes are all things I could never be comfortable wearing. So many crop tops and silhouettes that are unflattering on everyone but the most skinny figures.
I completely agreeâŠI feel like (not that itâs related) but the pandemic years have been the years Iâve noticed stores stopped having clothes for typical bodies again đ€Šââïž I guess itâs back to 2007 all over again lol. Thank god for online shopping!!â€ïžđ
Then donât buy them đ
Same with me. Too many crop tops. I've starting shopping in the men's clothes. Just like I didn't in the early 2000s.
I felt this so much as a working women in my 20s, I'm not interested in going to work in a crop top, a see-through top, or ripped jeans. The only clothes that are work appropriate I could only find the sections clearly geared to 40+ women
@@cfbg frđ
I canât imagine being a patient who needs those medicines and being unable to get them because of a trend.
I was in recovery for 10 years but recently relapsed and joined an Ana group. Itâs so miserable and I truly hope that teens decide to stay away from a lifestyle that makes your days so miserable, difficult and painful. I know that a lot of EDs are the result of a combination of factors such as low self esteem but trust me, disgracing and mistreating your body and mind isnât worth it.
I'm sorry you are struggling again. I was anorexic as a teen but have been in remission for almost 20 years. It is miserable and I wouldn't wish this disorder o n anyone. I hope you are able to get well again.
Iâm in recovery as well. Had an ED at 12-13, Iâm now almost 25 and still struggle but it is getting better. I wish you the best of luck on your journey, love. You are worthy, you are beautiful- itâs always going to be hard work, but I believe in you â€ïž
I grew up in the 90s and have been fighting an ED since then, finally started to get treatment in 2021. Im struggling now because of weight gain because of meds from the chronic illness. Seeing this trend again isnât helping. I really hope teenagers dont see this as a goal.
Organ failure and ED, people always comment on my weight on how I need to gain weight to become more of something they deem better... Im dying very slowly. This is no joke. Hopefully society can find a healthier view on what it is to be human
@@meldan5 Iâm so fucking proud of you, EDs are one of the worse because people arenât sympathetic towards us. âEat a burgerâ smh. You are incredibly strong for making it this far love, I believe in you. Iâm using fitness to help me eat, and trying to eat more âvaluableâ calories such as protein and carbs like rice because exercise makes me more hungry. I make foods only Iâll not be able to say no to (seriously try making pho itâs so good and nutritious!) like things with broth and noodles and an egg and veggies so itâs easier to go down than a huge steak and potatoes. Itâs hard, but you can do it. It helps that I met a man who loves me and cares that I have an ED and calms me, even if I cry for 3 hours straight because trying on clothes is traumatizing for me. You can do it on your own, however, you are beautiful and worthy. I donât know you, but I under your struggle and Iâm rooting for you đ đ
As someone who lives outside of the US, being thin is still considered normal, being overweight is not glamorised or applauded. Even doctors tell their patients to lose weight if they start getting close to the overweight mark, and everyone who is heavier than normal is urged to exercise and do something about it. With kids and teenagers it's never been much of a problem, because you are obligated to do sports until uni. But old people are the ones that have the hardest time doing something about their weight. So they started opening more clubs for the elderly, to stay in good shape. And I'm quite glad that's the case. It's nice seeing people in their 70s/80s going to yoga, swimming, biking, hiking, skiing, etc. and not being stuck to a bed because they've just accepted their situation instead of doing something about it.
Literally how has Vogue not hired Mina to run all their cultural fashion commentary yet. hullooooo Anna Wintour is anyone home over there??
I have chronic PCOS and am medically qualified to take ozempec but it's been inaccessible for 3 months because so many people want it. So I've been sitting here suffering with the symptoms and unable to get my treatment... Because people who are 145 want to be 120. :/ It's awful and you feel helpless.
Iâm so sorry about that, i know that to find anything that will actually help with PCOS is a battle in and of itself, so it being unavailable must be so crushing and frustrating :(
đđđ
I have PCOS and Pre-Diabetes. It's the first time I'm hearing about Ozempec tbh. I didn't realized it was a thing. I just know that I still have time to lose weight and speak to a nutritionist when I can.
Iâm a PA in primary care and I have patients with dangerously high blood sugars because of these people
Metformin has really helped me, maybe you could try that (if you want).
My mom was big into diet culture it had a huge effect on me as a 90s kid. Itâs incredibly toxic
RAISE YOUR HAND if you get a special kind of anxiety every time you see your Boomer or Gen X mom over the holidays, the eating-est time of the year đââđââđââ
Same, I came to weigh 39kg, I got anorexia, my mother was tremendously perfectionist and fatphobic (like 99% of the population at that time). My life broke that day I started that damn diet, "woke up" 9 years later not knowing who I was and with almost a decade lost, I don't wish it on anyone
Same. My mum weighs herself twice per day and is sad if she ever gains a bit from morning to the evening.
She also used to say how her legs are too big (they are not) and other mean things about her body. All that negativity heavily influenced my when I was younger.
My dad is also fat phobic and is always making comments about my sisters weight (she is overweight). It's hard to watch but at the same time you start to think "at least he is not making those comments about me"...
@@simonef.7584 Sounds just like my familyđ
@@lauren9817 They always carry some hidden tape meter and digital scale in their purses..
The side effects of these kinds of meds are no joke - I tried treatment for insulin resistance that involved this class of medication and never previously had kidney issues. After 2 months my kidneys started hurting every day, and even though I stopped, 2 years later I still have very painful kidney stones/sand almost always.
I'm starting to take trends differently. I like to celebrate whoever's body is trending and still appreciate my own it's okay to appreciate their body, as long as you understand that is all that's happening
Best comment!
Preach đ
I was JUST thinking about this yesterday. Iâve been shopping online for a NYE outfit for the past month and everything is made for v skinny bodies.
I lived through this trend the first time around (I was born in the 80s) and I felt so excluded from fashion back then bc thereâs just is no way my body type works with all crazy low rise stuff and drop waists.
Now those trends are back and Iâm like UUUGHHHH NOT AGAIN!!!!
I was a heroin addict for many years and one of the things that made it hard for me to get clean was the fact that heroin made me lose so much weight and I loved that. I was so miserable and strung out, but then I would touch my sharp hip bones as I was falling asleep every night (something that I canât feel when Iâm at my normal weight) and it would make me so happy. So dysfunctional!
I gained a lot of weight when I got clean this most recent time and now every site I go to is selling the same shit they were selling back when my addiction first started all those years ago.
Congratulations on your sobriety. I hope you're happy and healthy. No fashion trend is worth that. Btw, reported the spa comment. Best of luck to you.
all the best to you! ignore the external noise, stay healthy! â€ïž
iâm proud of you for getting clean. not being able to find clothes that fit your body is frustrating.
itâs the clothes that donât fit your body, not your body that doesnât fit the clothes.
When I said I wanted the 90s aesthetic to come back, I didn't meant THIS.
Ikrđ
I mean Tbf the body is part of the aesthetic
@@chidiogoikeh4550 what about we rebrand the aesthetic without the body size aspect and just keep the clothes, hairstyle and makeup đđđ
@@sporkzzz then it wouldnât be the 90s aesthetic đ
@@chidiogoikeh4550
It kinda would with the fashion style. People mainly like the 90s aesthetic bc of the style.
I donât think bodies would make a HUGE difference with the aesthetic.
reminds me of when I got super sick in high school, had super high fever and couldn't eat for weeks. The day I felt the worst was the day that people started telling me I looked so good.
I was literally laying on the floor when ever I wasn't in class
I definitely agree that thin never left. The slim-thick Kardashian trend was horrible though, especially as a very flat teen growing up in Brazil, where people are generally curvy. I remember being praised for being a skinny kid in comparison to my friends, only to start being told to eat more or shamed by boys for being flat just a couple years later. Body trends are a brutal, toxic thing designed to sell you different products.
Sim, uma coisa que percebi, comparando com os gringos, Ă© que aqui no Brasil a gente tem que ser magra E cheio de curvas (bunda e peitos).
THIS OUTFIT! MINA đ«¶âŒïž
FOR REAL THOUGH!
Honestly. Itâs lovely
So cute!
I was literally looking for this comment -- like yes, fuck beauty standards but THE DRESS HONEY
indeed! lovely đđđ
Girl, sometimes I watch your videos and I realize how truly out of the loop I am.
I'm glad to be out of the loop. I'm leaving the loop behind.
Same. I did not get into (or onto) TikTok, and - even worse - did deactivate my instagram in the beginning of 2020, and ever since i just have no idea what trends are in or what the hot gossip is. I kinda get fomo, or even a second degree, fomo-fomo. I am aware of broad trends/aesthetics, but the closest i do get to fashion is seeing what H&M is selling. Itâs really weird, as i am in my early 20âs and feel like i should ⊠care? But also I just have my own problems to solve and really couldnât bother to keep up with that side of current culture. It is kinda alienating in some parts, but i just do not have the nerves to throw myself into, well, the loop again.
Being out the loop protects your mental health. It's not a bad thing. Keep it that way lol
@@annikania2682 you pretty much summed up the way I felt in 2019 and mid 2020, I refused to download Tik Tok bc I was so against it, I had Instagram and CZcams but I felt so out of place, i literally had no idea what anybody was talking about online. I stopped feeling young even though I was 19 but I didnât feel old either it was a weird and isolating middle ground. Since then Iâve downloaded Tik tok and I got myself out of that headspace and I feel much better and I feel young again lol, such a weird thing to say when Iâm in my early 20s. But honestly not being in the loop made me feel so alone
your comment has 111 likes right now
OBSESSED with today's fit/makeup combo !!!!
I just love the way you go to all the roots of things so deeply
It's empowering to see someone tell historic background info mixed with observations of trends
What absolute joy
As a recovering a*orexic, the potential return for this trend is scaring the hell out of me.
fuck the people promoting this shit. I'm never going to lose weight on purpose, this I vow!!
same
đđđ
we recovered once, we can do it again
Amen to that.
I actually had to hop off tiktok because I saw people I perceived as better than me which is so easy to do. I feel like our obsession with thinness has never really left. Even if we had the k family with big butts, they still had flat stomachs and overall thin bodies. Its just a mess honestly
Exactlyyyy
It's never actually left, it just hid behind some hypocritical "body positivity". 99,9% of the bodies we see on the internet with wide hips, thick asses, round boobs and thin legs are all filtered and photoshopped. It scares me to see that these uncanny images slowly shove impossible standards in our heads.
I'm so glad that someone is on a big platform and speaking the truth
Thank you đ đ
may I say the color coordination of the set-makeup-styling is so pleasing
My niece is 14 and she's complained about being "fat" ever since she could talk (and she did not learn that from her mom etc). So I totally agree that the skinny ideal never went away and that the kids are feeling it, maybe more than ever now. When I grew up in the 90s we used to say that models are skinny, we're not. But kids today think they're one viral sensation from being a tiktok star and identify with their influencer idols. Not to mention we didn't spend hours of the day watching skinny ppl, in the way kids now consume social media.
Meh, remember when songs like TLC's Unpretty and Cristina Aguilera's Beautiful became popular in the late 90s and early 2000s because of the unhealthy beauty standards featured in teen magazines and women's magazines? Our generation DID consume such stuff just in a different form of media - magazines, TV shows, movies, music videos.
How is the super skinny look anymore dangerous than the standard that was being promoted before it? Women getting all sorts of surgery to enlarge body parts isnât any safer than dieting to look good I donât understand why this offends people but then itâs yasss queen to the ones that promote the slim stick bodyâs as if they were natural.
@@nitely2345ecause it was impossible for a vast majority of women to be as skinny as the heroin chick. If you had a little fat anywhere you were considered fat and ugly. Also a lot of women didnât diet to get skinny back then, they had Edâs and would starve themselves.
@@rotisserie8444 itâs impossible for a vast majority of women to be slim thick as well. Even more so cause even the women that were a little overweight canât target the fat to go to specific body parts whilst still leaving the abdomen flat and the ones that are skinny canât just make their hips bigger and grow their boobs. So it makes no sense why Kim kardashian is praised for promoting her surgery as a ânatural bodyâ meanwhile models are constantly shamed and ridiculed for being âsticksâ. It makes cero sense and it just shows how hypocritical the âbody positivityâ movement is.
My six year old daughter told me she only wants to be skinny because skinny is better. She for sure never heard that from me, a lady with a curvy body. My mom is very thin, but she also never once made me feel negative about my body. Not sure where my daughter got it from but itâs scary tic hear them say
I recently read an article about the Kardashians slipping into irrelevance and I've never been happier
I don't know. The way it usually goes, it just means somebody worse is on the horizon.
That's bs
Thank you for sparking further dialogue on these issues
I LOVE your aesthetic. The shirt and eyeshadow look so good. Your analyzation of culture over time is so informative and must have taken so long to compile together.
Tbh thinness has never truly left, it was just like âin the backgroundâ still promoted by social media, the only difference itâs that major names like the Kardashians were not promoting it but most of the other instagram influencers were always promoting it.
Btw I LOVE your outfit and the background, I admit I love watching your videos because of your outfits, youâre a fashion genius. †and not just any fashion, I love your classic, retro chic fashion ideas so unique! â€
Iâm a pharmacist and weâve had a semaglutide shortage/back order (generic medicine in ozempic and wegovy)- we have to request doctors to change medication therapy đđ
Yupp!!! I work for an insurance company and have gotten multiple calls that people canât find a pharmacy that has their meds in stock. Iâve called round and round and thankfully both times we found a Walgreens that has it in stock. Iâm scared that next time Iâm not going to be able to find it in stock anywhere.
it's disgusting that people will buy up meds and leave the patients who actually need them with nothing. it happened during the beginning of the pandemic with lupus medication
ok, but that's not a problem with people who want to loose weight, that's industry problem. I had to call 10 pharmacies to get antibiotic for my son today, you don't tell me it's the fault of all those other sick children taking the drugs away. I also dissolve adult Motrin for him because we haven't seen childrens Motrin in our store for months. How dare those other parents use all my Motrin?! Get a grip.
!! im a tech and nearly every shift i have to call around to see if any pharmacies nearby have any in stock since we're barely able to get any in and what we do receive isn't nearly enough for all our patients, the company i work for has started requiring a type 2 diabetes diagnosis in order to fill ozempic specifically so that's at least helped some in knowing that people who NEED the medication are the ones getting it
This is due to the American health system being f***ked and in the uK we have huge shortages of everything due to Brexit.
I'm an early 90s kid. I never was the naturally skinny figure, I had a very normal and very healthy weight. I gained a significant amount of weight during my early teens (as some people usually do during teen years) which later turned out to be thyroid issues. During two years, I gained 20 kgs, I weighed over 70 kgs at being 168cm tall. When I was diagnosed, the doctor raised the meds dose gradually over weeks so that it wasn't a big shock for my body as m,y metabolism was severely slowed down, and I still lost around 15 kgs rapidly in only one month. My former classmates met me after a longer time and after that weight loss (elementary school classmates, I was already in middle school when I was diagnosed), first thing they commented on how thin I was and what did I do to achieve it. They even specifically asked for the meds at that time! Like girls, I was literally on the verge of my body shutting down from the severely slowed down metabolism and all you care about is how thin I am? Ridiculous.
Also, I gained those lost kgs back as I got older, but in different places on my body (and I am 100% comfortable in my body now, I just still can't look at myself in photos, looking into the mirror is fine). I wear size EU44 pants, I'm slightly smaller for tops, and it is soooooo difficult to find fitting clothes for this size. Most of the tops and blouses are cut straight which does not acommodate my body type at all. I have to look for specific styles and also materials. It is very frustrating to try out 10 pairs of pants when they are not meant to fit a fuller body type. It honestly makes me think that "I'm too big". Bullcrap. I just really hope that fashion designers will eventually realize, that they should be inclusive, but like fully inclusive with sizing. We already have enough problems going on and clothing should be fun, not frustrating.
Girl I feel your pain. I'm far from overweight but clothes are made just for ONE body type. I normally range between a 36, 38 or 40 EU size (of course the disparity between sizes is another thing altogether đ), I'm moderately tall (1,71), have decent muscle built from exercising and have an hourglass figure, and finding trousers that don't strangle my hips and thighs while fitting my waist is a nightmare. Also I have small breasts, yet dresses and very fitted tops that aren't elastic compress my ribcage and shoulders and get uncomfortable to wear. Sometimes I get larger sizes but depending on the design, a larger size will still be large in other parts and won't look good. You look at me and my body isn't unbalanced in the least, actually the men I've been with always told me I have a great womanly figure, very balanced. Turns out I don't for basic things like clothing. Never in my life clothes fitted me better when I tried them in shops than during a period of time I lost a lot of weight out of a very bad depressive period in my life when I had lost fat, muscle, was starved and malnourished and didn't want to live. How coincidental!
thank u for being such a force
Oh god this video gave me flashbacks to all the thinspo, pro-ana stuff I internalized as a chronically online teenager in the early/mid-2000s. Very on point
Same, so much so it was triggering...
Ohhh âthinspoâ⊠I hadnât even thought of that word in awhile⊠I got kids now. I gotta get over this crap đą
i still have an old "thinspo" pinterest board from when i was 12/13 and falling into all the pro-ana stuff... i havne't looked at it in years but i've never deleted it either. Couldn't, for some reason. God i hope it's not coming back (it never went away, but at least it wasn't the "trend" for a while)
Despite being extremely out of touch and not on TikTok or Instagram, I still unconsciously feel this extreme necessity to revert back to my ED tendencies. I'm now monitoring what I'm eating to make sure I'm eating enough and healthy as a freaking 30 year old. EDs never go away
valid but donât act like 30 is old đ even in ED terms i know 70-somethings with ED tendencies
ME TOO! I donât even understand how even though Iâm not actively looking at that content anymore my brain is changing what I think â prettyâ is and wanting to go back to being skinny
Literally!! Iâve finished my ED therapy and now Iâm in remission and seeing this shit is so sad :( coming out on the other side of this illness alive just makes me want to shake everyone and tell them there is so much better out there than this
Eat healthier food, not less food
@@suhkawnit I donât think this type of phrase will help anyone with an edâŠ
Wow Mina, you excelled yourself with this one! I love how you start from context, then history, to the present moment and to finally open up room for debate. I did have the impression lately that ads are showcasing thin girls more than a variety of body shapes like I've been seeing the past two years. I just wish media would leave body shapes alone and that brands have a full size range. Also I wish I could sew my own clothing and be done with the whole thing.
Hi Mina! I'm a photographer and I've nv known about the term "her0in chic" tho now I can see how big of a trend it is and how it's everywhere. I've definitely seen that aesthetic before and even thought it was appealing and have considered recreating something along the same vibe. But after watching your video, I'm seeing it in a different light and I'm rethinking WHY i found the aesthetic appealing and what exactly I want to create so it aligns with what I stand for. Thank you for this!
I swear I once said TikTok would be the app to bring back this sh*t. The beauty standards of douyin becoming more relevant is just proof as well. It's not just the Y2K fashion, but also its Asian beauty standards slowly incorporating into western culture bc of the infatualization and constant appraisal of kpop idols. That's the thing that's starting to become to beauty standard not the 90's fashion only. And it doesn't help that the algorithm of tiktok(which has billions of users, meaning its very influential) is literally meant to push people that fit these standards on the FYP, meanwhile those who don't fit get little to no recognition bc the algorithm doesn't help them. That's why trends such as Gyaru become demonized and sexualized in order to make it seem like a bad or skimpy thing. But no one wants to have that conversation. (there's also a whole video explaining tiktoks algorithm if you search it up)
Very important observations.
i agree
Lol âbring backâ? Can people think more critically? Beauty standards have ALWAYS EXISTED.
@@Imxel21 I think they mean "bring back" as getting major positive attention again
like instagram has definetly not been on the exact same bs too?
tbh, these trends only exist in the influencer/celebrity space.
if you walk into an highschool right now, you're gonna see all those trends that tiktok influenced claimed were "out of date" -- coming from a highschooler.
you'll see maybe like 2 or 3 people who dress "differently" (me) but no one is clawing at the new trends, no one really cares if your body is trendy
because all that shit only lives online
Agreed⊠Lot of this stuff takes money and a certain lifestyle, most of us are not participating nor aspiring to such ridiculous and arbitrary expectations đż
You are actually right , we teens don't have money to do that . Although my experience is that even though we don't have the currency we do fall into the trap of this body is attractive or cool or that being fat is ugly atleast where i am from. At the end of the day if u are skinny no matter how sick u are because of it u will always be valued like seen attractive but it's not same for any larger bodied person like me
So i really think that these trends online do affect the perspective of teenagers or highschooler
Exactly. Sometimes people need to put down their phones for a bit and see a bit more of reality đ
interesting perspective, however i do genuinlly believe that this stuff is affecting our body images, even if ur friends don't talk about it/
Tbh I found it easier as a mid sized teen living through the early 2000s easier because that super skinnyness was for models and a small minority of people with those genetics. As I've gotten older with people in my age group having disposable income, time to dedicate pursuing the perfect body and control of their own diets (instead of whatever the family was eating) my peers look different now and it feels less separated from real life now. Coupled with the fat phobia in professional settings the pressure feels more intense.
I actually really appreciate this video. These were my thoughts exactly. Well said.
A beautiful video, thank you Mina!
as someone who suffered through the tumblr era of pro-ana, i had to delete tiktok. I genuinely couldn't continue my recovery journey because all the alt/y2k stuff on my fyp suddenly became bodychecking whether it was announced as a trend or someone posing showing off their "outfit" but very clearly using the video as a body check. I worry for the teenagers consuming that content the way i consumed the tumblr pro ana content. Im 21 and I still hear that fucking kate moss quote in my head on bad days because tumblr engrained that shit in my brain. Its like I'm witnessing this content actively making other people insecure and i cant stop it and i wish i could because ive been there and it fucking sucks!!!!!!!! I'm 100% on the tiktok hate train
this!!!!!
Girl, Iâm freaking 24 and I feel ALL of this! I was on pro Ana tumblr too it was so dark. I also deleted TikTok; unfortunately the shit is even on Pinterest so idk itâs insane
@@chidiogoikeh4550 I mean lots of people were concerned back then too
@@hectzen23 not in the same way.
I tried ozempic 3 years ago (because my mother is a fatphobic) and it took me almost a month to convince my mom to let me remove it. People don't lose weight because of ozempic per se, but because you're unable to eat because it makes people feel nauseated after a couple bits of food. My mother refused to believe me and my father had to try the ozempic himself to see if I was liying (he vomited the second day)
Believe me, it's not worth it if you're not diabetic
The exact same thing happened to me earlier this year and I completely agree, Ozempic made me nauseated to the point I was unable to do anything all day due to how terribly sick I was feeling đ It was very confusing and honestly a bit heartbreaking to see that my own mom was willing to push something with so many side effects on me just for the sake of being "skinny"
Exactly! I'm so sorry to hear your mom was trying to pump you full of something that makes you sick for the sake of beauty. That sounds like child abuse at best. Actually having an illness that means you have to be on chronic meds that make you sick and skinny SUCKS! I would know. Watching yourself waste away due to illness is a thing, and it's horrible. Contrary to popular belief, it's nothing to be envied.
Holy shit, that is fucked up. I hope you are in a better place now.
Dear god thatâs fucking awful. Iâm so sorry you deal with such utter bullshit. Especially from parents, whom weâre so often told to obey and respect bc theyâre supposed to protect us. I really hope youâre able to get out of there and flourish as a fabulous, independent adult person (speaking a little from experience as an adult afab person who left behind a toxic family situation đ )
Sounds toxic-hope you keep them and their bullshit at a distance nowadays. As someone whoâs fully stepped away from an emotionally and psychologically abusive parent I can only say that being on the other side is SO worth it
I'm writing this with intention of perspective and to maybe help someone. I've been underweight my entire life and have struggled to gain weight (I know we've all heard this before.) I've always had trouble fitting in, I was bullied over my body, and have always seen my skinniness as ugliness. And truth be told, being super model skinny isn't attractive, it's scary! The only time a malnourished person looks good is when they're photoshopped to look good. I've always had trouble finding a boyfriend, and clothes that actually fit. Girls, please don't change your bodies to be smaller, yall are so gorgeous and perfect. You won't be any happier at a smaller size, and it has its issues as well (INCLUDING DETRIMENTAL HEALTH ISSUES!!!!) Please everyone, let's ignore "heroin chic" and embrace healthy and happy â€ïž
One of your best pieces of work!
YAY FINALLY WE'RE TALKING ABOUT THIS TOPIC
Itâs been talked about. Whereâve u been??
@@chidiogoikeh4550 Iol I know but I was waiting for mina to speak about it
@@minsugagenuismanjjangjjang4352 I thought she had đ. Maybe in thinking about another CZcamsr sorry
What? Women getting rid of their BBLs, which are another goofy beauty standard, and being content being fit?
@@cfbg minasuga meant that mina finally talked about it
Well being thick was the beauty standard for awhile now and since plastic surgery and bbls became more accessible more people had the âunrealisticâ body. Since beauty trends seem to be about whatâs more rare or unattainable it makes sense the shift is happening unfortunately
Idk just a theory
This is actually such an interesting point though, I hadnât considered it
This is exactly my thought too! I feel like as humans, we're never going to not have beauty standards because we seem to thrive on exclusivity , 'special'ness etc, so anytime something becomes popular and accessible the needle is going to change. You see it in fashion too, and both fashion and beauty standards are about superficial looks, so of course they're going to either trend or go outta trend.
The best response is to not give a f***, be comfortable in ur looks / not participate in beauty standards because we can't all fit a particular body trend or fashion trend at all times. But I think that's difficult for people to do, we all seem to yearn to be 'special'
This is exactly it. If everyone can be thick, itâs not special anymore. Celebrities are chasing the âothernessâ, not wanting to be associated with commoness
I love the vintage dress and matching eye shadow, beautiful.
im honestly surprised that people dont discuss the EDs and thinness of countless kpop idols in the world that have a PHENOMENAL influence over the global population.
I'm in my late 60s and remember the "Twiggy" movement. Her stick thin shape was my goal as a teen. I dieted and fasted but could never get that shape. (My family tree is a pear) Karen Carpenter was the first person with an eating disorder that I ever heard of. It took me most of my adult life to come to terms with my body and be comfortable in my own skin. Thanks for featuring this topic.
I naturally have a twiggy type for now, although I know you don't keep it as you age she didn't. Whenever in the curvy trend I felt self conscious my nan and her partner showed me twigs and the Mary quant look etc and I felt I had a look I could explore and feel confident. I think the harm is when young people fight for a body that isn't the one they've got. There's been enough decades and trends to find things that suit you even if it's not the one you'd have originally gone for!
slim-thick always felt to me like the idolisation of skinniness permeating the body positivity movement under the guise of promoting 'curvy' and 'thick' features. i agree that skinniness as an ideal never left - SO many people, girls especially, were dieting/depriving themselves of food throughout my time in middle and high school, all during the heyday of the body positivity movement. the only difference is that now that y2k fashion's back in, people can idealise skinniness as 'part of the aesthetic' and 'nostalgia' rather than calling it exclusion of larger/different bodies, so companies are no longer so concerned w/ appealing to the body positivity movement anymore.
Itâs so true⊠it never went away. I think I THOUGHT there was more towards body positivity in mainstream fashion because of my echo chambers, then I watched the fashion shows this fall đłđł thanks for the informative video!
I enjoyed this episode more than any others tbh. Usually you are very informative which I love but this was so much more xoxo
Regardless of trends, people will always find something wrong with you. I grew up conventionally skinny in the 2000s and I was never praised for my skinnyness, in fact it was the opposite. My boy crush in middle school told me I was too skinny and to eat more. People still to this day comment on my body and it has made me insecure as a result. Iâve tried for years to gain weight and would stuff myself with junk foods thinking that would make me gain. It wasnât until this year that Iâve accepted my body for what it is and focused on food being fuel. So my take is that trends only count if youâre a celebrity or have a presence on social media. I donât think everyday people are worried about keeping up with body trends.
Omg same, but this was in the early 2010s, i remember being 14 and though I ate really well and loved my body, I genuinely thought I had a genetic skeletal deformity because of my hip dips (I never saw them on any of the women with hourglass figures on social media). Boys called me flat ass when I was TWELVE like looking back, how is a child supposed to have a BBL body. It's all toxic asf I hope we don't go back
I feel like skinny shaming for us natural skinnies should be addressed to because it really hurts. I wear long sleeves cos of vascular arms and have ribs so people absolutely refuse to believe this is possible naturally. My friends all know I eat more than them and have endocrine issues possibly causing this.
Honestly same I remember all through middle school people would bully me for being skinny and even accused my parents of not feeding me đ itâs only now that Iâm finally starting to gain weight
thats just sad, I hope your okay!
I'm sorry y'all had to deal with that bs growing up
Not the early 2000's again. I lived through that the first time round. Don't make us go through that again. It. Was. Hell.
Having an ed in 2010s and wanting to just be as skinny as possible instead of just focusing on getting good nutrition really wasn't worth it in any way, I truly hope young girls don't fall into this trap but unfortunately some for sure will
I think it could ever be as worse as back then. We are very PC now. Also, the mags donât run our culture anymore.
you dont have to wear the stuff thats trending đ
why is this so dramatic lol
@@nothing-jl2dz I'm seeing this exact trend on Pinterest. Almost like clockwork I fall into ed Pinterest where the comments are borderline pro ana and no one says anything!!! Those coquette girl blogs where lana del ret quotes are put on top of pictures of Lilly rose Depp also encourage this type of behaviour, all the women in that aesthetic are white and extremely skinny
Absolutely one of my favorite videos youâve done so far. Very well thought out, researched, and eloquently put together. PS, I love your style. I could never pull off what you wearđ
I love the visual analysis and how it puts this issue in context. Would you be able to share the list of photographers you mentioned?