Posted: January 12th, 2009 | Author: elena | Filed under: ageism, aging, airbrushing, body, censorship, image manipulation, media, self-image, television | Tags: aging, body, censorship, HDTV, image manipulation, manipulation, self-image, TV, wrinkles | 1 Comment »
Excerpt:
Actors, models and television personalities are accustomed to leading on-air lives in soft focus. But with the advent of all-digital television next month, the stage is set for unforgiving high-definition broadcasts, and even everyday people want to look airbrushed to perfection.
In our hyper-magnified world where HDTV, HD camcorders and point-and-shoot cameras with auto-airbrushing functions are becoming the norm, a blemish here, a pockmark there or even a wisp of a wrinkle is unacceptable.
In theory, the sharper images transmitted over high-definition digital television mean the skin has to look almost perfect. Which is to say that it has to look natural, fresh and dewy, not powdery and masklike as it did in the analog days.
Full article here.
Posted: January 6th, 2009 | Author: elena | Filed under: censorship, cosmetic surgery, health, hidden propaganda, media, print, self-image, women's magazines | Tags: censorship, cosmetic surgery, manipulation, media, women's magazines | No Comments »
Excerpt:
While the emotional health implications of cosmetic surgery are still up for scientific debate, articles in women’s magazines such as The Oprah Magazine and Cosmopolitan portray cosmetic surgery as a physically risky, but overall worthwhile option for enhancing physical appearance and emotional health, a UBC study has found.
Full article here.
Posted: November 19th, 2008 | Author: elena | Filed under: body, breast surgery, censorship, cosmetic surgery, self-image | Tags: body, breasts, censorship, surgery | No Comments »

The number of breast augmentations performed in the United States has skyrocketed in the past two decades. Statistics from the American Society for Aesthetic Plastic Surgery show the following:
Number of breast augmentations performed in 1992 : 32,607
Number of breast augmentations performed in 2007 : 399,440
That’s an increase of 1225% !
As Naomi Wolf explains in The Beauty Myth,
Culture screens breasts with impeccable thoroughness, almost never representing those that are soft, or asymmetrical, or drooping, or mature, or that have gone through the changes of pregnancy. Looking at breasts in culture one would have little idea that real breasts come in as many shapes and variations as there are women. [...] Since beauty censorship keeps women in profound darkness about other women’s real bodies, it is able to make virtually any woman feel that her breasts alone are too soft or low or sagging or small or big or weird or wrong.”
This sense of shame and inadequacy fuels the cosmetic surgery industry. As Wolf explains in her book,
“Modern cosmetic surgeons have a direct financial interest in a social role for women that requires them to feel ugly.”
For pictures (and stories) of real breasts, visit this site: 007b.com (NSFW, obviously)