Printer Friendly
The Free Library
14,670,920 articles and books
Member login
User name  
Password 
 
Join us Forgot password?

Still not good enough--from Barbie to Botox. (Up front: news and opinion from independent minds).


In a twist of fate, obituaries for Ruth Handler Ruth Handler (November 4, 1916 - April 27, 2002) was an American businesswoman, the president of the toy manufacturer Mattel, Inc., and is remembered primarily for her role in marketing the Barbie doll. , inventor of the Barbie doll Barbie doll

popular dress-up doll; extremely conventional and feminine. [Am. Hist.: Sann, 179]

See : Fads
, appeared just as a $50 million advertising campaign got underway for an anti-wrinkle drug with a name that memorably combines the words botulism botulism (bŏch`əlĭz'əm), acute poisoning resulting from ingestion of food containing toxins produced by the bacillus Clostridium botulinum.  and toxin. Expensive injections of Botox are already popular among women eager to remove lines from their faces. The ad blitz Noun 1. ad blitz - an organized program of advertisements
ad campaign, advertising campaign

crusade, campaign, cause, drive, effort, movement - a series of actions advancing a principle or tending toward a particular end; "he supported populist campaigns";
 of mid-2002 is certain to boost the practice.

American women between the ages of thirty and sixty-four are the prime targets, and 90 percent of them will be hit with Botox pitches a minimum of ten times. Launched with a paid layout in People magazine the first week of May ("It's not magic, it's Botox Cosmetic"), the print ads use before-and-after pictures. Network TV commercials are also part of the campaign.

To many minds, we live in a post-feminist era when denouncing sexist strictures is anachronistic a·nach·ro·nism  
n.
1. The representation of someone as existing or something as happening in other than chronological, proper, or historical order.

2.
. People who complain loudly about media images of women are apt to be derided for "political correctness." But another sort of PC--what might be called patriarchal correctness--continues to flourish today as a media mainstay, and not only in the realms of advertising and mass entertainment.

Newsweek's April 29 edition, looking ahead to "Companies of the Future" and the "Office of Tomorrow," featured a woman on the cover. Wielding some kind of futuristic gadget, this prototypical office worker was ultra-thin and wore several-inch spike heels as she sat in a transparent chair with a subtle yet distinct resemblance to a martini glass.

Despite all the progress for women's rights The effort to secure equal rights for women and to remove gender discrimination from laws, institutions, and behavioral patterns.

The women's rights movement began in the nineteenth century with the demand by some women reformers for the right to vote, known as suffrage, and
 and against rigid gender roles during the last few decades, it's chilling to take a fresh look at routine depictions of women in the mass media. Beauty-is-skin-deep renditions of what it means to be female help to explain the allure of Botox shots that cost about $500 and lose effect within four months.

When we think about loved ones, we probably aren't very concerned about their wrinkles. But acculturation acculturation, culture changes resulting from contact among various societies over time. Contact may have distinct results, such as the borrowing of certain traits by one culture from another, or the relative fusion of separate cultures.  runs deep and began early. In a society seemingly at war with nature--while consequences range from ozone depletion to water pollution to pesticide-laced crops--it stands to reason that such hostilities would extend to our own bodies.

After the eighty-five-year-old creator of Barbie died in late April, some news stories noted that Barbie's plasticized--and idealized--proportions were virtually impossible for girls to aspire to. The New York New York, state, United States
New York, Middle Atlantic state of the United States. It is bordered by Vermont, Massachusetts, Connecticut, and the Atlantic Ocean (E), New Jersey and Pennsylvania (S), Lakes Erie and Ontario and the Canadian province of
 Times reported that "if the 11 1/2-inch doll were 5-foot-6, her measurements would be 39-21-33." London's Daily Telegraph put the figure at 39-18-33. According to the Times, "One academic expert calculated that a woman's chances of having Barbie's figure were less than one in 100,000."

Styles change. And for the past thirty or so years new waves of feminism The waves of feminism are:
  • First-wave feminism - 19th and 20th century
  • Second-wave feminism - 1960s to 1980s
  • Third-wave feminism - 1990s to present-day.
 have effectively critiqued a lot of such destructive role-modeling. We may prefer to think that Barbie-like absurdities have been left behind by oh-so-sophisticated twenty-first-century media sensibilities. But to thumb through the Cosmopolitan now on the racks is to visit a matrix of "content" and advertising that incessantly inflames--and cashes in on--obsessions with seeking to measure up to media-driven images.

Back in 1985, legendary Cosmo editor Helen Gurley Brown Helen Gurley Brown (b. February 18, 1922 in Green Forest, Arkansas), is an author, publisher, and businesswoman. She was editor-in-chief of Cosmopolitan magazine for 32 years.

Brown's father died in an accident when she was young, and her sister was a polio victim.
 offered this candid insight into the relationship between her magazine's articles and its ad revenue: "Having come from the advertising world myself, I think, `Who needs somebody you're paying millions of dollars a year to come back and bite you on the ankle?'" At the time, Cosmopolitan was under fire for printing cigarette ads while staying away from articles about the terrible health impacts of smoking.

Today, Brown's comment still applies more generally to mainstream media--particularly television and magazines--in relation to countless ads. Large amounts of dollars pour in from advertisers hellbent on stoking women's unhappiness with their bodies and promising relief if only they are willing to part with some cash. Meanwhile, media outlets rarely challenge the unspoken assumptions and manipulations behind advertising.

Satiric anti-ads in the latest issue of Adbusters magazine include a full page filled with closeups of two sets of lips along with the words "Perfectionism per·fec·tion·ism
n.
A tendency to set rigid high standards of personal performance.



per·fection·ist adj. & n.
 is a malignant force in our society." That tag line begs for probing the question of what we mean by perfection. Ads that saturate sat·u·rate
v. Abbr. sat.
1. To imbue or impregnate thoroughly.

2. To soak, fill, or load to capacity.

3. To cause a substance to unite with the greatest possible amount of another substance.
 pervasive media keep claiming to offer perfectly marvelous products; they're functional as surrogates and substitutes for the wondrous complexities of nature.

Media veneers frequently sparkle with apparent high regard for women. Yet indications abound that much of the advertising industry's idealization idealization /ide·al·iza·tion/ (i-de?il-i-za´shun) a conscious or unconscious mental mechanism in which the individual overestimates an admired aspect or attribute of another person.  of fabricated female images is based on contempt for real women--who, like nature as a whole, must lack the sort of mass-produced uniformity that can be readily packaged and sold.

Endless media messages convey the stubborn presumption that women can never be good enough but should live and buy--and ultimately die--trying. First Barbie, then Botox.

Norman Solomon is a nationally syndicated columnist and author of The Habits of Highly Deceptive Media (1999). He can be reached by e-mail at mediabeat@ igc.org.
COPYRIGHT 2002 American Humanist Association
No portion of this article can be reproduced without the express written permission from the copyright holder.
Copyright 2002, Gale Group. All rights reserved. Gale Group is a Thomson Corporation Company.

 Reader Opinion

Title:

Comment:



 

Article Details
Printer friendly Cite/link Email Feedback
Author:Solomon, Norman
Publication:The Humanist
Article Type:Brief Article
Geographic Code:1USA
Date:Jul 1, 2002
Words:812
Previous Article:A tale of two rallies. (Up front: news and opinion from independent minds).(Brief Article)(Editorial)
Next Article:Virtual democracy and the prison-industrial complex.
Topics:



Related Articles
Goys and dolls. (the perception of beauty in society)
Why they don't like to read editorials.
Lawyer in tune with the 'Times.(Brief Article)
A New Wrinkle: The mad craze for Botox.(latest face-lift solution)
MEDICAL MARKETING HAS NEW WRINKLE.(Viewpoint)
Weeding the fields of others' dreams.(editing op-ed submissions)
Making the most of your business, trade media opportunities.(Business of Technology)
Editorial pages--a future in doubt.
Nine myths and one truth about editorial board blogging.(Blogging innovations)(Editorial)
Melding the media: brokering opinion online in new media environment.

Terms of use | Copyright © 2009 Farlex, Inc. | Feedback | For webmasters | Submit articles