How does the media affect teenage girls perception of body image? Community and Family Studies Year 12 Due Date: 6th March 2012 Contents Title page _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ Pg 1 Contents_ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ Pg 2 Abstract_ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ Pg 3 Acknowledgements_ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ Pg 4 Introduction_ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _
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aren’t good enough‚ skinny enough‚ or pretty enough. Young girls and women feel insecure about their bodies and physical appearance and often believe they must change their bodies to gain self-esteem. Media creates a negative body image in girls by creating disorders in women‚ showing unrealistic body images‚ and making them feel like they aren’t good enough. Girls will go to extremes to be skinny‚ which may result in harming their body. Most commonly eating disorders such as anorexia and bulimia
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Our bodies are what make us who we are ass people. Every person has something specific about them that make them stand out as a human being. If everyone goes around changing everything about them to become the “perfect person” then the individuality of one person would eventually disappear. A society has created the perfect person and idolizes the “perfect body” and expects everyone to look like that. People should take pride in the way they look‚ because no one looks exactly like you. Not just outer
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Social Media Effects on Females Body Image Does Social media really impact the way females see their body? Strong evidence supports that social media has a horrifying impact on female body image. In many cases‚ some would go as far as committing suicide‚ because they are not content with the way they look. Because females compare themselves to models and celebrities that is shown on social media‚ it is clear that there is a distortion from what is real and what is fake. They consider that if they
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thin models influences the idea of ideal body image that girls hold. Undoubtedly‚ the readership of teen magazines is no longer teenagers only‚ but apparently children between the ages of 8 and 12 – typically ascertain as the tweens are getting more engaged with the magazines (Thomas‚ 2003). Despite the existence of hundred reasons not to trust mass-media photography‚ a vulnerable group such as teenage girls can be easily influenced by edited photos. Media exposure undoubtedly is associated with
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Media affects body image because in every TV show or movie the characters are healthy‚ lean‚ handsome‚ or beautiful. In ads they change the picture by editing the person’s body to make them look unrealistically skinny or muscular. This unrealistic image pushes people to the extreme to gain that image because the media makes it seen that you have to look like that to be attractive and to have a boyfriend or girlfriend. And when people can’t gain that image they then become depressed and/or kill themselves
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According to the Media Dynamics publication‚ Media Matters‚ an average adult has a potential daily exposure to approximately 600-625 advertisements in any form. These exposures come from all media mediums; television‚ radio‚ newspaper‚ magazines‚ and internet. There are advertisements for everything from juice to condoms‚ fruit snacks to Viagra‚ Old Navy clothing sales to perfumes and Victoria’s Secret. The media exposes viewers to extremes between harmless and persuasive material and highly sensitive
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The body type portrayed in advertising as the ideal is possessed naturally by only five percent of females. Forty seven percent of girls in 5th-12th grade reported wanting to lose weight because of magazine pictures. Sixty nine percent of girls in 5th-12th grade reported that magazine pictures influenced their idea of a perfect body shape. Females are more than twice as likely as men to be portrayed as sexual objects (which means turning women into objects for sexual pleasure) during prime time commercials
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Sociocultural standards of feminine beauty are presented in almost all forms of popular media‚ barraging women with images that portray what is considered to be the "ideal body." Such standards of beauty are almost completely unattainable for most women. A majority of the models displayed on television and in advertisements are well below what is considered healthy body weight. Mass media’s use of such unrealistic models sends an implicit message that in order for a woman to be considered beautiful
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Media plays a significant role in our society today around perceptions and descriptions of beauty. We all see pictures of youth and beauty everywhere and feel pressured to meet social impossible beauty standards. Our society constantly changing due to the influence of what we see in the media. Humans significantly more dissatisfied with their own appearance after being shown television ad featuring exceptionally slimming beautiful people. People’s reaction to their reflection in the mirror may depend
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