Saturday, 8 February 2014

Fort Frances Times Feb 7 2014



Obesity activity encouraged by 'plus-size' push for Disney princesses
Friday, 7 February 2014 - 11:54am
By Duane Hicks      A regional obesity activist is elated by a recent campaign by a U.S. teen girl’s to get Disney to create a “plus-size” princess.
Paul Murphy, founder of Obesity Thunder Bay (www.obesitythunderbay.ning.com), applauded the efforts of Jewel Moore, a high school junior from Farmville, Va., who last week started a petition stating that since Disney has such a big influence on young girls, the mega-company should create a princess with a curvy body to “show support to a group of girls who are otherwise horrendously bullied by the media.”
On change.org, Moore wrote that she created the petition “because I’m a plus-size young woman, and I know many plus-size girls and women who struggle with confidence and need a positive plus-size character in the media.”
Moore’s petition, which has amassed more than 22,000 signatures since late last week, bears the title, “Every body is beautiful.”
“I really think that it opens up further dialogue,” said Murphy, noting someone from Denmark made a video about Moore’s campaign and this also is attracting views like wildfire.
“It opens the door. It’s such an exciting time,” he added.
“Last week I just couldn’t have crafted a better week with regard to people talking about the complex issue of community health.
“This Jewel Moore, her efforts, are just the icing on the cake,” noted Murphy. “This is a young girl who is standing up for other young girls against the media messages they’re receiving.”
Moore’s petition can be found online.
Murphy has campaign relentlessly over the past five years to get Northwestern Ontario talking about community health and obesity, and has made some headway in a world which more and more is talking about healthy eating and body acceptance.
In addition to participating in various community discussions in the Thunder Bay area, Murphy attended a conference in Vancouver last May and will be participating online in a health conference at the University of Guelph in the near future.
He also remains very active online at www.obesitythunderbay.ca, which offers links to videos and articles, as well as online discussions via Twitter and Facebook.
Meanwhile, countries such as Mexico are implementing a soda tax to urge people to drink healthy beverages while states and cities such as Massachusetts and San Francisco have approved candy taxes.
At the same time, shocking statistics about teen suicide, such as the Toronto District School Board being aware of about 700 suicide attempts made by students in the last school year, is putting the spotlight on issues of depression, bullying, and self-image.
All of this ties into Obesity Thunder Bay’s mandate to effect social change through advocacy, research, education, and the elimination of unhealthy environments.
Murphy stressed he and other Obesity Thunder Bay members aren’t about promoting weight loss, but rather a conversation about body image, healthy communities, and healthy individuals.
“We need to promote dignity and acceptance,” he remarked.
“We have to talk about inclusion.”


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Thursday, 6 February 2014

10 Downsides Of Creating A Plus-Size Disney Princess



I had to include this brilliantly drafted response . Thank you for reading this article.
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10 Downsides Of Creating A Plus-Size Disney Princess
  • 1 day ago by Samantha Escobar
Apparently, Virginia high school junior Jewel Moore is petitioning for Disney to create a plus-size Disney princess. As you all know, we here at The Gloss are opposed to any form of change, particularly the progressive type. Let’s take a look at some of the downsides that will come from a plus-size princess, shall we?
1. They won’t fit in the dresses.
Disney creators hand make every dress, you see, and they can only use one pattern. Like Karl Lagerfeld and Barbie‘s makers, they have been designing one size so long, it would be borderline impossible to do something different. As you know, professional artists are notoriously bad at creating new things.
2. Little girls will gain weight as a result.
If you recall your childhood, you will remember that literally the only messages you saw regarding body image came from one movie? And then you based you entire life on that movie and chose to change your entire appearance based on that movie? Indeed, that is why I am still green and amphibious.
3. Bigger waist = bigger feet = no glass slippers.
Unfortunately, shoes that could potentially sever your Achilles tendon if stepped on the wrong way are not made in wide sizes.
4. Less room on the side for fuzzy sidekicks.
It’s integral that you juxtapose females to giant furry animals to maintain the image that the woman is tiny, hairless and itsy bitsy.
5. …And funny overweight sidekicks.
Chubby people are for giggling at, not for cheering for! Unless you’re cheering for them to fall down the palace’s steps, AMIRITE?
6. But then Prince Charming would have to be “plus-size,” too.
Men don’t like plus-size women unless they’re “proportionate”! Just a reminder: We don’t have special sizing sections for men who are overweight. Only women.
7. People would empathize with the villain.
Human beings don’t have any overweight friends, relatives, coworkers, partners, or acquaintances that they like and relate to. Most people’s reactions to seeing the average non-model is to hand them poison apples, steal their voices and prick them with all kinds of cursed flowers.
Plus, the Daily Mail will have to write about overweight people without putting “see the before and after pics!!!” in its headlines. :(
8. Realism is bad!
That’s why people only like unrealistic movies like WaterworldJohn Carter and Gigli.
9. If we promote being overweight as “normal,” more kids will be overweight.
As you all know, people emulate exactly what they see on television and in films. That is why our society is made up exclusively of tall, thin, clear-skinned white women with long, flowing hair. As a matter of fact, the average American woman is 5’11″ and a size 2.
10. Kids would have somebody who resembles them to look up to.
See, the trouble with kids these days is that they’re not trying nearly hard enough to look like human beings other than themselves. We need to ensure that they are continuously bombarded with images of people whom they will likely never look like, and make sure we photoshop those pictures so not even those people can look like that. Otherwise, they will feel comfortable being themselves–possibly even happy. And nothing is worse than happy, comfortable children being themselves.
(Okay, but in all seriousness: you go, Jewel Moore.)
You can reach this post's author, Samantha Escobar, on twitter or via e-mail at



Wednesday, 5 February 2014

Jewel Moore Plus Size Princess -Disney

Teen girl launches petition for Disney to create a plus-size princess - but is that an unhealthy ideal too?
  • High schooler Jewel Moore says Disney has the power to influence girls' confidence, and a plus-size princess would be a positive role model
  • But some have argued that the focus needs to be on having 'normal' princesses with realistic and healthy dimensions instead
PUBLISHED: 16:03 GMT, 31 January 2014 | UPDATED: 17:11 GMT, 31 January 2014
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6,842 shares

A teenage girl has launched a petition for Disney to make a plus-size princess in the wake of controversy over whether the company promotes an unrealistic feminine ideal.
Jewel Moore, a high school junior from Farmville, Virginia, wrote on her Change.org page that since Disney has such a huge influence on young girls, it should create a princess with a curvy body to 'show support to a group of girls who are otherwise horrendously bullied by the media.'
But while many have praised her for trying to put a stop to body shaming, others have questioned whether a 'plus-size' princess - rather than simply a normal-size one - is a step in the wrong direction.
Fighting for a cause: Jewel Moore, a high school junior from Farmville, Virginia, who describes herself as 'plus-size', has launched a Change.org petition for Disney to create a plus-size princess
http://i.dailymail.co.uk/i/furniture/mobile/icon_camera_90x68.png+6
Fighting for a cause: Jewel Moore, a high school junior from Farmville, Virginia, who describes herself as 'plus-size', has launched a Change.org petition for Disney to create a plus-size princess
Body image: Citing the unrealistically skinny proportions of princesses like Ariel (left) and Jasmine, she says Disney should 'show support to a group of girls who are otherwise horrendously bullied by the media'
http://i.dailymail.co.uk/i/furniture/mobile/icon_camera_90x68.png+6
Body image: Citing the unrealistically skinny proportions of princesses like Ariel (left) and Jasmine (right), she says Disney should 'show support to a group of girls who are otherwise horrendously bullied by the media'
http://i.dailymail.co.uk/i/furniture/mobile/icon_camera_90x68.png+6
Body image: Citing the unrealistically skinny proportions of princesses like Ariel (left) and Jasmine (right), she says Disney should 'show support to a group of girls who are otherwise horrendously bullied by the media'
Jewel's petition, which has amassed 861 signatures so far, bears the title: 'Every body is beautiful'.
She writes that she created the page 'because I'm a plus-size young woman, and I know many plus-size girls and women who struggle with confidence and need a positive plus-size character in the media.'

More...
Citing research that 'a child's confidence correlates greatly with how much representation they have in the media,' she says a plus-size Disney princess would be a positive step towards body acceptance.
Many commenters have agreed with Jewel, leaving comments on the Change.org page to express their opinion.
Equality: Jewel's petition, which has amassed 861 signatures so far, bears the title: 'Every body is beautiful'
http://i.dailymail.co.uk/i/furniture/mobile/icon_camera_90x68.png+6
Equality: Jewel's petition, which has amassed 861 signatures so far, bears the title: 'Every body is beautiful'
Every body is beautiful: She wrote on the page: 'I'm a plus-size young woman, and I know many plus-size girls and women who struggle with confidence and need a positive plus-size character in the media'
http://i.dailymail.co.uk/i/furniture/mobile/icon_camera_90x68.png+6
Every body is beautiful: She wrote on the page: 'I'm a plus-size young woman, and I know many plus-size girls and women who struggle with confidence and need a positive plus-size character in the media'
'If young girls see that beauty comes in all shapes and sizes, they can change how society views it,' wrote one supporter
Another said: 'Having dealt with being overweight my entire life, I think that it would be great for Disney to make a more realistic princess for young girls to look up to.'
But some have taken issue with Jewel's emphasis on 'plus-size', asserting that the focus needs to be on having 'normal' princesses with realistic and healthy dimensions instead.
Misguided? While many have supported her petition, some have taken issue with her emphasis on 'plus-size', saying the focus needs to be on having 'normal' princesses with realistic and healthy dimensions instead
http://i.dailymail.co.uk/i/furniture/mobile/icon_camera_90x68.png+6
Misguided? While many have supported her petition, some have taken issue with her emphasis on 'plus-size', saying the focus needs to be on having 'normal' princesses with realistic and healthy dimensions instead
One parent wrote on CafeMom.com: 'Why do princesses have to be either weirdly skinny or plus size? Are there any petitions for normal sized princesses?'
'If girls are THAT impressionable I wouldn't want them looking up to overweight princesses'
The sentiment was shared by another mother, who said: 'Understandable. But at the same time do we want our daughters idolizing a plus sized princess either?
'If girls are THAT impressionable then I really wouldn't want them looking up to overweight princesses or idols. Why not just average sized? Not fat, not skinny.'


 Negative Feedback :
Name Removed
“I hate the term "plus-size" its merely a way to sugarcoat reality to fat, over weight people. Being over weight has just as much, if not more negative health issues short and long term compared to being slightly underweight.
Childrens self image is not at risk from disney. If anything it will just encourage them that princesses are not obese.
This is simply another attempt by fat people to try and validate and justify their unhealthy lifestyle so they don't feel guilty when they're too lazy to do something about it. They sit by the TV eating garbage rather than a healthy nutritious meal and exercising every once in a while.
Any fat person, given the chance, would take a thin physique over their fat one... They just don't want to work for it. When society accepts this mentality as ok, it drastically adds to the global health and financial epidemic of obesity.”