Persuasive Essay On Fashion Models

714 Words2 Pages

Are models really the perfect beauty queens society thinks they are? Whether it is “perfect” bodies or “perfect” faces; Are they really that perfect that teens and the fashion industry idolize them? Medical professionals say that 20% to 40% of models have eating disorders currently. From Anorexia to bulimia, models will do anything to get that size 0. Not only is this way of life giving a false perception on true beauty, but it is also influencing teens and children that they also must go to these extreme measures to get the “perfect body”. A whopping 5% of teens die of an eating disorder every year. These teens see a model with her bones protruding from her skinny waistline and think “why don’t I look like that?” The models sporting the very unfashionable bone accessory not only harm themselves, but everyone around them. So should there be a weight limit put upon these models? Should there be a standard BMI that every brand and part of the fashion industry should instill? Although many argue that the model and designer have the freedom to do and imagine any design or figure they want for their “artwork” to be displayed upon, is fashion really an excuse to let people die from? In reality, the only way to stop the drastic measures of models and teens alike is to strictly set a BMI upon the fashion industry.
Although many valid points can be made about the wrong done by the fashion industry, some people may still be concerned about the fact that using a system of BMI or minimum weights takes away the freedom of the designers and models. The designers and models are entitled to their own way of fashion and if that way is loved, then they should be able to express it. If a certain design or outfit calls for a skinny model then models ...

... middle of paper ...

... if they aren’t people call them “unsuitable for modeling”. “The fashion industry, images of celebrities, relationships with parents and other environmental factors load the metaphorical gun. Emotional distress pulls the trigger,” according to Aimee Liu, author of Gaining: The Truth About Life After Eating Disorders. "It has nothing in real terms to do with looks," she said. "Looks are a tool, a mechanism that gets used by the eating disorder”. In many cases, the models really have no choice but to diet and eat nothing, because it is in their genes. A 2005 study identified six core traits that appear to be linked to genes associated with both anorexia and bulimia: obsession, age at first menstruation, anxiety, lifetime minimum body-mass index, concern over mistakes and food-related obsessions. All these factors lead up to the ultimate decision of anorexia/bulimia.

Open Document