Do you not consider the average playboy woman to be more attractive than the average fashion model? personally i think the grand majority of men would find her a LOT more attractive than her. With the added benefit than looking like the first girl doesn’t involve killing yourself.
No, I don’t. Of course anorexic-looking models are unattractive IMO, but so are huge fake tits, overprocessed hair and ten pounds of makeup. Weight is not the only factor that plays into how beauty is judged. For me natural beauty is the best, and you don’t find much of anything natural in either fashion models or Playboy bunnies.
Beautiful women come in all shapes and sizes and ages. But I didn’t know that until Audrey Hepburn showed up in the 1950s.
When I first saw a photo of her, I thought there must be some mistake. She looked so unattractive when compared with the other movie stars of that era. She was scrawny with a big head and a square jaw and a long neck. Her eyes were too big for her face and her eyebrows were too long. Her nose wasn’t “cute” and her mouth was big. Even her haircut looked weird. It wasn’t long and softly curled.
Only a handful of years passed before I was trying to look just like her. She changed the way we perceived beauty. The concept was broadened quite a bit. Now there are people who wonder how I could ever see Audrey Hepburn as anything other than adorable.
The haircuts that we see on men now would have produced side-splitting laughter back in the cool days – whenever that was. What was dumb becomes cool. What was cool is worth a snicker. It’s so funny to watch happen.
It will become more inclusive as fashion designers and marketing people break down and acknowledge that some rich ethnic minorities no longer want to emulate blond 15-year-olds when they buy and wear designer clothes and accessories, but will remain exclusive enough to keep the majority of women depressed enough to support a $40 billion diet industry. Okay, that’s a bit simplistic, but that’s the crux of it. It may simply be economics that prompt the shift. Clothing lines that refuse to sell sizes above 10 may very well die out (and here we’re talking fashion, not haute couture – no one is making money selling size 0 taffeta and Swarovski crystal gowns).