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Skinny Models: Debate continues as Pret-a-Porter looms…

21 Feb

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No one denies that skinny models have stolen the catwalk away from the voluptuous girls of the 90′s. Gemma Ward (above), is no Claudia Schiffer. The question is: should the industry place limitations on waifish catwalkers?

With the pret-a-porter fashion week hitting Paris in 4 days, debate is heating up again in the pages of today’s issue of Le Monde.

France tried to play off the growing debate on skinny models that arose after Spain banned underweight girls from their fashion week. After receiving complaints on ultra-skinny models, and following the deaths of some girls to anorexia, Madrid ordered limits on Body Mass Indexes. Several fashion syndicate’s have followed suit. New York and Paris have not. Didier Grumbach, king of French fashion, said the industry has no responsibility to portray healthy models.

Arguments against banning the ultra-skinny come from designers and stylists, such as Martine de Menton, who says, “After the top-models of the 1980′s– Claudia Schiffer or Linda Evangelista– whom we looked at more than the clothes they were presenting, designers started looking for more anonymous and androgynous body types.”

“We must inform people, but above all not regulate the sector more than it already is,” said Didier Grumbach, head of the Federation francaise de la Couture. “Regulation is something that weighs down the atmosphere.”

PetiteBrigitte’s verdict: If Grumbach is so worried about ‘weighing down the atmosphere,’perhaps he should be more concerned over the death of 21 year-old Brazillian model Ana Carolina Reston(below), who died last year of anorexia. Or maybe he should read the studies on how young girl’s body images are linked to what they see in the media. As the models get younger, the media more pervasive, and the industry more powerful, the real victims of this trend will be the models who sell the clothes, and the girl’s who emulate them. The ultra-skinnies are doing more harm than good (to themselves, and to society). Give them a meal, let the designers have a momentary hissy, and let the runways reflect healthy images of women. We’ll still buy the clothes.

Incidentally– Bravo to Victoria Beckham, who just banned size 0 models from her new line of clothes. Mildly hypocritical since she herself is a size 0, but at least she’s sending a positive message.

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Update (March 30): France will not ban skinny models from Paris catwalks but will introduce a voluntary charter to make the fashion industry more aware of the health risks of being very thin, the Health Ministry said on Friday.

“The idea of it is not regulation like the Spanish have done … but to promote a strong campaign of awareness and information in the fashion industry,” he added.

See this for more.

Update part 2 (May 20):

A group of investigators have told the fashion world to grow up and do something about unhealthy models. Backed by the British Fashion Council, the statements come in response to growing disquiet about the risks of modelling to young women desperate to meet the industry’s waif-like norm. The deaths of a Uruguayan model, Luisel Ramos, 22, and her sister, Eliana, 18, within months of each other last year fuelled the debate. Luisel died of heart failure after starving herself for days before a fashion show and Eliana died of a heart attack. In November, the death of Ana Carolina Reston, a Brazilian model aged 21 who lived on a diet of apples and tomatoes, sparked worldwide concern.

Clarins: Protecting you from cell phones!

21 Feb

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Let me get this straight.

The French cannot manage to recycle, solve high unemployment, or refrigerate their milk. But they can develop a spray that protects you from electromagnetic radiation emitted from cell phones?? I love it!

French skincare company, Clarins Paris, just released a spray designed to repel the radiation given off by your cell phone and laptop.

The spray is made up of microorganisms found on plants near undersea volcanoes. The logic seems to be that the microorganisms have developed ways to protect the plants from the harmful radiation put out by the undersea volcanoes.

While the FDA says no study has definitively drawn a connection between cancer and cell phone use, the agency points out there haven’t been any studies to rule one out either.

Some doctors, such as Dr. Kenneth Black, head of Neurosurgery at Cedars Sinai in LA (i.e. drama queen), have gone as far to say, “We know that people that use cell phones a lot also complain of headaches, difficulty with concentration, with memory. You know, this is a microwave antenna, so you’re essentially cooking the brain when you hold the receiver right next to your brain.”

Debate heated up when prominent US dreamteam attorney, Johnny Cochran, died of a brain tumor. He was never seen outside the courtroom without a cell phone pressed to his ear.

PetiteBrigitte’s verdict: I believe cell phones will be the cigarettes of the 21st century. My lengthy scientific research leads me to conclude that there is a correlation between excessive cell phone use and cancer, and the Nokia’s of this world are paying big bucks for you to stay in the dark. When the info comes out though, just as in ciggies, you won’t stop using your phone. Meanwhile, hold off on the Clarins spray— it’s ahead of its time, probably doesn’t work, and besides… ignorance is bliss!

Like a hot nail entering the body

21 Feb

(O, you corrupt minds!)

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Swarms of giant hornets are attacking France. Ecologists are blaming global warming for their proliferation.

According to an article in today’s Telegraph, the Asian hornets arrived in a piece of pottery in 2004, and have spread like lightning throughout southern France, especially in the Aquitaine region. While posing no significant risk to humans, they are singlehandedly wiping out all the lovely French bees, and impacting the honey production in France.

And guess where their antennae are pointing? North to Paris! According to the Telegraph,

The hornets can grow to up to 1.8in and, with a wingspan of 3in, are renowned for inflicting a bite which has been compared to a hot nail entering the body.

So beware on your next picnique in the countryside. Bzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzz……….

Let Proust change your life, this March in Paris!

21 Feb

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Best-selling author Alain de Botton has said reading Proust can change your life. A lot of us have always meant to read Proust, yet when forced to choose between him and a Candace Bushnell novel, you know what happens. Now is your chance to get motivated! In a series of three lectures, Gretel Furner (grad of Oxford, prof at GW) will present the first book of Proust’s masterpiece In Search of Lost Time in a new translation by Lydia Davis. Find out why no writer has ever captured as well the richness of childhood experience nor the delicate pleasures of fin de siècle France. Participants should bring along a paperback edition of Marcel Proust’s The Way by Swann’s, published by Penguin Books (2002) and available at most English language bookshops in Paris.

March 7, 14, 21/ 10:30am-12/ 60 euros/ www.wice-paris.org

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