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Mean Girls: Dietician Monica Grenfell

Posted by Emily Farris

 

Across the pond, a beautiful size 16 teenager is still in the running toward becoming the U.K.'s next top Miss England. But the editors of The Daily Mail have had a heyday with 17-year-old Chloe Marshall, printing articles mocking her size, and last week the paper brought on a "dietician" to pen an op-ed calling Marshall "fat, lazy and a poster girl for ill health."

In the piece, Monica Grenfell doesn't laud the teenager for being brave and self confident (like we do), but instead says Chloe is sending the wrong message to young girls:


"In my view, Chloe is a terrible role model. I hope she doesn't win the Miss England title. It would send an appalling - and very dangerous - message to other young women that it's OK to be fat. Chloe is a stark reminder that obesity is now virtually normal in our society - and we should all be hanging our heads in shame.

She is an ambassador not for the beautiful larger lady as she'd have us believe but a poster girl for diabetes, strokes, heart attacks, cancers and all the other devastating and potentially fatal health problems that are caused or exacerbated by obesity...

As a judge on last year's Miss England contest, I was hugely impressed, not just by the beauty but by the skills dedication and determination of the contestants. For example, most had raised huge sums of money for their favourite charities. They shone out as young women to be admired. But can the same really be said of Chloe?

At 5ft 10in, Chloe should have a body mass index, or BMI, (indicating her levels of fat) of 20. Hers is 26.03... It's a total fallacy that young girls are being pressured into near-starving themselves into being too thin...

If Chloe chooses to be curvy, that's fine. It is, after all, her personal choice. But it's time she stopped telling the rest of us that being fat is great and that the only way to be a healthy weight is by starving yourself. It's dangerous nonsense."


Uh, okay. We disagree and our size 10/12 would like to challenge Ms. Grenfell to an op-ed writing contest. Then to a brawl. Then to a hot dog eating contest. Then to another brawl. Who's with us?

P.S. It should be noted that we think beauty pageants are stupid. Really fucking stupid.

[The Daily Mail via Jezebel

[Related: Study: 'Weight-ism' More Widespread Than Racism]

 

"You all have got to stop calling each other sluts and whores. It just makes it okay for guys to call you sluts and whores."

-Tina Fey/ Ms. Norbury, "Mean Girls"

 

[Previously: Mean Girls: Dr. Laura Schlessinger]


Comments

parrot1500 said:

She's a serious cutie. She needs to find a mean, though, between healthy (BMI of 20 and fit) and starving-skinny. The Daily Mail needs to shove it up their collective asses.

April 7, 2008 10:45 AM

just_maibe said:

She's not even that big. I really don't get why they've got their knickers in a twist about it.

April 7, 2008 10:53 AM

spasmak said:

is it just me, or does her head look WAY too small for her body?

that's not her real head, is all i'm sayin'.

April 7, 2008 11:41 AM

danrimage said:

I'd like to get HER knickers in a twist....

The Daily Mail are the Fox News of the British press. If they can cast a smug, judgemental 'wasn't like that in my day/why do WE have to pay for it?/Why don't they just fuck off home?/What does she LOOK like?' frown on something, they will.

Also, I've always found the, ahem, 'homelier' female body type insanely erotic (if I was to put it crudely, I'd say 'instant boner material'. Good job I've decided to be tasteful), far more than the skinny little kids we're constantly served in the mass media. I CANNOT be the only man who feels this way...where are OUR kind of unacceptably objectified women on billboards?

April 7, 2008 12:23 PM

Marcel said:

When you go for something as shallow as a beauty pageant you've got to expect a certain level of scrutiny. She deserves every bit of ink criticizing her appearance, the fact that she's fat just makes it easier.

April 7, 2008 1:24 PM

whyareyoustaring said:

as a size 14 I applaud her. BMI is a load of shit. It doesn't take into account that muscle weighs more than fat.

April 7, 2008 6:22 PM

dragondawn42o said:

Chloe is a beautiful, beautiful girl. I'm really glad to see her doing this well in a beauty pageant, even though I really really don't like them. She's challenging the mainstream idea of beauty, and she's taken the fight directly to the lion's den. That takes a hell of a lot of courage, so for that I applaud her. Plus I like the idea of undermining the institution of the beauty pageant from within.

And as danrimage said above, she's amazingly hot and I have no doubt whatsoever that she has to beat the boys back with sticks. *grin* I myself can attest that being a big curvy girl with luscious cleavage and a nice round ass is not an impediment. As long as I'm feeling good and smilin', the boys buzz around like bees; when I'm down, it's like they don't even see me (although that's somewhat by choice). So I think that slowly, ideas of beauty in our society are changing. It's about time.

April 8, 2008 4:04 AM

farknerve said:

A healthy BMI is 18.5 to 25.  If this woman's calculations are correct, then Chloe is only slightly overweight, not at all obese.  And from the patients I've seen, it's very easy for women's BMI to be in the "overweight" range if they have athletic builds or engage in sports.

Anyway, Chloe is amazing and very courageous!  I know I would not have been able to withstand the kind of criticism she is receiving when I was 17.  I wish her all the luck in the world and I was there was a way to send her a message of support.  

It is shameful that the Daily Mail is publishing these articles.  We try so hard as parents, teachers, and physicians to help young women see that they are more than their looks...then we see articles like these telling young women that if they are "not to be admired" if they are not a certain weight.  I'm basing this on the segment quoted above (as I don't want to click the Daily Mail link and give them more traffic), but notice that the author mentions how admirable it is that Chloe's thinner competitors raised money for charity, but doesn't mention any of Chloe's accomplishments, only her weight.

And that picture looks weirdly photoshopped or something, as if it had been made to be as unflattering as possible.

April 8, 2008 4:36 PM

QuietKindofCrazy said:

Physical fitness: means you are capable of taking care of everything you need to care of in day-to-day life. Many, many, years ago, that mean running down prey bare-foot, killing it, and eating it.

These days, well. . . you don't have to be fit to survive. The only reason to be thin and conserve resources is so that everyone around you has a chance to consume.

Thinness doesn't necessarily represent attractiveness; but it does represent an understanding that our resources are limited.

If I've been too subtle: "J'accuse!" Stop. Eating. So. Much. When. Other. People. Can't.

April 13, 2008 6:18 AM

fatsuperman said:

if you want to hear mean, check out what this blogger over at unfatblog.com has to say about chubby girls being sexy!

I think it is the same guy that runs myfatspouse!

April 14, 2008 2:04 AM

Not Chubby said:

To all those people criticizing the BMI scale, yeah, you're right... bodybuilders would have a much higher BMI than normal people.  And yes, you're right: muscle does weight more than fat.  Just look at all that muscle on her.  Must be skewing the BMI scale...

No, there's nothing wrong with Chloe.  That she is overweight shouldn't bring about condemnation.  Being a size 4 doesn't make you a better person than a size 18.  But in terms of glamour, hey, there's nothing particularly glamourous about being fat.  Nothing wrong with being fat, of course, but  just not glamorous.

April 29, 2008 2:29 PM

About Emily Farris

Emily Farris writes about culture and food for numerous publications and websites you've probably never heard of, including her own blog eefers. Her first cookbook will be published in fall 2008. Emily lives in Greenpoint, Brooklyn with her cat, but just one...so far.

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  • about the blogger

    Emily Farris writes about culture and food for numerous publications and websites you've probably never heard of, including her own blog eefers. Her first cookbook will be published in fall 2008. Emily lives in Greenpoint, Brooklyn with her cat, but just one . . . so far.

    Brian Fairbanks is a filmmaker living in the wilds of Brooklyn. He previously wrote for the Hartford Courant and Gawker. He won the Williamsburg Spelling Bee once. He loves cats, women with guns, and burning books.

    Nicole Pasulka is a Brooklyn writer and editor who's always on the lookout for the dirty. Her other virtual home is at The Morning News, where things are squeaky clean most of the time.

    Editorial Director, Nerve Media:
    Michael Martin

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