Wednesday, August 06, 2008

Woman Power?

I had to share something I read on the Jezebel website. I've never been there before and probably won't go back because the language in the editorials is horrible and offensive, but, I found this interesting. I got to this through a series of sites where I was looking for hairstyles of Faith Hill. I always love her hair and I'm getting mine cut tomorrow and I need some inspiration. So I got to Jezebel where they were talking about the latest Redbook magazine cover with Faith Hill and how much her photo had been retouched. Then I linked to another article on that and read what you see below. I'm not really a fan of Oprah, but this fascinated me.

Imagine a scenario in which a powerful, self-made, self-possessed woman deigns to follow the orders of a much-less powerful, egomaniacal foreigner and crash-diets herself to aesthetic "acceptability" so she can appear on the cover of an American magazine available to the public for, at most, 4 weeks. That scenario is exactly what happened when Oprah Winfrey was asked — and agreed — to appear on the cover of Vogue's October 1998 issue. As the story goes, Winfrey spent months whittling herself to Vogue editor-in-chief Anna Wintour's exacting standards so that she would look acceptable in a Steven Meisel-photograph for the cover. "If you want to be on the cover of Vogue and Anna Wintour says you have to be down to 150lbs - that's what you gotta do," Winfrey told the BBC, adding, tellingly, "I didn't think for one moment 'Now I am going to be a Vogue model' nor even did I think I could hold that weight."
The Vogue cover turned out well
, as many remember: Oprah looked hot. But there was something spooky beneath the Vogue image's Meisel-perfect, glossy veneer; namely, the idea that even a woman who had made her fortune validating women's strengths, hopes and dreams — and becoming one of the most powerful people on the planet in the process — would so eagerly and willingly help to perpetuate the "cover lie" of a medium that has made its mark by invalidating women's strengths, hopes and dreams with an endless parade of stories on how to be thinner, sexier, trendier, and — ugh — better in bed.

2 comments:

gifton said...

It's amazing what Photoshop can do! I would have never expected Oprah to do something like that. If you google that cover... she did look amazing but was that really "Oprah" I don't think so.

Ali said...

Wow...wow...wow...I pray that my children, boy and girls...are blind when I check my groceries out so that they will not believe that as truth. How did your hair turn out?