Quote:
Originally Posted by hamster-bamster
That is very simple - on a stick person, the shirt attracts the attention to the shirt. On an hourglass figure, it attracts attention to t&a.
But do not worry, I can speak on behalf of the women with breasts and hips (currently on the slightly zaftig side, but not too bad) - we are still doing OK, we are not going anywhere, we are not becoming extinct, and the fact that the fashion industry does not portray us as the industry standard does not affect to us too much. We still mate and reproduce and all the rest of that. I do not see any crisis in the fact that the fashion industry uses thin models.
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And the outlandish make-up, revealing outfits, deliberate breast-flashing, and hip swaying all common in fashion shows don't distract? Or their protruding hip bones ... which tend not only to distract, but to disgust ...
As a man, yes, I would be more interested in the t&a if the models were actually attractive. But I'm not the one buying the clothes. And as a bisexual man, I don't particularly find attractive male models all that distracting either.
I would surmise that the reason all these high fashion models look like adolescent boys (not only in body shape, but also in their angular face and strong jaw) is because the people choosing them to model clothing are homosexual men.
Anyway ... Both are a problem. And they seem to feed off each other (no pun intended). The more the obesity problem grows, the more people become obsessed with "health" and thinness, which leads to eating disorders and the like. And stress. Which leads to more health and weight problems...