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By: Christie E. Omodeo
GENDER IN MEDIA
MEDIA: prints, paintings, television, movies, radio, newspapers, comics, comix, novels,
zines, magazines, CDs, MP3s,podcasts, video games, blogs, videos, and Tweets and more.
Introduction
• I chose to explore gender in media because the subject interests me and
has caught my attention on more than one occasion. When reading the
text and taking notice in media I view, I become animated and passionate
about the subject and how much I abhor how gender is depicted in the
media and the influence it has on everyone, especially children and young
adults who are trying to find their way in this world and discovering who
they are.
• Men and Women are constantly being sexualized on television, movies,
book covers, advertisements and other forms of media. Women are
objectified and degraded to sell products and onlookers are lead to
believe it is normal behavior and given unrealistic expectations to attempt
to achieve. How gender is depicted in media is a problem that seems to
only be getting worse, not better. More attention needs to be put on how
wrong gender is being portrayed in media, which is why I chose to
research this topic and present it. Knowledge about this furthers
understanding about gender in communication because we are
surrounded by media, which communicated all of these things to us
constantly. Gaining understanding, knowledge, and having our eyes open
to what media is exposing us to will help us be able to dismiss and make
our own decisions and choices regarding gender. It will also help us
communicate about gender and avoid falling into the many oppressive
boxes media puts gender in.
• Gender is when women and men are socialized for
their roles that their cultures have prescribed them.
Gender focuses on the socio-cultural elements of
male and female role expectations. Gender roles
refer to sets of culturally defined character traits
labeled as “masculine” and “feminine”. Gender
refers to socially learned behavior and expectations
that distinguish masculinity and femininity.
• Gender Equality is when women and men have
equal conditions for realizing their full human rights
and potential to contribute to national, political,
economic, social and cultural development and
benefit equally from the result. Attaining gender
equality requires recognition that current social,
economic, cultural and political systems are
gendered.
• Femininity is “acquired and reproduced through
socialization and the development of self concept”
Women are expected to be emotionally expressive,
dependent, passive, cooperative, warm and
accepting a subordinate status in marriage and
employment. Competitiveness, violence and anger
are attributes which are largely regarded as being
unfeminine and not tolerated as female
behavior(Tapfumaneyi & Rupande , 2013).
media influence how people dress, what
they eat, what they look like, the games
they play, the music they listen to, and
the entertainment they watch. Media
convey these messages in two ways:
1. In the message content of the
television shows, magazine articles,
news items, music, and movies
2. In the advertising that surrounds
these messages.
Media create false consciousness, making
people believe they exert control over
what they view (and what they think
about what they view) when in reality
they have little or no control
(DeFrancisco, 2014).
MEDIA
• Media has defined how females and males should look and act. Stereotypes play a
huge role in this. Though advertisements, performers, actors and actresses, the
standard male should be masculine, dominant, physically fit, has abs, handsome
and so on like depicted in the image on the previous slide. The standard women is
feminine, soft, pretty, treated as property, objectified, should be submissive, thin,
have large breasts and so on, again as described in the image on the previous
slide. Because of the heavy usage of these types of individuals in media, what is
actually a normal body type for either gender is not acceptable, so everyone who
doesn’t process the unattainable image/ especially for women, doesn’t measure
up and is deemed unworthy. Women are often represented negatively thereby
promoting negative stereotypes about them (Tapfumaneyi & Rupande , 2013).
Stereotypes
• A stereotype is an oversimplified
image or idea of a specific type of
person or thing.
• A Stereotype threat occurs when a
group is informed of a stereotype
and then the group’s performance is
affected by the stereotype.
Stereotypes are everywhere, and all
of us will come up against them
more than once (DeFrancisco, 2014) .
• Gender stereotypes vary on four
dimensions: traits, role behaviors,
physical characteristics, and
occupations (Tapfumaneyi &
Rupande , 2013).
Mass mediated images construct an understanding of gender in which feminine
women are physically passive and ineffective and masculine men are physically
active and capable (DeFrancisco, 2014).
• Objectification occurs when people are viewed as objects existing solely
for the pleasure of the viewer, rather than as agents capable of action.
The person being objectified often is reduced to body parts: breasts,
genitalia, muscles, curves, buttocks, and hair. The person is no longer
human but commodified—turned into a market commodity like other
inanimate products, free to be bought and fondled (even if only by others’
eyes).
• Self-objectification occurs when people internalize the objectifier’s view
of their body and “participate in their own objectification” by seeking to
exert a limited power linked to their ability to attract the gaze of others.
This happens all of the time; girls or women wear low cut shirts to show
off cleavage to catch attention, or wear short shorts that show their butt
cheeks. Stars dress this way, as well as actresses (DeFrancisco, 2014) .
• Researchers have linked objectification to low self-esteem,
depression, anxiety, disordered eating, muscle dysmorphia, and
suicide, particularly for women, but also for puberty-aged children,
including boys (DeFrancisco, 2014).
• Commodification is the selling of cultural, sexual, or gender
difference in a way that supports institutionalized discrimination.
Women's bodies are constantly used in ads to sell things. They are
turned into things and objectified. This doesn't tend to happy to
men as much. When men appear in ads they are centered, and in a
strong pose, while woman are generally appearing seductive and/or
lower than the man (DeFrancisco, 2014).
The woman has almost no clothing, yet the man is fully clothed, and the only skin showing
is his face and hands…
A fine example of
a woman’s worth
in advertisement.
Sexual
innuendoes,
super
appropriate,
don’t you think?
A lot of advertisements don’t even show a
women’s whole body; they just focus on the
most important parts of her. A woman’s worth is
seen as her butt, between her legs, and her
breasts.
Women are posed lower to the ground than men
showing men are dominant and women are submissive.
Sexualization occurs when:
• a person’s value comes only from
his or her sexual appeal or
behavior, to the
• exclusion of other characteristics;
• a person is held to a standard that
equates physical attractiveness
(narrowly defined) with being
sexy;
• a person is sexually objectified—
that is, made into a thing for
others’ sexual use, rather than
seen as a person with the capacity
for independent action and
decision making.
• sexuality is inappropriately
imposed upon a person
(DeFrancisco, 2014).
I talk a lot about how badly
women are represented in
advertising, but men are
sexualized as well, whether it
is in an advertisement, on a
book cover, or other
mediums.
Pretty Little Liars
A lot of television and movies exploit sexuality and sexualize
characters, especially women, but not all of them rely heavily on
that. Revenge is an example of a female lead who doesn’t fall
into stereotypes, but is a strong woman, who doesn’t need a
man to handle things for her.
• A lot of magazines have sexualized images on the cover of women. Images of
woman with little clothing, or that focus on clothing you must wear, or things
you need as well as articles about best dressed stars and who wore it better
because it is the end of the world if two individuals in the public eye wear the
same outfit, especially to the same event. Media and magazine are teaching
people and children that these things are what is important instead of actual
important things going on in the world. Look at the covers. Being healthy is
looking “HOT” from behind? Really? A sexier body at any size… why do we
need to be sexy? And any size, but the girl on the cover is toned and thin… It
measure people’s worth only in terms of their appearance (DeFrancisco,
2014).
Why is it important who is best dressed?
“Is your decision about what to wear really a personal choice, or is it a response to
the larger cultural context that determines some fashion choices are acceptable and
others are not” (DeFrancisco, 2014)?
You don’t see men being scrutinized like this, most suits are pretty similar…
Some covers
are better--
Taylor seems
to keep it
classy.
SEXUALITY IS FREQUENTLY USED IN
PRODUCT ADVERTISING BECAUSE IT
TRIGGERS A STRONG EMOTIONAL RESPONSE
CONSISTING OF DESIRES, FANTASIES AND
APPEAL. THIS METHOD OF PERSUADING
CONSUMERS TO BUY THE PRODUCT BEING
ADVERTISED IS HAVING A NEGATIVE IMPACT
ON THE CULTURE AND THE NATION’S
H E A L T H A N D S E L F - E S T E E M .
• The sexuality based advertisements generally feature the ‘perfect’
woman or the ‘perfect’ man, or in some cases both. Consumers
connect this image with the product being sold, so in some cases the
thought process is, the consumer needs the product so they can look
or be like the person in the ad. The text by Sterin states, “We all have
a strong tendency to copy what we see others do, especially if they
appear powerful, rich, and attractive.” Insane amounts of time,
money and effort will go into trying to look like that person when in
reality it is doing more harm than good (Sterin, 2014, 2012).
Rapaille believed that
advertisements worked best
when they spoke to the
consumer’s inner desires and
fantasies. Using sexuality in
advertisements can trigger a
range of desires, from arousal to
unrealistic desires of wanting to
look like the person in the ad, or
even fantasies that you are the
person in the ad.
Killing Us Softly
• Jean Kilbourne turned a hobby of
collecting ads into a lifelong devotion
of speaking out against the negative
effects these ads have. She has
created several documentaries (Killing
Us Softly) though her career to
educate students and people about
the effects. She is very inspirational
and provides a great deal of proof and
valid information. She explains in
detail that, “advertising tells us that
what is most important about women
is how we look,” which is a strong
statement and holds true. Women are
fighting a battle that can’t be won.
Real life women are up against the
ideal woman, which is absolutely
flawless because she isn’t real. She
doesn’t have pores, lines, wrinkles,
scars, or blemishes that tell a story,
just clear of everything (Jhally, 2010).
• Women do insane things to try to
look like women in
advertisements because they
believe that is how they are
supposed to look, but everyone is
created with different genes and
are unique. In this world
uniqueness is not okay, which is
sad because that is what makes
you, you. While women try to
achieve the unrealistic goals a lot
of them fall into eating disorders,
such as anorexia and bulimia.
• There is a lot of literature that
links exposure to media-
propagated images of unrealistic
body image to eating disorders
and other health problems
(DeFrancisco, 2014).
These problems don’t just affect adults; they also affect children and young
adults. It is already difficult for children and young adults to figure out who
they are and their place in this world, but with the pressure of media, it makes
it impossible. That is why a large portion of young adults suffer from an eating
disorder, when a lot of them are probably normal and healthy to begin with.
Most ads don’t promote healthy women, and they should. The textbook by
Sterlin says, “It’s well established that seeing images of underweight women
make normal or overweight women feel bad about themselves,” which
shouldn’t be acceptable (Jhally, 2010) (Sterin, 2014, 2012).
“Although media images are not real, they have real effects on how people perceive sex and
gender” (DeFrancisco, 2014)
.
I found this image on Google as I was looking for examples of gender in media. I’m a huge
Disney fan and grew up on all of these movies, but this image makes a good point about
how gender is depicted in media that is even geared toward young children.
While Disney has some bad gender messages, one of my favorite
Disney movies does have a strong female character who goes
against gender expectations to save her father, though she has
to pretend to be a man in order to do it… In the end she gains
respect as a women.
Photoshop is a huge part of the problem, since it is rare that an untouched
photo is published; first it is edited, so there are no blemishes or pores, and so
the person is even thinner than they really are, as well as many other
altercations. The people in the pictures are no longer real once the process is
complete.
There are a handful of people in the public eye, like Jennifer Lawrence, who
speak out against what is being depicted in the media, but more need to. The
structure of media needs to change so the culture is exposed to ‘real women.’
• Jennifer Lawrence has spoken out about the media and the pressure
of dieting on multiple occasions like this quote, “But I think when it
comes to the media, the media needs to take responsibility for the
effect that it has on our younger generation, on these girls who are
watching these television shows, and picking up how to talk and how
to be cool, so then all of a sudden being funny is making fun of the girl
who's wearing an ugly dress." She doesn’t hold back and says what
she is thinking and media and the world needs more of that. This is the
type of person that people should be idolizing; she is smart, talented,
f u n n y , a n d m o s t i m p o r t a n t l y , H E A L T H Y .
I’m sure by now, you’re getting the picture. Jennifer Lawrence is
flawed like everyone else and has made mistakes, but I think she
is an amazing woman. I hope that her and others like her, will
help open people’s eyes to the negative, life altering effects the
media has on it’s viewers.
• Lorde previously took to social media
and posted a comparison of an
untouched photograph next to the
edited picture of herself with the
words, “i find this curious - two photos
from today, one edited so my skin is
perfect and one real. remember flaws
are ok :-).” Those are some powerful
words which should be advertised
instead of things like, “If your hair isn’t
beautiful, the rest hardly matters,”
which is from an ad for Pantene shown
in the documentary, Killing Us Softly 4.
Kilborne stated, “our popular culture
seems to have the ability to make
women anywhere and everywhere feel
absolutely terrible about themselves.”
Media is clearly horrible for our culture,
slaughtering self-esteem and in turn
encouraging eating disorders and
various health conditions. That isn’t
even counting the products that are
being sold to our culture with these
advertisements, which some are also
causing health problems (Lorde, 2014)
(Toomey, 2013) (Jhally, 2010) (Sterin,
2014, 2012).
Women are sold countless products to make
them beautiful, such as Revlon Colorstay
Mineral Blush, which has ingredients that are
linked to causing cancer according to
Environmental Workers Group rating for the
product. The organization assesses the
ingredients in beauty products and gives a
rating for each one and what affects using
the product can have on one’s health. Not
only does our culture have immense
pressure to use these products to be
beautiful, but some have to use them for
their career like Troian Bellisario from the
show Pretty Little Liars, displayed to the
right, who also made a powerful comment
about media and beauty. In a world where
plastic surgery in continuously increasing, it
is refreshing to see people like Troian,
Jennifer, and Lorde speaking out in hopes to
make a difference. If more people become
aware of this major flaw and speak out,
maybe the vicious cycle can be broken
(Group, 2007-2014) (Community, 2014)
(Sterin, 2014, 2012).
Text blown up that accompanied the image
Troian Bellisario posted on Instagram from the
previous slide.
I mentioned on the first slide about Troian the Environmental Workers Group. The
company created a website called EWG’s Skin Deep. Here is the description about what
they do: It's our mission at Environmental Working Group to use the power of information to
protect human health and the environment. EWG's Skin Deep database gives you practical
solutions to protect yourself and your family from everyday exposures to chemicals. We
launched Skin Deep in 2004 to create online safety profiles for cosmetics and personal care
products. Our aim is to fill in where industry and government leave off. Companies are
allowed to use almost any ingredient they wish. The U.S. government doesn't review the
safety of products before they're sold. Our staff scientists compare the ingredients on
personal care product labels and websites to information in nearly 60 toxicity and regulatory
databases. Now in its eighth year, EWG's Skin Deep database provides you with easy-to-
navigate safety ratings for a wide range of products and ingredients on the market.
Explore the site and find out more at: http://www.ewg.org/skindeep/.
This is a really great resource and it makes you think twice
about the products we are being told we need to use
according to our gender. Women’s worth is determined by
their beauty, so they need to buy makeup products to fulfill
that requirement and a lot of the products are harmful.
I was shocked by some of the
ratings of the items I use on a
daily bases. I had a natural
shampoo and conditioner
that I expected to have a low
rating because it was natural,
and it ended up being very
high. That is when I learned
that there is a difference
between natural and organic.
STOP THE BEAUTY
MADNESS
• About a year ago, I discovered a campaign called Stop the beauty Madness,
geared toward spreading awareness about beauty, women and ideals. They
created ads from stock images with blunt words, calling out the conceptions
media has on women that aren’t normally said out loud. I have already littered
some of these ads through my presentation. I think they are honest and eye-
opening. The site says, “There Comes A Time When You Have Simply Had
Enough.
Enough of the impossible standards. Enough of the "ideal" image. Most of all,
enough of the feeling of NOT ENOUGH when it comes to your own beauty.
There also comes a time when an entire culture of women have had it. When
blogs and ad campaigns and AS-IS selfie pictures start to change the rules of
the game.
That time is now. That culture is this culture,” and much, much, more. I highly
recommend you taking a look at that website found at:
http://www.stopthebeautymadness.com/.
• When I learned about this campaign, they were hosting a slam
poetry competition, which I entered. The poem I wrote and my
performance can be found on the following slides. I really felt
passionate about the topic, as I do now, so I faced my stage fright
and hate of being recorded in order to do it. I felt the message was
important enough to do that and I still do, so I’m sharing with all of
you as well.
Beauty Defined
I live in a world
Where beauty is defined by words like
TALL, SKINNY, THIN, FLAWLESS…
Where beauty is not being NORMAL
For MY OWN body type.
I must fit into a body type that only a very small percentage of
the population possesses.
In middle school I was asked if I was anorexic because I was
THIN.
The shocking words coming from people so young,
Because that had become a NORM in our world.
Now I’m twenty-five and am no longer super thin,
I’ve gained weight and have meat and curves on my BODY,
Which makes me feel self-conscious in my own SKIN.
I’m surrounded by ads telling me what I NEED to be
BEAUTIFUL.
SHINY HAIR, Makeup to cover my FLAWS, acne treatment to
get rid of my BLEMISHES, and WEIGHT LOSS pills.
They LEAVE OUT how these products will affect my HEALTH
long-term,
Or even my SELF-ESTEEM.
I remember being embarrassed growing up,
Because I didn’t have the COOL name brand clothing others
had.
All I wanted to do was fit in,
But now I know it is far better to STAND OUT.
Ads depict the PERFECT WOMAN; who has been Photo
shopped so she isn’t even REAL,
But I’m made to BELIEVE I should look like that,
Instead of all five-feet one hundred and twenty pounds of
myself.
I have been taught by the media,
That it is not okay to look like I do.
It is not beautiful to have PORES,
Or scars that tell stories.
The media has created a SICKNESS.
A DISEASE,
That has turned into a WIDE-SPREAD epidemic.
We need to STOP THE BEAUTY MADNESS,
Before it is TOO LATE.
Stop labeling people,
Because being DIFFERENT is what makes each of us beautiful.
My appearance doesn’t make me who I am,
My CHARACTER, PASSIONS and INTERESTS do.
Don’t DEFINE me by what I look like,
But instead by what I do.
I’m a WRITER, ARTIST, WIFE, POET, FRIEND, ARCHER,
SOCCER-PLAYER, MUSIC LOVER…
It is time to TEACH our children to be comfortable in their own skin,
Encourage being HEALTHY,
instead of setting unrealistic standards,
So people resort to becoming ANOREXIC or BULIMIC,
Just to be SKINNY.
Revel in the beauty of FLAWS,
Instead of getting plastic surgery for SOMEONE ELSE’S idea of
beauty.
When we give into these ideals we are losing pieces of ourselves,
And eventually there won’t be anything Left.
I don’t know about you,
But I don’t want to be a BARBIE,
I just want to be MYSELF.
© Christie (Cote) Omodeo
July 15, 2014
My Slam Poem performance that I entered into
the #StopTheBeautyMadness contest.
If you have trouble playing the video, it can be found here: https://youtu.be/40Vaqx5IqpY
Stop being passive
• oppositional gaze is to be an active participant in media discourse
about gender, instead of a passive recipient of it, one must possess
a vocabulary with which to critically discuss the content and the
gaze. One cannot engage in creative readings of media unless one
knows such readings are necessary and possible.
• Don’t just accept things because that is how they are, become
aware and challenge them. Make sure you are doing/buying
something, dressing or whatever for you, not because influences
are telling you to.
Conclusion
• Kilbourne said the media and its impact has only gotten worse since she
began her career, spreading awareness and wanting to make a difference. For
the good of our culture, health, and self-esteem the media needs to change. It
has created a toxic environment for our culture. Sexuality isn’t a bad thing,
but when it is being used in advertisements it has a significant negative
widespread cultural impact on the nation’s health and self-esteem.
• It is important to be aware of how gender is portrayed in media, especially as
consumers, so we can stop being passive consumers and be active about
what is important instead of feeding into the unhealthy trap that is gender in
media.
• Using the media in promoting gender sensitive media productions is crucial in
improving social gender relations. If media is to change the portrayal of
women by projecting positive images of them in media productions, it will
lead to improved gender relations in society (Tapfumaneyi & Rupande , 2013).
• Through examining gender in media I found endless examples of how both
genders are overly sexualized, and media heavily influences what it means to
be a man or women. There are also heavy ramifications because of the
intense media influence on gender. This subject is huge with a seemingly
endless amount of information, but limited awareness.
Works Cited
• Community, B. F. (2014, March). Troian Bellisario Has A Refreshing And Valuable Message About True Beauty For Her Pretty
Little Fans. Retrieved June 3, 2014, from Buzz Feed Community: http://www.buzzfeed.com/monicab22/troian-bellisario-
has-a-refreshing-and-valuable-me-e2jd
• DeFrancisco, V. P. (2014). Gender in Communication: A critical Introduction (Second ed.). SAGE Publications, INC.
• Group, E. W. (2007-2014). Retrieved June 4, 2014, from EWG's Skin Deep: http://www.ewg.org/
• Jhally, S. (Director). (2010). Killing US Softly 4 [Motion Picture].
• Lorde. (2014, March 30). Retrieved June 4, 2014, from Twitter:
https://twitter.com/lordemusic/statuses/450460437998747650
• Sterin, J. C. (2014, 2012). Mass Media Revolution. Pearson Education, Inc.
• Tapfumaneyi, K. D., & Rupande , G. (2013). The portrayal of gender relations in the media: Towards a gender sensitive
media. International journal of advanced research (Indore) , 1 (5), 571-578.
• Toomey, A. (2013, December). Retrieved June 3, 2014, from E Online: http://www.eonline.com/news/491699/jennifer-
lawrence-talks-body-image-it-should-be-illegal-to-call-someone-fat
• **Images were found through Google images. No copyright infringement intended.

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Gender Stereotyping in Media

  • 1. By: Christie E. Omodeo GENDER IN MEDIA
  • 2. MEDIA: prints, paintings, television, movies, radio, newspapers, comics, comix, novels, zines, magazines, CDs, MP3s,podcasts, video games, blogs, videos, and Tweets and more.
  • 3. Introduction • I chose to explore gender in media because the subject interests me and has caught my attention on more than one occasion. When reading the text and taking notice in media I view, I become animated and passionate about the subject and how much I abhor how gender is depicted in the media and the influence it has on everyone, especially children and young adults who are trying to find their way in this world and discovering who they are. • Men and Women are constantly being sexualized on television, movies, book covers, advertisements and other forms of media. Women are objectified and degraded to sell products and onlookers are lead to believe it is normal behavior and given unrealistic expectations to attempt to achieve. How gender is depicted in media is a problem that seems to only be getting worse, not better. More attention needs to be put on how wrong gender is being portrayed in media, which is why I chose to research this topic and present it. Knowledge about this furthers understanding about gender in communication because we are surrounded by media, which communicated all of these things to us constantly. Gaining understanding, knowledge, and having our eyes open to what media is exposing us to will help us be able to dismiss and make our own decisions and choices regarding gender. It will also help us communicate about gender and avoid falling into the many oppressive boxes media puts gender in.
  • 4. • Gender is when women and men are socialized for their roles that their cultures have prescribed them. Gender focuses on the socio-cultural elements of male and female role expectations. Gender roles refer to sets of culturally defined character traits labeled as “masculine” and “feminine”. Gender refers to socially learned behavior and expectations that distinguish masculinity and femininity. • Gender Equality is when women and men have equal conditions for realizing their full human rights and potential to contribute to national, political, economic, social and cultural development and benefit equally from the result. Attaining gender equality requires recognition that current social, economic, cultural and political systems are gendered. • Femininity is “acquired and reproduced through socialization and the development of self concept” Women are expected to be emotionally expressive, dependent, passive, cooperative, warm and accepting a subordinate status in marriage and employment. Competitiveness, violence and anger are attributes which are largely regarded as being unfeminine and not tolerated as female behavior(Tapfumaneyi & Rupande , 2013).
  • 5. media influence how people dress, what they eat, what they look like, the games they play, the music they listen to, and the entertainment they watch. Media convey these messages in two ways: 1. In the message content of the television shows, magazine articles, news items, music, and movies 2. In the advertising that surrounds these messages. Media create false consciousness, making people believe they exert control over what they view (and what they think about what they view) when in reality they have little or no control (DeFrancisco, 2014). MEDIA
  • 6.
  • 7.
  • 8. • Media has defined how females and males should look and act. Stereotypes play a huge role in this. Though advertisements, performers, actors and actresses, the standard male should be masculine, dominant, physically fit, has abs, handsome and so on like depicted in the image on the previous slide. The standard women is feminine, soft, pretty, treated as property, objectified, should be submissive, thin, have large breasts and so on, again as described in the image on the previous slide. Because of the heavy usage of these types of individuals in media, what is actually a normal body type for either gender is not acceptable, so everyone who doesn’t process the unattainable image/ especially for women, doesn’t measure up and is deemed unworthy. Women are often represented negatively thereby promoting negative stereotypes about them (Tapfumaneyi & Rupande , 2013).
  • 9.
  • 10.
  • 11. Stereotypes • A stereotype is an oversimplified image or idea of a specific type of person or thing. • A Stereotype threat occurs when a group is informed of a stereotype and then the group’s performance is affected by the stereotype. Stereotypes are everywhere, and all of us will come up against them more than once (DeFrancisco, 2014) . • Gender stereotypes vary on four dimensions: traits, role behaviors, physical characteristics, and occupations (Tapfumaneyi & Rupande , 2013).
  • 12. Mass mediated images construct an understanding of gender in which feminine women are physically passive and ineffective and masculine men are physically active and capable (DeFrancisco, 2014).
  • 13. • Objectification occurs when people are viewed as objects existing solely for the pleasure of the viewer, rather than as agents capable of action. The person being objectified often is reduced to body parts: breasts, genitalia, muscles, curves, buttocks, and hair. The person is no longer human but commodified—turned into a market commodity like other inanimate products, free to be bought and fondled (even if only by others’ eyes). • Self-objectification occurs when people internalize the objectifier’s view of their body and “participate in their own objectification” by seeking to exert a limited power linked to their ability to attract the gaze of others. This happens all of the time; girls or women wear low cut shirts to show off cleavage to catch attention, or wear short shorts that show their butt cheeks. Stars dress this way, as well as actresses (DeFrancisco, 2014) .
  • 14. • Researchers have linked objectification to low self-esteem, depression, anxiety, disordered eating, muscle dysmorphia, and suicide, particularly for women, but also for puberty-aged children, including boys (DeFrancisco, 2014).
  • 15. • Commodification is the selling of cultural, sexual, or gender difference in a way that supports institutionalized discrimination. Women's bodies are constantly used in ads to sell things. They are turned into things and objectified. This doesn't tend to happy to men as much. When men appear in ads they are centered, and in a strong pose, while woman are generally appearing seductive and/or lower than the man (DeFrancisco, 2014).
  • 16. The woman has almost no clothing, yet the man is fully clothed, and the only skin showing is his face and hands…
  • 17.
  • 18.
  • 19.
  • 20. A fine example of a woman’s worth in advertisement. Sexual innuendoes, super appropriate, don’t you think?
  • 21. A lot of advertisements don’t even show a women’s whole body; they just focus on the most important parts of her. A woman’s worth is seen as her butt, between her legs, and her breasts.
  • 22.
  • 23.
  • 24.
  • 25. Women are posed lower to the ground than men showing men are dominant and women are submissive.
  • 26. Sexualization occurs when: • a person’s value comes only from his or her sexual appeal or behavior, to the • exclusion of other characteristics; • a person is held to a standard that equates physical attractiveness (narrowly defined) with being sexy; • a person is sexually objectified— that is, made into a thing for others’ sexual use, rather than seen as a person with the capacity for independent action and decision making. • sexuality is inappropriately imposed upon a person (DeFrancisco, 2014).
  • 27. I talk a lot about how badly women are represented in advertising, but men are sexualized as well, whether it is in an advertisement, on a book cover, or other mediums.
  • 28.
  • 29.
  • 31. A lot of television and movies exploit sexuality and sexualize characters, especially women, but not all of them rely heavily on that. Revenge is an example of a female lead who doesn’t fall into stereotypes, but is a strong woman, who doesn’t need a man to handle things for her.
  • 32.
  • 33. • A lot of magazines have sexualized images on the cover of women. Images of woman with little clothing, or that focus on clothing you must wear, or things you need as well as articles about best dressed stars and who wore it better because it is the end of the world if two individuals in the public eye wear the same outfit, especially to the same event. Media and magazine are teaching people and children that these things are what is important instead of actual important things going on in the world. Look at the covers. Being healthy is looking “HOT” from behind? Really? A sexier body at any size… why do we need to be sexy? And any size, but the girl on the cover is toned and thin… It measure people’s worth only in terms of their appearance (DeFrancisco, 2014).
  • 34.
  • 35. Why is it important who is best dressed? “Is your decision about what to wear really a personal choice, or is it a response to the larger cultural context that determines some fashion choices are acceptable and others are not” (DeFrancisco, 2014)?
  • 36. You don’t see men being scrutinized like this, most suits are pretty similar…
  • 37. Some covers are better-- Taylor seems to keep it classy.
  • 38. SEXUALITY IS FREQUENTLY USED IN PRODUCT ADVERTISING BECAUSE IT TRIGGERS A STRONG EMOTIONAL RESPONSE CONSISTING OF DESIRES, FANTASIES AND APPEAL. THIS METHOD OF PERSUADING CONSUMERS TO BUY THE PRODUCT BEING ADVERTISED IS HAVING A NEGATIVE IMPACT ON THE CULTURE AND THE NATION’S H E A L T H A N D S E L F - E S T E E M .
  • 39. • The sexuality based advertisements generally feature the ‘perfect’ woman or the ‘perfect’ man, or in some cases both. Consumers connect this image with the product being sold, so in some cases the thought process is, the consumer needs the product so they can look or be like the person in the ad. The text by Sterin states, “We all have a strong tendency to copy what we see others do, especially if they appear powerful, rich, and attractive.” Insane amounts of time, money and effort will go into trying to look like that person when in reality it is doing more harm than good (Sterin, 2014, 2012). Rapaille believed that advertisements worked best when they spoke to the consumer’s inner desires and fantasies. Using sexuality in advertisements can trigger a range of desires, from arousal to unrealistic desires of wanting to look like the person in the ad, or even fantasies that you are the person in the ad.
  • 40. Killing Us Softly • Jean Kilbourne turned a hobby of collecting ads into a lifelong devotion of speaking out against the negative effects these ads have. She has created several documentaries (Killing Us Softly) though her career to educate students and people about the effects. She is very inspirational and provides a great deal of proof and valid information. She explains in detail that, “advertising tells us that what is most important about women is how we look,” which is a strong statement and holds true. Women are fighting a battle that can’t be won. Real life women are up against the ideal woman, which is absolutely flawless because she isn’t real. She doesn’t have pores, lines, wrinkles, scars, or blemishes that tell a story, just clear of everything (Jhally, 2010).
  • 41. • Women do insane things to try to look like women in advertisements because they believe that is how they are supposed to look, but everyone is created with different genes and are unique. In this world uniqueness is not okay, which is sad because that is what makes you, you. While women try to achieve the unrealistic goals a lot of them fall into eating disorders, such as anorexia and bulimia. • There is a lot of literature that links exposure to media- propagated images of unrealistic body image to eating disorders and other health problems (DeFrancisco, 2014).
  • 42.
  • 43.
  • 44.
  • 45.
  • 46. These problems don’t just affect adults; they also affect children and young adults. It is already difficult for children and young adults to figure out who they are and their place in this world, but with the pressure of media, it makes it impossible. That is why a large portion of young adults suffer from an eating disorder, when a lot of them are probably normal and healthy to begin with. Most ads don’t promote healthy women, and they should. The textbook by Sterlin says, “It’s well established that seeing images of underweight women make normal or overweight women feel bad about themselves,” which shouldn’t be acceptable (Jhally, 2010) (Sterin, 2014, 2012).
  • 47. “Although media images are not real, they have real effects on how people perceive sex and gender” (DeFrancisco, 2014) .
  • 48. I found this image on Google as I was looking for examples of gender in media. I’m a huge Disney fan and grew up on all of these movies, but this image makes a good point about how gender is depicted in media that is even geared toward young children.
  • 49. While Disney has some bad gender messages, one of my favorite Disney movies does have a strong female character who goes against gender expectations to save her father, though she has to pretend to be a man in order to do it… In the end she gains respect as a women.
  • 50. Photoshop is a huge part of the problem, since it is rare that an untouched photo is published; first it is edited, so there are no blemishes or pores, and so the person is even thinner than they really are, as well as many other altercations. The people in the pictures are no longer real once the process is complete.
  • 51. There are a handful of people in the public eye, like Jennifer Lawrence, who speak out against what is being depicted in the media, but more need to. The structure of media needs to change so the culture is exposed to ‘real women.’
  • 52. • Jennifer Lawrence has spoken out about the media and the pressure of dieting on multiple occasions like this quote, “But I think when it comes to the media, the media needs to take responsibility for the effect that it has on our younger generation, on these girls who are watching these television shows, and picking up how to talk and how to be cool, so then all of a sudden being funny is making fun of the girl who's wearing an ugly dress." She doesn’t hold back and says what she is thinking and media and the world needs more of that. This is the type of person that people should be idolizing; she is smart, talented, f u n n y , a n d m o s t i m p o r t a n t l y , H E A L T H Y .
  • 53.
  • 54.
  • 55.
  • 56.
  • 57. I’m sure by now, you’re getting the picture. Jennifer Lawrence is flawed like everyone else and has made mistakes, but I think she is an amazing woman. I hope that her and others like her, will help open people’s eyes to the negative, life altering effects the media has on it’s viewers.
  • 58.
  • 59. • Lorde previously took to social media and posted a comparison of an untouched photograph next to the edited picture of herself with the words, “i find this curious - two photos from today, one edited so my skin is perfect and one real. remember flaws are ok :-).” Those are some powerful words which should be advertised instead of things like, “If your hair isn’t beautiful, the rest hardly matters,” which is from an ad for Pantene shown in the documentary, Killing Us Softly 4. Kilborne stated, “our popular culture seems to have the ability to make women anywhere and everywhere feel absolutely terrible about themselves.” Media is clearly horrible for our culture, slaughtering self-esteem and in turn encouraging eating disorders and various health conditions. That isn’t even counting the products that are being sold to our culture with these advertisements, which some are also causing health problems (Lorde, 2014) (Toomey, 2013) (Jhally, 2010) (Sterin, 2014, 2012).
  • 60. Women are sold countless products to make them beautiful, such as Revlon Colorstay Mineral Blush, which has ingredients that are linked to causing cancer according to Environmental Workers Group rating for the product. The organization assesses the ingredients in beauty products and gives a rating for each one and what affects using the product can have on one’s health. Not only does our culture have immense pressure to use these products to be beautiful, but some have to use them for their career like Troian Bellisario from the show Pretty Little Liars, displayed to the right, who also made a powerful comment about media and beauty. In a world where plastic surgery in continuously increasing, it is refreshing to see people like Troian, Jennifer, and Lorde speaking out in hopes to make a difference. If more people become aware of this major flaw and speak out, maybe the vicious cycle can be broken (Group, 2007-2014) (Community, 2014) (Sterin, 2014, 2012).
  • 61. Text blown up that accompanied the image Troian Bellisario posted on Instagram from the previous slide.
  • 62. I mentioned on the first slide about Troian the Environmental Workers Group. The company created a website called EWG’s Skin Deep. Here is the description about what they do: It's our mission at Environmental Working Group to use the power of information to protect human health and the environment. EWG's Skin Deep database gives you practical solutions to protect yourself and your family from everyday exposures to chemicals. We launched Skin Deep in 2004 to create online safety profiles for cosmetics and personal care products. Our aim is to fill in where industry and government leave off. Companies are allowed to use almost any ingredient they wish. The U.S. government doesn't review the safety of products before they're sold. Our staff scientists compare the ingredients on personal care product labels and websites to information in nearly 60 toxicity and regulatory databases. Now in its eighth year, EWG's Skin Deep database provides you with easy-to- navigate safety ratings for a wide range of products and ingredients on the market. Explore the site and find out more at: http://www.ewg.org/skindeep/.
  • 63. This is a really great resource and it makes you think twice about the products we are being told we need to use according to our gender. Women’s worth is determined by their beauty, so they need to buy makeup products to fulfill that requirement and a lot of the products are harmful.
  • 64. I was shocked by some of the ratings of the items I use on a daily bases. I had a natural shampoo and conditioner that I expected to have a low rating because it was natural, and it ended up being very high. That is when I learned that there is a difference between natural and organic.
  • 66. • About a year ago, I discovered a campaign called Stop the beauty Madness, geared toward spreading awareness about beauty, women and ideals. They created ads from stock images with blunt words, calling out the conceptions media has on women that aren’t normally said out loud. I have already littered some of these ads through my presentation. I think they are honest and eye- opening. The site says, “There Comes A Time When You Have Simply Had Enough. Enough of the impossible standards. Enough of the "ideal" image. Most of all, enough of the feeling of NOT ENOUGH when it comes to your own beauty. There also comes a time when an entire culture of women have had it. When blogs and ad campaigns and AS-IS selfie pictures start to change the rules of the game. That time is now. That culture is this culture,” and much, much, more. I highly recommend you taking a look at that website found at: http://www.stopthebeautymadness.com/.
  • 67. • When I learned about this campaign, they were hosting a slam poetry competition, which I entered. The poem I wrote and my performance can be found on the following slides. I really felt passionate about the topic, as I do now, so I faced my stage fright and hate of being recorded in order to do it. I felt the message was important enough to do that and I still do, so I’m sharing with all of you as well.
  • 68. Beauty Defined I live in a world Where beauty is defined by words like TALL, SKINNY, THIN, FLAWLESS… Where beauty is not being NORMAL For MY OWN body type. I must fit into a body type that only a very small percentage of the population possesses. In middle school I was asked if I was anorexic because I was THIN. The shocking words coming from people so young, Because that had become a NORM in our world. Now I’m twenty-five and am no longer super thin, I’ve gained weight and have meat and curves on my BODY, Which makes me feel self-conscious in my own SKIN. I’m surrounded by ads telling me what I NEED to be BEAUTIFUL. SHINY HAIR, Makeup to cover my FLAWS, acne treatment to get rid of my BLEMISHES, and WEIGHT LOSS pills. They LEAVE OUT how these products will affect my HEALTH long-term, Or even my SELF-ESTEEM. I remember being embarrassed growing up, Because I didn’t have the COOL name brand clothing others had. All I wanted to do was fit in, But now I know it is far better to STAND OUT. Ads depict the PERFECT WOMAN; who has been Photo shopped so she isn’t even REAL, But I’m made to BELIEVE I should look like that, Instead of all five-feet one hundred and twenty pounds of myself. I have been taught by the media, That it is not okay to look like I do. It is not beautiful to have PORES, Or scars that tell stories. The media has created a SICKNESS. A DISEASE, That has turned into a WIDE-SPREAD epidemic. We need to STOP THE BEAUTY MADNESS, Before it is TOO LATE. Stop labeling people, Because being DIFFERENT is what makes each of us beautiful. My appearance doesn’t make me who I am, My CHARACTER, PASSIONS and INTERESTS do. Don’t DEFINE me by what I look like, But instead by what I do. I’m a WRITER, ARTIST, WIFE, POET, FRIEND, ARCHER, SOCCER-PLAYER, MUSIC LOVER…
  • 69. It is time to TEACH our children to be comfortable in their own skin, Encourage being HEALTHY, instead of setting unrealistic standards, So people resort to becoming ANOREXIC or BULIMIC, Just to be SKINNY. Revel in the beauty of FLAWS, Instead of getting plastic surgery for SOMEONE ELSE’S idea of beauty. When we give into these ideals we are losing pieces of ourselves, And eventually there won’t be anything Left. I don’t know about you, But I don’t want to be a BARBIE, I just want to be MYSELF. © Christie (Cote) Omodeo July 15, 2014
  • 70. My Slam Poem performance that I entered into the #StopTheBeautyMadness contest. If you have trouble playing the video, it can be found here: https://youtu.be/40Vaqx5IqpY
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  • 74. Stop being passive • oppositional gaze is to be an active participant in media discourse about gender, instead of a passive recipient of it, one must possess a vocabulary with which to critically discuss the content and the gaze. One cannot engage in creative readings of media unless one knows such readings are necessary and possible. • Don’t just accept things because that is how they are, become aware and challenge them. Make sure you are doing/buying something, dressing or whatever for you, not because influences are telling you to.
  • 75. Conclusion • Kilbourne said the media and its impact has only gotten worse since she began her career, spreading awareness and wanting to make a difference. For the good of our culture, health, and self-esteem the media needs to change. It has created a toxic environment for our culture. Sexuality isn’t a bad thing, but when it is being used in advertisements it has a significant negative widespread cultural impact on the nation’s health and self-esteem. • It is important to be aware of how gender is portrayed in media, especially as consumers, so we can stop being passive consumers and be active about what is important instead of feeding into the unhealthy trap that is gender in media. • Using the media in promoting gender sensitive media productions is crucial in improving social gender relations. If media is to change the portrayal of women by projecting positive images of them in media productions, it will lead to improved gender relations in society (Tapfumaneyi & Rupande , 2013). • Through examining gender in media I found endless examples of how both genders are overly sexualized, and media heavily influences what it means to be a man or women. There are also heavy ramifications because of the intense media influence on gender. This subject is huge with a seemingly endless amount of information, but limited awareness.
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  • 77. Works Cited • Community, B. F. (2014, March). Troian Bellisario Has A Refreshing And Valuable Message About True Beauty For Her Pretty Little Fans. Retrieved June 3, 2014, from Buzz Feed Community: http://www.buzzfeed.com/monicab22/troian-bellisario- has-a-refreshing-and-valuable-me-e2jd • DeFrancisco, V. P. (2014). Gender in Communication: A critical Introduction (Second ed.). SAGE Publications, INC. • Group, E. W. (2007-2014). Retrieved June 4, 2014, from EWG's Skin Deep: http://www.ewg.org/ • Jhally, S. (Director). (2010). Killing US Softly 4 [Motion Picture]. • Lorde. (2014, March 30). Retrieved June 4, 2014, from Twitter: https://twitter.com/lordemusic/statuses/450460437998747650 • Sterin, J. C. (2014, 2012). Mass Media Revolution. Pearson Education, Inc. • Tapfumaneyi, K. D., & Rupande , G. (2013). The portrayal of gender relations in the media: Towards a gender sensitive media. International journal of advanced research (Indore) , 1 (5), 571-578. • Toomey, A. (2013, December). Retrieved June 3, 2014, from E Online: http://www.eonline.com/news/491699/jennifer- lawrence-talks-body-image-it-should-be-illegal-to-call-someone-fat • **Images were found through Google images. No copyright infringement intended.