tweenymama
tweenymama
tweenymama

I'll gladly pay more if they will stop putting the Money Card-ashians on the cover.

Ya, I kinda tried to take the high road on these type articles. I attempted to provide evidence, experience, and a different perspective for situations like this, and while the response from commenters was quite positive, it appears the authors just don't care.

I understand. This stuff generates clicks (money) for the

Yeah, kind of offensive story concept without actual supporting evidence. Without an un-edited version of photo, it's not even clear what part IS photoshopped. What if she's just a different looking lady? Cool, now her modeling career is fucked because there's a news story about how unnatural she looks and how

Maybe, if Jez stopped talking about thigh gaps, some people would stop caring about thigh gaps. Even talking about how companies are (badly) photoshopping them in and how that's a bad thing, is perpetuating the notion that they're a good thing to have. Can we go maybe a week without a thigh gap story?

That's a totally normal/natural shape for legs. I can do the exact same thing with my legs. Not a story, Jezebel.

"...of course, there are challenges, but it's not like being on set." Right! Any parent at a regular job wouldn't have a team of people hovering around them and their children at all times, fulfilling every need, wish and demand for the two fucking weeks they're working in Wisconsin.

She's our generation's Marie Antoinette isn't she.

"I think it's different when you have an office job because it's routine and you know you can do all the stuff in the morning, and then you come home in the evening," she said. "When you're shooting a movie, they're like, 'We need you to go to Wisconsin for two weeks,' and then you work 14 hours a day, and that

What disgusts me the most is the false promise of reconciliation and forgiveness. To be odds with her parents and finally think she was getting peace was a cruel manipulation of trust. What a world we live in when it's a deadly move to go back home. So sad.

I didn't even have to read the text to determine that the woman in question was Indian. I just knew.

But we should be accepting of all cultures, even ones that treat women like literal property!

But.. that is what a portfolio is for. (Sorry I feel like I keep saying this here.)

For creative jobs? Yes, that is common. Especially if you are early in your career and don't have a strong portfolio. Or if it's a niche type of industry where they need to see how you'd apply your skills.

We've had to do it in the software business for the good jobs for a while. Have a portfolio, be prepared to show your skills. *shrug* seems pretty straightforward to me.

Well it is a still picture.

Also, I forgot to add, there should have been more about her career as an activist, and less about her being a bunny.

I agree with you. IDK if I sound like an asshole or not, but I had no idea Steinem was regarded for her looks. It's not that she is unattractive, it's just that I always thought of her as a pro-feminist policy pusher. Even if early in her career she did some journalism on the objectification of women, and had to go

She looks great, more power to her. This is what happens when you don't have children. There is a particular kind of worry that is not etched on her. Granted, having Christian Bale as a stepson might be aggravating at times, but that doesn't compete with insomnia and teenagers.

Tops on the no-shit list: "Wealthy Woman Looks Amaaaazing at Age 60 (or 70 or 80)". Well, yeah. She has the means to afford regular beauty maintenance (massages, facials, "nips and tucks", hair dye that doesn't come out of a box...) so of course she's going to look better than most of the rest of us plebes at a more

I know Gloria Steinem's looks are Beside The Point, but the fact that she is so attractive is why the "ugly feminist" stereotype always baffled me.