Website review: No wonder our perception of beauty ...

Lilybelle Lilybelle discovered this in Psychology 96 reviews since Oct 17, 2006
icon tagspsychology, video, beauty digital-karma.org/film/commercials/no-wonder-...

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Thumbs up Reviews of this website

Lilybelle discovered 21 months ago
A valuable peek into reality
alexion rated 9 months ago
Can they make me look a little like Brad Pitt :) Superb
ingamer rated 10 months ago
what "beauty" is now defined as...
MargoSchwartz rated 10 months ago
I know that photoshop is done intensely on models, but when her neck got lengthened, that freaked me out! Ahh...what a tangled web we weave, when first we practice to deceive.
kathysart rated 10 months ago
Thanks to Dove.. helping women be women, not plastic mannequins. Mannequins defined: mannequin |ˈmanikən| noun a dummy used to display clothes in a store window. * chiefly historical a young woman or man employed to show clothes to customers. ORIGIN mid 18th cent.: from French, from Dutch (see manikin ).USAGE In English usage, the word mannequin occurs much more frequently than any of its relatives manakin, manikin, and mannikin. The source for all four words is the Middle Dutch mannekijn (modern Dutch manneken) `little man,' `little doll.' Mannequin is the French spelling from this Dutch source. One of its French meanings, dating from about 1830, is `a young woman hired to model clothes' (even though the word means `little man '). This sense--still current, but rare in English--first appeared in 1902. The far more common sense of `a life-size jointed figure or dummy used for displaying clothes' is first recorded in 1939. Manikin has had the sense `little man' (often contemptuous) since the mid 16th century, when it was sometimes spelled manakin (as it appeared in Shakespeare's Twelfth Night, as a term of abuse). Manikin's sense of `an artist's lay figure' also dates from the mid 16th century (first recorded with the Dutch spelling manneken). To confuse matters further, in modern usage the words manakin and mannikin refer to birds of two unrelated families. The history of these bird names is somewhat obscure. Manakin may have come from the Portuguese manaquim `mannikin,' a variant of manequim `mannequin.' Mannikin may have come directly from the source of the Portuguese words, the Middle Dutch mannekijn. ~~*~~
xineann rated 10 months ago
Makes me feel better....
frogwalloper rated 10 months ago
Come back, real person!
kymmie1894 rated 10 months ago
Wow!! Fabulous truth!
toriahennesey rated 11 months ago
Worth a watch.
Christovir rated 12 months ago
It's a valuable message, but there is more to this advert than is apparent. See http://exeterra.blogspot.com/2007/04/on-beauty.html for a surprising twist about the people who produced this. And just so people know, most research into body image shows most men prefer women who are larger than those typically shown in the media.
Tath rated 12 months ago
man idea of beauty sure is distorted...!
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