Ditch the ads, upload images and much more - upgrade today from 5.95/month!
Read Contests Groups Learn Forums Store Help
 

Some people are @$$holes

Just read this.

I was reading this article on MSN today:

 

Scott Schuman is prowling SoHo, camera over his shoulder, looking for subjects for his photo blog of street fashion. He spots a promising model: a girl with long, shiny hair, wearing high heels midday on a Saturday—two signs, he says, of a fashionista. But ultimately he decides her look is "a little too Nordstrom." Instead, he shoots a bearded man wearing a brown puffer coat that cinches at the waist. The image, when posted on Schuman's blog, The Sartorialist, draws more than 70 comments about the coat: a good response, but hardly unusual—a single photo on the site can attract posts from hundreds of fashion-savvy commenters, who hotly debate the length of a jacket cuff or the fold of a pocket square.

 

 

 

Schuman is part of a growing group of bloggers posting pictures of fashion as worn by real people around the world. (Schuman needn't be too worried about the competition: he has a monthly page in GQ and two book deals in the works, and last week's opening of a show of images from his blog drew a line down the block.) Bloggers say their sites (Street Peeper, Last Night's Party, Fashionista and Stylesight, to name a few) are both creating and responding to interest in street fashion. "The Look Book," a collection of photographs of fashion-conscious New Yorkers originally published in New York Magazine, came out last September, and one of its subjects is already a star: André J., a bearded cross-dresser, graced the November cover of French Vogue. Merlin Bronques, who posts photos of trendy clubgoers on his blog, Last Night's Party, has shot his friends for ads for Ben Sherman and Converse. Now real people are even strutting the catwalk—the swimwear company Lycra plucked 20 women of all shapes and sizes off the beach to model their suits at last year's Miami Swim Fashion Week.

 

 

 

Fashion-industry folks say the trend of using real people to sell clothes attests to a fatigue with skinny, expressionless models in ads and on runways. As proof, they point to the negative publicity surrounding the painfully thin models at last spring's Fashion Week. "I definitely think there's some backlash amongst people who see fashion shows, then read stories about how the models have to smoke themselves to death and only drink lemon water for six weeks," says Simon Rogers, head of Ugly New York, a casting agency for "real"-looking models. "People would like to see somebody up there who reflects how people on the street really look." (The TV show "Ugly Betty" echoed this sentiment in a recent episode where Betty staged an "alternative" fashion show with nonprofessional models.) Now, with New York's Fall 2008 Fashion Week arriving this week, fashion watchers say we may begin to see subtle indications of the trend on the runway: the models will still be thin and gorgeous, but they may look more like thin, gorgeous versions of real people than like stereotypical models. "In the '80s and '90s, models were expected to look glamorous and clean, like Niki Taylor and Christy Turlington," says Faran Krentcil, former editor of Fashionista. "Now people want girls wearing concert T shirts and jeans they've patched themselves—girls who have an appeal that goes beyond how pretty they are." In other words, the demand is for models who exude personal style, whether they're wearing their own ratty duds or haute couture.

 

 

 

Much of this interest in real-looking models is driven by the Internet, which has democratized the once rarefied world of high fashion. "Fashion shows used to be for a very small number of people, very exclusive," says "Look Book" editor Amy Larocca. "Now you can see them an hour later on the Internet. Everyone can be involved." Larocca also links the increased accessibility of fashion to the number of high-end designers creating affordable lines for mass-market stores, such as Isaac Mizrahi's collection for Target, as well as reality shows such as "Project Runway."

 

 

Clothing companies are responding to the trend by seeking real people who look at home in the clothes being sold. "With the photos for Ben Sherman, I put the clothes on friends I knew who already wore Ben Sherman," says photo-blogger Bronques. It helps, of course, that Bronques happens to have some pretty great-looking friends. "The most successful brands know how to fuse what's happening on the street with their product," says Krentcil. "But if you don't look good in clothes, you're not going to sell them." And herein lies the sticking point: even designers who would embrace real models on runways face obstacles. Designers typically can make their clothes for the shows in only one or two sizes, negating the possibility of showing them on a range of body types. Rogers of Ugly New York says he's had inquiries about his models for Fashion Week but had no confirmed bookings yet.

Still, there's no denying that change is in the air. While Ben Sherman won't be showing at fashion week, Dana Dynamite, VP of marketing, says the brand is enthusiastic about using real models on catwalks in the future. Response to the ads, she says, has made her a believer: "People on blogs are saying we're so much cooler now that we did this."

 

 

And somebody posted this on the blog:

 

 

Posted By: FATISDISGUSTING @ 01/28/2008 3:34:18 PM

Comment: this "rise of the real people" doesnt mean for fat people to jump and rejoice(probably cant jump anyway), it isnt about you. quit looking for reasons to feel satisfaction in being fat and nasty....and unhealthy and disgusting. imagine if you just lost some weight, you would "feel" healthier and want to be active. fat people die faster, no need for debate, that simply is whats up. slim, active, healthy people who can actually use their bodies actively will outlive you. plain and simple. being fat is a choice, choose not to stuff your face, it wont make you prettier, it just adds more jelly to your already gelatenous, fat, nasty body. basic review of what we just covered: fat is nasty, quit stuffing your face, get a gym membership, fat is not cool, its disgusting. so the moral of today's discussion: im glad im thin and desirable and not fat and nasty. peace! or for you fat people, piece...of cake! lol..ha ha...whoo...good times, good times...ok im done this time. PEACE!

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Some people are just assholes, and personally, I wish this person had been born blind and mute. There are just some opinions that are OTT and completely disrespectful... I wanna give this Son of A Bitch a "slice of cake", myself.

 

 

 

 

 

Add a comment

    : Comment:

Comments


  • Freed by Mercy silver member
    January 28
    Edit | Reply
    How about a whole cake shoved in his face! I'm with you, Zach. It seems that overweight people and smokers are the only "politically correct" group others can harass and make fun of.

    We are smart, creative, witty and okay. Losing weight and keeping it off is not that easy to do.
    We can stretch and walk, do what we can, but we would injure ourselves if we do what a gym rat would do.

  • Frodofan silver member
    January 28
    Edit | Reply
    The article makes me glad. I'm not skinny but I'm not overweight either and I'd really love to see some natural looking people on the runways! I know too many people now that are just obsessed with their weight. The media has made them torture themselves to look anorexic and they think that others are fat and ugly if they don't have twiggy legs...

    The comment that person left is highly immature. It's rude and just plain idiotic. I wonder what they look like myself. Personally, I can't imagine they're very attractive and even if they are physically, they're certainly not attractive beyond that and that's what really counts!

    Some people over eat and aren't healthy and they should try to change that so that they won't be jeaprodizing their lives and hurting the people that love them, but then there's the other side... these models who are killing themselves by NOT eating.
  • that infuriates me...im fat but who gives a fuck atleast I like being me..im so annoyed by that