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Join in on this Discussion and see the pictures. Click here-> : Americans are more accepting of heavier bodies


BATMAN
01-11-2006, 03:25 PM
Thin is still in, but apparently fat is nowhere near as out as it used to be.

A survey finds America’s attitudes toward overweight people are shifting from rejection toward acceptance. Over a 20-year period, the percentage of Americans who said they find overweight people less attractive steadily dropped from 55 percent to 24 percent, the market research firm NPD Group found.

With about two-thirds of U.S. adults overweight, Americans seem more accepting of heavier body types, researchers say. The NPD survey of 1,900 people representative of the U.S. population also found other more relaxed attitudes about weight and diet.

http://msnbcmedia.msn.com/j/msnbc/Components/Photos/060111/060111_overweight_hmed_1p.widec.jpg

While body image remains a constant obsession, the national preoccupation with being thin has waned since the late 1980s and early 1990s, said the NPD’s Harry Balzer.

Those were the days when fast food chains rushed to install salad bars. In 1989, salads as a main course peaked at 10 percent of all restaurant meals. Today, those salad bars have all but vanished and salads account for just 5½ percent of main dishes.

“It turns out health is a wonderful topic to talk about,” Balzer said. “But to live that way is a real effort.”

Fewer people said they’re trying to “avoid snacking entirely” — just 26 percent in 2005, down from 45 percent in 1985 — while 75 percent said they had low-fat, no-fat or reduced fat products in the last two weeks, down from 86 percent in 1999, according to the survey.

At 5-feet-6 and 230 pounds, Lara Frater likes her body just fine and turns up her nose at trendy diets.

“I don’t beat myself up if I have a piece of cake,” said Frater, a 34-year-old New Yorker and author of “Fat Chicks Rule.”

No surprise
The survey’s findings aren’t that surprising, as attitudes about weight constantly shift, said John Cawley, associate professor at Cornell University’s College of Human Ecology.

While heavy women were idealized at times — think “Rubenesque,” a term born of 17th century painter Peter Paul Rubens’ full-figured women — corseted women with tiny waists were preferred in other eras.

“I don’t think we’re going to go back to worshipping obese women, but it’s interesting to see how attitudes change as more people become overweight,” Cawley said.

Others argue that people are merely becoming more politically correct and that bias against fat people is actually growing sharper.

“These studies don’t pick up on implicit, unconscious bias,” said Kelly Brownell, head of the Rudd Center for Food Policy and Obesity at Yale University.

“It’s like if you asked people around the country if they had racial bias. There’s a difference between what people say and what actually happens,” Brownell said.

Researchers at Cornell also found that negative attitudes about obesity persist.

The NPD study results may simply be a sign of “resignation from overweight people,” Brownell said, noting that it’s likely a majority of survey respondents are overweight.

The survey, to be published in February in the journal Rationality and Society, also found obese boys and girls were half as likely to date as normal weight kids.

At an obesity doctors meeting in 2003, a University of Liverpool study indicated that just standing next to a large woman can be bad for a guy’s image. The study had young women look at one of two pictures: One of a trim young man standing next to a svelte woman, and the other showing the same man next to a heavy woman.

When the man was shown standing by the large woman, he was rated 22 percent more negatively by the study volunteers than when he was next to the thin woman. When seen with the large woman, he was more likely to be described as miserable, depressed, weak and insecure.

Marilyn Wann, board member of the National Association to Advance Fat Acceptance, said fat people are the target of a witch hunt in a fitness-obsessed nation.

“Everyone thinks it’s OK to make fun of fatties,” said Wann, who won’t use the word “overweight” because she says it’s judgmental.

Even if people say they are more accepting of overweight people, many still yearn to be thin. The NPD survey shows the number of people who said “I would like to lose 20 pounds” jumped from 54 percent in 1985 to 61 percent last year.

meddle
01-11-2006, 11:48 PM
no wonder there are so many fat chicks in the country

ugh...

Well you're far from young, but you'll be a gooey mess when you're really old.

ComradeGiant
01-12-2006, 12:08 AM
The problem comes if you ever stop.

Nothing like flaccid muscle tissue to make your body look like Don Corleone.

jimlab
01-12-2006, 12:55 AM
the harsh reality is you have to work out harder to maintain the same level of strength you had at 20...I'm pretty much at 90% of what I had then, in terms of bench, squat, deadlift....barbell row and side laterals are actually up a littleDon't worry Mark, you've got plenty of muscle left between your ears...

aznpoopy
01-12-2006, 09:22 AM
fat white chicks = hottest girls ev4r

just grab on to those love handles and hold on for dear life

SpartanTS
01-12-2006, 09:33 AM
fat white chicks = hottest girls ev4r

just grab on to those love handles and hold on for dear life

:puke:

DarkAngelKamui
01-12-2006, 10:20 AM
fat white chicks = hottest girls ev4r

just grab on to those love handles and hold on for dear life

http://img.photobucket.com/albums/v217/DarkAngelKamui/One%20Liners%20Part%20Deux/fat-girls-give-the-best-head.jpg

aznpoopy
01-12-2006, 10:40 AM
l o l

:rofl:

Supper
01-13-2006, 09:18 AM
The problem comes if you ever stop.

Nothing like flaccid muscle tissue to make your body look like Don Corleone.
http://i14.photobucket.com/albums/a303/Sup1661/c26c32ba.jpg

BATMAN
01-13-2006, 12:32 PM
Anyone notice the surgical scar along his sternum?

It was some heart surgery for his years of steroid use.

his flab is mainly from steroid use.......

YearsOfDecay
01-13-2006, 01:16 PM
The problem comes if you ever stop.

Nothing like flaccid muscle tissue to make your body look like Don Corleone.


I can attest to that... I'm 34 now.. until i blew my arm out on a "Strive" machine, I would go to the gym 3-4 times a week. At age 32, I had the mishap on that damn machine a blew the tendon that curls over your elbow and down your forearm. I could barely lift a BEER of months afterward....

Well, two yeears later, there are Kangaroos at the zoo jealous of my "Joey"!!!!

BUT.. the good news is.. that the muscle hasn't completely deteriorated, it has memory, and as long as you keep using it to some degree, it hangs around. I started basic weight training again a few weeks ago, and my gorlfriend was shocked at how quickly the definition is comming back to by back and shoulders. (of course.. at 34, everything is creaking a LOT more than before and its going to take a LOT longer to get back in shape)

Now.. I gotta work on this freakin dunlap.....

aznpoopy
01-14-2006, 01:20 AM
wow arnold has lost it... and turned into a flabby hairy mess.

on that note, has anyone noticed how every single high school chick nowadays is fat? my 17 year old cousin and all her friends are fat. i was in the mall today buying some shoes. i don't know about other states, but in NJ, friday = mall teeny bopper night. every single high school girl in the mall was fat. i don't remember it being this way when i was in high school.

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