Media and beauty are interpretations of the human body and depictions of their bodies, so-called body images exist in their minds. Unbelievably, the media world is trying to use the image of the body to influence the individual's mind and body, whether it is good or bad. In Shari Graydon's article "How the media shapes us", the authors claim that women of all ages suffer, the media influences women, unhealthy and harmful medical problems It is the main cause of causing.
Article: The media depicts women as innocent, wrinkle-free, pore-free perfection. It is impossible to achieve perfection, but women are pursuing the emergence of the media "ideal beauty", from today's latent unbelievable women to extreme physical frustration and destructive practice today It is a surprisingly general phenomenon that becomes a catalyst in society. The social and cultural standards of women's beauty are shaping the content of our society through various forms of media communication. Women are often cursed, their value and value depend mainly on their beauty. Advertisements, movies, video games etc. should not be able to achieve substantially, by mentioning the criteria of "ideal" beauty, who should be and should be Indirectly told the woman. They are designed to allow incredible time and money to make women perfect their own beauty and feel guilty when they fail. But failure is inevitable. The media is depicted as a perfect woman with perfect, wrinkle-free, pore-free
Beauty is a ubiquitous feature that plagues young people of society today, as mainstream media make them believe that the beauty of inner is not as good as material beauty. Unfortunately, the media has been advertised about the true beauty of distortion, so it is an unhealthy observation of today's youth. Expectation for beauty is an unacceptable stereotype that creates unrealistic goals for our young people. - It is difficult to imagine a world without ideal women's expression. However, prior to the creation of the mass media, our ideas about beauty were limited to the communities in which we live. When the photograph was introduced in 1839, the real image of the face and the body was not exposed to society. The possibility that someone has a mirror during this time is very rare. But today, if they do not have a mirror, they are considered strange.