Media and girls' body image "Does this dress look strange to me?" Or "Are you overweight?" You are not alone. According to a study by Charisma magazine, I thought that 75% of women aged 13 to 35 were fat, but in fact only 25% was overweight.
The basis of this research paper is investigating the influence of mass media on the body image of adolescent girls. The media has had a very strong impact on almost all societies, especially young girls. Mass media draws an unrealistic and beautiful image. And it makes many girls to be serious and life-threatening. The girls are taking extreme measures to imitate unrealistic beliefs toward society towards beauty. As a result, diet pills, eating disorders, and cosmetic surgery are becoming too common for adolescent girls. This research report shows the latest information on this issue and some possible solutions.
Today, the standard of beauty is very high, it is only to raise this standard that you can easily access celebrity images with perfect bodies on social media platform. According to the 2010 survey by the US Girl Scouts, 88% of young girls believe that the media is putting a lot of pressure on them, 65% believe that the body image of the media fashion industry is too thin. The media increases the likelihood of a bad image of a young girl's body, which only leads to physical dissatisfaction, inferiority complex and eating disorders.
Body image: It is particularly suitable for young people, but body images that are evaluated in media images such as television, movies, advertisements, etc. express the girls as thin, beautiful and perfect. Skin tone The boy is depicted as muscular, very beautiful and tall. Overweight girls and thin boys tend to feel that they are inferior to these cultures and narrow standards. Babies begin to increase self-esteem when they are born. Their self esteem was originally established by fulfilling their basic needs, including the need for love, comfort and intimacy. They gradually know what they are loved. How parents or primary carers treat them to create conditions for future self-esteem