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Obesity
a Disadvantage
to Prime-Time Actors
Excerpt
By Jennie Phipps, HealthScoutNews
(HealthScoutNews) -- Overweight
actors appearing on TV's prime-time shows have a slim shot at
playing the romantic lead.
In fact, according to research at Michigan State University,
their characters are less likely to date, unlikely to have sex
and very likely to be the butt of bad jokes. Plus, they are rarely
portrayed in leadership roles and often appear to have no friends
of either sex.
"The last socially acceptable prejudice is against fat people,"
says chief researcher Bradley Greenberg, professor of communication
and telecommunication. The study was paid for by the Rudd Foundation
of Oakdale, Calif., whose mission is to document, understand and
reduce bias and stigma associated with obesity.
Greenberg's research examined portrayals of chubby characters
in 275 episodes from primetime fictional series with the highest
Nielsen ratings in the 1999-2000 television season. The shows
were on ABC, CBS, Fox, NBC, UPN and WB, and they included: "The
Simpsons," "King of the Hill," "The Jamie
Foxx Show," "7th Heaven," "Law and Order,"
"The Practice," "Everybody Loves Raymond,"
"Becker," "Judging Amy" and "7 Days."
Researchers inventoried body shapes, then compared the findings
with the physique of the average Joe and Jane on the street, as
measured by the National Institutes of Health.
"The female differences were staggering," Greenberg
said. Only one in 300 female characters is obese. In real life,
one in four women is at least 30 pounds over her healthy body
weight. TV reality also works the other way as well: Nine out
of 10 women on TV are average weight or underweight. Out here
in the real world, only five out of 10 can make that claim.
Women weren't the only ones singled out for unrealistic portrayals.
Males in real life are three times more likely to be obese than
their television peers, and male TV characters are six times more
likely to be underweight than their real-life counterparts, the
study said.
Other findings included:
- Large women had a third fewer romantic interactions than
women who were thin; large men had half as many.
- Larger men were twice as likely to be seen feeding their
faces than were men of average or less weight.
- Women's body types didn't differ by network, but CBS had
the fattest men.
- Fewer than 15 percent of the chubby male characters were
judged to be charming or smart, compared to 25 percent of the
average or skinny male characters.
Greenberg points out the lesson in all this: "Generally,
if the mass media omit or ignore a particular group, such groups
are deemed of lesser value and importance."
Other researchers who have examined body image on television
have had other concerns. A study at the University of Chicago
considered the way African-Americans are portrayed on TV and concluded
that many of the fat people on the tube are black: Twenty-seven
percent of the characters on black-oriented prime-time TV were
overweight, compared to only 2 percent on general prime time.
Dr. Anjali Jain, senior author of the study and an assistant
professor at the University of Chicago Children's Hospital, calls
it a mixed message because, she notes, African-Americans statistically
tend to be heavier than Caucasians.
"It is important to have African Americans and overweight
people on TV because this could enhance acceptance and reduce
the stigma of being overweight," she says. "But in a
group prone to obesity, it also could encourage the acceptance
of something with great health risks."
That point has been proven by research on eating disorders at
Brigham Young University, which concluded that young women with
anorexia used TV characters as models and affirmation of their
goal to be as skinny as possible.
Says researcher Kelly McCoy, assistant professor in the School
of Family Life, "The media helps them reduce the conflict
that exists between what they want to do and what their family
and other people close to them tell them is wrong."
What To Do: Want to look like most of the people on TV?
Weight
Watchers has helped millions take off pounds using healthy
methods. If that's too regimented for you, consider
Overeaters Anonymous, where you'll find support from sympathetic
fellow dieters -- but no rigid rules. Or just give up and love
the way you are. The National Association to
Advance Fat Acceptance has great resources.
Reference
Source 101
For more information on how to prevent other diseases, use
PreventDisease.com's "Quick
Prevention Resources".
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