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Overweight
TV Characters
Have Image Problem
Excerpt
By
Randy
Dotinga, HealthDay
Hollywood is no haven for the plump, and it's not surprising there
are a lot fewer overweight folks on television than there are
in real life.
But a new study suggests fat people
face other kinds of discrimination when they do manage to appear
on the screen.
Among other things, overweight
women are less likely to be considered attractive or to end up
in romantic situations. Fat men are challenged in the dating department,
too, and they're less likely to have sex.
"On the off chance you actually
see a larger person on TV, they are probably being portrayed as
the object of some kind of joke, as socially incompetent, or as
totally irrelevant to the events that are taking place,"
says study co-author Ken Lachlan, a graduate student at Michigan
State University.
While previous studies have examined
the roles of gender and race roles on television, the new study
is apparently the first of its kind to take an in-depth look at
overweight people. "There had been a lot of research done
on other issues, such as gender and racial portrayals, but we
saw a real lack of research dealing with obesity," says study
co-author Matthew Eastin, an assistant professor of journalism
and communication at Ohio State University.
Researchers tried to analyze at
least five episodes of each the 10 top-rated dramatic or comedic
series from each major television network during the 1999-2000
season. (The networks were ABC, NBC, CBS, Fox, WB, and UPN). They
ended up with 275 episodes from just 56 series because some series
were cancelled or featured non-human characters.
The researchers measured the body
type of major characters by examining their silhouettes. The results
of the study appear in the August issue of the American Journal
of Public Health.
In the real world, one in four
American women are obese -- a step beyond overweight -- but only
3 percent of the major female characters were. And while just
one in 20 women are dangerously underweight, one third of the
women on television were.
"The numbers for males aren't
quite as staggering," Lachlan says, "but 65 percent
of those on TV are of 'normal' body type, compared to 39 percent
in real life. Fifty-nine percent of American males are overweight,
compared to 27 percent on TV."
Meanwhile, the researchers judged
49 percent of the larger women to be attractive, compared to 92
percent of the thinner women. The larger women were almost two
times as likely to be the target of jokes as the thinner women.
"The sheer difference between
the types of bodies that can be found on TV and those found in
our population was staggering to me," Lachlan says. "I
expected that the results might be in that direction, but I never
thought the difference would be that dramatic."
What to do? The television industry
has never been good at portraying true American life. Among other
things, the new study found that just 4 percent of major television
characters appeared to have children.
As Eastin points out, there's no
law that says Hollywood has to be representative of America. "Change
in many of these matters, especially with gender or race, really
had to come from outside groups demonstrating that the television
industry was not portraying these groups in a positive light,
or portraying them at all."
It remains to be seen if overweight
Americans will take on the challenge of pressuring the entertainment
industry.
More information
The Rudd Institute, which funded
the obesity on television study, studies bias against the overweight.
Read more here.
Learn more about obesity from the American
Obesity Association.
Reference
Source 101
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