The XX Factor: What women really think.



  • Is Chocolate Milk Better Than No Milk, or Juice in Disguise?


    A post from DoubleX writer KJ Dell'Antonia:

    Schools across the country are looking for easy ways to cut fat and sugar from their menus, and chocolate milk has become a target of choice. The dairy industry fought back, arguing that kids don't choose chocolate milk over white milk, but over water, juice or soda—all arguably less healthy choices. Is it better to give kids a "kinda healthy" option, or should schools menus be sending a different message (no matter what kids bring from home)? ... (Read the rest of this article in DoubleX).

  • Fat Sexy Women


    I remember being taught in art history that the Venus of Willendorf, the Paleolithic sculputure of a gloriously zaftig female, was probably carved by a man as a shamanistic fertility figure. Now the New York Times has an article about a stunning discovery of one of the oldest figurative sculptures ever found, another “Venus,” this one dating from 35,000 years ago. She has pendulous breasts, a capacious stomach, and... (To read the rest of this post, visit our new website DoubleX.com!)

  • Sometimes It Pays To Be Called Fat


    Last Monday, British singer Amanda Palmer wrote on her blog that her record label wanted to reshoot scenes from her music video for "Leeds United." She says:

    they thought i looked fat. i thought they were on crack. dude. i'm a vain motherfucker. i know when i look fat. ... but THIS?? this was just nonsense. i thought i looked HOT.

    The music industry's insistence on well-toned abs is nothing new. (See: the uproar about Britney Spears' so-slight paunch at the 2007 MTV Video Music Awards; the plus-size Martha Walsh being swapped out of the video for "Gonna Make You Sweat" in favor of a svelte lip-syncer.) But this case is genuinely puzzling. Palmer did look hot. Her bared stomach looks lovely to me—I'd wear those abs proudly. The cabaret-style video doesn't dwell on her body, anyway. Most of the shots are long, taking in the rest of the performance and the audience as opposed to focusing on Palmer. And shouldn't record execs have people on hand at shoots to check out the costuming and ensure that their strict standards of acceptable appearance are being met?

    I'd never heard of Palmer before this—my knowledge of music is sadly limited. But I do love that song now. The blogosphere outcry on her behalf has got to be good for her sales—and her self-esteem. A little misogynistic endorsing of unrealistic body ideals can be a good thing if there's enough of a backlash.

    (via Feministing)

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