miércoles, 18 de enero de 2017

Looks aren't everything. Believe me, I'm a model.

Cameron changes her outfit on stage, to show how quickly she can change people’s opinions of her,only with the clothes.
Cameron is feminine, white and tall, and that is what requires be a model. She describes this as a genetic lottery and says that less than 4% of models are black. Cameron looks at modelling as extremely fake and superficial job, and the skills learnt are minimal. Most of the shots that she have done are directed and don't show who she really is.
She can get things without paying because of how she looks, for example a store owner gives her a dress for free, or a policeman let her get away with only a “Sorry, officer”. 
On the other hand, she sees other people punished because of how they look, 86% of people arrested by police in New York are black or south american and 78% of 17 year old girls are unhappy with how they look, thinking that if they look like a models they will be happier. 
Cameron says that models are the most insecure people because their whole life turn around about how they look.
Cameron's says that everyone should be more comfortable acknowledging the power of image in our successes and failures.

I already knew that the pictures of the models are not what they really are, and that the world of models are superficial. I once read a French model confessing that her bosses only gave to her apples and laxatives to eat, so she wouldn't gain weight and stay very thin. I don't like the stereotypes, I think that everyone is beautiful on its way and should be no one saying that the perfect body is like this or isn't like this.

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