bicker said:
Precisely. We simply don't have that problem, but rather the opposite problem. More than half of all children are overweight. More than two thirds of all adults are overweight. Over a third of all adults are obese. I think far too much attention is paid to how little some actresses weight and far too little attention is paid to how much so many of the rest of us weigh. And the number one reason why we weight so much? No, it's not because of the unattainable images of beauty projected on us from Hollywood. It's because we don't regularly exercise with sufficient intensity.
We don't have that problem????
I'll agree that when I walk out my door (or look in the mirror for that matter) I am less likely to see someone who is severely underweight than someone who is overweight, but that certainly does not mean we don't have the problem of our daughters wanting to emulate this. They may not be successful, but they can destroy their health trying. Anorexia and Bulimia are two very serious diseases and the images in the media are definitely a contributing factor to both.
The OP wasn't talking about fearing the US in general is trending toward severe weight loss to look like Keira Knightney or Kate Bosworth, but rather our impressionable young girls who already are struggling to get past acne and growth spurts and normal teenage angst and now have turned to excessive exercise, laxatives, purging, binging or food restriction in an effort to emulate these actresses.
I have a friend who is an average weight compulsive overeater and would love to trade for anorexia even while she still understands how horrible and life threatening that would be

. We can't even go to movies at times because even though she is an intelligent woman who knows there is retouching and "what you see isn't what is real", the images still make her obsess about how she doesn't measure up. She is terrified that her 2 year old daughter will grow up with the same food issues and instead turn to anorexia or bulimia.
Yes, we are an overweight nation. But I don't think we can simply say "we don't have this problem" because the more visible disease of overeating (and the culture/habits/laziness...however anyone would describe it) is more physically visible than a "thinner" eating disorder.