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There She Goes, Miss America
Corporate Accountability and WorkPlace:
Banks Paying a Price for Their Epic Greed
Sam Pizzigati
Democracy and Elections:
Nine Senators, Including Obama, Introduce Bill to Help Vets Register to Vote
Steven Rosenfeld
DrugReporter:
U.S. Ranks #1 in Consumption of Pot, Cocaine, Smokes
Jordan Smith
Election 2008:
John McCain's Disaster Economics
Frank Rich
Environment:
Lightning Strikes: Get Used to Catastrophic Wildfires and Worse
Scott Thill
ForeignPolicy:
Israeli Soldier Filmed Shooting at Blindfolded Palestinian
Health and Wellness:
Has Big Pharma Corruption Suppressed Effective Treatment Options?
Bruce E. Levine
Hurricane Katrina:
From the Bayou to Baghdad: Mission Not Accomplished
Amy Goodman
Immigration:
Immigration Debate: Lies, Hate, and Lack of True Journalism
Cristina Jimenez
Media and Technology:
Angelina and Brad Give Birth to $11 Million Twins
Vanessa Richmond
Movie Mix:
John Cusack: Bypassing the Corporate Media
Joshua Holland
Reproductive Justice and Gender:
How Effective Is Male Circumcision at Preventing Sexually Transmitted Infections?
Kate Bourne
Rights and Liberties:
How Scores of Black Men Were Tortured Into Giving False Confessions by Chicago Police
Jessica Pupovac
Sex and Relationships:
"Return of Desire": Fighting Myths About Female Sexuality
Sue Katz
War on Iraq:
Don't Believe the Hype: Blackwater Is Here to Stay
Jeremy Scahill
Water:
America's Got Water Problems, and No Plan to Fix Them
Elizabeth de la Vega
You've come a long way baby. High, firm boobs. Taut, smooth skin. No matter how accomplished you become, these are the things that make up the ideal woman in the land of the free. The American Society of Plastic Surgeons just released its 2001 stats to show that youth-inducing nips, tucks, sucks and filler-ups have tripled in the past decade. Since the Federal Drug Administration's recent blessing of Botox to "treat frown lines," Botox parties are all the rage. You can now sip champagne and get poison injected into your face to achieve that smooth, paralyzed look. "Just like Snow White," as one repeat customer cooed.
Still, the most dramatic gains reported for cosmetic procedures lie in the quest for bigger tits, with a swelling of 533 percent. Seems despite the political, economic and social doors opened for women over the years, desirability is still the inescapable female measurement of success. In a 1968 press release titled, No More Miss America!, The Degrading Mindless-Boob-Girlie Symbol topped ten protest points. The Women Libbers wrote, "Miss America and Playboy's centerfold are sisters over the skin," calling the poised, primped and programmed contestants "The Living Bra."
To protest such an inflated ideal of womanhood, they tossed more comatose bras into a Freedom Trash Can outside of the annual pageant, along with other "symbols of oppression" like Cosmopolitan magazines, high heels and razors. Though nothing went up in smoke due to an unattainable fire permit, feminists made history as man-hating, hairy-legged bra burners with sensible shoes and no sense of humor. But you have to laugh at the irony in "No More Miss America" nearing reality more than three decades later. Shortly after recent reports of Miss America's financial and internal woes, the Federal Communications Commission cleared last fall's Victoria's Secret Fashion Show of violating TV's prime time indecency standards. Goodbye Miss America, hello Miss Victoria! With the flesh fest greenlit for next year, the "mindless-boob-girly symbol" is alive and shakin'.
Miss America's career may not have sagged and wrinkled, but the 81-year-old dame just can't stand firm next to the new meat on the block. Victoria's Secret has apparently found the winning concoction: non-stop, abundant flesh that is firm, glistening, spilling out of lace, leather and silk. So what if the annual "fashion show" is simply a shameless and saucy lingerie commercial? The hour aims to titillate and it does. Without pretense of moral purpose (Is that a nipple I see?) for parading fig-leafed nymphs, Victoria's Secret promoted their ABC broadcast as "the sexiest night on TV."
Miss America organizers, however, forever defend themselves as a scholarship program, and not, I repeat, not a beauty pageant. Call it what you will, but it has always been about physical allure for the sake of commercial arousal. Miss America was born in 1921 as a "bather's revue" to drum up post-summer business on the Atlantic City boardwalk. Launched with the arrival of an 80-year-old "King Neptune" and entourage of twenty cuties and twenty black male "slaves," the beauty contest climaxed with the crowning of a 16-year-old and wrapping her in the American flag. From day one, organizers had to package Miss America as preserving the cultural mores of the day.
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Banks Paying a Price for Their Epic Greed Corporate Accountability and WorkPlace: Is banking merely a grubby game where the few enrich themselves at the expense of the many? By Sam Pizzigati, Too Much: A Commentary on Excess and Inequality. July 23, 2008. |
Immigration Debate: Lies, Hate, and Lack of True Journalism Immigration: Hateful language is too often the standard for mainstream media while discussing undocumented immigrants and minorities. By Cristina Jimenez, Drum Major Institute. July 23, 2008. |
Don't Believe the Hype: Blackwater Is Here to Stay War on Iraq: Despite reports that the company is leaving the mercenary business, Blackwater's future is secure. By Jeremy Scahill, Comment Is Free. July 23, 2008. |