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Beauty Kit For Little Girls

Beauty Kit
It seems like there was a saying that went something like: marketing is the fine art of convincing a person that something is needed where it was never previously wanted. Convincing the need for a product requires proving that this product solves a customer problem - satisfies some deficiency. Have a spill? Wipe it up with Bounty paper towels. Need to be safe on your 10 mile commute to work? Drive a Hummer H2.

Too ugly for grade school? Rhinoplasty to the rescue.

Unfortunately, a lot of marketing - especially that which is directed toward young people - attempts to convince deficiency of a more personal nature. More benign campaigns ensure you that your breath and armpits are natural stink factories in need of mints and anti-perspirant. More shameless advertising can easily be found in nefarious teenager magazines which peddle body image obsession and popularity psychosis in order to sell clothes and makeup.

But well beyond shameless, past disturbing, over in the ballpark of disgusting, bordering criminal is the cosmetic surgery industry. I can accept that advertisers are smarmy, but doctors? Helping burn victims is one thing, but who is being served by productized surgical "enhancements"? How does one get through medical school and go on to sell dangerous body augmentations as if they were breath mints and hummers? What happened to "do no harm?"

Last evening I found an excellent parody of this body image defecit advertising. It's a short film created by the digital arts group Pleix. The film was produced in 2001 and, in retrospect, it predicts the sort of material we now get to see on television in the form of Nip/Tuck and MTV's I Want A Famous Face. It's comprised of 4 commercials selling do-it-yourself cosmetic surgery "Beauty Kits" for little girls.

Look pretty! Feel Beautiful!

I've attached the movie to this post in case there are bandwidth issues, but you can also retrieve the film and browse their other short films from Pleix's films page.

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Extreme Beauty

I watched "Beauty Kit for Little Girls" 2 times in a row!!! Brilliantly satirical, it brings to light the fact that procedures so extreme--such as breaking your own nose to improve its appearance-- are actually becoming commonplace in our culture. The fact that our society is becoming desensitized to the lengths that people will go to in order to "fix" the things they do not like about their appearance is disturbing. Personally, shows like "Extreme Makeover" are a bit frightening! Not to mention the message they send to little girls, little boys, and adults alike...
I, myself, faced an ethical dilemma when I was deciding whether or not to get braces because I knew this meant that I was trying to change my appearance to make myself feel better. As a performer-- singer and actor-- the pressure to "improve" one's looks to the point of perfection is even greater. My own orthodontic journey, though less "extreme" has actually reminded me to accept myself the way I am and actually embrace the things that make me different, not only in terms of outward appearance, but overall.
In a country that prides itself on diversity, why is there such a focus on making everyone fit one mold?