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The popularity of beauty competitions within teen markets is a funny one given the rising concerns of body image and self esteem in young men and women everywhere. Then there’s the argument that Freedman and others have put up against the focus on the catwalk in Dolly and other publications.Įditorial staff claim that the mags carry a message akin to “girls rule!” That’s great, but then why not have a competition that celebrates the achievements of young women across their target readership: in the arts, sport, academia and community work? One can imagine that as a broadcaster, telling young Miss Thatcher that her career interests are shallow and unwise probably isn’t the easiest commentary to deliver.
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The latter objection is a challenging one to pull off, perhaps because it involves denigrating a popular and legal industry and the young people who work within it. Onlookers who felt uncomfortable about the competition, however, seem to fall into two camps: those who think marketing modelling in teen magazines is insulting and fruitless, and those who think modelling is an insulting and fruitless profession overall. The winner of the 2012 search, 13 year old Kirsty Thatcher, was unveiled this week and thrust into morning television interviews that wanted to question her over modelling as a tween and her celebrity crushes simultaneously. While it was an old fave in the late 90s, ex Dolly editor and current Mama Mia curator, Mia Freedman, got rid of the search in the 2000s, a move she explains as coming from her concerns about magazines prioritising beauty, not merely modelling, as a key concern for young girls. When Dolly announced the winner of their 2012 Model Search, it was really the first moment that anyone in the mass media had noticed the mag had reinstated the competition. Still, this week has seen us come round again to that tried and true process of modelling competitions in magazines for teenage girls. This was before Tyra had offered up Top Model for adolescents to sink their teeth into, and in the intervening years teens have arguably become supercharged divas with even more savvy for getting brands to hire them.
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But I distinctly remember my own best friend and I mucking around for hours in front of the mirror, pulling stupid poses and deciding on which pics we’d send in to convince the judges that we were worth it. I didn’t even care about make-up, and standing up for long periods for shoots would have bored me to tears. Now, I was a thoroughly un-photogenic young human, and would have made a terrifically frustrating model.
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Centred on the theme of ‘best friends’, it asked pairs of perfectly tanned thirteen year olds to write in about their friendship with the chance of winning a glossy fashion shoot. When I was of a teen mag consuming age, there was a competition that was run by a skincare brand.