Lindsay Lieberman explains how child pageantry causes emotional, physical, and monetary effects on both the competitors and the parents; this is the central claim of “Protecting Pageant Princesses: A Call for Statutory Regulation of Child Beauty Pageants.” Minor claim number one is that pageants can cause detrimental effects on a young woman such as depression, eating disorders, and body image issues that accelerate into lifetime problems. Brook Breedwell competed in pageants as a young child, and she explains that this industry caused her to suffer from stress, anxiety, and body image issues as she was raised in the industry that requires females to be unrealistic. Lieberman also states the minor claim of explain that NC House of Representatives…
In a competition between man and nature, nature more often claims victory. Pitted against tsunamis, earthquakes, and volcanic eruptions, nothing man made is permanent. In an excerpt taken from Ann Petry's novel, The Street, the main character Lutie Johnson is antagonized by the tumultuous winds that inhabit the town, along with the frigid cold. Using such literary elements as dark imagery, descriptive selection to detail and appalling personification, Petry successfully captures Johnson's relationship with the urban setting.…
The Lena Baker and Anjette Lyles are two-court cases that are very questionable in court decision. Lena Baker shot and kill Ernest B. Knight who had remove her from her home and locked in a the gristmill. Baker was sentenced to Death. Anjette Lyles was a woman who murder four people Ben F. Lyles Jr who was her first husband, Joe Neal Gabbert who was her second husband, Julia Lyles who was her former mother in law and Marcia her daughter. She was sentenced to the State Hospital for the Insane in Milledgeville. Georgia's…
the author informs us that “Psychologists and psychiatrists largely agree that pageants, such as “Toddlers and Tiaras,” reinforce negative female body image issues that result in eating disorders such as anorexia and bulimia. As evidence of this they mental health experts point out the trend towards the onset of eating disorders at much younger ages than ever before” (Schwartz). Being part of a beauty pageant the producers emphasize the “Barbie doll” image of what children need to look like in order to win. It is not possible for a human being to look like a Barbie it’s too overemphasized. For beauty pageant girl’s looks are number…
Beauty pageants made their first appearances in America during the 1920’s, where women flaunted around casinos, determined to win a crown for their physical attractiveness. The owner of the casino where these activities occurred, figured that this would attract more tourists. Throughout the years, more modern pageants were formed, like Ms. USA and Ms. America. Following in the footsteps of its adult form, child beauty pageants merged into the 1960’s. Child beauty pageants usually consist of modeling sportswear, evening wear, and showing off any special talent they may have. Judges critique the girls individually, based on their physical looks, poise, confidence, and perfection. To the judges, this is called “the complete package.” Although the objective of most child pageants is to build confidence and self-worth, beauty pageants can be considered exploitive to minors by causing them to believe in unrealistic ideas about beauty.…
Beauty pageants often provide psychological problems that can develop as a condition later on in life, and contestants will grow up in a…
The debate about beauty pageants is as varied as the kind of beauty pageants which are in existence today. Pageants go anywhere from the traditional late teens, early twenties, type pageant; to children’s pageants; to pageants for the disabled; and pageants for everything in between. No matter what kind of pageant it is, beauty is always a factor in determining the pageant’s outcome. That does not necessarily mean exterior beauty though; some pageants focus on inner beauty and strength.…
Improvement in social skills and public speech is also a positive aspect. Despite the positive outcomes feminists feel the outcome of pageants are more detrimental to a child's health than it does enhance it. Pageant parents feed into this social ideal and contribute to this vicious cycle passing down societal standards of beauty onto their children. Unhealthy behaviors are being fostered by dressing them up while a panel of judges measures their self-worth. They disregard the child's natural beauty and mask it with artificiality; spray tans, veneers, and hair extensions. This delivers a clear message of what is considered beautiful. It sends the message loud and clear- natural beauty is not good enough and that beauty is measured by flaccidity. Natural beauty is not good…
Child Beauty Pageants: What Are We Teaching Our Girls?The princess syndrome, self-image and eating disorders…
In the article “Child Beauty Pageants ‘About Parents Feeling Good, Not Kids’”, a registered dietician named Martina M. Cartwright was interviewed about her pageant experience and she said, “”Everything was based on what these kids look like and the way that children were displayed or dressed. They were fully made up; they looked like adult women, pint-size. They were judged on personality, but none spoke a word.” The statement that these girls are being judged on their personalities, but never speak a single word, truly shows how corrupt these pageants are. Pageants show kids that a person can be beautiful on the outside, but hideous on the inside, and still succeed in life. If kids grow up with the mentality that they can get everything just because they have a pretty face, they will not get very far. Children should be taught that a great personality, and intelligence will help them get what they need, because one day when they’re old, and can’t rely on their looks to get the job done, what will they do? How can people just sit back while these little girls are taught such poor…
Many girls are put under so much pressure that they face many issues of depression if they don’t win. These reasons are why we need to have an age limit on pageants and not let girls compete in glitz pageants when they are younger. The glitz pageants should only be offered to girls who have had a makeup routine and are old enough to get fake nails, spray tanned, and their legs…
While beauty contests may be empowering to the people in them, they have a negative effect on the people in today’s society especially the younger female population. They think that beauty contests are the definition of beautiful, so they develop eating habits in order to be as skinny as them (socyberty, 2008) and sometimes undergo cosmetic surgery in order to fix something they don’t like about themselves. It also doesn’t help that this is also what the media deems beautiful as well. I don’t know where all of this originated from, who deemed skinny, tall, tanned beautiful, but whatever happened to beauty being on the inside that matters? I do not make friends based on who is beautiful on the outside. I have many very pretty friends according to what the media portrays them as, but I don’t care about any of that. The only thing that matters to me…
The value in child beauty pageants is extremely difficult to find, partly because it doesn’t exist. The industry is responsible for confidence issues in millions of participants that can’t seem to win the ‘Grand Supreme Title’ or the “Prettiest Smile Award.’ As quoted by Andrews, “experts see a clear association between these types of events and the development of body image problems, eating disorders, and depression” (1). The young participants are resulting to harmful act to relieve the pain the pressure to be perfect has caused. Confidence levels are easily shot when scores from the judges are revealed, citing she was not ‘good enough’ to win it all. Young women will adapt to the feeling of constantly being judged on perfection, creating even more work for counselors teaching women to love themselves. As most parent’s claim that pageants can be a learning experience,…
According to Child Abuse Prevention and Treatment, child abuse is “the physical or mental injury, sexual abuse or exploitation, of a child under circumstances that could harm them” (Merino 82). Beauty pageants for children are doing just this, exploiting them to certain people’s eyes, who shouldn’t be looking (Merino 79). They are also known to cause developmental problems as well as eating disorders (Brooks 24). For years, experts have been saying how much damage it can do to place young children in these events (Brooks 24). Beauty pageants have a negative impact on children because of the exploitations of the child and the lasting effects on them.…
In the beauty pageant industry being skinny or thin is a must. Many women go above and beyond to meet this criteria. Some women even resort to starving themselves. “In recent studies, researchers have indicated that there is a trend among women who have participated in the pageant circuit regarding eating disorders” (Beauty). The focus on outward appearance has gone too far. eating disorders such as anorexia and bulimia are often caused by these pageants. Kristen Haglund, Miss America 2008 is living proof that eating disorders come about in the pageant lifestyle. She was one of the many pageant contestants who has struggled with an eating disorder. “Although today Kristen…