Margaret Ray, she was. One ape-sh*t chick, lemme tell ya.

"If all the world's a stage and all the people merely players, who in bloody 
hell hired the director?" -- Charles L Grant

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=fQUxw9aUVik




To: scifinoir2@yahoogroups.com
From: hellomahog...@gmail.com
Date: Thu, 14 Jan 2010 17:58:49 -0800
Subject: Re: [scifinoir2] OT: Study Finds British Women Want Curves Again


















 



  


    
      
      
      That is a part of the realities of Hollywood. They don't really talk 
about as much. It is a lot easier for people to stalk other people now 
especially if they stalkee is a celeb. 

Even David Letterman had a stalker, and he's not a handsome guy. A woman was 
living in his summer house for months and convinced the town where the house is 
located that she was his wife. Multiple times... 



On Thu, Jan 14, 2010 at 2:11 PM, Tracey de Morsella 
<tdli...@multiculturaladvantage.com> wrote:








        


























I never knew that.  Is that why we never see her in that many movies
anymore?

 





From:
scifinoir2@yahoogroups.com [mailto:scifino...@yahoogroups.com] On Behalf Of 
Martin
Baxter

Sent: Thursday, January 14, 2010 1:45 PM

To: SciFiNoir2

Subject: RE: [scifinoir2] OT: Study Finds British Women Want Curves
Again





 





Keith, Zeta *was* curvy, back in the day. She's lost a lot of that, primarily
because she was stalked for several years, went through horrible stress. She's
still in seculsion, to a degree. In her commercials for that telephone company
(can't recall which one), she's not even there. She's green-screened in.



"If all the world's a stage and all the people merely players, who in
bloody hell hired the director?" -- Charles L Grant



http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=fQUxw9aUVik















To:
scifinoir2@yahoogroups.com

From: keithbjohn...@comcast.net

Date: Thu, 14 Jan 2010 04:55:52 +0000

Subject: [scifinoir2] OT: Study Finds British Women Want Curves Again



  







 



Related to the conversation where I'd noted the Brits seem to use
more women with "real" shapes (at least in "Dr.
Who").  Although, even here i see perceptions have changed. I mean,
in what universe is Catherine Zeta-Jones considered curvy? She's beautiful, but
I'd call her slim at best. A related article I read was talking about something
called the "waist-to-hip" ratio, which supposedly measures a woman's
curves. It claimed a WTH of 0.7 indicated a perfect figure. Then, however, the
article said that women with that "perfect figure" included Selma
Hayek, Jessica Alba, and Audrey Hepburn? Huh? Hayek's  got the curves,
sho' 'nuff. Alba ain't anything close to what i'd consider curvacious. Fit, but
not Coke-bottle curvy. And Hepburn?? My goodness, on this scale, the likes of
Pam Grier, Kenya Moore, Nichele Nichols, and other classic voluptuous sisters
would be considered overweight!



So much of this conversation on beauty frankly ignores whole groups of people.
I rarely see African American or Latina women talked about as the standards,
unless it's something stupid like last year's fixation on Michele Obama's
arms.  



At any rate, I hope this is a trend reversing, and more women the world over
realize that being anorexic-looking isn't a standard of beauty worth worth
obtaining.



***********************************************************************



British
women 'want to be curvy not thin'



(AFP)
– Jul 22, 2009

LONDON — British women hanker after a curvy hourglass body shape
rather than trying to be ultra slim, preferring Kate Winslet to Kate Moss,
according to a poll published Wednesday.

Sixty percent admitted to being either an "apple" or "pear
shape," but 75 percent said they wanted a figure like Catherine Zeta-Jones
or Marilyn Monroe, against only 10 percent who wanted to squeeze into a slim
size 10 dress.

The findings reflect changing attitudes in Britain -- where obesity is a
growing problem -- among women tired of the so-called Size Zero culture long
fuelled by advertising and the fashion industry.

"The report shows that women's attitudes to slimming over the last 50
years have changed with their figures," said Laura Bryant of the food
company which commissioned the poll of 2,000 women.

"It seems British women have lost their waists but now they are demanding
them back."

And she added: "They are more concerned about getting a curvy hourglass
shape like their grandmothers instead of being the perfect size 10 which shows
a marked shift in attitude from the 80s and 90s, when success and failure when
slimming was benchmarked against fitting into certain sized clothes."

A top-10 list of female celebrities whose shape inspired women was topped by
buxom TV cook Nigella Lawson and actresses Helen Mirren, Judy Dench, and Joanna
Lumley.

The findings might raise eyebrows in neighbouring France, which has the highest
proportion of clinically underweight women in Europe, according to a study
published in April.

Only half of those French women think they are thin, said the study, noting
that in Britain, Spain and Portugal, the number of women who see themselves as
seriously skinny easily outstrips the number who actually are.

A study last December found that one in three adults in England will be obese
by the time London hosts the 2012 Olympics.

Between 1993 and 2004 the proportion of obese people rose "significantly",
from almost 13.6 percent to 24 percent among men and from almost 17 percent to
24.4 percent among women, according to University College London researchers.



 



 







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