Controversy Over The Photoshop Effect
Backhttp://diet.com/videos In Part 2 of The Photoshop Effect, diet.com investigates the ethics behind retouching photos and what fashion magazines can do to help bring awareness about the prolific use of photo retouch. Produced and hosted by Sarah Dussault. Special thanks Tim Lynch Photography, Alexis Beck and Tom Fauls.
Channel: Howto & Style
Uploaded: June 24, 2008 at 9:20 am
Author: diethealth
Length: 0:03:50
Rating: 4.40
Views: 200,455
Tags: Photoshop effect video health diet.com retouch ban Justin Timberlake adobe sarah free real girls tips beauty dove
Video Comments:
miavonni (Sunday 31st of August 2008 06:13:09 PM)
put the untouched photo in the bottom of the ad !
CaNGg1H (Wednesday 27th of August 2008 11:49:08 AM)
Why the women's eyes kept on blinking...her frequency is faster than the normal rate. LOL =D
ryanracca (Wednesday 27th of August 2008 12:11:50 PM)
whoa, kinda creepy
XD
ryanracca (Tuesday 26th of August 2008 11:47:54 PM)
Making photographs is an art
Using photoshop to morph certain photographs, at least for me, is not art.
Making use of photoshop to create digital art is, obviously, an art.
=P just sharing my opinion.
VanMeter232 (Tuesday 26th of August 2008 07:55:01 PM)
that was kind of cunty
VanMeter232 (Tuesday 26th of August 2008 07:54:07 PM)
a direct impact like a timebomb? that is a pretty half ass metaphor.
I am sorry that girls have to deal with issues "between their ears".
Other people have other issues between their ears as well.
I think social progress towards a more collective awareness of each other's vulnerablities is one way to beat these types of issues.
slade360 (Wednesday 3rd of September 2008 03:40:31 PM)
Very well put.
This woman has serious issues between her ears. We're now in a world where responsibility is being removed from the individual and placed instead on outward factors. No self accountablity.
Look below and Dynastychick3's many classifications which she's been awarded for 'struggling' with. Body Dysmorphic Disorder...I have one, Monetary Disproportionate Disorder...but I don't ask advertising to stop showing rich people.
You can't blame disorders on media, period.
dynastychick3 (Tuesday 26th of August 2008 11:32:06 AM)
Maybe true in some cases, but not all. My mother could have cared less (does care less) what I look like and I've been struggling with Eating Disorders, Body Dysmorphic Disorder, depression, anxiety attacks since age 12. 15 years later my life is in ruins. I was born with extreme social anxiety and it all started from there. Hit puberty, peers focus on external BS. Self-esteem was shot and still is. Suicidal at times.
grandmastatus (Sunday 24th of August 2008 03:48:42 PM)
i LOVE those warnings! WARNING: you may feel like shit after looking at this photo
WARNING: these people are much uglier in real life.
italy2bklyn (Sunday 24th of August 2008 03:40:49 PM)
I see the argument they're trying to make. But the real problem lies within the fact women feel they have to amount up to the less than 1% of females portrayed by the media. How about focusing on teaching young women that they are ok just the way they are. I'm not depressed and hate myself because I don't look like Brad Pitt or Vin Diesel. Take some responsibility and stop trying to blame individual faults on your inability to seperate fact from fiction.
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