As a teen, I thought Cindy Crawford was the epitome of hot.

Cindy "Chunky" Crawford rocks a runway in 1995, years before forcing me to buy a house full of Rooms To Go furniture.
Imagine my chagrin today as I perused an article in the January issue of PLUS Model Magazine that alleges Cindy wore a size 6, the same size as many of today’s non-super models.
It was quite a blow to learn I should have been buying Kate Moss calendars all those years.
The article says Cindy and other renowned hotties from a more portly era of posing (Paulina Porizkova and Billy Joel’s ex-wife) would be too chunky to make it onto the runways of today’s slimmer, and perhaps dangerously trimmer world of fashion. To prove their point, the magazine provides pics of a plus size model alongside a much thinner “straight size model.”
Fox News has a worksafe writeup, but for the pics you have to click on the full meal deal.
The pictures should “open the minds of the fashion industry,” which is stepping further away from reality, according to PLUS founder and editor-in-chief, Madeline Figueroa Jones, who is probably at least a size 8.
Jones, who may be frailer emotionally than physically, said she nearly cried when she first saw the pictures, but still ran them.
The magazine points out fashion models appear to be shrinking: “Twenty years ago the average fashion model weighed 8 percent less than the average woman. Today she weighs 23 percent less” and “most runway models meet the Body Mass Index physical criteria for Anorexia.”
Now, Cindy is 45, a mother of two and still easy on the eyes. She says she feels sorry for the supermodels of today and points out the obvious — “straight size models” have no curves.
Maybe that’s why my calendar collection stopped in 1989.
95 comments Add your comment
Ghoti
January 15th, 2012
6:16 am
There’s a multi-billion dollar industry built around telling women there’s something wrong with their appearance, no matter what they look like. Why would anyone even want to be a size 0? Are they hoping to just disappear?
And, the earlier poster nailed it when he/she said that most fashion designers are gay men who want women to look like teenage boys, because that’s what turns THEM on!
Size 0
January 15th, 2012
12:55 pm
Hey “Sorry Folks,” I love you. I am 35 years old; I am 63 inches tall, 110lbs, 20% body fat. In the Summer, I weigh a bit less. I wear a 0 or a juniors 1 or a girls 16 pants or 14 shorts/skirts. Kids are so fat now that the juniors are smaller than the girls clothing. All fit loosely. I have a full time job, and I’m a mother. I am vegan, and I run. I have a ton of energy, and I am very healthy. I don’t get sick. I can actually do pull-ups; most women can’t. I wish other people could understand how happy and fit I am and how good being in shape feels.
Perfect Size 6
January 16th, 2012
12:36 pm
At Size 0 – i bet you’d just LOVE a biscuit right about now huh?
luvinlife
January 16th, 2012
1:42 pm
Clothes today ARE sized smaller to make the growing public feel “better”; however we’re all still in denial. If you’re over 40 yrs old and still have clothes from your youth in your closet or basement, they will be the true size of a 6, 8, 10, etc. I don’t think 0’s, 2’s or 4’s existed back then. For an accurate sizing, add “4″ to whatever size you see in the clothing stores today….that’s the real size!
Why is the ideal shape for a woman that of a 14 year old boy?
February 2nd, 2012
4:39 pm
“And, the earlier poster nailed it when he/she said that most fashion designers are gay men who want women to look like teenage boys, because that’s what turns THEM on!”
I wish this fact would get talked about more.
People (including myself) are afraid of being called homophobic if they state the above, but fashion designers don’t even hesitate to make size 12 women pariahs and refuse to manufacture clothes for them because they’re “fat” and don’t deserve it.