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
Leah
January 12th, 2012
9:21 pm
If a size 6 is considered plus size for women, then ladies, I say we declare anything over a 31 as plus size for men. Women aren’t the only ones who need to be fit. My guess is the majority of the guys chiming in here negatively are lonely, sad, and well over plus size “31″. Oh, and you meat heads whose neck size is bigger than your neck, you are plus size too!!!!!
(That 31 is pretty unrealistic for you boys, isn’t it?)
Ha!
Saddlehide Annie
January 12th, 2012
9:21 pm
I think the numbers are misleading. Case in point-30 years ago I weighed 118 and I was a size 6. I recently purchased new jeans after losing 40 pounds and I now wear size 6. The problem? I weigh 163!!!!! How could I be a size 6 unless the numbers are being manipulated to accomodate overweight American women such as myself???
manlyman
January 12th, 2012
9:29 pm
If Cindy Crawford is/was size 6 then size 6 is what I want my women to be. Shapely, graceful, healthy and fine.
You can keep the skinny stick model types – ugh!
king flirt
January 12th, 2012
9:40 pm
It is very evident that Sorry Folks is a man.
Vonzella
January 12th, 2012
10:06 pm
The “average” woman in 2012 is an overweight sweathog so the disparity is easy to believe. Let’s not dumb this down in reverse by making trim, attractive women politically incorrect because they’re not fat.
Leigh
January 12th, 2012
10:14 pm
Well damn fashion world I guess I am obese at a size 10. Also I am fairly tall, 5′10….hmmmm a model is starving herself in 5,4,3,2….
Jill
January 13th, 2012
8:05 am
Please remember that clothing manufacturers are now producing “vanity sized” clothing. Cindy’s size 6 in the ’80’s is today’s size 2-4.
Robert Lee
January 13th, 2012
1:20 pm
Good Lord, when will yall stop doing this to each other? Self confidence is worth AT LEAST 3 sizes, maybe more. I am so tired of gorgeous women being so insecure that they are unattractive.
Sick, sick, Sick!!!
January 13th, 2012
1:53 pm
I am SICK AND TIRED of Hollywood telling me what I should look like. I’ve been a size 12-14 all my adult life. I’m extremely active and eat very healthy. This is the way my body is, and I accept that.
But to make a 6 a Plus Size?????? Eventually “0″ will be plus size…..
DENISE
January 13th, 2012
2:26 pm
Yeah, x-rays are real sexy……not!