"Kristina Pimenova" A youngest Super Model:
Her legs are
endlessly long and thin; tousled locks fall sensually in waves around her
shoulders, watery blue eyes bore right into your soul as she stares at you with
a slight coy smile—she's Kristina Pimenova, nine year-old Russian fashion
model (who's been modelling since she was three).
Feel like a
pervert? This is definitely feeding ground for online violators. And who is
really monitoring the 2,583,864 people that follow the 'world's youngest supermodel'
on Facebook? Managed by her mother, ex-model Glikeriya Shirokova,
Pimenova's social networking accounts are filled with images of her campaigns
(that include Dolce & Gabbana, Armani, Benetton, Cavalli); pouting and
preening; bronzed cheeks and blowouts; long legs and luminous make-up. Much
like French model Thylane Blondeau who seductively posed for French Vogue at
the age of nine (in 2011), inviting backlash. Congratulations adults, from
being protective we've gone to pushy, from sending children out to play, we're
sending them to pageants. We're not allowing them to be precocious; we're
encouraging it – treating them as tiny grown-ups.
Slut-shaming teenagers
Case in
point, the Obama girls—who show up at the annual White House turkey pardoning ceremony
wearing long-sleeved tops and bottoms that respectably cover their bottoms and
receive this online barrage: "Dear Sasha and Malia, I get you're both in
those awful teen years, but you're part of the First Family, try showing a
little class. Dress like you deserve respect, not a spot at a bar."
Elizabeth Lauten, communications director for U.S. Rep. Stephen Fincher,
R-Tennessee, decided their wardrobes deserved more comment than the ceremony,
exposing them to the kind of bullying that adults in the limelight have had to
deal with for years.
Coming out of the closet (at 13)
Brendan
Jordon was first shot dancing suggestively
Lady Gaga-esque, at the opening of a mall in America. The mini internet
sensation now has a YouTube channel where he's posted a video titled, 'My
coming-out story', where he discusses how soon after seventh grade, he 'just
knew' he liked guys and couldn't fathom why 'gay' was used as insult – and
decided he was 'going to break free from these chains' and reveal his sexual
identity. American Apparel now features an ad with the teen wearing a t-shirt
that proclaims 'Lesbian Gay Bisexual Transgender Pride'.
The age of the downfall
I blame the
adults. In trying to prepare children for life and success we're robbing them
of a childhood. No matter how forceful and expressive a child, isn't it a
parent's job to regulate their lives until they're old enough to know
better? While often, grown-ups don't know better, how can we expect
children too? And because of this acceleration into adulthood; suicide and
depression; anxiety-related memory lapses and fear of failure; once largely
adult-issues, have infiltrated childhood.
Humbert
Humbert's obsession with his Lolita is deemed unnatural but today we live in a
world that's idolising a flat-chested nine-year-old, slut-shaming young girls,
and making an internet sensation of a self-aware teenage boy gyrating
suggestively on national TV. Child-star syndrome is a rarity veering towards
regularity, but will the rise of the planet of the mini-adults make
childhood passé?
No comments:
Post a Comment