These negative influences towards fat people are coming from all different directions, such as: music, television, magazines, social networks, crude slang terms, fashion, and weight crazed role models. As the average American receives over five hundred advertising messages a day, the media seemingly tends to influence the American, replacing his or her actual human interactions with the disturbed ideas of advertisers (Fowles 413). One of these horrid advertising messages was recently spotted in a commercial aired by the sports bar/food chain company Hooters. The commercial, now streamed on Salon.com, begins with three gentlemen standing in a sports restaurant. As a plus size woman walks by, one of the men nudges the other in and widens his eyes with a headshake of disapproval. While this alone could be credited as a contributing factor of fat phobia consuming the population, the thirty-second commercial continues. Suddenly, a group of crazed men and yet another plus size woman in a jersey
These negative influences towards fat people are coming from all different directions, such as: music, television, magazines, social networks, crude slang terms, fashion, and weight crazed role models. As the average American receives over five hundred advertising messages a day, the media seemingly tends to influence the American, replacing his or her actual human interactions with the disturbed ideas of advertisers (Fowles 413). One of these horrid advertising messages was recently spotted in a commercial aired by the sports bar/food chain company Hooters. The commercial, now streamed on Salon.com, begins with three gentlemen standing in a sports restaurant. As a plus size woman walks by, one of the men nudges the other in and widens his eyes with a headshake of disapproval. While this alone could be credited as a contributing factor of fat phobia consuming the population, the thirty-second commercial continues. Suddenly, a group of crazed men and yet another plus size woman in a jersey