Tuesday, February 11, 2014

Redone -The Wrong way to Attack Obesity

My first response to this ad was “what? You are a little girl. You don’t seem as you’re 13 or older?” Then, your eyes stare into the girl’s weary eyes, your eyes move downward her bloated body, edited for a gloomy yet serious effect. Your eyes are automatically drawn to the bold red font that is hard to miss against the black and white edit; “WARNING…” I stare harder into the little girls eyes once more and BOOM! It hit me. This ad was a play on words, she really isn’t a “little” as in petite girl, she is obese and a” bigger than her age” girl. But, what really shocked me was this WAS a Stop Obesity campaign.
The little girl crosses her arms in frustration because she truly is not a “little” girl. This ad, a part of Children's Healthcare of Atlanta’s campaign, aims to shock parents into action. Unhappy, ill-fated, bullied faced and overweight children are being used to have an emotional impact on parents.
 The little girl crosses her arms in frustration because she truly is not a “little” girl. Her depressed expression resembles one of a bullied child that can’t stand up to their bully. So if this girl can’t stand up to bullying comments of her not being a “little girl”, who will stand up for her? This is the question that CHA wanted to arise in the viewer’s minds. Parents are to blame. This ill-faced girl can’t stand up for herself; she can’t buy the healthiest foods, she can’t proportion her food, and include exercise in her life systematically, because she is a child. Therefore CHA pressures parents to take responsibility to control their child’s health and make them the “little girl” they should be.
I have a few questions to ask though. Children’s Healthcare of Atlanta, why aren’t you advocating a healthy lifestyle for these children and parents? Offering solutions and changes to incorporate in the children’s lives to actually start seeing results in the state? Why attack the insecurity of obese children, the one insecurity that that society bashes everyday whether someone is obese or not. Why?
This ad presses obese kids to think their appearance is their parents fault. They will turn to parents and ask why am I fat? All the blame is now on parents for not making their child look like a socially accepted “little girl”. Well Children’s Healthcare of Atlanta, I also guess it’s the parents fault this child will get bullied everyday by another careless child for her big body. It’s the parent’s fault an obese child will lose less and less self-confidence because of the comments, other “little girls” make about her. It’s the parents fault an obese child will take their life to no longer deal with society’s pressure to be that “little girl”. Reversing obesity should start with approaching the patients’ health, daily activity, and consumption, not their appearance and who’s to blame.

This ad is just doing more harm than good. The ad doesn’t focus on ways to reverse obesity but rather adds to the social stigma of what everyone should look like. Yes the girl isn’t little in size; people may call her fat and big. But if she is obese, her main issue is having too much fat on her body. Overweight doesn’t necessarily equal obese. Obesity means having too much body fat. Targeting how to get rid of this fat should be the main objective of this ad. Not size, shape or outward appearance of the child. Why degrade the size of a child because it’s not what all little girls look like? Look inward, fix the fat.

2 comments:

  1. Hey gena, I really liked your ad and especially the way you started your blog with you're own reaction. You added some personal aspect which made it even better instead of like reporting on an ad. Your writing was clear and interesting. If anything, I would just advise to change the background color of the second half because it like beige on white and it's a bit confusing to read.

    ReplyDelete
  2. Gena, I really appreciate your approach to this analysis. You do analyze the ad, describing how it works, but I like that you take it a step further and critique the message itself, especially since you do it so thoughtfully. Nicely done!

    ReplyDelete