Rhoda Bernard, Ed.D.

July 16, 2009

Some Guilty Pleasures Revealed

Filed under: Entertainment, Fashion and Beauty, Life Balance — admin @ 2:02 pm

There are some things in my life — activities, reading material, TV shows, music, etc. — that I enjoy but that I don’t feel proud of, or don’t often share. My guilty pleasures. I imagine that we all have guilty pleasures of various kinds in our lives.

Today, I am going to reveal publicly a few of my guilty pleasures:

1. Music -
Musical theater songs, even the cheesy ones. Having grown up on a strict diet of Barbra Streisand and Rogers and Hammerstein, I must admit that I love even the cheesy musical theater repertoire. I know that it is not the most artful music and/or that the lyrics are not the most witty. But something in me just adores the shmaltz of it all.

2. Television – reality TV shows about modeling. Even the really bad ones. I have posted in this very blog about one of the better modeling-oriented reality TV shows, She’s Got the Look. But I must admit that I also enjoy America’s Next Top Model and the Janice Dickinson shows on TV. Something about the campiness of it all and the behind-the-scenes look at the modeling industry keep me coming back for more.

3. Activity – shopping for just about anything. I love to shop. Even if I don’t need anything and/or don’t buy anything. The entire process of shopping is fun for me. This may have something to do with my continued enjoyment of What Not to Wear (I get to go shopping with the participants and with Stacy and Clinton. In fact, I would be in heaven if I got to go shopping with Stacy and Clinton for real!). I hate to admit it, because it’s not like me in the way that most people know me, but I love to shop.

What are some of your guilty pleasures? Why do you think you feel guilty about them?

For me, these are guilty pleasures because they don’t fit with the way that I think that I am perceived by others, and the way that I want to be perceived.

June 13, 2009

Who’s Got the Look?

Filed under: Entertainment, Fashion and Beauty, Gender Issues — admin @ 8:58 pm

I was thrilled with the return of the TV Land original series, “She’s Got the Look,” a modeling competition for women over 35. It is refreshing to watch real women, people around my age whom I can relate to, striving towards their dream of becoming a model. The whole cultural fascination with modeling goes back a long, long way – decades before the reality TV competitions. I remember the Barbizon Modeling School advertisements in Seventeen Magazine and the commercials for the school, which used the tag line, “Be a model. Or just look like one.”

It seems that the modeling industry has long been capitalizing on the split and struggle that most women in Western culture experience — between being beautiful and being smart. It is commonly put forth that a woman can be only beautiful or smart, and not both. An attractive woman cannot be intelligent, and an intelligent woman cannot be attractive. One of many double binds that women face (madonna/whore is probably the best known). [I do not mean to suggest that men do not face double binds in Western culture, because they do -- certainly between being strong/manly and being sensitive/emotional, for example. However, as a woman, I am much more intimately acquainted with the double binds of womanhood in Western culture.]

Recently, I saw Pirates! at the Huntington Theatre in Boston. One of the many changes to the script was that, when the Pirates hooked up with their brides at the end of the show, the Pirate King told them to “tell the pretty ones that they are smart and the smart ones that they are pretty.”

This is all to say that I know many, many intelligent women who are fascinated by modeling in some way, and I would include myself in that category. I had more than a passing interest in the Barbizon School when I was younger, and I maintain an interest in beauty/fashion/modeling today.

What is unique about “She’s Got the Look” is that the youthful mandate of modeling has been jettisoned in favor of women over 35 with interesting experiences and stories to tell. Yes, looks do matter, but they are not the whole picture. I love that one of the finalists this year is 70 years old. And that last year’s winner was in her late 40s.

Only one episode of the new season has aired so far. The episode featured the auditions for this year’s contestants. And of course, there was a twist (we have come to expect twists in reality TV shows): 20 contestants were selected and brought to New York, where 9 of them were promptly eliminated after a runway challenge. The rest of the season will follow the remaining 11 contestants through the competition.

Check your local listings for “She’s Got the Look.” You won’t be disappointed.

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