Wednesday, 28 February 2007
Interesting video and song!!!
(i quite find the song very different!)
Xx*~*KiRaN*~*xX
NameeEeeEeeEeeee
*[SaMaN]*
*[SaMaN]*
Tuesday, 27 February 2007
What's wrong with trying to be thin?
Stomach problems
Heart problems
Irregular periods or no periods
Fine hair all over the body, including the face
Dry, scaly skin
If it isn't treated, bulimia can cause the following health problems:
Stomach problems
Heart problems
Kidney problems
Dental problems (from throwing up stomach acid)
Dehydration (not enough water in the body)
xX*~*KiRaN*~*Xx
Thursday, 22 February 2007
HollyHannahBulimia

Left alone on New Year's Eve, and convinced that she was undesirable, Hannah began binging and purging to cope with her feelings of rejection. This quickly became a vicious cycle of behavior as her on-off relationship with John-Paul (and his mood swings) made her increasingly angry and confused. Later, after John-Paul admitted he was gay, Hannah was conviced that she turned him gay. Her eating disorders appear to be part of a continuing storyline.
***xXkiranXx***
(if you dont watch Hollyoaks trust its good ;) lol)
gEtTiN tHeRe!!!
xXKiRaNXx
Wednesday, 21 February 2007
London Fashion Week
http://edition.cnn.com/2007/WORLD/europe/02/12/london.fashion/index.html
http://www.dailymail.co.uk/pages/live/femail/article.html?in_article_id=431494&in_page_id=1879
by neema
Sunday, 18 February 2007
VH1 - all access
>cant realii find the video link on youtube or google<
In Hollywood, the pressure for actresses to get and stay thin is the source of a shocking and alarming trend. Female celebrities have become tinier than ever, and "skinny" has moved from a health-conscious preoccupation to a dangerous obsession.
It began in the late '90s, when a few skeletal celebs like Calista Flockhart and Lara Flynn Boyle made headlines for being too thin. Now, nearly all of Hollywood's leading ladies are all drastically underweight. They know their next role or great red carpet gown often depends on how many pounds they're packing. This weight fixation has set the bar higher than ever, and in turn, created a dark side to Hollywood "fitness."
VH1 All Access: How Thin is Too Thin? will explore this new trend and examine the disturbing mentality behind it, while exposing the stick-thin celebs currently perpetuating this problem. The show will be broken into 3 distinct blocks:
CURRENT STARS WHO APPEAR TO BE TOO THIN
THE EXTREMES CELEBS GO TO TO BECOME/STAY SUPER-THIN
WHEN THE OBSESSION GOES TOO FAR: ANOREXIA & BULIMIA
Entertainment/gossip columnists, nutritionists, and celebrity trainers will all weigh in on what celebrities are doing to their bodies, while putting it in the context of how healthy - or unhealthy - some of these popular practices are
by neema
Friday, 16 February 2007
ouline of doc...
- Beginning of documentary – video of models on a catwalk – including sound, video then goes into slow motion, and screen goes black and white, following on will be the title of our documentary in colour.
- Find model footage on you tube
- Montage of Celebrities/Covers
- Title will come up- fade (music could stop)
- Beginning of dietitian Interview/ still of her face and name will appear, explain what eating disorder is
- Pictures of magazine Covers
- Possible interview with The Guardian journalist ( still not confirmed)
- Interview with psychotherapist
- Try an get a video of models on the catwalk, a voice over saying statistics
- Get some general information about media influence on teenagers.
- Record vox pops of people saying what an eating disorder is. Overlapping the voices so it becomes a blur
- the clip below, shows models on the catwalk - we may use part of it during the documentary
by neema
Blog Comments
- What do you particularly like about it? What's especially impressive?
- What could be improved? What's missing or could be added?
- What other things could we include in the production?
- How should we go about filming any remaining scenes or editing the footage during post-production (+ suggestions for music, etc.)?
Monday, 12 February 2007
in The mediA

This article was published today in the Daily Mirror, as there is controversy surrounding London fashion week.
PROTESTERS ZERO IN ON SIZE 0 MODELS
PROTESTS against Size Zero models hit the start of London Fashion Week yesterday. Waving placards, demonstrators blasted the British Fashion Council's decision not to ban super-skinny girls from the catwalk.
The move came as five models were judged too thin for Spain's top fashion event in Madrid.
In London, protesters gathered outside the Natural History Museum as Paul Costelloe's new collection kicked off the week-long fashion event.
Designers have been asked to use only "healthy" models in their shows who are aged at least 16.
The use of girls wearing American size zero clothes - the equivalent of a British size four - has sparked huge controversy.
In Spain, five of 69 women vetted for the Cibeles fashion show in Madrid were declared too thin to take part.
Their body mass index was analysed by doctors and if it was too low, they were banned from catwalk. Dr Susana Monereo said: "The idea of weighing models who are on show here and making sure they look healthy is so that they do not have a negative influence by prompting young people to become obsessed by being thin."
Yesterday British Fashion Council boss Hilary Riva defended the decision not to ban ultra-slim models.
Speaking after the Paul Costelloe show, she said: "What I think we saw today were great models.
"Very tall, and there wasn't one of them which I thought looked very young or excessively thin.
"I think it is unrealistic to expect changing behaviours and attitudes after a short space of time in something like this. We have to raise awareness and debate about the subject."
And banning size zero models could lead them to take legal action, it was warned yesterday.
Melissa Richardson of the Take Two agency, said: "You can't say to models, 'You can't work because you are black or because you are blind', so why should you be able to say, 'You are too thin for work'?"
Her opinion was backed by Vogue magazine editor Alexandra Shulman.
She said: "We would not be allowed to discriminate in that way. It would be like saying you can't have black or white models."
Culture Secretary Tessa Jowell said all women should face medical checks before they are allowed on the catwalk.
Milan, Madrid and New York have banned models with a body mass index of less than 18.5 per cent. A healthy BMI is regarded as between 18.5 and 25 per cent.
But designer Katharine Hamnett said the size zero debate was a "frivolous" distraction from more important issues about the ethical and environmental impact of the fashion industry.
this is a report made by SKY NEWS
ProGress ReporT
on the 19Th February we have arranged an interview with a psychotherapist, however she specialises in eating disorders amongst adults so it may be different to the previous interview.
also we have planned the opening sequence for the documentary and the features we want to include.
by neema & kiran
Tuesday, 6 February 2007
HELP!!!!!
1) Speak positively to yourself. I constantly challenged the voice and fears inside me that underminded my needs, rights, and desires.
2) Create visual reminders. I surrounded myself with books, pictures, and sayings that gave me permission to eat guilt-free, knowing it would result in stronger and clearer thoughts, decisions, and feelings.
3) Take responsibility for yourself. I made a decision to no longer be a passive victim, but an active agent in my own life. That meant making decisions that worked for me.
4) Take risks. Instead of isolating myself, fearing failureand not reaching my potential, I became publicabout my eating disorder- I told people about my struggle. This diminished the power of silence, fear, and lonliness.
5) Accept and work with help. At one time I thought I had to get better on my own so I resisted the support of friends, family, and professionals. While it is true that I needed to make the decision to get better on my own, I needed to feel others supported me even when I had to learn by making mistakes.
6) Make planned changes. I set small goals to reach majordesires. Take one day at a time.
7) Keep a Journal. Recording my thoughts and feelings over time helped me see how I was changing.
8) Enter into relationships. I benefited from the healing of friendship. Friends reflected an image of myself during our interactions. Relationships helped me to find out who I was, what I wanted to be, and with whom I would share my life.
By kiran xx
Monday, 5 February 2007
Thinternet
It gives advice and tips >so called commandments< that anorexics should follow. The short documentary features two battling anorexics, one is a 24 year old who has been battling for 13 years. the other anorexic featured is a 14yr old girl who has been battling for 2yrs - however her parents refuse to admit her into a psychiatric facility.
however both anorexics said that the websites helped them share their story with others, and that they had a sense of acceptance and belonging.
Two specialists are interviewed in the documentary who both state that the government/ local heath trusts have failed to support families and anorexics, as in most cases the psychiatric ward wasn't the best place to help them recover.
interesting facts:
* 9/10 anorexics feel they can't tell anyone
* 1% said they could tell their parents
* it is the biggest teenage killer after car accidents
below are links to newspaper websites who have featured eating disorders in relation to the media...
http://www.thesun.co.uk/article/0,,2001290023-2006020519,00.html
http://www.guardian.co.uk/uk_news/story/0,,1999860,00.html
http://www.thesun.co.uk/article/0,,2001290023-2006550228,00.html
by neema.documentary- THIN promo
This documentary is very interesting as it really goes deep into what young girls think, and it is quite sad because they just want to be thin. It shows a bit where a girl is crying so much because she wants to be thin.
They say they want to be noticed, they don’t want to be a pile of bones and they don’t want to be really big, they don’t really know what normal is anymore.
The look of pizza disgusted one girl and she didn’t even want to look at it as she was just living on fruit, the documentary follows on with trying to get her to be normal and get her well.
I thought the documentary was wicked, it proper gets to you into it, and it makes you feel how the girls are feeling that suffer from it.
Xx Kiran xX
Sunday, 4 February 2007
Resarch for practical production

This documentary shows how a girl suffers from severe illnesses which all resulted form a rejection by a boy at school who thought she was fat.
*[SaMaN]*
Saturday, 3 February 2007
I'm a child anorexic - documentary

This was a documentary shown on BBC3 within the last week, a camera crew went to Rhodes Farm (located in Barnet) - a clinic in which teenagers are able to go to when overcoming anorexia.
The youngest patient was a girl of 12 and the oldest was 16, with lots of magazines within the clinic, she claims that the media did not influence her, as she developed anorexia by the image she had in her head, an idol. Once reaching her ideal weight she was free to leave the clinic.
Dr Dee Dawson who runs the clinic describes anorexia as one of the deadliest psychiatric illnesses, and runs group and individual sessions with patients.
Rhodes Farm can be described as a small boarding school where pupils can sit their GCSE's and A Levels.
Staffs prepare high calorie meals and patients are supervised when eating as some have previously tried to hide food in tissues or squeeze oil out of chips.
When eating some girls memorize the calories in certain foods such as chips, olive oil, and fish fingers and hesitate when eating.
Another girl exercises vigorously in her room, to burn the calories she had eaten for dinner, but when caught she was on constant supervision; she also refused to drink water thinking it had calories!
http://www.bbc.co.uk/slink/sexlovelife/reallife/child_anorexic.shtml
By neema
Wednesday, 31 January 2007
meeting with dietitian...
Saturday, 27 January 2007
music for doc...
this is a powerful song, the message in the song is ' you are beautiful no matter what they say' , it shows that girls don't have to be skinny to look beautiful, they are beautiful just as they are...
Rihanna - Unfaithful (Instrumental)
this song holds a strong meaning, but we will be using the instrumental version for background music as its calming and cool.
Another song that was suggested was >jojo - exceptional< ( thanks ZeB)
"You're exceptional the way you are don't need to change for nobody you're incredible, anyone can see that when will you believe that?"
it conveys the message of our documeantary and is another powerful song
by neema
Thursday, 25 January 2007
What We Want To iNclude...
This is a brief outline of what we hope to include in our documentary:
* An interview with a psychiatrist
Possible questions –
*How many patients have you had to deal with regarding an eating disorder?
*In your experience why do you think teenagers develop this disorder?
*Are the majority of your patients female or male, as statistics show an increase of males having an eating disorder?
*How do you help teenagers combat the disorder?
*In the past has treatment ever failed?
*Have some of your patients come out worse or better after treatment?
*Are there any tips or advice you could offer to teenagers who currently have a disorder but are scared to admit it?
*Magazine front covers – a few of which are posted on the blog
*Hopefully an interview with a person who currently or previously had an eating disorder.
*Pictures of celebrities we have found, most of which are size 0.
*Stills soap story lines, i.e. HOLLYOAKS
By neema,saman & kiran
Wednesday, 24 January 2007
In the Media...

Anorexia claimed the life of model; Ana Carolina Reston (left) who died on 14th November 2006, in
She was 5'8'' tall and weighed only 88 pounds. Doctors consider this weight normal for a 12-year-old girl who is no more than 5 feet tall. Her mother has since revealed to the press that her diet, since the last two months, consisted only of apples and tomatoes.
This article shows that people are affected by eating disorders all around the world, and one of the major influences being the fashion industry, fortunatley for Ana she was unable to control anorexia and it resulted in her death.
by neema
SoO Whats The Difference?
The Difference
Anorexia is an illness that occurs mainly in teenage girls, although increasingly boys suffer from it too. People with anorexia are obsessed with being thin and are terrified of gaining weight. As a result, they starve themselves (especially avoiding high-calorie foods), and exercise obsessively until they become extremely thin and well below the normal weight for their age and height.
Bulimia usually affects women in their early to mid-twenties. People with bulimia are also terrified of gaining weight, but they can usually keep within a normal weight. This is because they eat very large amounts of fattening food (called 'bingeing'), but then get rid of that food by vomiting or by taking laxatives.
The Causes
We do not know exactly what causes anorexia or bulimia. Many explanations have been suggested, although the precise reasons may be different for each person.
A fear of not being able to cope or feeling overwhelmed are common among people with anorexia or bulimia. For instance, adolescence is full of major changes – both physical and emotional – and some teenagers may be confused or uncertain. Denying themselves food may be one way to establish some control in their lives. Others may resort to food to block out disturbing feelings. People with bulimia are often unsure of themselves, lack confidence in their abilities or suffer from depression. Binge eating may be one way to cope with these unhappy, unsettled feelings.
Today's 'thin is beautiful' image may be a contributing factor. The waif-like ideal promoted through the media can put pressure on women of all ages to diet, sometimes to excess. Other triggers of eating disorders may include upsetting events, such as divorce, or difficult or abusive family relationships.
by *neema*
Tuesday, 23 January 2007
Eating Disorders are NOT SEXY!!!
What Is Anorexia?
Did YoU Know That 90% of Anorexics Are FemAle!
HowEver the number of MaLes with eating disorders is currently on the riSe

This is Ashley and Mary Kate Olsen. Mary Kate was the twin that had an eating disorder and received medical treatment for it. Now she is doing well.
So WhAts Been In The MedIa??

In This Issue Of HEAT, The AmOunt Of Celebs BeComIng Thin Is referred To As An EPIDEMIC!


By Neema
NamEd And ShaMed
NamEd And ShaMed

Mischa Barton Looking shockingly thin.. considering she is a role model for Teenage Girls

Nicole Ritchie who apparently DeNied HavinG an Eating DisOrdeR...

Most Recent Picture of Victoria Beckham, You could Have never Guessed That She is A mother of three...
By *Neema & Saman*
...I fOunD an ArtIcle On The Net AboUt a 19 Year Old Girl Who DieD frOm an EatInG DisOder..her MothEr Is Now BlaminG CeleBs..SaYinG how They'Re a Bad InfluEnce..I was ThinKing That We Cud IncluDe SomEthinG Like This...
January 6, 2007
Skinny celebs blamed for teenager's deathAsian News InternationalLondon,
The heartbroken mother of a teenage who died of eating disorder anorexia has slammed skinny celebs like Posh Spice for setting a bad example.
Rosalind Ponomarenko-Jones, whose 19-year old daughter Sophie Mazurek, weighed just four stone or 25.40 kilos when she died after a two-year battle with the eating disorder, has hit out celebs who make being thin glamorous.
"These girls, and celebrities such as Victoria Beckham, are very negative role models. Sophie knew that but she thought people like Victoria Beckham were glamorous - she wanted to be like them," the Daily Mail quoted her, as saying.
Mrs Ponomarenko-Jones revealed that her daughter, who used to weigh 54 kilos when she developed anorexia at the age of 17, spent a “fortune” on mags which were full of pics showing which celebs were thin and which were fat.
Mazurek’s mother also blamed the magazines for she says that they made being thin “attractive and glamorous”.
"Sophie spent a fortune on magazines full of pictures of celebrities and features showing who was looking thin and who looked fat. They are certainly partly to blame because they make being thin seem attractive and glamorous," Mrs Ponomarenko-Jones said.
"But girls with anorexia also often suffer from low self-esteem - they are not happy in their own skin and want to be like celebrities, and that is a major factor behind the onset of anorexia as well," she added.
A spokesman for Victoria Beckham said it would be "inappropriate to comment on somebody's loss".
*[SaMan]*
Monday, 22 January 2007
EåtÏñg ð¡§øRÐê®
We are doing a Documentary on eating disorders, we will be looking more into what it is all about and how it is Effecting young teenage girls....WHAT influences them to want to be like celebs....WHO influences them to want to be like celebs???? It is question upon questions....there are many GiRlS in this world that suffer a great deal of eating disorder, JuSt because they want to be what you call "perfect" in a CeLeBs eyes. I am working in a group with both *NeEmA* & *SaMaN*, together we will create a documentary that will reveal the secrets off the many ways that girls have suffered terribly.
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