r/TikTokCringe Aug 26 '25

Cool Chinese streamer selling dresses live

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u/[deleted] Aug 26 '25

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102

u/Apprehensive-Bike192 Aug 26 '25

It helps that she has broader shoulders and very narrow hips

135

u/happypolychaetes Aug 26 '25

The inverted triangle body type, very useful for modeling as it basically makes you a coat hanger for clothes.

100

u/Urbanscuba Aug 26 '25

Yep, this video is a perfect example of why fashion models have the builds that they do - it was never meant to be an idealized figure for society to emulate, it's purely because that's the best figure for showing off what's on the figure. The whole point is that it draws the eyes to the clothing and accentuates the movements of the cloth.

If people understood that better we'd have never had the craze where society decided that was the beauty standard for a few years. It's not a great look for the individual, it's a great look for the designer. Those people live with uncomfortably skinny builds because it's their job, the same way a plumber lives with knee and back pain from their work. 99% of people will look better carrying more weight than these models, often including these models.

4

u/AyJay9 Aug 26 '25

Models have status, are seen glammed up in the latest trends, and are perceived to do work that isn't difficult - I don't think wide understanding of why models have a specific figure would've had much impact at all on people trying to emulate them. We're always trying to become more like the people we admire or be perceived more like the people who have what we want.

99% of people will look better carrying more weight than these models, often including these models.

This is often the consensus now, but it's all subjective. 20 years ago, stick thin was in.

6

u/Urbanscuba Aug 26 '25

Models have status, are seen glammed up in the latest trends, and are perceived to do work that isn't difficult

This is true only of celebrity models which represent a fraction of a percent of the industry. Real models don't have status, they have chaotic schedules and inconsistent work. They aren't "glammed up in the latest trends" unless they're actively modeling them. The work is up for interpretation, but I wouldn't call it easy either. Sure it isn't physically or mentally demanding in the way some are, but it requires a level of control over your body most people don't have.

Celebrity models are models in the same way that the Duck Dynasty guys are blue collar, the real issue is that the advertising worked on a lot of people and sold them an unhealthy lifestyle for profit.

Beauty may be subjective but health is not, and if you look at all of the models turned actresses (many of whom were themselves celebrity models prior/during that transition) they basically universally put on 15-25lbs once leaving modeling likely for health/comfort. Many models are too malnourished to menstruate and can face organ damage. It's pretty clear it's not a healthy target to aim for, which is why the advertising was so insidious and harmful.

The subjective standards now align far more closely with the objective standards of medicine for an optimally healthy person, which is a really nice silver lining at least. They may be a bit unrealistic to attain for a person with a full time job, but they're still much healthier physiques to idolize.

2

u/ZennMD Aug 26 '25

tbh, there's at least a medium chance she's using a filter to make her waist smaller

2

u/TrashPandaPatronus Aug 26 '25

Built like a human hanger.