Oct. 25, 2016 Update: Given that media is slowly giving more coverage to the impact of body image on boys, including wee ones as young as six years old being 'fat-shamed' and toddlers even at age three, it seems sites from WebMD to health platforms are finally beginning to 'get it' that boys are being impacted with buffed boy cues and puffy superhero abs too! Choosing a … [Read more...]
Packaging Boyhood: What About BOYS Halloween Costumes?
Filed Under: Branding & Consumerism, Consumerism, Emerging trends & STEM, Growing up too soon, Marketing Shaping Youth, Media Literacy, Misogyny & Racism, Sexualization & Body Image, Shaping Youth, Stereotypes & Diversity Tagged With: action heroes, aggression, APA study, body dissatisfaction, Body-Dysmorphia, boys, boys Halloween costumes, buffed boy, bullying, candy scares, Case for Make Believe, children, cliche characters, corporate social responsibility, costumes, DIY costumes, dominance, eating-disorders, Gender, ghoulish, girlish, girls Halloween costumes, Halloween, Halloween horrors, Halloween makeup, health, heroes, Jackson Katz, Kids, kids costumes, Lyn Mikel-Brown, machismo, macho, make believe, makeup tips, male, Mark Tappan, masculinity, media-literacy, Michele Borba, Packaging-Boyhood, pimp costumes, pirates, power, prostitots, racy, raid boys souls, Responsible Men, revealing, salacious, scary, Sexualization, sexy costumes, Sharon Lamb, skanky, slackers, So Sexy So Soon, social-media, special forces, spooky, superheroes, Ted Rutherford, teens, tough guys, toxic cues to kids, Trick or treat, true child, violence, wicked innocence, youth