ABC Home | Radio | Television | News | Your Local ABC | More Subjects… | Shop

Email

Magazine with 'too thin' models pulled

Posted August 29, 2008 08:21:00

A Quebec publisher apologised on Thursday for promoting scrawny female forms in a young women's magazine, which he also pulled from stores amid a public outcry.

In an open letter posted on his company La Maison Simons's website, Peter Simons offered his "personal apologies" for the latest issue of Twik magazine featuring emaciated models, saying he failed "to exercise proper attention, empathy and especially sensitivity and social responsibility."

Part of the 36-page fashion catalogue's 450,000 print run went out last week as an insert in several local newspapers and was also to be available at Simons department stores, but will no longer be displayed.

Quebec Health Minister Yves Bolduc congratulated the company for responding to public complaints.

"After reflecting on these comments, we have drawn up very specific guidelines for our advertising design teams," Mr Simons said.

Images of bony women are "destructive to a more vulnerable portion of the population, which is exposed to anorexia," he told the Montreal Gazette.

Earlier this year, France banned the promotion of extreme thinness or severe weight loss, amid a controversy over skinny models.

- AFP

Tags: arts-and-entertainment, fashion, eating-disorders, canada

Photo gallery

Lighting strikes Brisbane during a storm on November 19, 2008.

Week in news

The past week in news, as seen through a lens.

Gallery

Simon Katich celebrates his ton

First Test

Photos from Australia's clash with New Zealand at the Gabba.

Watch

Jeremy Smith scores a try despite pressure from Billy Slater

World Cup highlights

New Zealand has beaten Australia 34-20 in the Rugby League World Cup final.