LOS ANGELES, Feb. 7 /PRNewswire-USNewswire/ -- Examining 15,000
individual speaking characters across G-, PG-, PG-13, and R-rated films,
research by Dr. Stacy Smith of USC's Annenberg School for Communication in
association with the Geena Davis Institute on Gender in Media indicates
that males outnumber females roughly 3 (2.71) to 1 on the silver screen.
Dr. Smith and her team also examined 4000 female film characters and
found that two types of females often frequent film: the traditional and
the hypersexual. For example, females are over five times as likely as
males to be shown in alluring apparel and are roughly three times as likely
as males (10.6% vs. 3.4%) to be shown with an unrealistically "ideal" body.
Dr. Smith's research also reveals problematic portrayals in television
aimed at children. Females in kids' fare are almost four times as likely as
males to be shown in sexy attire (20.7% vs. 5.4%) and nearly twice as
likely as males to be shown with a small waist line (25.6% vs. 14.4%).
Animated females in TV for kids are more likely to be shown in sexually
revealing attire than are live action females (24.5% vs. 17.4%). Also,
females in animated TV stories for children are more likely to have small
waists (36.9% vs. 6.9%) and have an unrealistic body shape (22.7% vs. 1.2%)
than are females in live action TV stories for children. Though, females
are not the only ones hypersexualized in TV content for children. Animated
males are more likely than live action males to have a large chest (15.4%
vs. 4.9%), small waist (18.4% vs. 4.3%), and an unrealistically
muscularized physique (12.5% vs. .5%).
This research was announced at a four-day international conference on
gender and children in media at the University of Southern California and
hosted by the Geena Davis Institute on Gender in Media.
Academy Award-winner Geena Davis, Sony Entertainment Co-Chair Amy
Pascal, Philanthropist Wallis Annenberg, ABC Entertainment President
Stephen McPherson, Brown Johnson President, Animation, Nickelodeon/MTVN
Kids and Family Group, and Tom Lynch were keynote speakers at an exclusive
luncheon for more than two hundred executives and producers.
The conference also featured workshops including 30 accomplished
children's media researchers from around the globe.
At an Open Forum, panelists discussed the link between media and public
health, the effects of American media in other countries, marketing
products to young people, and creating complex female characters for the
children's market. Among the day's participants included creators of shows
at the Cartoon Network, Disney, and DiC, as well as representatives from
Mattel, TV Guide Channel, and Variety. Linda Simensky, Senior Director of
Children's Programming for PBS, was the Open Forum's keynote speaker.
For more information please visit:
http://www.thegeenadavisinstitute.org
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