Dictation
1.
angry young women: a young new generation of activists is challenging misogyny
My life is not your porn. Wrote read one poster. We should be able to live not survive, declared another.
The women …brandishing them in the centre of Soul Seoul wore red clothes and large sunglasses, they had covered their heads with baseball caps and or broad-brimmed hats. …The headgear and glasses serve mainly to give protests to unrecognised man make the protesters unrecognizable to men who may might be hostile to their cause. A the fight against molka, videos which are filmed with using cameras hidden in public toilets, school changing rooms or even women’s homes, and then post ed on the internet.
The red red-clad women are the most visible part of the a wave of activism against sexism in South Korea.
which was rent ranked 118th and out of 144 countries last year. and in the world economic forum’s measure the of e quality between the sexes, in terms of the parents appearance and behaviour, women and men all have two are hold to wildly different standards.
a Youtube star who used her make-up tutorial channel to announce that she was giving up make-up to join the moment “corset-free” movement, which challenges unrealistic beauty standards, received a torrent of online threats.
Misogyny is still common sense in South Korea says xxx, university in Seoul, people do not accept that women are worth the same as men. but women are currently increasingly challenging this conviction.
many are cropping their hair, crashing crushing their eyeshadow and throwing away their lipstick, and posting videos of their rebellion online.
xxx believes the individual focus of the movement is their its strengths, she thinks the anti-spycam protest s has have drawn such crowds because it they speaks directly to women’s daily experience. If you cannot even be safe from the intrusion in the bathroom or in your own home, then where are you safe, she says.
2.
Victoria’s secret gets ready for a make over makeover
Sex sells, and it sells few things better than long lingerie. No where Nowhere is there that more evident than a the victoria’s secret fashion show. The feathered Befeathered models,
known as angles, shimming shimmy down the a runway to promote America’s biggest underwear retailer.
In 2011, more than 10 million people watched it on television. But on December 2nd, just 3.3 million viewers tuned in. Once as its chief said asset, the brand’s sexiness now looks like a liability. The way people dress has changed, said serena w, a stallwalk stalwart of the industry, whose most recently project was is a brand of unisex underwear. People don’t want boobs up under the chain their chin or things pressed or pushed in. a slew of competitors promoting comfort and inclusivity, have taken that message to heart.
Michelle, left victoria’s secret when where she was a senior merchant and went out on to find found lively, an online underwear brand. She argues that what makes woman sexy is confidence, meaning an emphasis on comfort. 70% of the bras sold by lively are wireless. Their they are eager to emphasize inclusivity too, according to Mintel, a research firm, over half of consumers in Britain, France, Germany, Italy ,and Spain, reckon fashion retailers should use more realistic models. Victoria’s secret is not about to go bust, the firm’s scale is such there that with the right rebranding, it could bounce back. In November, it replaced its chief excutive executive, JS, with JM, former ly of Tony Burch, a fashion retailer, following that re rejig, victoria’s secrets has held off on big announcements.。