Figure’ Magazine Caters to Reality

With 65% of American women wearing size 12 or larger and unable to wear any of the fashions displayed in Vogue, Elle, W, or Harper’s Bazaar, Figure Magazine is just the ticket. Figure, launched this week, is a new 300,000 circulation magazine designed for the plus-size woman. Plus size just sounds so unattractive but it is a reflection of today’s reality. Women are not Kournikova sized.

Brinsights LLC is the publisher of the lifestyle magazine which will include articles on shopping, makeovers, and etiquette. The magazine has sold 68,000 copies in its first four days on newsstands.

It’s an admirable effort but the downside is that people continue to aspire to be what they are not. It’s human nature. A person always wants to be better (read skinnier) than they are. Or sexier. That is why the Vogue’s of the world are so successful. They show the unachievable. The goal that may never be reached yet it motivates (yes, in unhealthy ways sometimes) people to aspire to a higher goal. While there is nothing wrong with facing reality, readers of Figure may experience lost sense of aspiration and long for, again, reading about the unachievable.

Picture of Steve Hall

Steve Hall

RECENT ARTICLES

TRENDING AROUND THE WEB

If you’d rather have 3 real friends than 50 followers, you have these 7 rare qualities most people never develop

If you’d rather have 3 real friends than 50 followers, you have these 7 rare qualities most people never develop

Global English Editing

Psychology says people who still wear a wristwatch instead of checking their phone usually display these 7 traits that are becoming rare

Psychology says people who still wear a wristwatch instead of checking their phone usually display these 7 traits that are becoming rare

Global English Editing

People who stay energetic into their 70s almost always follow these 6 evening habits

People who stay energetic into their 70s almost always follow these 6 evening habits

Global English Editing

I found my mom’s hidden bank account after she died—$47,000 that explained every “we can’t afford it” from my childhood

I found my mom’s hidden bank account after she died—$47,000 that explained every “we can’t afford it” from my childhood

Global English Editing

There’s a habit people develop in childhood poverty that never fully goes away—even after becoming millionaires

There’s a habit people develop in childhood poverty that never fully goes away—even after becoming millionaires

Global English Editing

Psychology says people who avoid confrontation often display these 8 behaviors that quietly damage relationships without them realizing it

Psychology says people who avoid confrontation often display these 8 behaviors that quietly damage relationships without them realizing it

Global English Editing