
Sign up to save your podcasts
Or


Send us a text
Society loves to shame people for their weight. It's called fat-shaming, and even though it doesn't do anything beneficial for physical or mental health on a societal or individual level, it happens all of the time. It's a form of bullying that often gets a pass under the guise of concern, small-talk or encouragement to lose weight.
Celebrities face constant scrutiny over their looks and weight and when they are fat-shamed, it's in a very public way: a viral social media post, a magazine article, a TV show, etc. And while we can imagine that this is a painful experience for the person being fat-shamed, does it impact the rest of us, and if so, how?
Today's Causes or Cures podcast features Amanda Ravary, a clinical psychologist and researcher at McGill University that researched this topic. Specifically, she analyzed high-profile incidents of celebrity fat-shaming and studied the effects they had on a large sample of women.
Click to listen, subscribe to the podcast! :)
You can contact Dr. Eeks at bloomingwellness.c
Follow Dr. Eeks on Instagram here.
Or Facebook here.
Or Twitter.
Read Manic Kingdom here.
Listen to her short audio parody on the wellness industry here.
Subcribe to her newsletter here!
Support the show
By Dr. Eeks4.8
5151 ratings
Send us a text
Society loves to shame people for their weight. It's called fat-shaming, and even though it doesn't do anything beneficial for physical or mental health on a societal or individual level, it happens all of the time. It's a form of bullying that often gets a pass under the guise of concern, small-talk or encouragement to lose weight.
Celebrities face constant scrutiny over their looks and weight and when they are fat-shamed, it's in a very public way: a viral social media post, a magazine article, a TV show, etc. And while we can imagine that this is a painful experience for the person being fat-shamed, does it impact the rest of us, and if so, how?
Today's Causes or Cures podcast features Amanda Ravary, a clinical psychologist and researcher at McGill University that researched this topic. Specifically, she analyzed high-profile incidents of celebrity fat-shaming and studied the effects they had on a large sample of women.
Click to listen, subscribe to the podcast! :)
You can contact Dr. Eeks at bloomingwellness.c
Follow Dr. Eeks on Instagram here.
Or Facebook here.
Or Twitter.
Read Manic Kingdom here.
Listen to her short audio parody on the wellness industry here.
Subcribe to her newsletter here!
Support the show

229,238 Listeners

128 Listeners

27,992 Listeners

3,830 Listeners

9,217 Listeners

8,579 Listeners

45,636 Listeners

245 Listeners

2,405 Listeners

5,130 Listeners

29,248 Listeners

2,069 Listeners

19,741 Listeners

16,920 Listeners

149 Listeners