Jamie explores how the Cathy character navigates body image and fashion trends, and who and how these colonially driven beauty standards came to dominate the U.S.
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Quick trigger warning. This episode contains descriptions of eating disorders and themes surrounding them. Picture this. It's December two. Aladdin is at the top of the box office, closely followed by one of our most predatory presidents having a cameo in home alone to one of our other most predatory presidents. And that's really saying something had just been voted into office and was preparing to take over from a bland, loser, warmongering president whose garbage son would also be president on the strength of nepotism alone and would later rebrand as the world's most terrible artist. And in December nine two, Kathy, the comic strip character was on the cover of a magazine. I hear your question, which magazine? No Cosmo wasn't brave enough. Kathy appeared on the cover of Wait Watchers magazine, wearing green, red and gold for the season, declaring happy Holidays, Meet the real Kathy and inside this issue we do The piece by R. G. Marzuli reads as follows the cartoon. Cathy's weight struggles and battles with the scale are legend, so it was only natural for her to team up with Weight Watchers. Her impish image, Grace's posters and brochures and outwork meeting locations around the country, giving women a chuckle as well as the reassured knowledge that they are certainly not alone. Cathy's problem with her weight comes up a lot because the general issue of self image is a huge part of the strip. Guys White explains, it's central to every woman's existence, even if we don't want to say that it is. We live in a world we're expected to look a certain way and where the role models of perfection are astoundingly hard to achieve. In our own way. We all struggle to be what the world expects a woman to be. So this article was more than just a spotlight on the Kathy character, whose popularity had steadily risen during the years of feminist backlash in the eighties. This article was a part of a sponsorship deal. In the early nineties, Kathy appeared on number of Weight Watchers posters, pins, and promotions. Also included in these promotions were Mr Pinkley and Irving, complete with a caption contest to win two tickets on a Caribbean cruise. It was the nineties. You wouldn't understand, that's right, Kathy, I wouldn't understand the nineties because I'm young and full of life. But it's no surprise that the Kathy character would become the literal poster child for a company whose brand relied on regular people, mostly women, who were struggling with their body image. After all, this had been the Comic Strips brand for over fifteen years, and it's where we hear the most persistent criticisms of Kathy. Some of her crueler critics asked why she could never successfully lose weight, and others disliked that she was so fixated on it. Some got bored by Cathy's continual frustration with her own reflection in a bathing suit, while others thought that her annoyance with the changing fashion trends was whiny and repetitive. They're lucky I wasn't a want to wear those hideous clothes from the Instagram targeted ads. You know, I got that. You're right, those are very upsetting, and I will grant you that. But what was Kathy guys White really saying about diet culture in her work and as promoting the diet culture surrounding Weight Watchers magazine changed the message? Also, who the funk won? That caption contest and was the cruise fund. In today's episode, we're looking at the Kathy body image complex. So let's get music. She passed into the world in nineteen seventy six. She's at what, She's out on dates, and she don't lack politics, from mama and urban to feminist friends. And she's fighting all the stands it with chocolate and hand Cathy. She's fighting back. She stressed with success. Let's snack Cathy, Cathy, fun Cathy. She's gotta luck go in all. The Kathy and Weight Watchers collaboration was short lived, but touches on something we've come up against quite a bit in this series. If you scan eBay for remaining Cathy merchandise, you'll see more of the stereotype of the character that Guys White created, monetized and perpetuated. She can't lose weight, she's addicted to shopping. She and her mom have an intense relationship, and on and on and on the other side of that equation is the actual material this merchandise was based on, which, as well discussed today, contained far more nuanced and specific commentary. You might remember from episode two, I asked Kathy, Guys White about this period of intense merchandizing of her strip in December ninety two when this magazine came out. Guys, why it would have been writing the daily strip, raising an infant as a single parent, and running an entire merchandising company. In retrospect, she did have some regrets about this time. Here's what she said, Well, the two big licensing forces were Charles Schultz, who had, of course the licensing empire, and Jim Davis, who created Garfield, and he had a licensing empire. And I saw no reason why a female cartoonist couldn't have a licensing empire, especially because you know, we love to shop. Women loved the shop and there we go. So that that was my plan. My plan was to have my my female based licensing empire. So that did not work out as planned, But I spent decades trying to make a work. I mean, it's from from where I was sitting. It felt like when I was growing up, like Kathy was omnipotent. I yeah, it was. That was hard at yeah, it just was a lot. I mean I eventually had to have an office full of people who worked also worked on the licensing who were dead sales and marketing and all of that eventually had to have some people helped draw the merchandise. Uh oh boy, there's so much of that I would not have done if I had it to do over again, because a lot of it in in a lot of that and a lot of like the pursuing, the greed and glory of having my licensing empire, and a lot of it I lost, like the like the essence of Kathy and the heart and soul of Kathy, like my favorite, my favorite of all the billion greeting cards we did, my very favorite ones still are the ones I drew myself. But I would need to agree to stuff just to like, agreed to deals or endorsements, who uh is to fund the office, And then it was kind of got into that cycle. So, I mean, just as a business person, I learned a lot about I learned a lot by doing, you know, by making all the blunders that people make, which is you know, getting a little bit getting too big and not you know, and kind of losing touch with what was good. But at the time, Jamie, I mean, I was fueled by a woman's possibility to do everything. So at the in the you know, in the nineties, when the licensing was had gotten really big and we were just built this this whole other office just got designed for us to move into, and the comptrip was doing great. That's and I had, I mean six waking hours six six seconds you know, per day, where I wasn't just completely overwhelmed. That's when it occurred to me that I should adopt a baby. So it's pretty safe to say that with this in mind, the Weight Watchers sponsorship was more or less a cashion and that's absolutely up for criticism on guys White and her company's part. After all, the comic regularly indicated that diet culture was prohibitively expensive and didn't work, and so for the Kathy character to have actually endorsed a weight loss method as something that works may have been surprising to longtime readers. But American dieting culture far predated the Cathy and Weight Watchers collab. Its legacy is baked right into the colonial dumpster fire that is the American experiment. Let's go back to that Weight Watcher's article really quick. In light of Cathy's ongoing weight problems, guys White has her own personal experience to draw from. At five one, she was once more than fifty pounds overweight. She maintains her weight loss through the skills she learned at weight watchers. Weight Watchers showed me the whole concept of being able eat normal food and proper portion sizes. It gave me a foundation for living in a world filled with food. In the strip, Cathy's weight problems stem from her love hate relationship with food and the temptation to use it for all the wrong purposes. Although she's been a student of the physical fitness slash health movement for years, Cathy will succumb to a cheesecake were a box of donuts. We all like to think we're above those struggles, but most of us begin or end every day of our lives with a little food fight of our own. Guys White says, Cathy is honest about those real personal moments that may not be that cool to talk to people about. So it's with this kind of aggressive merchandizing in the brief burst of diet endorsements that a little bit of hypocrisy leaks through, something that Guys White seems to understand pretty clearly today. Why endorse a diet company when your work is about how diets target and fail women. Some would argue hope that Kathy character has no shortage of that when it comes to modifying her body to meet the standards of the day, but in practice, it's more likely, like guys White said, that she made that choice to continue to make enough money to keep her merchandizing company afloat. So I want to pick apart what is exactly going on with this predatory diet culture. The article mentions things like overweight, proper portion sizes, normal food, and while these phrases are very normalized and intuitive, I was curious what their origin really was. Honestly, I have been dreading writing and recording this episode because if there's one thing I hate talking about, it is about my relationship with food and disordered eating. And in a way, I kind of feel like a hypocrite even like attempting this discussion, because so far in my life, no matter how much information I learned, how much empirically true evidence that exists that the way that we are trained to see ourselves is rooted in dangerous bullshit, I'm still nowhere close to deprogramming, shaking whatever, ring myself from it. Failing. It's a vortex. So you're saying, I'm right. We'll put a pin in that. And the more I think about this frustration, this failure to like my own body, and the deeply ingrained belief that women's bodies require this constant maintenance, observation, improvement, the more I start to feel like, and I'm looking at you, Kathy Comic. I mean, it's not that bad. You're right, I'm protecting. So this isn't a full history of diet culture, but I tried to put together a crash course because maybe you need to hear some of this the same way that I did. The Cathy character's tendency to get frustrated with her body and the expectations being forced on it take up as much real estate in the history of the comic as her relationship and workplace problems, if not more. It's one of the themes that's most popularly associated and criticized about her. For many people, the first association of a Kathy comic is Kathy looking in the mirror at a department store because she doesn't think she looks right. She thinks that she's fat and feels that to be fat is to be bad. Because the fashion trend of the moment, whether it's nineteen seventy six, when the comics started, or when it ended catered to real thin women and not actual bodies. Here's one of my favorites on this subject from the late nineteen nineties. Kathy is reading a magazine while working out on her home elliptical machine in sweatpants. In the past ten years, the amount of money spent on diet programs has doubled to thirty five billion a year. In the exact same tenure period, adult Americans have gained an average of eight pounds eight Kathy looks stressed and gets off the elliptical. The more money we spend on dieting, the more weight we gain. The more weight we gain, the more money we spend on dieting. In the final panel, Kathy lies flat on her couch with the magazine covering her face. She is defeated. When I speak of the millennium, they're referring to the future span of our waistline, and Kathy is using authentic statistics of the day for American dieters here. While people loved to make fun of the character for feeling, strips like this reveal that the system was rigged to begin with So we've got to take a look at that system with a brief, admittedly incomplete history of how diet culture has affected American women and not just the middle class working women that Kathy tends to comment on. Again, this is a crash course, So I quickly would like to shout out the three sources I used most often in putting this episode together. Those were Fearing the Black Body by Sabrina Strings, This is Big by Marissa Metzer, and the amazing Maintenance Phase podcast from Audrey Gordon and Michael Hopps, And it is with their sage guidance that I bring you back to ancient Greece. Seriously, Keathy, I know you read like every book on personal health from the nineteen seventies to the two thousand's, but you need to like give me a chance, let the process work. Okay, ancient grace, goodbye. She's not wrong, but bear with me for a second, because the way we look at women's bodies goes way back throughout history. A full female figure has been the feminine ideal. But as time goes on, that ideal, which is almost always formed by white men, becomes slimmer and slimmer. But we're starting in ancient Greece, because that is where the classical Venus figure comes from. Maybe you can picture the statue that I'm talking about. Alread. She's nude, she's covering one nipple and her pubic area. She doesn't have a twentieth century supermodel body. She has a body. She has meat on her arms and her legs and her stomach. The statue, which was originally made in the first century BC, came to prominence in the modern sense in the sixteen hundreds when it was displayed at the Via Medici in Rome, a property that was run by the Grand Duke of Tuscany, and overtime, this statue became an icon, and the physical figure of Venus was considered to be the ideal feminine form in Western European culture, around a time where Western Europe was aggressively colonizing around the world. This meant, among other things, that this image of Venus was perpetuated across the globe very quickly, and women from around the world with different skin tones, builds, ages were compared against her this fictional statue. The book Hearing the Black Body does an excellent job of unpacking how these prominent standards of beauty were almost always created and standardized like this. They were made up by white men. They were enforced on white women to display white women as the peak of femininity and to other non white women. I'm going to let this book's incredible research and attention to detail kind of guide us through this period in history up until the second wave of feminism, where Kathy's story begins. Author Zabrina Strings unpacks the Venus de Medici's legacy and its role in establishing the ideal female form. In Fearing the black body, she says this Venetian voluptuous nous was united by the notion that beauty was found in proportionality and that fleshiness was pleasing to the eye. Strings also describes the absence of non white women in popular European art during this time, with a few exceptions. One of these exceptions was a seventeenth century sculpture, and seventeenth century means that it's from the sixteen hundreds. That has never not been confusing to me. So if you knew that you're smarter than me, If you didn't, there you go. A seventeenth century sculpture called the African Venus, whose sculpture has been disputed over the years, but is currently thought to be a Dutch guy named Johann Gregor vander schardt vander Shart, vander Shart, It's very serious. He's a serious letting an artist in his last name is vander Shart. The statue looks very similar to the Venus de Medici, but instead depicts a black woman's body. And while the Venus de medici, a white woman is seen looking away from her own body demurely, the African venus holds a hand mirror where she views her own image. And this is just one example of what I'd really like to stress here, and that is that the way we view bodies, particularly women's bodies, is very closely tied to imperialism from every angle. To say that it's just patriarchy is overly simplest stick because there's a lot of factors at play here. There are differences in how women's bodies are treated and viewed by race, by country of origin, by time period, by build, and by trends of the day. Basically all of these attitudes were shaped and enforced by men of European and later American origin. Strings says this of the African Venus's legacy. In a prelude to ideas about Africans that would be developed over the next several centuries, the African venus is lacking in shame, whereas the European eyed venus putica covers her pubis and breasts. The African venus is mesmerized by her own beauty as she gazes wistfully at her own reflection. At this time, women's bodies were viewed as property in many ways. This could be through marriage or, as was the case for many African women, actual enslavement by white people, and these body standards rarely, if ever, have anything to do with health and sometimes be directly harmful to health. At certain points in history, women with fuller figures would be an indication that their husbands could afford rich foods, and at other times, more slender women that her husband restricted the intake of food and drink in order to bring his family closer to God. This constant recalibration and optimization of white women's bodies and the mothering of non white women's bodies is a constant trend, as was the European male tendency to only call black and brown women beautiful when they had features that resembled white European women. Women with bigger figures were celebrated in a way that directly opposed with body standards imposed on men. Fatness in men was thought to represent a lack of self control and thinness, as Sabrina Strings put that represented quote bodily proof of rationality and intelligence unquote. Okay, We're going to fast forward a bit to a late Renaissance flam artist named Peter Paul Rubens, who became very famous for painting nudes of curvy white ladies lining up with the voluptuous aesthetic popular at the time. To this day, you still might hear women referred to as ruben esque by a creepy uncle or a bad writer. Rubens himself was extremely fixated on how he felt women should look, to the extent that he wrote a long treatise on what he considered to constitute beauty and ideal proportionality. He included a whole chapter on looks that he thought were specifically hot. Nothing weird going on here, Rubens says this. The body must not be too thin or too skinny, nor too large or too fat, but with a moderate embondment following the model of the antique statues. The hip or the tops of the thighs, and the thighs themselves should be large and apple. The botics should be round and fleshy, the knees should be fleshy and round. As if anyone asked, that's what I'm saying, What the fuck so? Rubens paintings ordinarily featured nude white women, and he would sometimes feature black women in the portrait as a servant or slave wearing clothing, as he did in paintings like Bath, Shabbah and Venus in front of the Mirror. This, regretfully, would have lined up with Ruben's life. He was living in Antwerp, Belgium, a hub of imperialism and slave trade during that time. In paintings like these, black women were explicitly mothered and portrayed as inferior, while white women were told by Ruben's images how to look in order to be valuable to society. Sabrina Strings puts it like this. In other words, whiteness stood not just for social supremacy, but general superiority. This body standard held pretty firmly for some time, but things began to shift by the late seventeen hundreds and into the eighteen hundreds, and it was during this time that European colonists continued an increasing rate to wreak havoc and force white supremacy on a large portion of the planet. There are very few countries that have gone untouched by the imperialism of this era, and in the case of many cultures, including indigenous Americans and a steep increase in the forced enslavement of African people, entire cultures were massacred and attempted to be erased entirely in favor of European ideals and culture. And it was during this time that the bodies of non white women were further othered, and at times explicitly mothered by being linked with fatness. A popular example of this lies in the story of Sarah Bartman, a South African quake Koi woman who became known by the cruel nickname of the Hot and taught Venus while living in Cape Town, South Africa. Bartman was brought to the UK by a Scottish military surgeon to display her body as an exhibit, but the more accurate term, based on how her image and body was monetized, is more like a circus. Many details of Bartman's life are unknown, and it's not clear whether she went to the UK in eighteen ten voluntarily or not. What is known she was toured across Europe because her body looked different than European women, and she was marketed with intense grotesque fixation put on her buttocks. White lookers on could pay to poke and prod at her, and Bartman was later brought to France and effectively enslaved while being put on display before she died at forty of unknown causes, many of said smallpox. There is a lot more to discuss here about Sarah Bartman's life and much that isn't known about it. Her legacy and her image, which was generally illustrated, exaggerated, and disseminated by Europeans, is historically connected to how black women's bodies are mothered, and this is something that Saberena Strings sites to demonstrate that as European beauty standards shifted to encourage white women to become thinner, non white women were mothered in order to show white women how not to be. Strings says this, whether fact or fiction. The purported size of her bottom and tandem with her presumed general rotundity placed Sarah beyond the pale of fair skinned European norms of beauty. Racial theories had linked fatness to blackness in the European imagination, and they had also linked thinness to whiteness. I'll be linking tomorrow about Sarah Bartman's life in the episode description. As the eighteen hundreds continued, body standards began to shift, Europeans across gender lines were encouraged to eat and drink less to demonstrate their class, with a lot of pop culture at the time reinforcing that fatness was linked with African women, specifically during a time where race science became a prominent and deeply harmful component of the European imperialist equation. Here, according to Strings, is how it worked. Englishmen were seen as arbiters of taste or those capable of creating the guidelines for judging beauty. English women were treated as its representatives. As the eighteen hundreds were on, thin white women gradually became a symbol of not just white supremacy, but of divine morality and closeness to God. And it's with this mentality taking hold across the imperial world that early diet culture began to rear its head. The idea of food and drink restriction to force thinness was also originally tied to Christianity, and it was this that motivated an early unwitting diet guru named George Chain. Chain was a Scottish born physician whose invention of a diet of milk, seeds, and fruits not just helped him lose weight, but became a lucrative diet among aristocratic women of the day. This launched him into a prominent and comfortable life, even though he was at the time deeply annoyed that women seemed to be more drawn to his work than men. Boo who. Here's a short history of diets in the eighteen hundreds, all invented by European men. I know I'm being overly cautious here, but I'm not endorsing these. Please don't do these. Let's get some music going. The avoiding Swamps diet, which claimed that living near a swamp caused obesity. Someone alert Shrek and Donkey to this one. What are you doing in my swamp? There was the Fletcherism diet, which instructed that people chew food until it turned to liquid to fool the body into thinking it was full. There was the vinegar and water diet as pushed by Lord Byron, the tapeworm diet which yep, and the first popularized low carb diet by a British undertaker in William Banton. He published one of the first ever popular diet book called A Letter on Corpulence. Let's cut the music. Pushers of fad diets have long targeted women specifically and are often exposed to be total scammers, But their scammers with a very consistent goal to make money and gain notoriety by encouraging women to alter their habits and bodies under the assumption that it will make them healthier and more desirable by society. Some of these diets simply supplemented less healthy foods with more healthy foods, while others relied on dangerous gimmicks or modified disordered eating. Diet Pills also started cropping up in the late eighteen hundreds, which both did not work and caused severe damage to users bodies. Another very effective tool for enforcing these body standards goes back to where we started in this episode. At mass distributed magazines primarily directed at white girls and women, Sabrina Strings credits and magazine called Goodie's Lady Book as an early pusher of body norms in mass media. It was published from eighteen thirty to eighteen seventy eight in Philadelphia and was edited by a woman for forty years of its run, a writer named Sarah Joseph Hale. But as people with big old brains like you and me, No, you and I the smartest people to ever live, a woman's involvement in something does not mean that that's something is holy pro women. Because while Sarah Joseph Hale did do some cool stuff, including spotlighting women in the workforce as early as the eighteen fifties, and hired first wave feminist Sarah Jane Lippincott as an assistant editor before she was fired by GODI for denouncing slavery in the magazine. But Sarah Joseph Hale, as Sabrina Strings tells us, in Fearing the Black Body, wanted to push the narrative of women as more than housewives by reinforcing temperance, morality, and food restriction. Goadie's Lady Book, as many modern magazines still do today, pushed the idea of optimizing one's body. According to the morality of the day and the day of Goadie's Lady Book stated that American beauty was white, Anglo Saxon and Protestant wasp city baby, some real Charlotte's walking around. All this to say that many white women who were tastemakers, even those who claimed to be feminists, were generally complicit in this mindset. An example is a writer named Lee Hunt, who once published a piece in Goadie's called Chapter on Female Features. Sabrina Strings describes the piece like this, Hunt makes it clear that excessive eating leads to a figure that would be undesirable for cultivated white women. With more than a hint of sarcasm, Hunt acknowledges that there are fashions and beauty as well as dress. With this, she is suggesting that in other parts of the world, different standards of beauty apply. Goodie's Ladybook perpetuated and over time adjusted what the concept of American beauty was. Originally, it excluded most white immigrant women as well, at different times, excluding Irish women, Italian women, Polish women, Catholic women, and Jewish women by associating them with fatness. Over time, however, most other white women were welcomed into the fold, while black, brown, Indigenous, and any fat women remained firmly excluded from what the term American beauty meant. What it boiled down to was this image of delicate white supremacy, with the white women representing the eventual reproduction of the race. Strings says that it was the quote multiple and colliding factors of Protestant asceticism scientific racism in the protoscience of health and beauty unquote. After Godie's Lady Book folded Bye Bye, other magazines with more familiar names took up the mantel. How about Harper's Bizaar. It began in eighteen sixty seven in New York by publishing Magnates the Harper Brothers, who marketed the magazine to middle and upper class white women, and again a woman served as the editor in chief for its formative years. Mary Louise Booth edited the magazine from its beginning and for the next sixteen years, and frequently included columns about women's dietary habits. There was a column called for the Ugly Girls that was about falling short of feminine expectations, and unlike Godie's Lady Book, Harper's Bazaar was unequivocally a fashion magazine. Fashion is a complicated and fascinating topic that we'll get to a bit later in the episode, and it's been used both really powerfully for self and cultural expression as well as taken advantage of to enforce the standards of patriarchy and imperialism. Harper's Bizarre from the beginning, existed at this very tricky intersection. Saberena Strings says this of the magazine, Harper's reflected a kindred preoccupation with the right models of beauty, which were based on one's race and class status. For this reason, the magazine denounced the fatness of the savage races and exalted the more streamlined aesthetic of the Germans. This sentiment was to be found in an eighteen seventy nine article titled the Fixed Facts of Beauty. In it, the author informs readers that it is not to say that the laws of beauty are not fixed, that because the turxy's beauty are not fixed, that because the turxy's beauty only in the obese and certain of the savages and the deformed, that therefore the laws of beauty are arbitrary. It was in the late eighteen hundred that Cosmo began publishing with a pretty similar mission to Harper's. It featured articles by writers like Elizabeth Bisland, who was actually a pretty fascinating character. She engaged in a race around the world against pioneer investigative reporter Nellie Bligh. But Bisland also wrote on the concept of American beauty, talking about thinness as a type of exceptionalism. Here's how Sabrina Strings characterizes her work. It is a type of beauty possible only in the United States, where the best of all races, those from Northern and Western Europe, had arrived as immigrants. These desirable immigrants had mixed and mingled to produce progeny who were tall, thin, and of unsurpassed beauty. And while this mindset is aggressively bigoted, this wouldn't have been surprising rhetoric for the time by a long shot. In the early nine hundreds, eugenic race science was becoming increasingly popular in the United States as a discriminatory tool. In a New England, Puritan fancy guy named Charles Davenport Okay founded the Eugenics Records Office in New York, further pushing the idea that people of color as well as, to quote Charles Davenport quote polls, Irish and Italians unquote, were lesser than Eugenics attempted to accomplish this by drawing attention to slight physical differences, often imagined to justify its claims of superiority. Eugenics are still weaponized to this day. By the time these magazines were popular, first wave feminism was in full swing in the United States, and as we investigated in episode three of this podcast, all the exclusionary, white, middle and upper class dominated issues that came with the time period led to women being granted the vote in the US, and by that time the body standards in the United States had firmly changed. While some areas of the American South had previously celebrated fuller women's figures than in the North, mass media had more or less perpetuated the slender white ideal, to the point where articles of the time said explicitly that the Venus di medici, once the beauty standard, would now be considered too big to be beautiful by the American standards. In the early nineteen hundreds, Harper's Cosmo and advertising at large were overwhelmed with the image of the Gibson Girl, which were illustrations of the white lady ideal, drawn by you won't be shocked, some guy, Charles Dana Gibson. While the Gibson girls varied in their fashions, all Gibson girls were tall and descended from the British, forming this image of white American exceptionalism. Nowadays, the Gibson girl is more commonly associated with American flappers, what women looked like around the time of an increased focus on women's rights. But that wasn't necessarily their intent. Gibson himself was quick to say that his illustrations, while iconic, were meant to calcify the concept of American beauty and to exclude women who did not fit its standard. He once wrote this, what zeng Will calls the melting pot of the races as resulted in a certain character. There beyond question the loveliest of all their sex. Evolution has selected the best things for preservation. Why should women not be beautiful? Increasingly, why should it not be the fittest in form and features, as well as mind and muscle, which survives? And where should that fittest be? In evidence? Most strikingly in the United States, of course, where natural selection has been going on, as elsewhere, there has been a great variety to choose from. The eventual American woman will be even more beautiful than the woman of today. Her claims to that distinction will result from a fine combination of the best points of all those many races which have helped to make our population. Other American men took a different tech on women's bodies, which it's incredible to hear so many different perspectives on something that is none of their business. The perspective I'm talking about is that of John Harvey Kellogg, who, yes, ultimately founded that breakfast cereal empire, but began as a deeply religious and deeply racist eugenicist who feared that American women had become so thin that they were no longer adequately fertile to continue the white American race. Not all women have uterus, as Mr Kellogg, not that you give a ship. He's said, I don't know what I'm doing. At the time, John Harvey Kellogg was very clear on his views. He said, quote, the only hope for the race is in the future of its girls unquote. He rejected the physical frame of Gibson girls and flappers, and encouraged women to eat well Kellogg's cereal to become, as he told it, heartier and more fertile. There's an entire book on the full picture by Dr Howard Markle called the Kellogg's the battling Brothers of Battle Creek. That all link in the description. It is a bizarre and disturbing legacy. So Tony the Tiger part of the EU genesis legacy. I don't make the facts, but it's my sacred duty to report them. Snap crackle and pop Uron noticed the Raisin brand's son sick. Oh, get them out of there? And what good with these exceptionalist ideals? And magazines and advertising be without rules and products with which to attain the look. Beginning in nineteen thirteen, scales for the home became consumer products so that people could monitor their bodies from the comfort of their own bathroom. The concept of calories became standard with a nineteen eighteen best seller called Diet and Health with Key to the Calories by Lulu Hunt Peter's Watch Your Weight. The cover warned and in its pages Peters described fatness as a quote disease unquote. The concept of body mass index came into play with something called ideal weight tables, most popularly with tables circulated by MetLife Insurance. The data these tables used were entirely based off of white and disproportionately male bodies, and we're not designed with mind towards actual bodily health, but instead to be used by insurance companies in order to assess risk on who qualifies for life insurance. Come on. The b m I as we know it now came to prominence in the US in nineteen seventy two, just four years before the Cathy strip debuted in American newspapers. While the b m I was just a modification of these tables, which completely excluded non white people and many women, it was eventually adopted by the NIH or National Institute of Health. Previously, the nih had utilized those MetLife Life insurance tables. The inherent racism of the body mass Index is well documented, in spite of its popularity to this day. I will link some resources in the descrip option and it's here in the nineties seventies where our girl Cathy re enters the picture. Now that you're up to speed on how we arrived at the diet culture that the Kathy comic was staring down the barrel of when the comics started. We're going to pick up there in part two of this episode later in the week. By back Cast is an I Heart radio production. It is written, researched, and hosted by me Jamie Loftus, Sophie Electuman is the world's Greatest producer, Isaac Taylor is the world's greatest editor, Zoe Blade writes the world best music, and Brandon Dickert wrote the world best theme song. In today's episode, you heard the vocal talents of Sharene Lana unas Maggie Cannon, Isaac Taylor, and the Icon herself, Jackie Michelle Johnson as Kathy. We will see you Wednesday,