The UK Channel Four reality television programmes Supersize vs Superskinny and Supersize vs Superskinny: Kids present their viewers with a stark, and supposedly educative, reforming of food practices. Pairing participants defined as underweight with others defined as morbidly obese, the programmes are premised on a so-called ‘diet swap’, in which participants consume their foils’ (either meagre or excessive) meals in order to face the supposed follies of their ways. While the programmes include both male and female participants, in-depth content analysis reveals that their televisual storytelling has gendered underpinnings, centred on the theme of ‘fitness’ to mother. Notably, this ‘fitness’, as the programmes frame it, entails reforming wo...
In recent decades overnutrition and obesity have been presented as a looming threat to the health an...
The Change4Life campaign draws on ‘nudge’ theory to encourage families to ‘make better choices’ abou...
This paper investigates the ways in which ‘the child’ is positioned in obesity debates and, in doing...
The UK Channel Four reality television programmes Supersize vs Superskinny and Supersize vs Superski...
Despite the intense level of attention directed towards obesity, there has been limited success in a...
Mothers are expected to monitor their children’s dietary intakes and physical activities and are bla...
As the obesity epidemic fills the news hours, weight-loss TV programmes fill day-time viewing and th...
Widespread concern about a childhood obesity ‘epidemic’ has focused attention on the bodies, weight ...
Images and detailed descriptions of the postnatal maternal body have become more common in popular w...
In this era of ever-increasing emphasis on personal responsibility the 'obesity epidemic', officiali...
Despite the intense level of attention directed towards obesity, there has been limited success in a...
Contemporary Western societies focus considerable policy and media attention on the 'epidemic of chi...
The formats of makeover and lifestyle television are an evolution of the reality television genre. T...
This paper examines the rehearsal of familiar debates about how to raise children within the genre o...
In this paper I interrogate one of the seldom examined resources that children and adults alike have...
In recent decades overnutrition and obesity have been presented as a looming threat to the health an...
The Change4Life campaign draws on ‘nudge’ theory to encourage families to ‘make better choices’ abou...
This paper investigates the ways in which ‘the child’ is positioned in obesity debates and, in doing...
The UK Channel Four reality television programmes Supersize vs Superskinny and Supersize vs Superski...
Despite the intense level of attention directed towards obesity, there has been limited success in a...
Mothers are expected to monitor their children’s dietary intakes and physical activities and are bla...
As the obesity epidemic fills the news hours, weight-loss TV programmes fill day-time viewing and th...
Widespread concern about a childhood obesity ‘epidemic’ has focused attention on the bodies, weight ...
Images and detailed descriptions of the postnatal maternal body have become more common in popular w...
In this era of ever-increasing emphasis on personal responsibility the 'obesity epidemic', officiali...
Despite the intense level of attention directed towards obesity, there has been limited success in a...
Contemporary Western societies focus considerable policy and media attention on the 'epidemic of chi...
The formats of makeover and lifestyle television are an evolution of the reality television genre. T...
This paper examines the rehearsal of familiar debates about how to raise children within the genre o...
In this paper I interrogate one of the seldom examined resources that children and adults alike have...
In recent decades overnutrition and obesity have been presented as a looming threat to the health an...
The Change4Life campaign draws on ‘nudge’ theory to encourage families to ‘make better choices’ abou...
This paper investigates the ways in which ‘the child’ is positioned in obesity debates and, in doing...