🐱 Adele is thin now - Fatties madder than getting cut off at buffet

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CatParty


Adele’s latest social media post has

spawned a wide-ranging debate about

beauty standards and body positivity.


The Instagram photo featured a thank-you

to her fans and a message of support for

essential workers “risking their lives” .

It was Adele’s appearance in the image, however, that drew a large response online.

Countless fans commented that the “Hello” singer looked “stunning” and “beautiful”.

But while the responses to Adele’s appearance were largely positive, several social media users found the reactions problematic.

Others argued that the focus on

Adele’s weight also ignored her

numerous achievements as an artist



Adele has always loved the skin she is in.
When she first burst on the scene with her debut album "19" in 2008, the British singer was knocked for being plus sized.
Then she lost weight, but apparently not enough to suit some people.
In 2012, famed fashion designer Karl Lagerfeld apologized after reportedly calling the Grammy winner "a little too fat."



Adele shot back.
"I've never wanted to look like models on the cover of magazines," the then 23-year-old told People. "I represent the majority of women and I'm very proud of that."
Around the same time, she discussed body image with CNN's Anderson Cooper during a "60 Minutes" interview and said she's never felt pressure to look a certain way.
"I've never seen magazine covers and seen music videos and been like, I want to look like that if I want to be a success," she said.
In the years since, Adele has climbed to even greater heights as an artist. She's also become a mother, gotten married and divorced.
In an Instagram post Wednesday in celebration of her birthday, Adele, now 32, appears thinner than she ever has since she became famous.
We as a society love a before and after when it comes to our stars. Every celebrity transformation, physical or otherwise, often leads to our public assessment of whether it's good or bad. But is praising Adele's current appearance somehow criticizing how she looked before? Or are we simply acknowledging the transformation?


Not that thinner Adele hasn't been criticized.
Adele's latest photo caused plenty of buzz by some on social media, where people had already been weighing in on her apparent weight loss back in January.
That's when TMZ published a piece headlined "ADELE NOW FANS SAY SHE'S GETTING TOO THIN ...Can't Please Everybody."
Commentary over Adele looking svelte came after photos were published of her on the beach in the British territory of Anguilla.
Chalk one up for you can't win for losing.
With celebrities, it seems many feel entitled to comment more freely about them because we buy their music, or watch their movies. We know them but we don't know them, so what's the harm in sharing opinions about them?
But Adele's body is her own. How she chooses to look is also her own business and not a reflection of her artistry, remarkable talent or professional accomplishments. She's sold millions of albums, had four No. 1 Billboard hits, won 15 Grammys and sold out countless stadiums -- all while being various sizes.
Yes, Adele has lost weight. But up or down on the scale, she remains a beautiful woman who creates beautiful art.

"There's bigger issues going on in the world than how I feel about myself and stuff like that," Adele said about her body image in a 2015 interview.
Amen, Adele. Amen.
 
They're pop singers, not Nobel laureates. Investing any amount of mental energy into insulting them is a complete waste of time; they exist to sing the songs and wear the clothes and that's it.
yeah exactly they aren't nobel laureates which is why pretending one was any better or less shallow than the other was incredibly stupid. I didn't realise comparing one well known pop-star to another well known pop-star took a massive amount of brain power. besides It wasn't to insult either one of them just to tick off co-workers on slow day. Like you never voiced a dumb thought for a lark.
 
I don't like adele but like the idiots they are, the "fat positive" morons are once again showing their narcissism in that they really are just jealous they can't (won't) lose the weight and people won't purposefully skew human nature to view slender as unattractive.

I think it's less a case of narcissism and more a case of people not knowing how to work with what they've got. If you're not conventionally attractive, you can still find a partner by virtue of having a magnetic personality. When you lack the drive to better yourself physically and have the personality of a stale piece of cheese, the only options afforded to you are as such: you can either make peace with your lot in life, or you can try to drag everybody down to your level.

That's why you see so many of these landwhales coming out the woodwork to piss and moan about some celebrity losing weight. Her success serves as a bitter reminder of what they think they can't achieve.
 
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Hey, good for her I say. Fuck anyone that's giving her shit over this. Losing weight is not easy.
 
Fats literally believe that eating less and walking a couple miles a day is literally a insurmountable obstacle and you are a horrible person if you expect them to actually do that. Fat women also unironically believe that they deserve a jacked handsome guy just like any other woman because...inner beauty or something.
 
whats up with her boobs? did she stop using a push up bra?
That's what happens to titties when you lose a lot of weight. You lose boob fat too, and you have extra skin from when they were bigger, so they hang more. It can usually be hidden with a good bra, but a lot of former fat ladies want or get breast lifts because of it too.
 
OP should be banned for not including a picture as there's 0% chance in hell I'll willingly give yahoo or cnn a click.
@OnMoTi did you just have to wish that upon us?

Also:

Pop star Adele may have only wanted to thank first responders, but a photo from the noticeably slimmer singer instead triggered an epidemic of fatphobia accusations and body-shaming among 'health at any size' hypocrites.
The chart-topping Brit emerged from a five-month social media hiatus on Tuesday with the most innocuous of Instagram posts, thanking her fans for wishing her a happy birthday and including a beaming photo of herself in a little black dress. "I hope you're all staying safe and sane during this crazy time," she added for good measure.


Safe? Maybe. But sane? Judging by the avalanche of fatphobia accusations and skinny-shaming that ensued, Adele-watchers were most definitely not staying sane. One might think people would have better things to do during a pandemic than shred a pop star for her life choices, but that's underestimating the hypocrisy of the ‘body positivity’ movement.

Adele rocketed to fame over a decade ago despite being quite a bit heftier than the typical pop starlet, a testament to both her voice and the public's willingness to embrace performers who didn't fit the standard mold. While her look became more polished over the years, she was always praised by body positivity advocates for refusing to be pushed around about her weight. Hailed for "never wanting to look like models on the cover of magazines," her steadfast refusal to conform to the industry's beauty standards was declared "refreshing."

"Weight has nothing to do with my career," she said back in 2012, to thunderous media applause.


While Adele was making herself scarce online these past few months, celebrity gossip outlets hinted she was hitting the gym hard, motivated by a desire to be healthy for the sake of her young son. Now that she’s unveiled the finished product, she’s committed the unpardonable sin of implying – by her very existence! – that ‘weight loss’ and ‘health’ might not be mutually exclusive.

Alas, the body positivity movement is only 'positive' when it comes to certain bodies. When the pop star it claimed as its own decided she wanted to get fitter, that same independent spirit they'd embraced was recast as a personal attack upon their own life choices. Adele hasn't commented on her slimmed-down shape publicly, but it doesn't matter – she's said to be "more confident" and "seems happier." Her body – and her continued embrace of it – is by default a threat to the neurotic ‘health at any size’ advocates who reflexively scowl at fashion magazines and mutter curses under their breath when they see a thin woman eating.


And heaven forbid anyone compliment the singer on her transformation – that's an unconscionable assault on all overweight people, in the minds of some.

It's really nobody's business but Adele's what her motives were for losing weight, but given that carrying around extra pounds puts one at risk for a number of debilitating diseases, her choice should be respected. Losing weight isn't easy, and complimenting a star on their transformation shouldn't be interpreted as slagging off larger women. The world is already in the grip of one contagious epidemic – body positivity advocates would be wise to stomp out this hypocrisy outbreak before it spreads.
Sometimes I really fucking love Russia.
 
yeah exactly they aren't nobel laureates which is why pretending one was any better or less shallow than the other was incredibly stupid. I didn't realise comparing one well known pop-star to another well known pop-star took a massive amount of brain power. besides It wasn't to insult either one of them just to tick off co-workers on slow day. Like you never voiced a dumb thought for a lark.

I'm not a pop fan but Adele have a far superior voice compared to Swift. Swift should be compared to Ariana "thank you, next next" Grande.
 
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B-but Healthy at Any Size! Including sizes that don't require 60 yards of fabric to make a single tent-like garment.

Good for Adele.
 
Didn't know she had one hell of a jaw underneath that fat, she looks like a totally different person. But better.
 
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