From a young age, girls are told to be confident in themselves, and not worry about what others think- society, however, is telling them the very opposite. From advertisements to the newest blockbuster film, you can be guaranteed to see a woman “half clad, half-witted and needing to be rescued by quick-thinking fully clothed men” (Stereotypes, …show more content…
This can be blamed on a number of things, namely films, advertisements and media, all in which the attractive, coy female is presented with a cheesy ‘complement’, proceeds to blush and accept the invitation for a date. Is it a sense of entitlement? An ideal dreamt up by an egotistical man? Perhaps the media can be held accountable, as it is predominately male-run industry? Women’s magazines are an example of just how far this issue has spread. Despite these companies being ran by ‘empowered women helping to empower others’, they show an alarming number of the same traits that, if they were to be presented by a male, would hold an entirely different reputation. On a larger scale, "When women are in the news, their role is often trivialized. World leaders are described in terms of their hats or dress designers" (Benedict, Virgin or Vamp, 1992). This type of presentation is the reason for women to believe that the do not hold any real power, that they cannot truly do anything to make a change in the