Photoshopping Mag Covers: How Much is Too Much?
Glamour: We didn't slim America.
For its October issueâthe âFirst Annual Figure Flatteryâ issueâGlamour put America Ferrera, star of ABCâs Ugly Betty, on its cover. For Jezebel, Gawker Mediaâs âgirlie blog,â it was bit too much âfigure flattery.â The site ran a post under the headline âPhotoshop of Horrorsâ juxtaposing Glamourâs cover with a photo of Ferrera at the Emmy Awards the same week the magazine hit newsstands. (The apparent slimming recalled a similar incident in which CBSâs in-house magazine trimmed Katie Couric by about three sizes.)
A Glamour spokesperson denies any such trimming. âAmerica was shot for the cover in June, and as she says in the article, she's a size 6/8. There was no slimming done to the cover.â
Photoshop manipulation on magazine covers is nothing new. George Karabotsos, design director at Menâs Health, points to a 1952 National Geographic cover that moved the Pyramids closer together. But recently the practice has teetered into dangerous territory, with Glamourâs Ferrera and Menâs Fitnessâ blatant enlargement of Andy Roddickâs bicepsâwhich Roddick himself exposed as fake on his blog (âlittle did I know I have 22 inch guns and a disappearing birth mark on my right arm ... whoever did this has mad skillsâ) and led to the resignation of the magazineâs designerâas the most egregious examples.
Roddick isnât the only victim to cry foul. Kate Winslet, after seeing herself on the cover of a British GQ: âI donât look like that, nor do I desire to look like that.â
Sometimes itâs not the body that is manipulated. In May, In Touch touched up Angelina Jolieâs veiny arm for its cover. Editor Richard Spencer was unapologetic: "You're right, we softened those veins. The arm was very, very veiny ... I think they can forgive it for the cover â unless it is a story specifically about their body. This was about her plans to expand her family."
But what about making your cover photo fit the story? In June, Star magazine used a photo of Jennifer Aniston carrying what appeared to be a manuscript for a cover story on the actressâ alleged â$5 Million Tell-All!â One problem: the manuscript was actually an art catalog.
Indeed, cover manipulation has become so widespread, says Karabotsos, that some magazines even include a budget line for retouching.
How Much is Too Much?
âRetouching should be like wearing light makeup, not to the point where you canât recognize the girl anymore,â says Self art director Petra Kobayashi. âWe retouch to make the models look bigger, healthier.â
Karabotsos agrees. âWe look for the ideal celeb or model for our magazineâa regular guy to have a beer with. He canât be too perfect, too retouched,â says Karabotsos. âA reader could think, âIf the coverâs not real, maybe the info in the magazine isnât that real.â
This is especially true with news magazines, says Karabatsis. Both Newsweekâwhich plopped Martha Stewartâs head on a different body for its âMarthaâs Last Laughâ coverâand Timeâwhich caused a literal outcry after placing a tear on Ronald Reagan in Marchâfaced criticism for publishing manipulated covers.
The National Press Photographers Association called Newsweekâs treatment of Martha a âmajor ethical breach.â
âYouâre a news organization,â says Karabotsos, noting that Newsweek has since changed their approach by disclosing photo illustrations like Marthaâs on the cover.
But even transparency doesnât translate to trust, Karabotsos says. âWe go to magazines to bring us the world. Theyâre bringing us a modified world that doesnât exist? Can we trust them?â
âYou have to think,â adds Kobayashi, âWhere does reality start?â
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