Here’s a fun fact: These days, your average Aussie woman weighs in at about 70kgs and is about 163cm tall.
Last year, Body & Soul decided to take those statistics and perform a little experiment. They found a model that was 163cm tall and weighed about 70kg. Her name was Melanie Ward, and she was 35-years-old.
Body & Soul photographed Melanie in a crop top and a pair of shorts, and took a poster of her to the streets. They then crowd-sourced opinions, asking passers-by about whether they thought the model (name: Melanie, age: 33) was overweight.
Take a look at Melanie:
Interestingly, when the story ran, the majority of people said that Melanie was overweight. One woman called her fat. Another even asked, “how can this be the norm? How do people feel comfortable in such a state?”
And now, Melanie is back in the news again, after a federal Liberal MP discovered the story from last June, and reposted it on his Facebook page last week – voicing very similar opinions to those originally published in the article.
The MP is a not-particularly-well-known Queenslander named Andrew Laming. Mr Laming is also a doctor, and is evidently passionate about the the weight of Australians. When posting the link, he wrote: “So, is it OK to be overweight, if it is now average?”
Understandably, the debate was re-ignited. Women commented, accusing him of fat-shaming Melanie.
Federal Labor MP Kate Ellis said that it was an “appalling attack” and told Network Ten that we don’t need the government criticising women’s bodies – “we’ve got health experts and many others who will do that, and women themselves.”