After one of the following photos was posted, Instagram banned the user’s account. Can you guess which one?
This one:
Or this one:
Or this one:
Or this one:
All just photos of girls in bikinis, right?
Right. All except the last one, which shows HIDEOUS FEMALE PUBIC HAIR ARRRRRRGGGHHHH EEEWWWWW.
Yeah. It was the last photo that appeared to get Artist Petra Collins banned. Apparently she received so many complaints, that not only did Instagram delete the photo, they shut down her entire account.
And the only difference between that photo and the other 5.9 million other photos hashtagged ‘bikini’ on Instagram?
Pubes.
Well, female pubes, to be exact. It’s important to note that Instagram doesn’t seem to have a problem with male pubic hair. Of the 17, 829 Instagram photos hashtagged ‘pubes’, almost all are of males (except for the jokey ‘haha my cat’s hair looks like #pubes!’ sort of shots). One of the most popular photos on Instagram last week was this photo of One Direction’s Liam on his hotel balcony:
So what is the freaking deal, Instagram? Why has the line of ‘offensiveness’ seemingly been drawn at women’s bikini lines in their natural state? If you’re going to have guidelines for what’s appropriate – fine. But how can those guidelines be so filled with hyprocricy? How can you allow barely-there bikini shots but only if they’re hairless? How can you allow men’s pubic hair but not women’s? What sort of alternate universe is this?