February 27, 2009
As if Heidi Klum and Claudia Schiffer weren’t evidence enough, German researchers have just published a study in the Plastic and Reconstructive Surgery journal that proves something we all pretty much suspected: women with smaller waist-to-hip ratios (ie. waists that are narrower than their hips) are judged to be more attractive.
The scientists (who obviously don’t read Sports Illustrated) presented over 34,000 people with photographs of a woman whose leg length, weight, bust size, and hip width were made larger and smaller using morphing software. While the woman’s face remained the same in every photo, the majority of participants judged her to be most appealing in instances when she had a little waist and lower body weight.
Right now, all that’s been released is the abstract of the study. Stay tuned to see if the results differ between men and women—we suspect it’s the ladies who like the skinnies.












In structure, this cycle of "America's Next Top Model" is nearly identical to each of those that have preceded it, yet, against all odds, this has been one of the stronger seasons in recent history. I pondered what made this so during the remaining models' trip to Amsterdam:
So the best model, or one of them anyway, won "America's Next Top Model." I said in my last post that the dearly departed Marjorie Conrad reminded me of Elise Sewell from Cycle 1. McKey Sullivan, this season's winner, reminds me of Johanna House from Cycle 2. She might not be as bubbly and chipper as the runner-up, Samantha Potter (or Cycle 2's Mercedes Scelba-Shorte), but give me a break. How could you let someone with that face and who can carry off a severe shork dark haircut like that not win it all?
After becoming "America's Next Top Model's" 11th winner, Brittany "McKey" Sullivan chatted with journalists on a conference call about the competition and life after it. Here were a few highlights from the discussion:
Ladies, you know that lie you tell yourself when you look at fashion models? "The one thing keeping me from being a model is my height"? Well, now there's no excuse. Removing itself further than ever from the actual world of fashion, for its 13th cycle, "America's Next Top Model" has now put a height MAXIMUM on its contestants: a whopping 5 feet, 7 inches. 
