Why Every Woman Should Celebrate Sports Illustrated’s Swimsuit Issue

Editor’s Note: Keli Goff @ Loop21 observes that 2012 Sports Illustrated swimsuit issue cover model, Kate Upton, can actually help girls and women develop healthier body images. This article originally ran here.

keli goff
Keli Goff

Each year, shortly after we have made and already begun to break our New Year’s resolutions, Americans become captivated by sports’ most competitive contest. No I am not referring to the Super Bowl, but the contest for who will grace the cover of the Sports Illustrated Swimsuit Issue.

Landing the cover is supposed to be the equivalent of winning the Super Bowl of the modeling world (or something like that), credited with launching, or at least elevating, the careers of some of modeling’s most famous and enduring names, among them Christie Brinkley and Tyra Banks. While it’s arguable that it elicits very different reactions from men and women, with the New York Times describing it as “the dream book of adolescent males and the bane of feminists,” I’m one feminist who believes that there’s a lot for women to celebrate about the Sports Illustrated Swimsuit Issue.

Read more @ Loop21.

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