Popular Culture Review Vol. 20, No. 1, Winter 2009 | Page 46

42 Popular Culture Review Especially important are the comments from their new husbands. Melanie, who went from a size 16 to size 12, hoped that on her wedding day new husband Frank would be “very surprised” and “awestruck.” Thus, the beauty of each bride overshadows any other aspect of her person, with the allimportant endorsement of their husbands serving as validation of their efforts, such as Justine’s new husband Tom’s comment: “I couldn’t have guessed how beautiful she looks.” Colleen’s new husband Chris comments on her transformation from 163 pounds down to 145, illustrating the importance of the physical in creating the successful bridal appearance: “She looks like a Barbie doll or a china doll. Just so perfect and so amazing. So beautiful. Absolutely beautiful.” Comparing one’s new wife to a Barbie doll further illustrates the notion of idealized beauty; Colleen apparently did not look like Barbie prior to her transformation, but now she is perfect. One wonders how she will maintain such perfection after the wedding day. Conclusion Presented on FitTV, a medium purporting to promote health and fitness, the themes in Buff Brides of bodily disapproval and the wedding dress as motivator for losing weight and attaining today’s definition of the feminine body (thin and toned) further enhance the message that the female body serves as the foremost indicator of a woman’s worth. I found especially noteworthy how these women, the minority women in particular, viewed themselves as deficient or lacking in some way. Their expressions of dissatisfaction support Bartky’s assertion that media images of the perfect female beauty “leave no doubt in the minds of most women that they fail to measure up” (71). The viewer sees these women weighed and measured, much like livestock; their waist size and weight literally define their self worth. Buff Brides tells women that food must be controlled, denied, and used only as a reward for following the “rules” of femininity—that is, managing one’s body. Repeatedly, these women are shown either as “bad” by “indulging” or as “good” by rejecting food. Rather than portraying food as necessary and vital to maintaining good health, this program consistently shows that weight loss can only occur if one can resist temptation. Food becomes an obstacle to the attainment of the perfect body—which is defined as one that can fit into the wedding gown and be gazed at by others without the worry of flabby arms. The program’s inclusion of the wedding planning aspect gives the impression that fitting into a bridal gown to look good for one’s (male) mate serves as a legitimate reason to lose weight. The feminine ideal of perfection, so prominent in other wedding media, takes on additional importance in Buff Brides, in that all the brides, no matter their weight loss achievements or disappointments, all are “perfect” brides in the end. By the time of the wedding, it seems that onlookers still consider these brides beautiful: success or failure appears to be a moot point in the end. The hard work and stress that these women undergo as they deny themselves food and work out to the point of exhaustion and pain are dismissed as a matter of