Being in the public eye is a very odd thing. Because much of the time, it is an eye. It’s rarely an ear. Whenever you appear on TV or even in print, people tend to remember how you look not what you say and that can be disconcerting. Especially when your chosen career path was never knowingly based on aesthetics.
Like politicians. Or journalists. I first learned this when I began a fledgling apprenticeship as a guest reporter on The Today Show. After my first wobbly story went to air (a scintillating tale about denim), the woman in charge of the network’s on-air image pulled me aside for a quiet word. That word was ‘bra’ and apparently, I needed a better one.
I also had to cut my hair, stop slouching and speak in a less nasal way. Next, I was ordered to practice sitting on the Today Show couch so I’d look less awkward during interviews.
I took this feedback seriously. I trimmed my hair and tightened my bra straps. I practiced sitting. Until one distressing morning when I arrived on the set and the floor manager ushered me away from the couch towards some stools. “We’re over here for this segment,” he said as my world collapsed. “But I haven’t practiced stools!” I wailed. “I only know couches!”
Years later during my blink-and-you’ll-miss-it stint as a TV executive, in a perverse yet oddly karmic twist of fate I was put in charge of the network’s on-air image. Briefly, I was the one who had to ensure shoulders and boobs didn’t droop, ties and shirts didn’t clash and hair was kempt. It was a ridiculous yet necessary job because much of the public feedback is about how TV presenters look. Being the Image Police was a dispiriting task required two attributes: eyes and diplomacy. I possessed one of those and for a time, it was enough.
Top Comments
How funny that communications students are still being taught such non-sensical toss-pottage that perpetuates the blandification of personal presentation in the media. I rememember being taught similar nonsense during a communications degree in the late 80's. It was the same silly made-up "science" that got us wearing sharp suits with silly shoulder pads so we little women would appear bigger and tougher in a man's world.
I would love to see people on the telly etc that look like the rest of us...wonky limbs, un-sleek hair, the occasional mis-matched shoe.
Georgie Gardiner is reliably immaculate, and her self-discipline is admirable. But my favourite tv presenter is Li Lin Chin, who reads SBS news. She exudes confident self-expression and still manages to read the news with authority.
PS Mia, I love the way you look on the Today show. You look like a real woman doing a job, not someone playing dress-ups. Your authentic, non-styled, self works for me!
Does it matter what men wear? Obviously not. If the only example we can dredge up is a man in outrageously skimpy swimming attire, in his spare time and with no mention of his hair or makeup or general posture or voice or choice of accessories, then it's pretty obvious that men dodge a fair chunk of the criticism that is constantly levelled at women, whether they're on the job or out for a jog.
And not at all coincidentally, women are continuously judged harshly for every aspect of their appearance...mostly by other women. It's a nasty, vicious cycle.
Take Ms Gillard. Usually lambasted for being too drab, too unfashionable, yet when there's a natural disaster and she dares to wear a lick of makeup, she's accused of not doing her job properly, of not caring, of not being of the same calibre of leader as Ms Bligh, all because one was wearing makeup and the other wasn't.
Here's an idea. Let's stop focusing on appearances and instead focus on the job at hand, the abilities and strengths and talents of our women, instead of just our aesthetics and fashion choices.