PhototgraphySports

High school accused of body-shaming girls after photoshopping their cleavages in yearbook photos

Bartram Trail High School in St. Johns County, Florida recently came under fire for photoshopping girlsā€™ bodies in yearbook photos. After their yearbook was published, 80 female students reported that their photos were altered to remove any hint of cleavage. The students and their parents got furious, and so did the public.

Riley Oā€™Keefe, a ninth-grader at Bartram Trail, first noticed the poor Photoshop job done on her yearbook photo. There was a black bar added to her image to cover her chest.

After going through the yearbook, she found plenty more photos with the same modification. After the initial laughter of disbelief, there came fury. As Riley told The New York Times, other girls approached her and said that these alterations made them feel sexualized and exposed.

The story soon hit the news, with parents and students asking for an apology. Ben Ryan of Action News Jax interviewed the students and tried reaching out to the school officials, too. However, none of them was reportedly available for an interview.

The school did issue a statement regarding the case, though. It reads that the school previously didnā€™t include student photos in the yearbook if they violated the student code of conduct. ā€œThe digital alterations were a solution to make sure all students were included in the yearbook,ā€ the statement reads. Still, the school is offering refunds to all the parents who have a problem with this solution.

So, the problem is that the girls didnā€™t respect the dress code. Still, both parents and students told Ben Ryan that this isnā€™t true. The girls reportedly didnā€™t get dress code violations when wearing the same outfits before. One mom said that her daughter wore it ā€œlike 50 times and never got in trouble.ā€

Interestingly enough, there are some photos of a swimming team wearing Speedos, which were completely unaltered. And yeah, you got it right ā€“ those photos feature boys. Only photos of girls were (poorly) photoshopped to hide any ā€œinappropriateā€ bits.

ā€œThe double standard in the yearbook is more so they looked at our body and thought just a little bit of skin showing is sexual,ā€ Oā€™Keefe told Action News Jax. ā€œThey looked at the boys, for the swim team photos and other sports photos and thought that was fine, and thatā€™s really upsetting and uncomfortable.ā€

This whole scandal reminds me of those music album covers that were photoshopped in the Middle East to appear moreā€¦ modest. Or even worse, when an Iranian streaming website removed women from their album covers. It makes me feel like we are not that far from living in a world from The Handmaidā€™s Tale. And it reminds me that we live in the world of double standards in which women usually draw the short straw.

If this was your daughter or you in these photos, how would you react? How would you deal with it? I think Iā€™d be pretty vocal about it, and Iā€™m curious to hear your thoughts.

[via Bored Panda, the New York Times]



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