In honor of finally getting to watch “The Hunger Games: Catching Fire”
movie today, this post is going to be about the amazingly beautiful, funny, and
talented Jennifer Lawrence. She is one of the most genuine Hollywood actors now and
I think she deserves all the success that comes to her. She’s expressed in
television and magazine interviews that she’s comfortable with her body even in
a business that considers her to be overweight. A lot of her fans think she
looks amazing the way she is, myself being one of them.
In the April 2012 issue of Seventeen magazine, she discusses how
she believes girls should embrace their bodies:
Jennifer Lawrence explains, “[When I was playing Mystique in X-Men,] I
remember thinking, if I’m going to be naked in paint in front of the entire
world, I’m going to look like a woman. I’m going to have curves and have boobs
and have a butt. Because girls are going to look at that, and if I look like a
scarecrow, they are going to think, Oh, that’s normal. It’s not normal. I’m just
so sick of these young girls with diets.” (Seventeen, 118)
movie today, this post is going to be about the amazingly beautiful, funny, and
talented Jennifer Lawrence. She is one of the most genuine Hollywood actors now and
I think she deserves all the success that comes to her. She’s expressed in
television and magazine interviews that she’s comfortable with her body even in
a business that considers her to be overweight. A lot of her fans think she
looks amazing the way she is, myself being one of them.
In the April 2012 issue of Seventeen magazine, she discusses how
she believes girls should embrace their bodies:
Jennifer Lawrence explains, “[When I was playing Mystique in X-Men,] I
remember thinking, if I’m going to be naked in paint in front of the entire
world, I’m going to look like a woman. I’m going to have curves and have boobs
and have a butt. Because girls are going to look at that, and if I look like a
scarecrow, they are going to think, Oh, that’s normal. It’s not normal. I’m just
so sick of these young girls with diets.” (Seventeen, 118)