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Plus-size Nike mannequins: recognition of reality or obesity promoters? Critics stir up debate on social media

  • ‘She is not size 12, or even 16 … She is immense, gargantuan, vast,’ wrote one critic of sportswear brand’s new mannequins. Social media users soon fired back
  • Nike is not the first retailer to make such a move, nor is the criticism new – US brand faced similar attacks when it launched a plus-size collection in 2017

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One of Nike’s new plus-size mannequins at the sportswear brand’s Niketown outlet in London. The launch of the mannequins has attracted both praise and criticism. Photo: courtesy of Nike
Zoe Low

Nike revealed plus-sized and para-sport mannequins in its London store recently, an inclusive move that was widely celebrated for embracing the reality that people come in different shapes and sizes, but also criticised by some.

Writing for British news outlet The Telegraph, journalist Tanya Gold claiming the sportswear brand was promoting obesity – attracting ire for her “fatphobic” take on Nike’s new mannequins.

“I fear that the war on obesity is lost, or has even, as is fashionable, ceased to exist,” Gold wrote. “Yet the new Nike mannequin is not size 12, which is healthy, or even 16 – a hefty weight, yes, but not one to kill a woman. She is immense, gargantuan, vast. She heaves with fat,” Gold wrote.

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She also insinuated that plus-sized people could not possibly be exercising: “She is not readying herself for a run in her shiny Nike gear. She cannot run. She is, more likely, pre-diabetic and on her way to a hip replacement.”
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Twitter users swiftly called out Gold and other critics for their hypocrisy in shaming fat people yet not wanting them to have access to clothing for workouts.

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