NEW YORK TIMES writes about Lookism

AlexAP

AlexAP

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Not Lookism.net, but about the Lookspill:

Not all the time, but often, the attractive get the first-class treatment. Research suggests they are more likely to be offered job interviews, more likely to be hired when interviewed and more likely to be promoted than less attractive individuals. They are more likely to receive loans and more likely to receive lower interest rates on those loans.

The discriminatory effects of lookism are pervasive. Attractive economists are more likely to study at high-ranked graduate programs and their papers are cited more often than papers from their less attractive peers. One study found that when unattractive criminals committed a moderate misdemeanor, their fines were about four times as large as those of attractive criminals.

Daniel Hamermesh, a leading scholar in this field, observed that an American worker who is among the bottom one-seventh in looks earns about 10 to 15 percent less a year than one in the top third. An unattractive person misses out on nearly a quarter-million dollars in earnings over a lifetime.

The overall effect of these biases is vast. One 2004 study found that more people report being discriminated against because of their looks than because of their ethnicity.

In a study published in the current issue of the American Journal of Sociology, Ellis P. Monk Jr., Michael H. Esposito and Hedwig Lee report that the earnings gap between people perceived as attractive and unattractive rivals or exceeds the earnings gap between white and Black adults. They find the attractiveness curve is especially punishing for Black women. Those who meet the socially dominant criteria for beauty see an earnings boost; those who don’t earn on average just 63 cents to the dollar of those who do.


 
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thought it was going to be the surgery article but this ones recent ill read while bonesmashing ty op
 
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I have seen these big news companies make quite a few articles and videos about looks and how it affects everything in life, often they use the term lookism, and it maybe gets popular for a few days but it always dies out. I just don't think something like this can ever have the sensationalist appeal that racism or sexism can have because you can look at someone and instantly tell if they're black or if they're a woman, but with looks its much more nuanced and complex. People want something they can read thats easy to make sense of and emotionally triggering
 
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thought it was going to be the surgery article but this ones recent ill read while bonesmashing ty op
The surgery article was on New York Magazine, not New York Times.
 
I have seen these big news companies make quite a few articles and videos about looks and how it affects everything in life, often they use the term lookism, and it maybe gets popular for a few days but it always dies out. I just don't think something like this can ever have the sensationalist appeal that racism or sexism can have because you can look at someone and instantly tell if they're black or if they're a woman, but with looks its much more nuanced and complex. People want something they can read thats easy to make sense of and emotionally triggering
Racism and sexism are the worst thing in the NY Times. Now they say that Lookism can be worse. So, they should do now regular articles about Lookism-based discrimination on the workplace until things start to change. But they won't, the article will very likely be the only one about the topic.
 
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just halo effect
 
I have seen these big news companies make quite a few articles and videos about looks and how it affects everything in life, often they use the term lookism, and it maybe gets popular for a few days but it always dies out. I just don't think something like this can ever have the sensationalist appeal that racism or sexism can have because you can look at someone and instantly tell if they're black or if they're a woman, but with looks its much more nuanced and complex. People want something they can read thats easy to make sense of and emotionally triggering
this is exactly it people are retarded and can't figure out any ism beyond the most black and white
 
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I have seen these big news companies make quite a few articles and videos about looks and how it affects everything in life, often they use the term lookism, and it maybe gets popular for a few days but it always dies out. I just don't think something like this can ever have the sensationalist appeal that racism or sexism can have because you can look at someone and instantly tell if they're black or if they're a woman, but with looks its much more nuanced and complex. People want something they can read thats easy to make sense of and emotionally triggering
Hollywood created the lookism stain.
 
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