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Cindy Crawford criticizes Oprah for ‘objectifying’ in ’86 interview.


(L) Photo by Dimitrios ⁢Kambouris/Getty Images ‌for Albie Awards. (R) Photo by Ilya S. Savenok/Getty Images for Kering

Oprah Winfrey Accused of‍ Objectifying Cindy Crawford During ‍1986 Interview

Former supermodel Cindy Crawford has called out ‍notable talk ‍show host⁢ Oprah Winfrey​ for making her feel “objectified” during ⁢an interview in 1986.

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In⁤ the new Apple TV+⁤ docuseries‍ called The‌ Super Models,⁢ Crawford opened up about her early ⁣life and career. ⁣She also revealed that she felt objectified ‍regarding how the talk‍ show ‌host treated her‍ during ⁢her first appearance on The Oprah Winfrey Show in 1986.

Crawford,⁤ 57, ‌explained that it had happened when she and ⁣her Elite‍ Modeling Agency representative John Casablancas went ‌on the show.

When the former model was ⁤20-years-old, she recalled how Winfrey had requested for her to‌ stand ​up in front of the live audience and show off‍ her body while she complimented her.

“Did she always have this body?” ‌Winfrey asked Casablancas, who was the founder of Elite ‍Model Management whom is credited for discovering Crawford. “Stand up just for a moment. Now this is what I ‌call a body,” Winfrey said.

“Did ⁢she have ​to go through that training period, or no?” the talk show host inquired of Crawford’s path to a slim figure.

“I was‌ like the chattel. Or a child ⁣— be⁤ seen and not heard,” Crawford said. ⁢“When you look at it through today’s eyes when Oprah’s, like, ‘Stand ⁤up and ​show me your body.’ Like, ⁢show us why you’re worthy of being here. In the moment, I didn’t recognize it. Only when I ​look back at ‍it​ and I was, ‌like, ‘Oh, my gosh, that was ⁣so not‍ okay, really…’ Especially ‌from Oprah,”⁢ Crawford continued.

The newly dropped docuseries provides a‌ behind the scenes take on the lives of some of the most successful supermodels throughout the 1990s, including Crawford, Linda Evangelista, Naomi Campbell and Christy Turlington.

The docuseries​ also represents the models’ reflection on how they came to dominate the fashion industry.

“I never felt like I looked special or‍ different. If anything, I wasn’t like ​the ⁤ugly duckling,⁣ but ⁤in my⁢ high‌ school​ the ​pretty girls were like⁢ the little petite cheerleaders. That was what the idea of ​beauty was in my small town,” Crawford recalled‌ of her⁣ upbringing.‍ “I never even‌ thought about modeling. I didn’t even know⁤ it was a real job. I didn’t know how I‍ would get from⁢ DeKalb, Illinois,⁢ to ​a magazine.”

The interview ‌from‌ 1986 had been available on Winfrey’s YouTube ​channel up until Wednesday.

The Super Models launched on the evening of Wednesday, September 20th, which was only a ⁢few ​hours after the interview showcasing Crawford ⁣was taken down on‍ Youtube.

Winfrey had adamantly questioned Crawford’s agent and he spoke ⁣on Crawford’s behalf.

“With Cindy, it was much more ⁣psychologically she was not sure she really wanted​ to model…little by little, her ambition is growing. ‍She’s getting a sense, and I’m ​saying⁣ it now on this ⁢program, if she wants ​to she ‍can be number one in ⁢the business,” Casablancas said.

His prediction regarding Crawford’s modeling success certainly came true.

However, the‌ model revealed‌ just​ how ⁣hard she was working‌ to make it‍ throughout the early days of her ‍career. She even admitted that she would often “pass out” from hunger during her long shoot days.

“I​ was 20 years old, I had dropped out ⁢of college to model in Chicago and it ⁤was great. I was making $1000 a day,” she explained. “The main business⁤ there was catalog. There was⁢ one main photographer, Victor Skrebneski, and he was the big fish in ‍a little⁢ pond. Victor ⁣was definitely a mentor in the fashion industry, when Victor told‍ you not to⁣ move, you didn’t move.”

Crawford continued, “I passed out there⁣ more than once. Especially ⁣right before​ lunch, you pass out and you would faint.⁢ And then they would prop you back up and ‌you would ​do it all over again.”

“It wasn’t about, ‘Oh wow,‍ you’re so pretty, we’re gonna take pictures of you,’” she says of the attitudes towards models at that ⁤point in her career.⁢ “It was like,‌ ‘Your job is, you’re helping me sell this jacket. We’re all here to sell this jacket.”

Additionally, the model ⁢revealed⁢ that⁢ her parents were‍ extremely hesitant of her ⁤joining the industry in the early days of her career.

“My dad really didn’t understand that modeling was a real career. He thought ‍modeling was ‍like another name‌ for prostitution,” she⁢ said. “They came with me to my very first ‌modeling⁢ appointment.”

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What did Cindy Crawford reveal about her experience with Oprah Winfrey in the⁣ docuseries “The Super Models”?

Oprah Winfrey Accused of​ Objectifying Cindy Crawford During 1986 Interview

Former supermodel Cindy Crawford has⁢ recently spoken out about‌ feeling objectified during an interview with ⁣talk show host Oprah Winfrey‌ in 1986. In⁢ a new docuseries called “The Super Models” on Apple ‍TV+, Crawford shared her experience and how Winfrey made her feel uncomfortable.

During the interview, Crawford, who was only 20 years old at the time, and ‌her representative from Elite Modeling Agency,⁣ John Casablancas, appeared on “The ⁣Oprah Winfrey Show.” Winfrey requested that Crawford stand ‍up in front of the⁣ live⁤ audience and show off her ⁢body while complimenting her.

Winfrey asked‌ Casablancas if⁣ Crawford always had her body, stating, “Now this is what I call ‍a body.” She also inquired ‍about Crawford’s path to achieving a slim figure. ‌Crawford recalls feeling like a commodity or a child, devoid ‌of​ a voice. She⁤ reflects ‌on the moment



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