Clashing commercials; or, What does "toned" actually mean?

Reebok has the brand new line of shoes, as well as of course brand new commercials to foster them. Called Easytone, the boots condition the woman's boundary as well as legs, so you have been told anyway. No gym. No workouts. Just wear shoes. Snake oil? Perhaps. But that's not what I'm endangered with today.

What bothers me is the picture peddled to women as the ideal. A "toned" look suggests, to me as well as many others, I'm sure, an jaunty physique. Maybe not the bodybuilder's, yet manifestly athletic. What is presented instead, though, is the same soft, smooth, size 2 look you have been informed constantly is the delicate ideal. Is this model's physique really much different from which seen in the thousand alternative advertisements?



Contrasted with which of fitness athlete Jelena Abbou seen in this Fahrenheit commercial, it becomes viewable how insignificant Easytone's "toned" look is:



In the Fahrenheit commercial you see the lady lucidly strong as well as athletic, yet strikingly attractive by any in accord with standard. Why can't there be some-more similar to this?

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