Charlotte Church

Charlotte Church: Young Stars Forced to Be ‘Hypersexualized’

Share:

British singer Charlotte Church has spoken out against the pressure on young female pop stars to sell themselves as sex objects, in a lecture for BBC 6 Music.

She talked about her own experience of being pushed into wearing inappropriate clothes as a young artist by industry bosses.

She said record labels are encouraging singers “to present themselves as hypersexualized, unrealistic, cartoonish, as objects, reducing female sexuality to a prize you can win.”

She explained: “When I was 19 or 20 I found myself in this position, being pressurized into wearing more and more revealing outfits.

“The lines that I had spun at me again and again—generally by middle-aged men—were: ‘You look great, you’ve got a great body, why not show it off?

“Or: ‘Don’t worry, it will look classy, it will look artistic.’ I felt deeply uncomfortable about the whole thing, but I was often reminded by record label executives just whose money was being spent.”

The singer, now 27, said young female artists were routinely “coerced into sexually demonstrative behavior in order to hold on to their careers.”

In a feature for the Daily Record newspaper, a former music magazine editor said artists are dressed provocatively because “sex sells.”

John McKie said: “In a sense, this OTT imagery comes from a place of fear as the record company and artist have to do everything they can to make the record sell.”

And medical psychology professor Andrew Hill said that sexualized images can have a powerful influence on children and that there are “intense pressures” on both sexes to conform to what they see.

He said: “There’s a tendency for us to look at others and compare our adequacy and to look to how we might change and improve ourselves.”

He added: “That’s alive and kicking and it’s very important for adolescents. We can pick it up at pre-teen age.”

Church’s comments come as fellow star Annie Lennox also hit out at the sexualization of pop videos.

Lennox said some music videos have become “highly styled pornography with musical accompaniment,” and should be subject to an age-rating system.

It follows a recent controversial dance routine by Miley Cyrus which was highly sexualized.

A columnist in the Daily Mail said the “young and vulnerable” should be shielded from things they “lack the maturity to understand.”

Sarah Vine said, “I can’t bear to think of my 10-year-old debasing herself in the style of Cyrus.”

Share:

Leave a Reply


More Spiritual Content
So Long, Globalist Agenda: Trump Can End Bad International Agreements With the Stroke of a Pen 
Top of the Week: Phil Robertson Health Update: ‘The Prayers of Millions’ Are Working
Top of the Week: Phil Robertson Health Update: ‘The Prayers of Millions’ Are Working
PRAY: Car Rams Christmas Market, 11 Dead with Dozens Reportedly Injured
Israeli Minister in Letter to Pope: ‘Jesus lived and died as a Jew’
America’s ‘Superman Prophecy’: A Vision of Redemption
Are These 10 Prophetic Points Your Gamebreakers for 2025?
David Diga Hernandez: How to Grow with God in 2025
US Citizen Found ‘Guilty’ of ‘Hate Speech’ for Quoting Bible Verse
Larry Huch’s 2025 Word: ‘The Golden Era’
previous arrow
next arrow
Shadow

Most Popular Posts

Latest Videos
88.3K Subscribers
1.1K Videos
8.9M Views

Share