“The Skinny on Celebrities: Parasocial Relationships Moderate the Effects of Thin Media Figures on Women’s Body Image”, Ariana F. Young, Shira Gabriel, Gretchen B. Sechrist2012-02-02 (; backlinks; similar)⁠:

Much research demonstrates that exposure to thin media ideals has a negative effect on women’s body image.

The present research suggests a notable and important exception to this rule. The authors propose the parasocial relationship-moderation hypothesis—that parasocial, or one-sided, relationships (PSRs) moderate the effects of thin media figures on body image. Specifically, the authors propose that having a PSR with a media figure increases the likelihood of assimilating, rather than contrasting, the PSR’s body to the self.

  1. Study 1 found that women who perceived similarity with a thin model felt better about their bodies than those who did not perceive similarity.

  2. Study 2 found that women were more satisfied with their bodies after exposure to a favorite celebrity they perceived as thin than a control celebrity they perceived as thin.

  3. Finally, Study 3 suggests that assimilation was the underlying mechanism of increased body satisfaction after exposure to a thin favorite celebrity.

[Keywords: social comparison, assimilation, body image, parasocial relationships]