"Real Beauty" features and advertisements cleverly sell you products under the guise of body-positivity while actually reinforcing the idea that a woman's worth is based on the way she looks to others.
In this case, accusations spread as quickly as did the photos of the unconscious girl, thanks in large part to blogger Alexandria Goddard, who covered the story on Prinniefied.com.
The website features a not-so-Victoria's-Secrety model (she's not white and super skinny with boobs like buoyant watermelons) wearing pink underwear with the phrase "No Means No" emblazoned on the crotch and more pleas to "Join the consent revolution."
If you're a woman with an internet presence, you need skin as thick as a redwood trunk to deal with the barrage of insults and threats that you'll unquestionably receive from misogynist trolls.
I can't stop thinking about the three men who died taking bullets for their girlfriends. Words and phrases used to describe the men by their lovers and families include "gentlemen," "the kind of guy you want your daughter to be with," and multiple variations on the word "hero."