Orlando Sentinel (Sunday)

Supermodel is both victim and capitalist in ‘My Body’

In a world that exploits women, Emily Ratajkowsk­i exploits herself. Progress?

- By Molly Young

The figure of the modeling agent must be up there with the personal-injury lawyer and the tobacco lobbyist as far as stock villain profession­s go. Has an honorable and kindly modeling agent ever been committed to print, film, television or stage? Are those very words doomed to suggest a leering cartoon rubbing his hands together and making “ah-ooga” noises as an underpaid model toils to funnel money into his cartoon bank account?

Emily Ratajkowsk­i’s book of essays, “My Body” (Metropolit­an Books/ Henry Holt & Co., 237 pages, $26), will not alter the record. It features multiple modeling agents, none of them savory. One arranges for Ratajkowsk­i to attend the Super Bowl with a random financier for $25,000. (It’s left to his client to infer that the words “go to” contain certain expectatio­ns.) Another pauses on a photo of Ratajkowsk­i as a teenager and says, “Now this is the look. This is how we know this girl gets (expletive).” A third agent sends Ratajkowsk­i, at 20 years old, to a job in the Catskills without mentioning that it’s a lingerie shoot, or that the photograph­er will show Ratajkowsk­i nude photos of another woman, or that he will request that she, too, remove her clothes.

The Catskills voyage turns into a horror story. After being sexually assaulted by the photograph­er, Ratajkowsk­i, having nowhere else to go, sleeps at his house, only to wake and find him posting a photo of her on Instagram. Adding injury to injury, the photograph­er later publishes a book of the photos taken the evening of the assault, leaving Ratajkowsk­i “livid and frantic” as the book sells out, goes through reprints and sells out again.

That essay, called “Buying Myself Back,” is the strongest of the 11 collected here, which are serious, personal, repetitive and myopic. “This is a book about capitalism,” Ratajkowsk­i said in an interview. Arguably, the sleazy photograph­er could say the same about his book of ill-gotten pictures. But while he merely demonstrat­es the unremarkab­le fact that men daily exploit women’s bodies for money (and pleasure, and fame, and Oscars), what Ratajkowsk­i describes in the essay — which was received with both applause and backlash — is the ambiguity of exploiting her own body.

That ambiguity is present in these essays, often frustratin­gly so. Part of the problem is that Ratajkowsk­i’s conception of herself is at odds with the reality

she describes, which is a sincere but exasperati­ng kind of celebrity dysmorphia. Evaluating her career, she concludes: “My position brought me in close proximity to wealth and power and brought me some autonomy, but it hasn’t resulted in true empowermen­t.”

Only Ratajkowsk­i can determine her sense of autonomy. But wealth and power are more easily quantified, and it seems fair to insist that Ratajkowsk­i —

with a booming womenswear line, 28 million Instagram followers, a partnershi­p with L’Oreal and a Super Bowl ad under her belt — is not merely in “close proximity” to either.

In an essay titled “Bc Hello Halle Berry,” Ratajkowsk­i gets paid to go on vacation in the Maldives and grows annoyed when her husband calls her a “capitalist.” That comment comes when the two of them are lounging on beach chairs, doing a bit of people-watching. “I pointed out that we weren’t like the other guests at this resort,” Ratajkowsk­i writes. The other guests, she tells her husband, are real rich people.

“C’mon, baby,” her husband says. “You’re a capitalist, too, admit it.”

“I’m trying to succeed in a capitalist system,” Ratajkowsk­i responds. “But that doesn’t mean I like the game.”

There are moments of courageous self-disclosure in “My Body,” and passages

that made me laugh, such as her descriptio­n of a giant photo of Victoria’s Secret models “arching their backs and holding index fingers up to their mouths as if flirtatiou­sly telling me to shush.” (You know the pose.) She performs a public service by excerpting the treatment for Robin Thicke’s “Blurred Lines” video.

That video is what launched Ratajkowsk­i to fame in 2013. With its on-screen hashtags and images of Thicke murmuring “I know you want it” in a model’s ear, the video now looks so dated that it might as well be a Civil War daguerreot­ype. Ratajkowsk­i is funny and charming, dancing goofily and rolling her eyes at the idiocy unfolding around her. But it is still a video that features three semi-naked females (the models) cavorting among three clothed men (the artists), demonstrat­ing a vision — the director’s vision? Thicke’s vision? Both, maybe? — that nudity

is precisely the “skill” these women bring to the table.

The essay about “Blurred Lines” is the one that most clearly captures the perplexing nature of Ratajkowsk­i’s position. She’s thoughtful and skeptical, and has been treated wretchedly over the course of her career; she grapples intently with her sense of victimizat­ion at the hands of those who would use her body to sell their products. It seems strange, then, that her empowermen­t should arrive in the form of doing exactly that, albeit on her own terms and with her own products. It is inarguably better that Ratajkowsk­i, rather than some horny bozo, receive the profits from her image — but does a more equitable distributi­on of cash really make a difference to the young women who scroll through Instagram, rapidly absorbing new reasons to despise themselves? That, it seems to me, is the unsolvable moral question at the heart of this book.

 ?? CAROLINE TOMPKINS/THE NEW YORK TIMES PHOTOS ?? In her debut essay collection, “My Body,” supermodel Emily Ratajowski takes stock of what she’s gained and lost from selling her image for a living.
CAROLINE TOMPKINS/THE NEW YORK TIMES PHOTOS In her debut essay collection, “My Body,” supermodel Emily Ratajowski takes stock of what she’s gained and lost from selling her image for a living.
 ?? ?? “My position ... hasn’t resulted in true empowermen­t,” Emily Ratajowski writes.
“My position ... hasn’t resulted in true empowermen­t,” Emily Ratajowski writes.

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