Ester Expósito speaks out about the backlash she received after attending Bad Bunny’s concert in Madrid.
"I think the problem lies in the way a very misogynistic part of society looks at and judges others, as well as in the people who use social media to hurt others".
Por favor para un embarazo de alto riesgo, necesito que me ayuden a ubicar este medicamento en alguna farmacia de Caracas o Maracay, solo necesito la farmacia que lo tenga, una vida está en juego, mil gracias
Reality vs. Photoshop: How doctored images have warped beauty standards for decades—and what it’s doing to young girls.”
It’s not new, but it’s everywhere: For decades, magazines, ads, and now social media have used heavy photo editing. Celebrities and pros routinely slim waists, smooth skin, enlarge eyes/lips, lighten skin tones, and reshape bodies. Paparazzi or unfiltered shots often reveal a very different (and still human) reality.
The data on harm is clear: Studies consistently link exposure to idealized, edited images with worse body image in girls and young women. This includes higher body dissatisfaction, lower self-esteem, increased anxiety/depression symptoms, and greater risk of eating disorders. Social comparison (especially upward to “perfect” images) is a key driver.
Photo editing backfires personally too: Girls who frequently edit their own photos report lower body esteem and more appearance anxiety. One study found 85% of girls have used filters/apps to alter their looks by age 13, and longer editing time correlates with poorer self-image.
Filters and edits blur reality, making normal human variation (pores, texture, asymmetry, body diversity) feel “wrong.”
Beauty isn’t flawless skin or impossible proportions, it’s real, varied, and human. Real confidence comes from reality, not retouching.
Shouldn’t we teach our daughters and granddaughters to find the beauty in exactly who they are? Their uniqueness makes them more beautiful than any filter ever could.
DENUNCIA | Un turista que llegó recientemente a Venezuela a bordo de un velero denunció haber sido sometido a un procedimiento de ingreso que calificó como intimidante y desproporcionado.
Según su testimonio, más de 30 funcionarios de al menos siete organismos participaron en la inspección, que incluyó revisión exhaustiva de la embarcación, pertenencias personales y uso de perros antidrogas. El navegante afirmó que el operativo generó temor entre la tripulación y proyecta una imagen poco favorable para el turismo náutico en el país.
El puerto donde ocurrió el hecho no fue revelado. VÍA @EnOriente