So, what’s a girl to do when the sales are down and your other tactics have failed? Talk about your eating disorder.
She recalls, “When I went to ballet school, I was around a lot of girls with eating disorders, and I actually had a minor one myself.
“It was about six months of not eating too much at all. I was 11 and five foot, two inches and about 70 pounds. My parents stepped in and made me eat.”
I wouldn’t really call weighing 70 pounds a ‘minor’ eating disorder, even if you are only 5’2” and eleven. I know that the Body Mass Index isn’t the most accurate way of estimating your healthy weight, but this gives her a rating of 12.8, and anything below 18 is considered underweight, just to give you an idea of how thin that is.
I actually think that when celebrities talk about their eating disorders, they should never give figures as it can encourage girls to copy, when misused by pro-anorexia websites.
Ashlee’s new album has had mixed reviews, Rolling Stone gives it three stars, describing it as Eighties-influenced electro-rock.
The danceable beats haven’t obliterated Simpson’s affinity for chugging riffs, though they may have inspired some ill-advised lyrics: “I ain’t got no beef,” she boasts on “Rule Breaker.” But Simpson’s still her own favorite subject, and she’s got an excellent coming-of-age anthem in “What I’ve Become,” a paparazzi kiss-off with an appealingly honest chorus: “I’ve just begun to find my way.”
Ashlee Simpson and Pete Wentz are shown at White House Correspondents’ Association dinner at the Washington Hilton on 4/26/08, thanks to WENN.
Cele|bitchy
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