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Entertainment
Rocio Corsi

Hit 2000s Show Sparks Fresh Body Standards Debate After Surprising Image Goes Viral Two Decades Later

The hit HBO show The Sopranos will forever be remembered for challenging the stereotypical Mafia drama by incorporating themes such as family, identity, power, and mental health.

More than two decades after it first aired, the Emmy-winning series is now being analyzed through a new lens.

A viral tweet focused on an unlikely character: Caitlin Rucker, Meadow Soprano’s freshman-year roommate at Columbia.

A tweet about an unexpected TV character has reignited a heated debate about beauty standards from the early 2000s

Image credits: HBO

Portrayed by Ari Graynor, the character is presented as emotionally fragile, and her increasingly erratic behavior creates tension with Meadow.

An image that has amassed more than 5 million views on X shows Caitlin in her dorm, wearing underwear bottoms and a tight tank top.

“This is what was considered comically fat two decades ago,” the user wote alongside the image from the 2001 episode.

Image credits: The Late Show with Stephen Colbert

The post, which has been liked by 137,000 users, reignited discussions about beauty standards and whether the entertainment industry has made progress in how it portrays the actors it casts.

Many viewers said Ari Graynor’s body type differed from the very thin actresses commonly cast on television in the late 1990s and early 2000s.

Still, they were stunned to learn that she was written as the “crazy fat roommate.”

Viewers were in disbelief that the actress was considered “comically fat” in 2001

Image credits: creepydotorg/HBO

“This is my dream body,” one woman wrote, while another exclaimed, “This is a healthy weight! She looks great.”

“I have this exact body type and this actually makes me feel so validated,” another woman said in response to the post.

Meanwhile, some fans of the show pushed back against the idea that Ari Graynor’s body was part of her character’s narrative.

Image credits: JohnJ15574377
Image credits: Jeremypacheco

“Not really, she was just considered crazy,” argued one Sopranos fan, while another shared, “No one on the show said she was fat.”

Another user said that, beyond this specific character, the TV industry’s beauty standards were much narrower in the 2000s than they are today.

Renée Zellweger’s transformation for Bridget Jones’s Diary has resurfaced as a reminder of the era’s beauty standards

Image credits: SkotiVi

“Being ‘fat’ was half of Bridgit Jones’ personality and all the Cosmo girls were disgusted,” they wrote of the beloved 2001 rom-com.

“It’s so laughable now- probably the healthiest and hottest Renée Zellweger ever was.”

In Bridget Jones’s Diary, Zellweger played the socially awkward protagonist, whose weight is a recurring plot point and a key part of her characterization.

Image credits: Miramax Films

The story, which reflects the beauty standards of the 1990s and early 2000s, includes scenes in which Bridget obsessively records her weight in her diary and feels guilty about eating. Friends and family members also make comments about her appearance.

Zellweger put on weight to play the rom-com heroine. Speaking with The Guardian in 2001, she revealed that she gained 17 lb (8 kg) and consulted a dietician and endocrinologist, who created a regimen of three full meals a day, multiple snacks, and no exercise.

While many believe Hollywood has become more inclusive, others argue today’s actresses face a different kind of pressure

Image credits: Miramax Films

Amid the debate surrounding the “mainstream” body types of the early 2000s, some have suggested that the entertainment industry hasn’t changed much after all.

If anything, they argue, the actresses we see on our screens have taken on an increasingly eerily similar look with the rise of weight-loss jabs and cosmetic treatments.

Image credits: DungeonCos

In a TikTok video that went viral last December, a user compared retro photos of Glenn Close and Meryl Streep to recent pictures of Megan Fox, Lindsay Lohan, and Sydney Sweeney.

Image credits: nonregemesse

The woman, who goes by @trainingforamazing on the platform, argued that society now “expects our actresses to look like supermodels, whereas supermodels used to be supermodels, and actresses were actresses.”

“This group of women has some of the most prolific acting credits of all time. And all of them look like real people,” she said while referring to the photos of young Close and Streep.

A viral TikTok claimed modern stars are starting to look increasingly alike

@trainingforamazing I miss real faces on screen #beautystandards #plasticsurgery #feminist ♬ original sound – Faith

She stressed that plastic surgery has become so normalized that people don’t notice the changes until they see a contrast with the “real” actresses of 1980s Hollywood, many of whom didn’t have plump lips, small noses, or hollowed-out cheekbones.

According to the user, the actresses’ alleged cosmetic enhancements are making them less expressive, therefore affecting the quality of their performances.

“Our faces are our stories,” she stressed. “They are what’s passed down to us through generations. And if your face can’t move and you look like everyone else, what story are you telling?”

“That girl looks completely normal,” a viewer wrote

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