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The heavy price for women with bigger luscious breasts

Porfirio Rubirosa

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The heavy price of bigger breasts
No one takes you seriously when you tell them that your chest is a massive pain in the rear, or rather, back

Bryony Gordon



The Daily Telegraph



WOMEN with large breasts shouldn’t have to pay more for their underwear.
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Women with larger-than-average busts always moan, don’t they?
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They stand there, with their hands on their womanly hips, their cleavages eclipsing their tiny waists, whingeing because God was kind enough to bestow upon them the kind of bosom that renders men powerless with lust and women speechless with envy.
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“It’s really awful, actually. I get terrible back pain” — at this point they will stick their hands on their lower backs for effect, thus heaving their breasts into your face — “and I can never find a bra that fits, or doesn’t look like a piece of building equipment or surgical dressing. Also, people just stare at them all the time. It’s as if I’m not a person — I’m just a giant pair of breasts.”
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But now the big-breasted brigade have another reason to complain: Marks and Spencer (M&S) in Britain is refusing to end its practice of charging an extra £2 ($4.43) for bras over a DD cup.
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Proving the gravity of the situation, a Facebook group has been set up.
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Busts 4 Justice has more than 8,000 members, who will presumably dress their chests in superhero costumes and storm the M&S headquarters, or carry out a mass burning of their criminally expensive undergarments.
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The group’s co-founder, Ms Beckie Williams — a 34E, apparently — argues that just as fat people don’t have to spend extra on larger clothes, so women with bigger breasts should not have to pay more for bras.
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M&S claims that the engineering and materials required to create these feats of structural, supportive magnificence more than justifies the extra cost. Asda, meanwhile, has declared all‑out war, and announced that their bras will be one price fits all.
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“People may joke about it, but bras are a sensitive subject,” said Ms Williams this week. “It just shows how much of an emotional issue having big breasts is for a lot of women.”
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Titter, titter. Actually, she has a point, though she is making it entirely in the wrong way — because every time a woman with a large bust moans about it, those in front of her usually switch off and focus on her chest.
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Without going into detail, I am one of the aforementioned whingeing females, and there is not a man or woman in the world who will take you seriously when you tell them that your chest is a massive pain in the rear, or rather, back.
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They just think: “Breasts, breasts, glorious breasts” and become so hypnotised that you wonder whether you could cure them of their 40 a-day habit.
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Unfortunately, I fear the best way for Ms Beckie Williams to get justice for bigger busts is to squeeze hers into an M&S design, storm into M&S CEO Stuart Rose’s office and smile sweetly at him. Tragic, but probably true.
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On the subject of big breasts, my thoughts naturally turn to Prime Minister of Italy, Mr Silvio Berlusconi.
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He employed a former topless model as his minister for equal opportunities, phoned adult chat lines to carry out a pre-election opinion poll and told a doctor working with the victims of Italy’s recent earthquake that she could resuscitate him any time.
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Now his wife is divorcing him. He is a laughing stock across the globe — but less so in Britain, where putting a topless model and an ageing pervert into government would probably be something of an improvement.
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Meanwhile, in the real world — ie Twitter — a list of the social network’s most influential “Tweeters” has been released. Triple British Academy of Film and Television Arts Award-winning English film critic and presenter of radio and television Jonathan Ross has topped it.
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Downing Street has only just beaten British television presenter Phillip Schofield.
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Singers P Diddy, Britney Spears andMr Ross’ wife are well ahead of former United States’ Vice-President and environmental activist Al Gore.
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US Secretary of State Hillary Clinton is left trailing in the wake of singer and actress Miley Cyrus and singer 50 Cent.
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English musician and songwriter Liam Gallagher and English pop music singer and songwriter Lily Allen beat US Vice-President Joe Biden hands down.
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A mirror on the changing face of the world, if ever there was one.
No one takes you seriously when you tell them that your chest is a massive pain in the rear, or rather, back
 

Porfirio Rubirosa

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gee wiz looks like the Busts 4 Justice group is very effective...:biggrin::p

Marks & Spencer caves in, cuts prices on big bras

By GREGORY KATZ
Associated Press Writer

Posted: May. 8 7:24 a.m.
Updated: May. 8 9:51 a.m.

LONDON — The Battle of the Bust is over, and consumers have triumphed.

Britain's largest clothing retailer, Marks & Spencer, has backed down on its incendiary policy of charging a 2 pound ($3) surcharge for bras that are DD or larger in the face of a spreading consumer revolt.

Think women don't care about this issue? Then think again - that's what M&S executives had to do after some 14,000 women gave their name to a Facebook campaign aimed at eliminating the big boob penalty.

"We always try to do the right thing by our customers and we thought we had, but it's clear we've got it wrong this time," said M&S chairman Stuart Rose. "From Saturday, no matter whether it's large or small bras you need, the price will be the same."

To get the message out, the company paid for an eye-catching full-page advertisement in several national newspapers Friday. It showed a full-figured woman in lacy green lingerie. In the ad, the company apologized for its mistake and offered a 25 percent reduction in all bras of all sizes for the next two weeks.

"We are just overwhelmed," said Becky Mount, a co-founder of the Busts 4 Justice group that brought retailing icon M&S to its knees with a canny Internet and media-oriented campaign. "We've won, and we never thought it would happen so quickly."

The group, which grew exponentially in the last few days, had vowed to challenge Rose and other M&S executives at the company's annual meeting this summer. Mount said this threat, and growing media support for their crusade, made the company's leaders realize they were losing the public relations battle.

"They didn't want a lot of big-breasted women storming their meeting," said Mount, 19. "I think they realized they were dealing with a much bigger force than they thought originally, and that we weren't going to go away."

She said the group's members would be happy to shop at M&S now that the surcharge has been dropped.

The new policy brings M&S into line with other major retailers in Britain, who decline to pass the higher cost of designing and manufacturing large-size bras on to the consumer.

British lingerie specialists ranging from the pricey Agent Provocateur to the saucy Ann Summers line do not charge more for DD bras, despite the extra work that goes into producing them. In the United States, bra prices on the popular Victoria's Secret Web site do not change as sizes get larger.

But policies change store by store and brand by brand.

At the upscale Rigby & Peller shops in London, which specialize in personalized fittings, the company's own bras are priced the same regardless of the size, said buyer Nicky Clayton. But some outside brands the store sells do contain a markup for larger sizes.

"Some brands like the Italian company Prima Donna charge us more, so we pass that on," she said. "But for Rigby and Peller bras the prices are exactly the same because we've got total control and can maintain pricing across all the sizes."

She said M&S probably ran into trouble because its lingerie price policy differed from the strategy used for other items.

"If they charged more for larger sizes of all their items, like garments and outerwear, it would have been fine," she said. "It was just that they took this policy only on the lingerie sector, that made it a problem."

Copyright 2009 by The Associated Press. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.
 

ScarFace

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The weight war in Britain has yielded larger stadium seating, wider cars, roomier jeans and now a bra cup beyond DD — the J cup.

National retailer Marks & Spencer said it found a demand for larger lingerie, the Telegraph reported.

Its best-selling cup size is 36C, compared to 34B about five years ago, said Soozie Jenkinson, the head of lingerie design. And the chain reports 25 percent of its bra sales are DD cup or larger, double the sales of three years ago.

The J-cup will be sold online to test its popularity before it is put on store shelves, the newspaper said. :eek::eek::biggrin:

Researchers say less exercise, more calories and the side-effects of the contraceptive pill have combined to increase the average size of women’s clothes from 12 in the 1950s to 16 today. - Telegraph
 

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Porfirio Rubirosa

Alfrescian
Loyal
hey like your pics attachment but got to wonder whether those 2 gals tits are au naturel...because they are well known Sun page 3 gals:biggrin:
[Researchers say less exercise, more calories and the side-effects of the contraceptive pill have combined to increase the average size of women’s clothes from 12 in the 1950s to 16 today. - Telegraph
 
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