A new study confirms how some folks use photos from the deceased much younger days instead of something taken more recently. Nah, say it ain't so. Joking aside, you see this all the time on newspaper obit pages - a photograph of a 30-something person attached to the death notice of someone in their 80s. It looks a little disconcerting if you ask me. But you probably can't blame the person being written about since family members are most likely the ones deciding which photos run in the paper. Maybe to them, the photo of grandma before her hair thinned or her face sagged is the way they want to remember her. They can look at that younger portrait and recall the good times, perhaps before she took ill. But I think there's something positive to be said for running photos of people closer to the age that they pass on, even if it shows their advanced age. It's almost a way of giving a thumbs up to the fact that this person was a survivor and lived a long, long time.
COLUMBUS, Ohio, May 14 (UPI) -- There is pressure for women to appear youthful in entertainment and the media, but there is also a youth bias for obituary photos, U.S. researchers said. The study, published in the Omega-Journal of Death and Dying, found that the number of obituary photographs showing the deceased at a much younger age than when he or she died more than doubled between 1967 and 1997. Women were more than twice as likely as men to have an obituary photo from when they were much younger.
Study co-author Keith Anderson of Ohio State University in Columbus said that in 1967, about 17 percent of the obituary photographs surveyed in the The Plain Dealer, a daily newspaper in Cleveland, were age-inappropriate -- the photos of the deceased were at least 15 years younger than when they died. However, by 1997, the number had increased to 36 percent.
"Obituaries and their photographs are one reflection of our society at a particular moment in time," Anderson said in a statement. "In this case, we can get hints about our views on aging and appearance from the photographs chosen for obituaries. Our findings suggest that we were less accepting of aging in the 1990s than we were back in the 60s."
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LIKE THE TITLE character in "Precious," the new Lee Daniels' film, this 14-year-old Philadelphia girl had been raped by a relative and infected with HIV, the virus that causes AIDS.
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Jenice Armstrong: First lady Michelle Obama' has white cousins? Oh, my gosh! Can you believe it? Well, yeah. Just about every black American I know has white relatives.
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Can't we all just get along? Not if one of us is from Philly and the other's from New York, with the Phils and Yankees squaring off tonight. Jenice Armstrong talks about how her house has been divided, and Stu Bykofsky, a Philly institution who grew up in the Bronx, has practically become a house divided against itself. Do you have New York friends, or a Yankees fan at home?
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THE LAST thing Sheila Armstrong remembers about the attack was the sight of her lover hoisting a vacuum over her.
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AFRICAN-AMERICAN women aren't the only ones who obsess about their hair. Here's what we heard from you.
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Jenice Armstrong: Renowned genealogical sleuth Megan Smolenyak Smolenyak (yes, that's really her name) mostly has been able to exist just under the radar. That has changed.
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Armstrong: The subject of black women's hair is a tangle of issues relating to America's racial history, women's self-esteem, and mainstream acceptance.
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