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Supermodel Gisele blames families for anorexia

Fashion industry scapegoated, Bundchen says; strong kin kept her healthy

Gisele Bundchen
Mark Mainz / Getty Images file
‘Everybody knows that the norm in fashion is thin,’ Gisele Bundchen said. ‘But excuse me, there are people born with the right genes for this profession.’
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updated 3:17 p.m. ET Jan. 19, 2007

RIO DE JANEIRO, Brazil - Supermodel Gisele Bundchen says troubled families are to blame for anorexia — not the fashion industry, which has been widely criticized for promoting waifish silhouettes.

“I never suffered from this problem (anorexia), because I had a very strong family base. Parents are responsible, not the fashion industry,” Bundchen said in the Friday edition of O Globo newspaper.

Bundchen, 26, was visiting her native Brazil this week for the Fashion Rio show, which has banned models who are under 16 and has required proof of good health after the death of a Brazilian model from complications due to starvation last year.

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In September, Spain barred models below a certain weight from Madrid fashion shows, while the Italian government and its fashion chiefs signed a pact to keep sickly thin girls off the catwalk.

Bundchen, the former girlfriend of actor Leonardo DiCaprio, said being a model is a matter of genetics.

“Everybody knows that the norm in fashion is thin,” she said. “But excuse me, there are people born with the right genes for this profession.”

Bundchen, who was ranked 16th on Forbes magazine’s list of the 20 richest women in entertainment this week, said as a child her peers teased her for being skinny with names like Olive Oyl, the gangly character from the Popeye cartoons.

“In fashion I felt accepted ... I never felt lonely, because I always relied on my family.”

Copyright 2009 Reuters. Click for restrictions.

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