Page 57 - Katherine Ryan press pack
P. 57

“I’m not preachy in any way. I don’t even pretend to have all the answers and I make a lot of
               mistakes myself,” she insists, before getting into the meat of her show, the cultural status of

               the glamour model in Britain. “Back home we didn’t have glamour models; we had porno

               magazines and we had mainstream actresses and presenters. Here, that line is so blurred and
               glamour models are put in such positions where they are sold as personalities but their entire

               personality is just about getting naked or being drunk in the Big Brother house.”



               As someone who, aged 18, worked in the Toronto branch of Hooters (a restaurant chain
               known for its scantily clad waitresses), Ryan recognises that there are different career paths

               out there for people. “I was a product of the society that said women are for decoration but I
               do think girls should be able to do whatever they want. Yet, across the world there are girls

               who just can’t; some can’t even go to school in Nigeria without being abducted. Here, you

               actually have a choice to put your tits away. And, well, maybe you should.”






               Unquenchable thirst for the minutest information on celebs


               As well as tackling the public’s seemingly unquenchable thirst for the minutest information

               on celebs such as Harry Styles, “Cheryl” and Cara Delevingne, Glam Role Model has her
               discussing motherhood (Violet is her five-year–old daughter, or “flatmate”), the real

               difference between Miley and Beyoncé, and some frank material about sex and body politics.


               The relentless pursuit of celebrityhood which arrived with the explosion of reality TV and the

               new kind of talent show carries its own inevitable dark side, a side-effect to fame which Ryan

               has been determined to protect herself from. “People don’t realise that putting yourself out
               there, whether it’s as the most popular girl at school or the weirdo (and I have been both),

               makes you very vulnerable and more likely that people will attack you in some way. I’m so

               lucky because I actually take comfort in people not liking me; I think it’s lovely that we all
               like different things. When people come after me on Twitter, well, it’s fine: why would I

               expect everyone to like me? I do think it’s a bit weird that you would go out of your way to

               tell me how much you don’t like me, though.”
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