Last week, Getty Images and the 奥辞尘别苍鈥檚 Sports Trust new guidelines intended to improve how female athletes are portrayed. The goal: curate more diverse, realistic photographs that celebrate the strength and athletic prowess of these women, rather than contribute to the current cesspool of stock images replete with skimpy sports bras and overly sexualized poses. 聽
鈥淭he guidelines are as follows:
- Sport appeal not sex appeal. Focus on the skill, strength, speed, passion, and drama of the sport instead of how the athletes look.
- Mix it up. Capture a diverse mix of athletes participating in a wide range of sports.
- Keep it real. Authentic, credible imagery that represents the athlete as she鈥檇 want to be seen.
- Play your part. Everyone involved in the production, reporting, and consumption of sporting imagery to take responsibility for the changes they can make.
- More is more. Increase the number of images taken and seen.
- Be bold. Be creative and push the boundaries, seek out new talent and new audiences.鈥
While we applaud Getty鈥檚 new policy鈥攁nd really, it鈥檚 about time鈥攊t addresses only a small portion of the online stock聽photography world. Our online art and production team has collectively spent hours trawling multiple stock photo sites鈥攚hich we rely on daily to find art for our stories鈥攊n search of non-creepy shots of women. With the current selection, it鈥檚 enormously difficult to find images that take female athletes seriously in the sports we cover.聽
We searched for 鈥渨oman athlete鈥 on one popular site, iStock, and found these 13 drastic offenders鈥攁nd that was just in the first five pages of results (out of 1,420 pages). These shots are only the most obvious examples of patterns we鈥檝e noticed that downplay women鈥檚 athleticism in favor of sex appeal. Not to mention, the majority of results featured only white models. This shouldn鈥檛 be that hard.
If you ever find yourself in the unenviable position of hunting for stock photos of female athletes that don鈥檛 look NSFW, here鈥檚 a sampling of red flags we鈥檝e become very familiar with. (Hint: If the new intern feels uncomfortable downloading all the images for your article, they鈥檙e probably sexist.)
1. The suggestive face, lightly disguised as intense effort.

2. 聽The suggestive face, lightly disguised as midstride glance. We鈥檝e never seen anyone run like this. Ever.

3. The unrealistic workout outfit (emphasized here with the weightlifting obscured by hazy light and the camera鈥檚 focus squarely on the short-shorts).

4. Because we women like to do yoga in our underwear and knee-high leg聽warmers.

5. No idea what鈥檚 happening here鈥攐ur only hint that this is a photo about a sport is that she seems to be wearing kickboxing gloves.

6. If tennis players flailed around this much, it鈥檇 be a lot more entertaining. In this case, the complete disregard for proper form makes it hard聽for us to believe that the subtle crotch flash is accidental.

7. We can鈥檛 explain why anyone would want to use a photo that cuts out the model鈥檚 head like this, which makes it look like a straight-up creep shot.

8. Once again, the model鈥檚 head is kept out of frame for reasons unknown. Also for reasons unknown, the model is dressed in clothes we鈥檝e never seen at the gym.

9. If you really want to drive the 鈥渟ex appeal over sport appeal鈥 point home, make sure the model is just holding a fitness tool聽as a prop.

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11. Stock photographers, ask yourselves: Am I shooting from this angle to be creative, to show an athlete鈥檚 prowess, or because it鈥檚 a straight-up butt/crotch/cleavage shot?

12. Same shoot, same why-is-this-necessary angle.

13. Now we鈥檙e just queasy.

Here at 国产吃瓜黑料, we鈥檝e discussed finding the budget to shoot our own fitness stock (fully聽clothed, with proper form). We hope these new guidelines help in the meantime, but in all seriousness, we also know that we鈥檝e published our fair share of questionable photos of women. It鈥檚 easy to laugh at ridiculously sexist stock photos like these, but it鈥檚 just one part of a much broader problem鈥攚e all need to do better.