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The Good, The Bad, The Boobs

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https://luvleighan.wixsite.com/goddessproductions/the-good-the-bad-the-boobs-1

Goddess Productions 
Directors: LuvLeighAn Clark 
Screenwriter: LuvLeighAn Clark 
Genre: Feature Documentary 

Logline –
They bring death and sadness, while feeding new life, and giving pleasure.
Boobs heaven or hell?
They bring pain with or without a bra.

Synopsis –
This documentary will cover all aspects of boobs - when bras where created, why, and who makes them, as well as the problems of wearing bras and the damage the body suffers from not wearing them. 

For those of us who are extremely well endowed, going without a bra becomes more of a problem than wearing one. Ladies that are larger than a G cup have a harder time finding bras in stores that 1) look sexy, while 2) being comfortable and not causing extra pain. 

If the bras you’re looking for aren’t in stores, you can order them online. However, there’s nothing worse than ordering a bra online and finding it wasn’t sized correctly. Not only do you have to pay to ship it back, you have to wait even longer. So, if you are like me, you wait until the one or two bras you own are on their last hook before buying a new one, and they still cost around eighty dollars or more, unless you can buy them on sale, and that’s still around sixty dollars. 

The bigger the cup size, the more uncomfortable the bra; it smashes the boobs in and spreads them apart, adding up to a whole new level of pain. This makes you wonder: who made bras, and, if it was a woman, why are they making them so painful? 

Also, if so many people are getting large breast implants, why are there no bras for those of us over a G cup? Why doesn’t Victoria’s Secret make bras larger than an F cup? They’re one of the biggest bra companies, and yet they leave out a large part of their clientele. 

The documentary will also cover the hardship of buying bras. Those of us that make around $20,000 or less a year have a hard time spending eighty dollars on a bra, especially one that might not even fit and will only last a few months. When I was only making $8,000 a year, I had to buy my bras from Walmart, which in of itself is not an issue, but it becomes one when you’re larger than a 36K, and Walmart only goes up to a DD. Even if the bra is nowhere near your size, you still buy it, because you need something and you don’t have more than twenty dollars to spend on it, even if you have to buy a new one every two or three months. 

Having the wrong bra size can cause huge health problems 

both with the back and shoulders; this costs even more money in medical bills. And back and shoulder problems aren’t the only things that affect boobs; both men and women get diseases that affect boobs. This also affects the lives of their family, as well as adding the additional burden of huge medical bills for treatment. (For medical treatment, some cancers and tumors can be seen during a mammogram; however, you must be forty to get a mammogram, even though younger people also get breast cancer. I’d like to explore why this is.) 

To change the beat of the documentary, we will also cover breastfeeding. Should it be okay to breastfeed in public? Or should ladies that breastfeed be forced to hide when they are feeding? Should there be a cut-off age for breastfeeding kids? 

Breastfeeding will lead into how people view boobs as a sexual part of the body. Why do guys feel the need to comment on boobs regardless of whether a woman shows cleavage? Why can’t a woman show cleavage without being harassed for it? Guys can leave their pants sagging and no one says anything, but if a woman shows any boobage at all, even the outline of boobs, she is chastised. 

This treatment causes many women to hate their bodies, the result of a culture of body shaming. The documentary will transition to ask why men can go shirtless, but not women. Some cultures do not see boobs as chiefly sexual, but rather just another part of the human body. In fact, in those cultures, if you’re caught staring at a woman’s body, you’re the one who should be punished for it. In contrast, in the United States we punish women when men look at their boobs, even when they’re modestly covered. Why? And which culture sounds more primitive?

Topic Summary –
The United States has had its issues on how it views women, including the pervasive view that women are a lesser class. From beliefs ranging from covering women head to toe to saying a woman cannot be raped, these ideas cause the next generation to question what we view as acceptable and unacceptable. At the heart of everything lies one sobering thought: what if the idea that women have no rights returns? 

This questioning brings the topic back to what rights women have. In 2011, I had a guy passing me on the street reach out and grab my right boob. It took me a few seconds to realize what happened, but, even with my brain having trouble registering the sexual assault, it didn’t change the fact that it was a criminal offense. 

However, with new religions and cultures coming to the 
United States, views on the female body are changing. Some of these new belief systems blame the woman for a man taking notice of a woman’s breast, making sexual assault against women acceptable. 

When I was a child, I was made to feel guilty for having extremely large breasts. Before I was halfway through elementary school, I had adults - even family members - commenting on how my boobs where bigger than any adults’ they knew. When I was ten years old, comic books were the only place I could see ladies with boobs my size being strong and kicking ass, with no one in the comics commenting on their boobs being too large. 

There are many people who think comic books sexualize females because they give them oversized boobs. But do they? Even if they do, if a female shows cleavage or even goes topless, who has the right to say that it’s wrong? Who is in the wrong - the female who does it, or the guy who sexualizes her? 

Many people will disagree with me, but that’s okay; I’m not making this documentary to tell people what to believe. Documentaries are meant to educate people. I will present the issues and what people think using input from panels and from personal interviews on each of these topics.

Organizer

LuvLeighAn Clark
Organizer
Los Angeles, CA

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