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Ashton Kutcher says Hollywood isn't solely responsible for beauty standards
Summary
At the New York premiere of FX's The Beauty, Ashton Kutcher said Hollywood reflects a range of appearances rather than imposing a single beauty ideal, and he described beauty expectations as driven by broader societal norms rather than studio mandates.
Content
Ashton Kutcher spoke at the New York premiere of FX's new thriller The Beauty and addressed debates over beauty standards. He said the idea that Hollywood forces a single ideal is overstated and noted a wider range of ages, body types and appearances on screen today. Kutcher described beauty expectations as driven by broader societal norms rather than studio mandates. The series itself confronts society's fixation on physical perfection through a speculative premise.
Key points:
- Kutcher told Fox News Digital that "Hollywood is constantly trying to reflect back at humanity what humanity is reflecting at it."
- He said television and film now show many different types of people, rather than a single chiseled look for leads.
- The FX series The Beauty imagines a sexually transmitted virus that turns people into flawless specimens, described in coverage as producing gruesome and deadly consequences.
- Kutcher plays "The Corporation," a tech billionaire who creates the drug central to the story, and the cast includes Evan Peters, Rebecca Hall, Anthony Ramos and others.
- Evan Peters said creator Ryan Murphy's through line is that what makes someone unique is what makes them beautiful.
Summary:
Kutcher's remarks add a viewpoint to ongoing conversations about how media portray people and what shapes beauty expectations. The Beauty uses a dramatic premise to explore those themes. Undetermined at this time.
