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Beauty Bites Beast by Ellen Snortland
Beauty Bites Beast by Ellen Snortland













Case 2: a woman friend who was brutally battered and bloodied by a psychotic member of her own sex (for being overweight) - that case was also in the national news. Case 1: the recent shooting of Marshae Jones in Alabama. I would have been more receptive to BBB had the producers been equitable and also reported on women-on-women violence. Not all physical attacks on women are by men. The male narrator alone deserves a good, swift kick in the cojones for his annoying, belittling tone. Its presentation, to me, was offensive, simplistic, and ridiculing. As a man, I found the documentary to be yet another tiresome misandrist manifesto (pardon me, womanifesto) declaring Men as The Enemy and Women as Eternal Victims (of Men). “If you freak out and limit your teen’s freedom, they’re not going to tell you.As a mother's son and sisters' brother, I understand the point of "Beauty Bites Beast": the world is a scary place for women, who need to learn to defend themselves. How parents react when their child tells about unsafe situations they have experienced or are dealing with can shut down communication, she said. They should learn verbal skills, and then - as a last resort - physical skills that allow them to escape to safety.” That no one gets to touch them without permission, including peers. In their book, Snortland and Gaeta write: “We believe that kids should have jurisdiction over their own bodies. “There’s a consequence to asserting themselves that boys don’t have… When men say ‘no’ it’s ‘no.’ When women say ‘no’ it’s the beginning of negotiation. Many times girls are called names when they assert themselves, she said. People who intend harm “are emergencies,” she said, “which is one way to describe everything from mild bullying to physical assault.” “You practice what to do before the fire is happening.” In teaching and training sessions, Snortland’s approach is similar to being prepared in case of emergencies, such as a fire, she said.

Beauty Bites Beast by Ellen Snortland Beauty Bites Beast by Ellen Snortland Beauty Bites Beast by Ellen Snortland

“Often times, (the assailant) is someone they’re acquainted with or a family member - if so, it’s under-reported even more.” “One in three females will be assaulted sometime in their life, according to the World Health Organization,” she said. The danger of physical attack is just as real. People prepare for auto accidents and, in California, for earthquakes, she said. “Yet no one ever talked to me about self-defense.

Beauty Bites Beast by Ellen Snortland

I was raised in a loving family,” she said. “I am well-educated, well-read, well-traveled. Snortland, a lawyer and film producer in Los Angeles, is author of the book, “Beauty Bites Beast.”Ī self-proclaimed “proud Dakotan,” she was raised in South Dakota and spent summers with her family in Bismarck where her uncle, Howard Snortland, served many years as head of public instruction for North Dakota. “Most of us never got the basics in terms of setting boundaries, so it’s a good read regardless of (the reader’s) age,” she said.















Beauty Bites Beast by Ellen Snortland