A heated debate broke out on Twitter -- a breeding ground for divisiveness -- after the razor company, Gillette Venus, posted a photo of a plus-size, bikini-clad model at the beach.
With the caption "Go out there and slay the day," the photo may seem like any other on its feed, most of them portraying women in minimal clothing showing off their freshly shaven skin. This particular photo, however, caused a tsunami of commenters to offer judgments on the model's health.
Go out there and slay the day šŖš¼ šø Glitter + Lazers pic.twitter.com/cIc0R3JfpR
— Gillette Venus (@GilletteVenus) April 3, 2019
The conflict comes from some users accusing Gillette of glamorizing obesity and others praising the company for promoting body positivity for all shapes and sizes.
The photo's subject, Anna O'Brien, told "Good Morning America," in an interview airing Thursday, "The purpose of taking that photo was just to capture a really joyful time in my life. I just wanted to remember how happy i felt. And that's all it was. It was just a really happy time in my life."
O'Brien, who is a blogger and social media influencer, had posted the photo to her social media from a trip to Cuba and was contacted by Gillette asking if they could repost it. But the comments on Twitter were instantly divided.
"It was hurtful when my obese mother died at 40 and couldnāt see me graduate high school," one Twitter user wrote. "I find this ad extremely offensive."
"This woman will die of heart disease before @potus completes his second term. I hope she's just as happy and carefree for her last 6 years if life. Everybody should live themselves, but lets not call it healthy," another person responded to the picture on Twitter.
(MORE: Tess Holliday hits back at 'horrible people' who body-shame her)Please stop. Promoting this is dangerous. Being unhealthy is not a good thing.
— Brenna Spencer (@BrennaSpencer) April 5, 2019
Many others came to the model's defense, fighting back at those who rushed to judgment.
"Are you this person's doctor? Do you know if they are unhealthy? How? Where is her medical history in the tweet?" someone wrote.
Are you this person's doctor? Do you know if they are unhealthy? How? Where is her medical history in the tweet?
— Jessie ā #Wayward (@JessieTeaSippin) April 5, 2019
And even if they are...unhealthy people ALSO get to have fun and wear what they want and like themselves. You can do all those things while improving your health...
Another added: "Weight is not an indicator of health, and health is not an indicator of worth."
Weight is not an indicator of health, and health is not an indicator of worth.
— Cheeto Dust (@cheetodust666) April 5, 2019
This is important to show younger girls so they donāt starve themselves to look like the skinny models most brands show. You do realize you are saying this about an actual human? Who can see your reply? That isnāt healthy. You are not her doctor.
— Eva š„āØ (@evaarnett02) April 5, 2019
"So where do we draw the line between body positivity and health issues?" someone else replied,
So where do we draw the line between body positivity and health issues ?
— La_Mitad_mas_uno (@hasabeen) April 5, 2019
"What people who aren't plus-sized don't know is this is our everyday existence," O'Brien told "GMA." "I wanna show women that they can do whatever they want.
"If you look at my image, itās joyful. Itās happy. Itās inspired," she added. "Iām living a great life. But for a lot of people, all they can see is fat."
The company was forced to respond to the hullabaloo on Twitter, writing, "Venus is committed to representing beautiful women of all shapes, sizes, and skin types because ALL types of beautiful skin deserve to be shown. We love Anna because she lives out loud and loves her skin no matter how the 'rules' say she should display it."
Venus is committed to representing beautiful women of all shapes, sizes, and skin types because ALL types of beautiful skin deserve to be shown. We love Anna because she lives out loud and loves her skin no matter how the ārulesā say she should display it š
— Gillette Venus (@GilletteVenus) April 4, 2019
O'Brien is no stranger to outrage. Her bikini snaps often draw attention, including photos last year from Las Vegas and Times Square.
"At the end of the day, bodies are bodies," she said. "There are so many different types of them. And that's all this is about. ... Let's start showing them as they are."