Anger over Facebook plus-size ad ban

Tess HollidayImage copyright
Getty Images

Image caption

Tess Holliday had not given permission for the image to be used

Australian feminist group Cherchez La Femme has expressed its fury after Facebook rejected an advert it created because of the image it used.

The picture featured plus-sized model Tess Holliday wearing a bikini.

The social network said the advert, for the event designed to promote body positivity, “depicts a body… in an undesirable manner”.

Facebook added that while the event page would not be taken down, the advert would not be approved.

So while the picture is still visible on the page itself, the event is not being promoted elsewhere on the platform.

“Ads like these are not allowed since they make viewers feel bad about themselves,” read the response from Facebook’s Ads Team.

It also suggested that an alternative image of someone “running or riding a bike” would be more appropriate.

Facebook told the BBC it was investigating the matter.

Image copyright
Jessamy Gleeson

Image caption

Jessamy Gleeson is one of the producers of the Cherchez La Femme event.

Its terms and conditions state that images used in advertising may not “show excessive amounts of skin or cleavage”.

Jessamy Gleeson, one of the producers of the Melbourne-based “Feminism and Fat” event, told the BBC she was furious.

“They’re not policing women’s bodies when it comes to acceptable standards of beauty elsewhere,” she said.

“I can see that they were attempting to try to tackle eating disorders – that makes sense – but at some point you have to consider that women of different weights exist on Facebook.”

The group had contacted Tess Holliday’s management for permission to use the image but had not received a reply, she said.