Michelle Obama won’t let magazines style or dress her

news easter egg roll 130409

As the 100-day mark for the Obama administration approaches, many in the media are taking some time out to assess all that’s happened and all that’s been accomplished. I know the history of the “100 days”, but it seems like these retrospectives are cheesy and great examples of bad journalism. Still, there’s an interesting piece in the New York Times about Michelle Obama’s “100 days”, and some of it is intriguing.

It seems Michelle Obama feels very strongly about controlling her public image. Shocking for the First Lady of the United States, right? For her magazine covers, she doesn’t want to work with the various magazines’ professional stylists, dressers and make-up artists, preferring to work with her own team. Michelle also prefers to wear her own clothes for magazine covers, eschewing haute couture for off-the-rack clothes and her favorite up-and-coming designers.

Michelle Obama has also emerged as one of the least controversial First Ladies thus far, and one of the most popular women in America, with approval ratings higher than her husband. This, after being mocked and stereotyped for a year as an “angry black woman”. Perhaps that’s where this image-consciousness came from?

Vogue magazine, the fashion world’s chronicler of first ladies, bedecked Hillary Rodham Clinton in black velvet and Laura Bush in blue silk. But not Michelle Obama. She insisted on choosing her own dress (a sleeveless, magenta silk number) and using her own hair and makeup stylists for the glossy photograph splashed across Vogue’s March cover.

This was nothing new for Mrs. Obama, who has pointedly controlled her look on the covers of People, Essence, More and O, Oprah Winfrey’s magazine. Editors at Essence, who suggested colors, styles and accessories, said her staff did not call to acknowledge their overtures. Editors at More said they were dumbfounded when, after painstaking negotiations, Mrs. Obama showed up at the photo shoot with a different dress from the one she had promised to wear. (She ultimately agreed to go back to her first choice, a pink Maria Pinto sheath.)

“We were like, ‘Excuse me, we tell you what to wear,’ ” said Lesley Jane Seymour, the editor-in-chief of More, who said Mrs. Obama refused to wear anything other than her own clothes for their October cover. “She wanted none of that. She was creating the cover. She was creating the image. There’s definitely a will of steel there.”

Indeed, the new first lady is methodically shaping her public image, and in ways that extend far beyond fashion.

She has given coveted interviews primarily to women’s magazines and news outlets that have allowed her to highlight her domestic side: her focus on motherhood and her efforts to settle her family in the White House; her interest in gardening and healthy living; her affinity for mixing off-the-rack and designer goods; and her efforts to open up the White House to ordinary Americans.

By focusing on her domestic persona and harnessing the fascination with her family, the first lady and her communications team have emerged as the key architects of one of the most remarkable political transformations in years. Only 10 months ago, Mrs. Obama was described as an angry black woman by some conservatives and as a liability to her husband. Now, she is widely admired for her warmth, and her vibrant and accessible manner, and her race seems almost an afterthought to many Americans. She has the highest favorability ratings of any incoming first lady since 1980, and is even more popular than the president.

[From The New York Times]

Of course, once everyone starts talking about how you’re not that controversial, that becomes the controversy. Some critics think that a First Lady who is a Harvard-educated lawyer should be doing a bit more than playing dress up on magazine covers. However, the NY Times points out that Michelle and her staff are immersed in several different policy discussions. It’s just that Michelle and her team handpicked some of the least controversial policies – stuff like AmeriCorps, supporting military families and healthy eating.

The image that Mrs. Obama is projecting, however, fails to fully reflect the multifaceted first lady. A Harvard-trained lawyer and former hospital vice president, she is also a tough-minded professional who cares deeply about influencing public policy and sometimes promotes legislation at her events. Her top aides, for example, are often immersed in policy discussions in the West Wing that are not publicized by the White House.

Some people who know Mrs. Obama lament that this side of her is so rarely on public display. Some blame the news media for being more interested in her exercise routines than in her thinking on big issues. Others believe that her aides are placating those voters who prefer more traditional first ladies.

“We’re not getting all of Michelle Obama, and that’s a shame,” said Connie Schultz, a journalist and author whose husband, Senator Sherrod Brown, the Ohio Democrat, is friendly with the president.

“It’s the softer, domestic side that we’re seeing, which appeals to a lot of people,” Ms. Schultz said. “But a lot of us are cheering her on and hoping we’re going to hear more from that public policy side of Michelle Obama. Maybe it’s the old-fashioned feminist in me. I want to keep celebrating that brain.”

Mrs. Obama has declined to sit for wide-ranging interviews with several newspapers, including this one, preferring to focus on particular themes. (She gave The New York Times an exclusive interview about the White House vegetable garden, for instance.) Some political analysts believe Mrs. Obama hopes that her surging popularity will ultimately allow her greater latitude to operate more openly in policy realms that she cares about.

“She’s building up enormous goodwill,” said Paul Costello, who served as an adviser to the former first lady Rosalynn Carter. With such strong support, Mr. Costello said, she might ultimately feel confident enough to “push the envelope.”

For now, Mrs. Obama seems perfectly comfortable with her public persona.

[From The New York Times]

I can see both sides of this – I’d really like Michelle Obama to get more publicly involved in more difficult policies and issues, but I totally understand the media campaign she and her team are engaged in. Michelle’s critics had a field day with many of her poorly-worded statements or outright gaffes during the primaries and general campaign. The stereotype that some in the media created of an angry, hen-pecking, strident, ball-busting woman was both sexist and racist, in my mind. I, too, think the image turn-around is quite extraordinary. Her high approval ratings won’t continue if she’s seen as sticking her nose into a policy discussion, or taking on some difficult issue-driven crusade.

Here are the Obamas at the White House Easter Egg Roll on the South Lawn on April 13th. Images thanks to WENN.com .
news easter egg roll 130409

You can follow any responses to this entry through the RSS 2.0 feed.

21 Responses to “Michelle Obama won’t let magazines style or dress her”

Comments are Closed

We close comments on older posts to fight comment spam.

  1. anastasiabeaverhausen says:

    Eh, I think she was always who she is now, not some angry radical as people tried to characterize her.

    And I don’t blame her for wanting to dress herself!

  2. Wow says:

    Still loving The First Lady, Michelle Obama. I love her even more for not playing into letting the country dictate her style.

    Good for her.

  3. Annie says:

    You know, the statements she made that people picked on during the primaries and what not were really honest. And I respected her immensely for having such strong convictions. And it pissed me off to no end, that in all honesty, had a man said those very same things (albeit a white man), he’d be deemed gutsy and honest and full of gumption! Michelle says it, she’s an ‘angry black woman’ equivalent to that of Madea or something.

    RIDICULOUS.

    Can’t please everyone. And you know, I must admit, while she may not be as vocal as she used to be publicly, you bet your bottom she’s on Barack giving her dollar. She’s far too brilliant.

  4. BOGART4017 says:

    Good for her. Where does any lowly magazine employee adopt the attitude “excuse me we tell you what to wear”. Since she is not an empty-headed actress promoting the latest hollyweird crap she should’nt have to play the game. They know damn well a first lady in a 3 dollar NYC tourist t-shirt and knock off babyphat jeans is still gonna move units.

  5. Juss says:

    Good for her. Those magazines have delt with only dolls for too long.Now they don’t know what to do with a real person.

  6. Mairead says:

    My, hasn’t Malia gotten tall 😆

    Anyway, she learned her lesson from Hillary who wasn’t your typical mom staying home and baking cookies. Neither the minivan majority nor the media ever forgave her for that – how dare she try and have ideas outside of appearance and the home! The gall! (don’t believe me? Oprah and Martha Stewart maintain their empires by basing them on “feminine” things like homewares, favourite things and soft self-development. )

    Anyway – back to the story…
    “We were like, ‘Excuse me, we tell you what to wear,’ ” said Lesley Jane Seymour, the editor-in-chief of More

    “We were like” says the Editor-in-chief no less. No wonder the feckin’ print media is going to the dogs. If this halfwit can’t even construct a simple sentence, I wouldn’t trust her to construct a magazine cover image either.

  7. Orangejulius says:

    Damned if she does open her mouth about anything substantive, damned if she doesn’t. I’m proud of her for not succuming to the mag’s demands. Really. Yes, Maireed, the main reason Hillary was so hated was that she wasn’t the mealy-mouthed, good little wifey. It was hard to believe that she was threatening to some men because she had a brain. The venom!

  8. Kaiser says:

    Mairead – That caught my eye, too, and not just for the “like” – although, like, that was, like, totally bad. But imagine the nerve of a More Mag editor getting all huffy with the First Lady… seriously, who does that b*tch think she is?

    Edit: Actually, it could have been worse…
    More Mag Editor: “And we were like, oh no you didna, girl!”

  9. KansasRefugee says:

    Michelle Obama was not elected, her husband was. I think she is smart to stay out of thinking she plays a role in policy. BUT if it is going on behind the scenes I wish they would be honest about it.

    She does seem to be an intelligent woman but she can run for President herself after her husband leaves office, no?

  10. Ally says:

    Modelling is a profession. It is degrading to any other professional (politicians, writers, actors, singers) to play the clotheshorse for a magazine.

    Michelle Obama is a public person. I think it’s regrettable that there’s so much focus on her clothes. She’s right to insist on appearing as herself, and not to become a clothes-wearing plaything.

  11. Autumm Leaves says:

    I love First Lady Michelle. She’s class, intelligence, & style all the way. She doesn’t need to be “handled” byt the likes of editor, who would make her look like crap anyways. They never seem to get it right when it comes to women of color. FLOTUS has her own style and it’s being emulated across America. Keep rockin’ it FLOTUS!

  12. MaiGirl says:

    I can only pray that I am as accomplished a professional, wife, and mother someday. I cannot imagine how difficult it must be to keep your head amongst such crazy, contradictory opinions of your attitudes and behavior. My only issue with her is that I wish she had a better understanding of her body and what looks good on her. All the full skirts and big belts make her look bottom-heavy. But…I guess that’s just my opinion 😀

  13. becca says:

    She dresses herself. Good for her!

  14. Simp says:

    KansasRefug said:
    Michelle Obama was not elected, her husband was. I think she is smart to stay out of thinking she plays a role in policy.

    Someone needs a history lesson. It is typical to the point of being expected for First Ladies to take on their own policy project. Nancy was all about drug awareness, Hillary was working on health care, Obama has said she wants to work on family issues (thus the shaping of the motherly image).

    Though I had to laugh at the unsurprising Laura Bush quote:
    “The role of First Lady is whatever the First Lady wants it to be.”

    MO is goign to get grilled no matter what. The R’s have repeatedly shown that strong, intelligent women scare the crap out of them.

  15. Dirty Martini says:

    Sorry but I am simply not a fan. Not of hers, not of her husbands, not of their policies, and not really of her clothes either. Count me in the group who rolled their eyes in dismay when she wore a sweater set when visiting the Queen of England.

    And yes–she has been angry and strident. And yes–she has made gaffes and unfortunate statements. ANd yes–now that she’s reigned it in she’s boring as all get out and totally without a position on anything of any substance….other than the dog’s mental state of course.

    Somehow, she swung from one unforunate extreme (angry /strident) to the other (milquetoast) in the blink of an inaugaural oath.

  16. HashBrowns says:

    I like Michelle Obama, she seems genuine.

    It was fine that she wore a sweater set to meet the Queen. She isn’t going to wear a cocktail dress or gown in the middle of the afternoon. It was presentable and she looked demure and put-together. That’s all that needs to be said, I think.

  17. Dirty Martini says:

    No need to wear a cocktail dress or gown in the middle of the afternoon–agreed.

    How about a suit with matching skirt and jacket? How about a day dress of with some semblance of style & fashion?

    Not a sweater set. It’s not Children’s Hour at the public library folks…its the freakin’ First Lady of the USA and the Queen of England.

    Just sayin’……………….

  18. Joolzz says:

    I don’t even know what the Prime Ministers Wife of Canada looks like!

  19. myself says:

    I love u and LIKE u and in awe …..u r e yourself go on wathever they say:U RE THE BEST AND F….K THE REST!!!!and time will come when THEY will criticise u …..that s ok its part of the game of…LIFE….we feel u michelle….thats the most important…..as a texan I FELL U GOOD!!!!be urself whatever……good or bad:U RE THE ONE ……first lady of our country…….hummmmmmm….it feeeels good….it……that s OUR DREAM,THAT`S UR LIFE!»!!!!

  20. MARY says:

    sorry, but michelle obama dresses horrible. if she refuses to get help, too bad! her face always looks so mad. I think she was born like that, with anger!

  21. JUSTINE says:

    Mary now dont say that shes a great woman but there is one thing i have to say michelle is the first lady to ever be different and act different and dress different than all the other first ladys weve had shes a real role model for some people and there making a big deal just because she likes hamburgers so what i there are a lot of famous people that like to eat that and there making a big deal over it just like the news always does for eveything. michelle is a really gret person the only one i dont like is obama and that is because hes trying to take away the right to bare arms we need that right cause if he passes that we cant have it all guns are taken away and it would be stupid cause half the people in the world dont know how to fight hand to hand they only know how to fight with guns. and the other reason y i dont like him and this is the one thing hes done that makes me want to kill him hes taking all the terriest out of jail and even the 5 deadliest ones and bringing them to (Lousiana) and the reason im so made is because that where i live i dont wanna die by getting bombed hes gonna get killed really soon by really mad people or Hilary Clinton is gonna become president which i would rather have her than him and i take back saying i want Obama for president cause at first i did and now i regret what i said id rather that Mckane guy that was running for president. GO MICHELLE. I DESPISE AND WANT TO KILL OBAMA!!!