Little Horse, Big Repercussions?

A miniature horse from New Hampshire is becoming a huge media sensation … and raising issues about both judging on size and ostracizing differences along the way. The horse, named Einstein and the foal of two champion miniature horses Painted Feather and Finesse, is small even for a “mini.”

From WMUR:

He’s currently 15 inches tall and weighs just 20 pounds. Even those who have experience with miniature horses said he’s something special.

“He is definitely my smallest mini foal, and we do see minis and we do see mini foals, but he’s definitely the smallest,” said Dr. Jacqueline Bartol of the New England Equine Medical and Surgical Center. “Still is. He’s growing, but he’s not very big yet.”

Einstein’s co-owners Charlie Cantrell and Rachel Wagner seem taken with the little guy … but a cynical part of me wonders if the paycheck and notoriety of having a so-called freak of nature in their possession means even more. They certainly talk the talk:

“We thought Einstein was special when we first saw him,” Cantrell said. “We fell in love with him. He was so small and so delicate, and we really felt he needed a couple people to take care of him. To give him everything, he needed to give him a good jump start.”

On the heels of that, though, WMUR points out:

His size has turned him into a celebrity of sorts in the horse world. He has been on TV shows like “Good Morning America,” English newspapers searched for their own Einstein, and his owners have fielded media requests from across the world.

Yeah, I bet they have. That’s about when this started to go sour for me, but here’s the real kicker:

The owners have now petitioned the Guinness Book of World Records to have Einstein bump Thumbelina as the current title holder of smallest horse.

“We did make an application to put in for Einstein because Einstein is 15 inches. Thumbelina is 17. He’s 20 pounds. She’s like 57 pounds,” Cantrell said.

Sucks to be Thumbelina, I guess. Uh, wish I could say I didn’t see that one coming, but I can’t. When you’re contacting the Guinness Book of World Records about the size of your horse and how it’s smaller than the one they currently have listed, you’re making a media play. The sad thing is, it’s working. There are articles about Einstein everywhere from The Huffington Post to Mail Online out of the U.K. to Fox News.

Many people show their miniature horses, but that probably won’t be the case with Einstein. His owners said that more likely, he’ll just be kept as a pet. When fully grown, Einstein will be the size of a regular baby horse.

You don’t see media reports on the smallest human midget. There are no international outcries when a model starves herself to death to the point where her corpse is “the average weight of a seven-year-old child”. The same holds true for those of larger sizes—the only place you see reports on exceptionally large human babies is supermarket tabloids, and models considered plus-size actually weigh less than the average for American woman.

All right, I know I might be turning a cute little (pun wasn’t intended when I wrote it, but I’m leaving it there because it made me smile) horse story into something bigger … but is it?



You Might Also Like ...

What Does It Mean When Women Are Hairy?

The New York Times wonders about the inside on the sordid details of what it means to be an unshorn woman, but really, it’s not that hard of a question to answer, especially in 2010.

The Times feels that when celebrity women appear on the red carpet au natural that it’s a usually a horrific accident and an obvious oversight, but according to Mo’Nique’s latest red carpet debut, this is clearly not the case. Their other assumed MO is that these same women are “making a statement.”

However, the paper phoned an expert on the subject: Amanda Palmer, former singer for the Dresden Dolls, who also recently showed up in the Hollywood public eye sporting normal, natural body hair. When asked if she was making a big, bold statement, Palmer stated that she was not, despite the fact that some celebrities do give it the whole gusto and claim that women shouldn’t be tied to a Bic and soap-on-a-rope just because culture sees it as fit.

While many men (and women) are taken aback at hair growing where … well, where hair just grows, is considered something of a turnoff, I think the only thing perpetuating the aforementioned fact is the people who are consistently asking themselves and others whether or not their natural body hair will turn others away — and off. My advice? Don’t even question it and do what you feel is truly comfortable.

So, in response to the headline: What does it mean when women are hairy?

It means the exact same thing as it does when a man is hairy: it’s their choice, their very own personal prerogative shining through, and it’s these same women (and men) disconnecting themselves from allowing society to dictate each and every decision that they consider during their short time on this planet.

And good for that.



You Might Also Like ...

  • No Related Posts

Mo’Nique Flashes Hairy Legs at Golden Globes

Mo’Nique, who’s never shied away from speaking her mind no matter who was in the room, either made a bold statement at last night’s Golden Globe awards or just made a huge landscaping faux pas.

Mo’Nique, Golden Globe winner of Precious, arrived at the event last night looking radiant, glowing and … hairy.  She appeared on the red carpet, picked up the hem of her dress in what I’m assuming was supposed to be a curtsy-like move and flashed the world her very hairy legs.  Her very hairy legs.

The actress, who I find to be amusing, adorable and talented, has gone “rogue.”  And I don’t mean “rogue” in the Sarah Palin kind of way, but in the way that she still shows that she doesn’t give a fuck when it comes to the public’s perception.

Either that, or she had gotten her drink on in the wee hours prior to the award show and simply forgot.

Regardless, good for her.  I generally have a no-shave policy.  I’m not a hairy individual to begin with and I also have a two year-old, which means that I don’t have a lot of lone shower time, let alone time in the shower as it were, but I’m totally secure in rocking the fine hairlets that grow on my lower legs.  Would I be if I had pelts growing down there, I’m not sure, but I’m pretty confident in saying that I don’t care too much whether or not people see my hairy ole legs.

And clearly, neither does Mo’Nique.



You Might Also Like ...

  • No Related Posts