How to make herself agreeable to everyone A memoir

Cameron Russell, 1987-

Book - 2024

"Scouted by a modeling agent when she was just sixteen years old, Cameron Russell first approached her job with some reservations: She was a precocious and serious student with her sights set on college-not the runway. But it was a job, and modeling seemed to offer young women like herself access to wealth, fame, and influence. Besides, as she was often reminded, "there are a million girls in line" who would eagerly replace her. A ferocious, visceral memoir, How to Make Herself Agreeable to Everyone chronicles how Russell learned to navigate the dizzying space between physical appearance and inferiority, and making money in an often-exploitative system. Being "agreeable" led to more success, more bookings, more oppo...rtunities to work with the world's top photographers and biggest brands. As her prominence in fashion grew, Cameron discovered the work of modeling to be deeply isolating and frustrating. Instead of giving her freedom, her job required her to perform the role of compliant femme fatale, in which she found little room for transformation or growth. So she began organizing with her peers, and together they began finding their place in movements for labor rights, climate and racial justice, and brought MeToo to the fashion industry"--

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Subjects
Genres
Autobiographies
Published
New York : Random House [2024]
Language
English
Main Author
Cameron Russell, 1987- (author)
Edition
First edition
Physical Description
207 pages ; 22 cm
Bibliography
Includes bibliographical references (pages 197-207).
ISBN
9780593595480
9780593595497
Contents unavailable.
Review by Booklist Review

Modeling was not the career path Russell expected to pursue, but after she was "discovered" as a teenager, the fashion world became a defining component of her life. However, the exceptional money and freedom it offered often came at the cost of her autonomy and ethics. Russell addresses several chapters of this memoir directly to those who shaped her experience: her mother, the invisible yet all-seeing audience, and the exploitative men who dominate the industry. Russell's writing style evolves as she does; when describing her youth as a model, she writes her memories with the introspection and detail of a coming-of-age novel. As she grows older and her political ambitions solidify (early on, she dreams of being both a supermodel and the U.S. president), her writing becomes more academic. Her activism largely focuses on labor organizing and sexual violence within the fashion industry. As one of the field's most well-known critics, she offers a thoughtful examination of its intersections of beauty, violence, and desire.

From Booklist, Copyright (c) American Library Association. Used with permission.
Review by Publisher's Weekly Review

Supermodel and activist Russell catalogs the psychic toll of a career in front of the camera in her candid and confrontational debut. Scouted to model as a naive 16-year-old in 2003, Russell quickly learned that producing the desired poses and reactions for much older photographers resulted in lucrative bookings and referrals, while questions or expressions of discomfort­--in response to intimate touches from strangers, for example, or requests for sexually explicit poses--earned her a reputation as "difficult." As Russell became more well-known, she grew increasingly eager to please the industry's gatekeepers and power brokers, compartmentalizing her feelings along the way ("The way to stop reacting is to put the self away so there's nobody to offend, to blame, to ignore"). Eventually, however, those feelings spilled over, and in the 2010s, Russell began organizing with fellow models to expose abuses of power across the industry. Readers expecting a standard model memoir are likely to be surprised by Russell's forceful style and devastating revelations, which recall the frankness of Julia Fox's Down the Drain. It's an impressive and illuminating dispatch from the front lines of the fashion industry. Agent: Caroline Eisenmann, Frances Goldin Literary. (Mar.)

(c) Copyright PWxyz, LLC. All rights reserved
Review by Kirkus Book Review

A model and activist breaks a self-imposed silence about her professional life to examine the dark underside of the fashion industry. When Russell began modeling at 16, she was unaware that she was entering a world where a woman's value was based as much on looks as on a willingness to "do anything" for (male) photographers. Her first experiences rejecting an S & M--style shoot confused her not only because of the photographer's annoyed response but also because of her inability to make him understand that the pictures might jeopardize a future career in politics. Russell soon realized that if she was going to become a successful model, she would need to let "the photographer feel he control[ed]" her. However, the intimacy she performed as a model often left her open to unwanted advances from photographers and their clients, who treated models as "disposable" sexual commodities. Over time, she became a "good actress" and learned to play the game, scoring lucrative contracts with the likes of Calvin Klein and Ralph Lauren that allowed her to pay for a college education at Columbia. Unable to ignore the abuses of power she saw in her work, Russell began to speak out, first through a TED Talk about "Whiteness, beauty [and] privilege." Later, she helped found the Model Mafia, a collective in which models could discuss their experiences within a brutal system that exploits girls and young women who, unlike the (largely white) supermodels celebrated by the media, lived "far from family [and made] less than a livable wage." Intimate and thoughtful, Russell's book offers a disturbing look at the hidden ways women are objectified and degraded in an industry that profits from creating illusions of beauty that feed an endless--and damaging--circle of misogynist desire. A sharp, provocative memoir about an evergreen topic. Copyright (c) Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.

Copyright (c) Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.

she'll do anything 1. On my first shoot the stylist says to his assistant: Let's go for an S-N-M vibe. Mom, do you remember? I go to the toilet and call you and say, They want to put a belt around my neck, it's an S-N-M vibe, and you say no belt around my neck, S and M is a sexual fetish. So I say no to the belt, and he thinks I'm ungrateful. By way of explanation I say: I want to run for president. I have to be careful about the kind of pictures I take. He looks me in the eye and I look back. Normally adults are pleased or amused when I tell them this. But he rolls his eyes and takes off the belt. He gives me a tiny black bikini. Go! he says, and turns his back. I've never worn a bikini before. I didn't know I would be wearing one, but I don't have enough pubic hair yet to need to shave. On set I suck my stomach in until my ribs poke out. How do I stand when my stomach is showing? The photographer keeps telling me, Relax. He has a fart-machine prank he does. I laugh because I'm supposed to. When the photo comes out, my agent makes it my comp card and sends it to clients. I carry it around to castings to give out. Your body looks amazing, she says. The stylist won't work with me for another seven years. When he finally books me again, he jokes: You were such a spoiled brat. 2. On my second shoot the makeup artist paints my lips red, and in the mirror of the RV bathroom my teeth look stained next to the bright color. She tells me I have cocksucker lips. The stylist says I'm going to be huge. 3. My fourth or fifth shoot, the photographer--a legend--kisses me on the lips when I'm standing at the elevators waiting to leave. I am sixteen and the double kiss everyone does is awkward, and so I think maybe I messed it up. A dozen shoots and fifteen years later he will still call me "girl" when we work together and pretend he does not know my name. 4. The photographer adjusts my hair and clothes by placing his whole hand--heavy, warm--on my face, my shoulder, my hip, and then drawing it slowly back from my skin. He stands behind me in the mirror and looks at me and I look away and he squeezes my shoulders. Electricity shoots through me and I think about this feeling even after the shoot is over, when I'm back home, for weeks and months. The agents keep telling me how much money I can make, but all I want is to experience this feeling again. It turns out this shoot launches my career. A famous art director visits the set that day and says, F***, she's sexy, to the photographer. I try to be polite and make uncomfortable eye contact while they talk about how I look. Then, since I don't know what to say, I walk away and sink into a couch on the other side of the studio. I can still hear them looking through the images on the computer: F***, f***, f***, they say. 5. The next time we shoot he will ask me to shoot topless. But I'm sixteen, I say. I feel like I might cry. It has to be topless, says the stylist. I text you, Mom, and my new agent. The photographer asks me if I'm okay. I'm going to leave, I say, even though I don't want to, I just want to shoot with him wearing a top. I hug and double kiss him goodbye and walk out. Like we're breaking up. Of course, nobody cares; they have six other girls on set, ready to go. 6. The famous art director will nickname me "Camarones." He makes me lie in the dirt next to a swampy river, my body fake wet, sticky with baby oil, and tells me to arch my back and close my eyes. I stay lying in the mud, wondering if there are leeches, because they want my legs to stay where they are (positioned just so, spread at the water's edge) while the crew looks through Polaroids. The art director will come over and take pictures on his personal camera. F***, he says. Mostly, though, they shoot their contract girl. At the end of the first day the sky turns dark and the wind picks up and they turn a big spotlight on her lying in the reeds, wearing just jeans. The air is thick and wet. She is glowing. She covers her breasts with one arm and rolls around looking into the camera. Her lips get an extra spray from the makeup artist's glycerin bottle; they open. She is dripping. The rest of us disappear into the evening drizzle. When they are done, an assistant brings her a white robe, which she ties loosely. The art director throws an arm around her, the robe bunches, and I see her nipple. They walk together to a car, which will take them back to the hotel. Production shepherds me into the van with the rest of the crew. The next day they shoot me again in the afternoon. God, you're sexy, says the art director. I don't know what to say. I wish I could have heard what their contract girl said when she was on set, but I couldn't get close enough. 7. I shoot a fragrance campaign with this same art director, and nobody tells me that I am the star of the campaign. Instead I sit alone for a day while everyone else shoots, wondering if I haven't made the cut. The second day he tells me, We need you making out with a guy. He suggests a model who is loud and obnoxious. I point and suggest another model whose name I don't know. It's just acting, I think. He laughs and says okay. So my first kiss is standing in a pool in underwear and a tank top. We kiss over and over for the cameras. 8. At castings--where the only time I get to speak is when I say, Good, thank you, after they ask, How are you today?--I get called purebred, all-American, well-educated, from a good family, maybe perfect for a contract, timeless, classic, but a little exotic, almost a little ethnic, do you have any Native American ancestry, the whole package, a triple threat. I'm still in high school, can't really sing or dance, and the last time I acted was in fourth grade, so I sense that what they mean is, I have the body, the face, and the White* skin they're looking for. The walls at castings are covered with photos of nearly identical-looking White girls, for the summer season with tans, paler for fall/winter and couture. I am White, hip 33, waist 21, bust 33, 5' 9.5" but we could round up. 9. An art director who owns the magazine we're shooting for in Paris looks through the back of the RV while I change. At first I don't notice. He convinces my agent to have me take Polaroids with him. He asks me to go topless, I say no. Chérie, he says, this is Paris. But I want to run for president of the United States, I say. I can't take topless pictures. I wonder if the reason why I've been saying I'm going to be president all these years is because I want to be treated like someone who might be president one day. He shrugs, leaves the room, and returns with a strapless bra. When he shoots, one of his hands holds the camera and the other reaches to pull the top down. Is it twisted? I ask. Just need to hold it straight, he says. Eyes here, he says. The Polaroids fall onto the floor while he takes them. When he's done I look down and my nipples are exposed. How did I not feel the elastic sliding so low? The pictures develop and I see he has made me look topless. As soon as I'm in the stairwell I feel my face get hot and tears roll down my cheeks. The whole thing happened too fast. I feel weak and stupid. Dad picks me up from the airport when I get home, and I try to tell him about it. Couldn't you have just said no? he asks. I tried but the agency thought it was important. I guess you'll know for next time. When the magazine comes out, he's put me on the cover. 10. Next time is a decade later, when he requests me for a shoot and I waver while my agent convinces me, yes, I should do it. You need good editorial, she says. Okay. The shoot takes two days and the photos are fine. He treats me like an old friend and I act like one. 11. Photographers call me jailbait. One invites me to drinks. Eventually, I find my body in a bed next to him. Not myself: A lot of myself will be surprisingly gone by then. (You don't know how much of a self you are until you aren't.) 12. A French agent takes me out to dinner at a sushi restaurant where you can text other tables. Lots of men are there and they start texting our table. The agent brought his cousin too, and they are laughing, replying for me in French I don't understand. He takes me home on his motorcycle and I have to hold on tight to his body to be safe. The agent gives his cousin my number and his cousin texts me asking if I'll go on a date with him. I say no--his cousin must be at least thirty and he lives in Paris and I didn't like him at dinner--but I save his number and his name in my phone, because I'm seventeen and nobody has ever asked me out before. My French agent sends me emails and says he's in love. He says all the boys must be in love with me but I should go for a Frenchie. I try to respond like an adult, with sarcasm and distance. "You need a hobby," I write. Other emails I ignore, because what do you say? 13. My agent tells me they aren't shooting me because I'm a virgin. 14. My agent tells me they aren't shooting me because I lost my virginity. Excerpted from How to Make Herself Agreeable to Everyone: A Memoir by Cameron Russell All rights reserved by the original copyright owners. Excerpts are provided for display purposes only and may not be reproduced, reprinted or distributed without the written permission of the publisher.