イケメンに叱られる日本のダイエットアプリ

「不健康なことをするたびに、誰かステキな人がいじめてくれたら、5キロの減量だって簡単に達成できるのに」と考えたことはあるだろうか?

「不健康なことをするたびに、誰かステキな人がいじめてくれたら、5キロの減量だって簡単に達成できるのに」と考えたことはあるだろうか?

幸いにも、こんな夢を現実にしてくれる携帯アプリが日本から登場する。

「シェイプアップ応援」アプリ『ねんしょうfor Girls』は、以前に公開された男性向けのアプリ『ねんしょう!』をベースにしたもので、今月中のリリースが予定されている。

オリジナルの男性向けバージョンでは、減量に挑戦するユーザーに対して、アニメの可愛らしい女性が、励ましや褒め言葉をかけるものとなっているが、今回の女性向けバージョンでは、これとは異なるアプローチを取っているという。

RocketNews24」のカラ・クレッグ氏によると、女性向けバージョン『ねんしょうfor Girls』は、腹筋トレーニングと「二の腕の引き締め」に重点を置いており、褒め言葉ではなく、「侮辱の言葉」が特徴だという。

『ねんしょうfor Girls』は、3人の魅力的な男性が「飴とムチ」の方法を使ってユーザーのシェイプアップを応援するアプリだ。運動しないと、「イケメン」はユーザーをロマンチックに侮辱する。運動すれば、イケメンとの関係を進展させることができる。

「付き合っている」アニメの男性に非難されるくらいなら、健康的な食生活と運動を続けるほうが良い、というわけだ。

しかし、「太っていることを恥ずかしいと思う」ことはダイエットに効果がなく、むしろ体重の増加につながるという研究結果も発表されていることから、このアプリの有効性については疑わしい面もある。「Jezebel」のローラ・ベック氏はこのアプリについて、「よく分からないが、世の中には変わった人たちもいる」とコメントしている。同感だ。

[以下の動画は、男性用「筋トレ応援ゲーム」『ねんしょう!』のPV]

[Emma Gray(English) 日本語版:兵藤説子、合原弘子/ガリレオ)]

関連記事

Meet Our Body Image Heroes
Gina Rodriguez(01 of16)
Open Image Modal
The Golden-Globe winner told HuffPost Live how her father shaped her perspective on beauty:\n
Beauty was very much on my mind. I had a father that would -- we would look up at billboards and he would say, \"That\'s one version of beauty. You\'re another version of beauty. And she\'s a version of beauty. And that girl? She\'s another version of beauty.\" He always said that beauty came from within, and as much as you\'re younger and you\'re [sarcastically] like, \"Yeah, beauty comes from within\" -- no, beauty does come from within. I\'ve met some of the most beautiful people, and sadly their heart is just not smiling, and that destroys it all. And then other people that aesthetically aren\'t considered as beautiful are the most gorgeous people I\'ve ever seen in my life.
Lady Gaga(02 of16)
Open Image Modal
After the media focused on her alleged weight gain in September 2012, Gaga hit back at critics by baring her body in photographs, sharing her struggles with an eating disorder, and inviting her fans to join her in a \"body revolution.\" (credit:Facebook)
Adele(03 of16)
Open Image Modal
Adele says she tries not to worry about her body image and doesn\'t want to be a \"skinny minnie.\" \n\n\"The first thing to do is be happy with yourself and appreciate your body -- only then should you try to change things about yourself.\" (credit:Facebook)
Rebel Wilson(04 of16)
Open Image Modal
The actress took to Twitter to say, \"I\'m not trying to be hot. I\'m just trying to be a good actress and entertain people.\"\r\n (credit:Facebook)
Margaret Cho(05 of16)
Open Image Modal
In a powerful 2012 piece for Jezebel, the comedian responded to people who criticized her appearance:\n
I grew up hard and am still hard and I don\'t care. I did not choose this face or this body and I have learned to live with it and love it and celebrate it and adorn it with tremendous drawings from the greatest artists in the world and I feel good and powerful like a nation that has never been free and now after many hard won victories is finally fucking free. I am beautiful and I am finally fucking free.
(credit:Getty)
Ashley Judd(06 of16)
Open Image Modal
After the March 2012 frenzy around Judd\'s \"puffy face,\" the actress fought back in The Daily Beast, calling the media out for making women\'s bodies \"a source of speculation, ridicule, and invalidation, as if they belong to others.\" (credit:Facebook)
Danielle Brooks(07 of16)
Open Image Modal
The \"Orange Is The New Black\" actress wrote a powerful essay for Glamour about her struggles with self-esteem and journey to body love. She\'s now dedicated to making sure all body types are seen on-screen:\n\"Ideally, I want to see all beauties, all shapes, all sizes, all skin tones, all backgrounds represented in my profession. Now that I am blessed to be that reflection I was once looking for, I’m making a promise to speak out for that little girl that I used to be.\" (credit:Getty)
Allison Tate(08 of16)
Open Image Modal
Tate\'s essay about body image and motherhood not only broke the Internet; it has sparked a movement of \"moms who stay in the picture.\" (credit:Allison Tate)
Autumn Whitefield Madrano(09 of16)
Open Image Modal
On her informed, thoughtful blog \"The Beheld,\" Autumn writes about beauty, body image, appearance and her two -- that\'s right, two -- mirror fasts. (credit:Facebook)
Kjerstin Gruys(10 of16)
Open Image Modal
Gruys went on a year-long mirror fast during which she did not study her reflection in mirrors or other reflective surfaces, or look at photographs of herself. (credit:Facebook)
Christina Aguilera(11 of16)
Open Image Modal
\"I am always in support of someone who is willing and comfortable in their own skin enough to embrace it,\" the singer said in a recent interview. (credit:Facebook)
Lena Dunham(12 of16)
Open Image Modal
At the 2012 New Yorker Festival, the magazine\'s TV critic, Emily Nussbaum, asked Lena Dunham, producer, creator and star of the hit HBO show \"Girls,\" why Dunham is naked in so many scenes. Dunham responded, \"I realized that what was missing in movies for me was the presence of bodies I understood.\" She said she plans to live until she is 105 and show her thighs every day. (credit:Facebook)
Alexa Chung(13 of16)
Open Image Modal
Chung responded to critics who suggested that her slight frame made her a bad role model for young women, saying:\r\n\r\n\"Just because I exist in this shape doesn\'t mean that I\'m, like, advocating it.\" (credit:Facebook)
Stella Boonshoft(14 of16)
Open Image Modal
The NYU student started the amazing Body Love Blog, where she posted this picture of herself and wrote an open letter to those who feel entitled to shame others for the size or look of their bodies. (credit:Facebook)
Beth Ditto(15 of16)
Open Image Modal
This 5-foot-tall, 200-pound singer spoke openly about her weight to The Advocate, saying, \"I feel sorry ... for people who\'ve had skinny privilege and then have it taken away from them. I have had a lifetime to adjust to seeing how people treat women who aren\'t their idea of beautiful and therefore aren\'t their idea of useful, and I had to find ways to become useful to myself.\" (credit:Facebook)
Mindy Kaling(16 of16)
Open Image Modal
In 2013 interview with Parade, Kaling said that she was tired of being discussing her appearance:\n\"I always get asked, \'Where do you get your confidence?\' I think people are well meaning, but it\'s pretty insulting. Because what it means to me is, \'You, Mindy Kaling, have all the trappings of a very marginalized person. You\'re not skinny, you\'re not white, you\'re a woman. Why on earth would you feel like you\'re worth anything?\'\" (credit:Getty)