Jordan - AKA Katie Price - is best known for posing in lingerie and lifestyle magazines. But she also ran for Parliament in 2001 on a platform promising free breast implants under the slogan "For a Bigger and Betta Future."
She has since been a regular on television and in the tabloids. Can a Playboy model also be a feminist icon?
A distinguished panel debates the issue- The Cambridge Union Society
Bio
Joanne Box
Joanne Box is a student attending New Hall, Cambridge University. She is also director of debating for The Cambridge Union Society.
Louise Chunn
Louise Chunn is the editor of Good Houskeeping. She was formerly editor of the Guardian Woman's page, Instyle and deputy editor of Vogue. She has also worked at Elle and ES magazine.
Louise Court
Louise Court is the Editor of Cosmopolitan Magazine.
Edwina Currie
Edwina Currie Jones is a former British Member of Parliament. She served from 1983 to 1997 as a Conservative Party MP, including three years as Junior Health Minister, before resigning in 1988 because of a controversy over salmonella in eggs.
Abi Titmuss
Abigail Evelyn Titmuss, best known as Abi Titmuss, is an English glamour model turned television personality and actress.
Catherine Townsend
The Independent's no-holds-barred sex and dating columnist, Catherine Townsend published her first novel, Sleeping Around: Secrets of a Sexual Adventuress, in 2007 and is now writing a second book and appearing in How to Have Sex After Marriage on Five.
Born in Arkansas, Catherine was a gossip columnist for New York Magazine before moving to London in 2003, since which time she has had a very interesting - and public - private life.
Jenni Trent Hughes
Jenni Trent Hughes is a life strategist, coach, and agony aunt who specializes in relationships and family issues.
She is also a successful TV and radio broadcaster, author, and magazine columnist. Although born in Jamaica, Hughes now lives and works mainly in the UK.
Social movement that seeks equal rights for women. Widespread concern for women's rights dates from the Enlightenment; one of the first important expressions of the movement was Mary Wollstonecraft's A Vindication of the Rights of Woman (1792). The 1848 Seneca Falls Convention, convened by Elizabeth Cady Stanton, Lucretia Mott, and others, called for full legal equality with men, including full educational opportunity and equal compensation; thereafter the woman suffrage movement began to gather momentum. It faced particularly stiff resistance in the United Kingdom and the United States, where women gained the right to vote in 1918 and 1920, respectively. By mid-century a second wave of feminism emerged to address the limited nature of women's participation in the workplace and prevailing notions that tended to confine women to the home. A third wave of feminism arose in the late 20th century and was notable for challenging middle-class white feminists and for broadening feminism's goals to encompass equal rights for all people regardless of race, creed, economic or educational status, physical appearance or ability, or sexual preference. See alsoEqual Rights Amendment; women's liberation movement.
The longer this video goes on the more interesting it gets, the two basic arguments build as each individual adds to them. And there's a lot of good fun humor mixed along with it all.