In 2013, author Camille Hugh published her book
The Thigh Gap Hack, and in June 2013 she was interviewed about the book on
The Dr. Oz Show. The book was criticized by Lisa Delaney of Spryliving.com, who said the book "feeds girls' and women's obsessions with their bodies, promotes thinness at the expense of healthfulness (because of Hugh's disdain of fitness, exercise, muscles, etc.), and promotes flaky, unproven methods for weight/fat loss." and the U.S.
National Eating Disorders Association launched a website to promote healthy
body image and attitudes to food and weight. Australian
plus-size model Robyn Lawley criticized the thigh gap trend, denouncing it as "just another tool of manipulation that other people are trying to use to keep me from loving my body".
Target Corporation apologized after
Cassey Ho discovered that a photo of a model had a
photoshopped thigh gap for a girl's bathing suit ad.
Old Navy came under criticism by bloggers after a photo of a mannequin wearing women's
plus-size jeans on their website appeared to have a small thigh gap placed so that the jeans on the mannequin would look thinner than they would look on an actual person. Old Navy subsequently stated that they do not use any photo-editing techniques to alter the apparent shape of their products, but they do sometimes use pins on clothing to adjust how it fits a mannequin. ==Media comment==