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Pregnant Jourdan Dunn's Teen Vogue Cover Creates Questions About Teen Pregnancy

First Posted: 03/18/2010 5:12 am Updated: 05/25/2011 2:30 pm

DALLAS -- A model on the November cover of Teen Vogue is a 19-year-old who reveals in the magazine that she is pregnant.

Jourdan Dunn is not visibly pregnant on the cover, and Teen Vogue Editor-in-Chief Amy Astley said the magazine didn't know about Dunn's pregnancy until after the photo shoot. But she said that editors didn't consider pulling the cover Dunn shares with fellow model Chanel Iman.

"Teen pregnancy is a difficult, real-life issue that Teen Vogue readers (with an average age of 18) are mature enough to be exposed to," Astley said in a statement. "Teen Vogue felt it was important to support, not punish, Jourdan Dunn, who contributed to a beautiful photo shoot and who will surely have an ongoing and successful career in fashion."

The cover has raised eyebrows among some parents, teens and advocates against teen pregnancy.

"There's no message to send to them that that's not OK. Maybe if she's on the cover to tell them 'Be careful,' that's one thing," said Catherine Essig, a 19-year-old sophomore at Dallas' Southern Methodist University, who was concerned about 15- and 16-year-old readers.

Many advocates said parents should use the cover as a way to talk to their kids about sex and the importance of planning pregnancies for the right moment in their lives.

"Teen parenting isn't glamorous, even if you are a teen model," said Valerie Huber, executive director of the National Abstinence Education Association.

A message left by The Associated Press at Dunn's New York City agency was not immediately returned. The London native told Teen Vogue that her unplanned pregnancy has been hard.

"All I could think about was what my mom was going to say, my agency, my boyfriend," said Dunn, who is expecting a boy in December. "When I told my mom, she started crying and blaming herself. She got pregnant with me at the same age, and she said, 'I don't want you to have to go through what I did.'"

The magazine should be used as a teachable moment because the media and popular culture help shape "the social script for teenagers," said Bill Albert, a spokesman for the National Campaign to Prevent Teen and Unplanned Pregnancy.

"It shapes what they think is cool, is not cool, what's in, what's out, what's acceptable, what seems to be the social norm," he said. "It's not the only influence and I'd suggest not the most powerful, but it is an influence."

But parents, he said, shouldn't underestimate their own power.

"Young people tell us time and time again that parents -- not the media, not their partners, not their peers -- parents most influence their decisions about sex," he said.

After a record high in the early 1990s, the teen birth rate in the U.S. dropped 34 percent from 1991 to 2005. But between 2005 and 2007, it increased 5 percent, according to the National Campaign to Prevent Teen and Unplanned Pregnancy.

A lack of family planning remains a problem even as women get older -- 70 percent of pregnancies among 18 to 29-year-olds are unplanned, Albert said.

The magazine cover story mainly focuses on the two models' friendship, which grew chilly over competition for a time, and their experiences as black models in the fashion world.

Jill Taylor, chair of the women and gender studies department at Simmons College in Boston, said that she would have liked to have seen the magazine use the model's pregnancy to provide more information about teen pregnancy.

"Fourteen and 15-year-olds reading it don't have an idea how hard it is for most single mothers having babies. She's got resources," Taylor said.

That difference between Dunn and most teens could be a starting point for a discussion about timing.

"What do you want to have in place when you get pregnant?" asked Dr. Janet Realini, president of the Healthy Futures, a nonprofit dedicated to preventing teen and unplanned pregnancies in San Antonio and Texas. "For teens, we mostly want them to think about staying in school, finding the person who is right for them."

As a mother of four and a co-founder of a Plano-based faith-based group that advocates abstinence, 42-year-old Kim Hinkle said that while she might not like her teens to not see a pregnant model on the cover of a magazine, she understands it's a topic that is pervasive in society.

She agreed with experts who said the article could start discussions.

"As a mother, it's hard because you've got to live in their reality," she said.

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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
reader1
Interested in the world
05:53 PM on 10/29/2009
I agree, it is a teachable moment. Most of us have had sex before or by 16. That is a reality in America. However, we need to know the diffrence between having sex and making love. Or even being loved. We are not teaching the difference. We are making something that is natural between two people not natural.

As adults, we need to stop acting like we did not sneak around and do things that eventually came out in the light. (smile) I know, many of you are perfect, the difference is our children let us know that we are not. When they make unwise decisions, lets be there to help them make better ones, not tear them apart.

For example (Sarah Palin) did not shrug away from her daughters' pregnancy. She stood in front of the world. But for her, she just acted like it didn't happen. Let's all learn from this moment!
02:21 AM on 10/29/2009
this is such a dumb non issue its not even funny...

first off, she isnt pregnant on the cover of teen vogue,

second, teens dont read teen vogue, no teen can relate for 1400 dollar chanel book bags....

teen vogue is like a mini vogue for adults or when they already read regular vogue...

fouth, she is 19, she is an adult, at least she isnt 15.

why do people make such big issues?
02:49 PM on 10/29/2009
Actually, you must not know many teen age girls, Niles. If anything, I would say that the average TeenVogue reader is between 12 and 16, not even the 18 year old demographic they claim.

I don't think this girl should be ostracized from modeling or from the cover because she is pregnant. But I do think that rather than vague statements about how 'she wasn't pregnant at the time' and 'the story is really about the two girls friendship' TeenVogue could use this opportunity to make the life of a pregnant teen look a LITTLE less glamorous and give their readers a healthy dose of reality about it.
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
alby91
11:06 PM on 10/28/2009
i mean i don't agree with teen pregnancy but she PREGNANT and some people need to face it..she can't do anything about it. Its not like there aren't pregnant teens in this world. She also makes her own money and she earns more than the average person so this shouldn't be a problem because she's also helping the economy. So she shouldn't be punished for anything. It will be RIDICULOUS if they refused to use her ad the cover because that'd be saying that pregnant teens should be cast and it doesn't set a good example.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Merersu
Tempering the Rage through Revelation
11:06 PM on 10/28/2009
This whole this is just ridiculous. She is an adult. She's 19; has a career and money; and is old enough to make her own choices. Why this is a big friggen deal is beyond me! Besides, teens in the US already reproduce at an alarming level WITHOUT having a job (like she does) and lots of money (like she does).
10:41 PM on 10/28/2009
She is 19, so she is legal age, even though that doesn't happen most of the time...and she makes more in a day than most people with degrees' in a day..possibly. But when then, is it ok to start having kids? 21?? Teen pregnancy to me is like 13 to 16 even 12!!! which I have seen come in through the ER before...so whats' the concern?
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HUFFPOST COMMUNITY MODERATOR
Niasia
Tryin to make it in the Nation's Capital
10:07 PM on 10/28/2009
ok she is an adult. that's all that matters! And so what she isn't married 50% of marriages end in divorce... single mother regardless. so it's ok to get divorced and be a single mother as opposed to a never married single mother.
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08:02 PM on 10/28/2009
Ms. Dunn has as much right to be pregnant as any other adult woman.

As for Vogue, employment discrimination against pregnant women is illegal in many places, and wrong everywhere. It's disgusting how many women here are arguing in favor of it.
07:35 PM on 10/28/2009
A pregnant adult is on the cover of a magazine. And? Therefore? Also? WTF? WHY is this considered news?
06:54 PM on 10/28/2009
my comment earlier was apparently deleted. I wonder why? All I said was: why is the girl always cast in shame? what about the baby's father?
08:49 PM on 10/28/2009
Amen! Boys/men are all caught up in not choosing to use protection... and we all know why. Besides selfish and uncaring.
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HUFFPOST COMMUNITY MODERATOR
Niasia
Tryin to make it in the Nation's Capital
10:10 PM on 10/28/2009
amen amen amen! let's not even talk about how the girls are treated in schools and so on. they even force them to alternative schools... I think the boys should deal with the consequences as well. but I won't see that in my lifetime.
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06:11 PM on 10/28/2009
An employed adult is pregnant. Why does anyone think this is their business?
04:53 PM on 10/28/2009
I think the bigger news is that Teen Vogue put African American models on the cover. :-)
faith2hope
Faith the substance of my Hope
07:48 PM on 10/28/2009
I agree that is the story, how many times have we seen that.
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09:04 PM on 10/28/2009
But the black model is an unwed mother which also perpetuates a stereotype. Why couldn't we have just the un-pregnant black model? Why does there have to be some flawed aspect to the rare inclusion of a black cover model? Why not feature Bristol Palin or a white model with a substance abuse problem? This bothers me. I don't care if she's a consenting adult. There is still a stigma to it. Especially for black women.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
tangelan
You will not cast aspersions on my asparagus.
10:03 PM on 10/28/2009
I was thinking the same thing. Progress!
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
sherifffruitfly
04:34 PM on 10/28/2009
If she's old enough to die in our military, she's old enough to be pregnant. Silly headline, silly non-story.
04:48 PM on 10/28/2009
Valid point Sheriff
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
mc1135
05:27 PM on 10/28/2009
The real question is: Is she married?
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Bexstarr
05:51 PM on 10/28/2009
Is that anyone's business? Since she announced this over the summer, the father is her childhood sweetheart. If she marries him or not, that is none of our business.
07:28 PM on 10/28/2009
Why, because she should add a pretty-damn-likely-to-fail marriage on top of it?
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
bma83
03:49 PM on 10/28/2009
Beautiful cover.
03:42 PM on 10/28/2009
"There's no message to send to them that that's not OK. Maybe if she's on the cover to tell them 'Be careful,' that's one thing," said Catherine Essig, a 19-year-old sophomore at Dallas' Southern Methodist University, who was concerned about 15- and 16-year-old readers."

Bristol Palin (17 years old) appeared MANY TIMES on magazine covers and on national TV (paraded by her mother) with her VERY VISABLE baby bump with NO uproar. ...............

The message the GOP sent with Bristol was that it is COOL to be pregnant IF you are the teenaged daughter of the republican VP candidate, or at least the daughter of ANY republican ............. Again NO Uproar.

"Jourdan Dunn is not visibly pregnant on the cover, and Teen Vogue Editor-in-Chief Amy Astley said the magazine didn't know about Dunn's pregnancy until after the photo shoot"

So what's the uproar about Jourdan? ........... And besides she is 19 and and considered an adult (not a 17 year old teenager as Bristol was).

"Teen parenting isn't glamorous, even if you are a teen model," said Valerie Huber, executive director of the National Abstinence Education Association."...........................

But it was glamorous for Bristol to go on her 2 stop FAKE ABSTINANCE tour to fulfill one of Sarah Palin's publicity, damage control stunts...............

THIS FAKE OUTRAGE IS NOTHING BUT A DOUBLE STANDARD.
11:03 PM on 10/28/2009
Thank you tel8034!! My thoughts exactly.... the hypocrisy is ridiculous.
03:05 PM on 10/28/2009
oh!