Red Band Society's Portrayal of Anorexia Nervosa
Red Band Society's Portrayal of Anorexia Nervosa
Red Band Society's Portrayal of Anorexia Nervosa
Dr. Klebaur
comes from different media sources such as magazines, television shows, movies, Instagram,
TikTok, and many others. All these media sources impact everyone’s lives and thought
processes. In a westernized culture, media sources are likely going to link thinness to success
and promote extreme dieting as well as standards of ideal body sizes that are impossible or
very difficult to achieve. This may lead people to engage in unhealthy behaviors to meet
those standards, so it is also important that media sources accurately portray Eating Disorders
(EDs), to prevent people from engaging in such. One of the media sources that accurately
portrays and gives its viewers an accurate representation of an ED, more specifically
Anorexia Nervosa (AN) is the show Red Band Society. Red Band Society portrays AN
symptoms and the criteria that an individual need to meet to be diagnosed with AN according
to the DSM. Even though some scenes may not be very realistic and some of the symptoms
may be left out, Red Band Society is a somewhat accurate representation of Anorexia
Nervosa (AN).
essential to know the basics of this particular disorder. Anorexia Nervosa is described in the
DSM (2013) as an eating disorder. Cultural influences, in addition to genes and other
individual restricts its calorie intake so harshly that it causes the individual to be at a weight
significantly under what would be expected considering factors such as height, age, sex,
physical health, and developmental trajectory. On top of that, AN involves an extreme fear of
adding weight or becoming fat that encourages restriction of calorie intake even when at a
significantly low weight. This extreme fear is experienced because an individual suffering
from AN has a distorted image of what their own body looks or their weight (American
3
appropriately in a media source. Nevertheless, Red Band Society, through one of its main
characters, Emma, does a pretty good job at it. The show is set in a hospital, and it displays
different teenagers battling with their illnesses and disorders, among which AN is found.
Emma is one of the main characters trying to recover from AN. Through Emma’s character,
the show allows its spectators to gain a good comprehension of the disorder, since a lot of the
symptoms of AN are portrayed, and Emma meets all of the criteria that a person needs to
meet to have an AN diagnosis. Therefore, even though there is only one character portraying
AN, Red Band Society achieves to give the public a realistic depiction of what individuals
Emma’s characteristics align with those of the individuals that are most affected by
AN, white teenage females. Emma is from a middle-class family that wants her to be
successful and strive for perfection. Emma, as it is usual in individuals with AN, has a very
rigid thinking style, and wants to feel in control all the time. Emma developed anorexia when
she was fifteen after her best friend moved away. Her best friend moving away left Emma
experimenting with a series of new feelings and situations: she was depressed, lonely, and
struggling to make new friends. That made her lose the sense of control that she was always
pursuing. Apart from feeling a lack of control, Emma was under a lot of stress, because she
was hiding her struggles from her parents so that she could feel that she was meeting their
expectations. Emma’s coping mechanism to forget about all those negative feelings was to
stop eating. The food that she ingested was the only thing that Emma felt was under her
control, so she made it her goal to not eat, and her body weight became under 85% of what
would be expected for her fast. Having a bodyweight under 85% of the expectations for one’s
age, height, and sex is one of the criteria that need to be met for an individual to be diagnosed
According to the BMI calculator of the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention
Emma’s normal body weight would be 97.1 or over. However, in Red Band Society, episode
1 (2014) Emma is going to check her weight with the doctor, and she is only 70 pounds
which, is a bodyweight way under 85% of the minimum expected weight of 97.1 pounds, for
a girl her age and her height, implying that she indeed meets one of the criteria to be
diagnosed with Anorexia (Nagle & Ensler, 2014). Throughout the show, several examples
portray Emma’s low body weight and how incredibly skinny she is. Another example is when
in episode 4 (2014) when Emma goes to a high school homecoming and two girls approach
her asking for the diet she had been following to be a double zero, referring to Emma’s jean
size because of how thin Emma’s legs and hips were (Krebs & Rosenbaum, 2014). Thus, Red
Band Society does a good job at representing this specific criterion that needs to be met to
have AN. However, bodyweight is not the only feature that it’s taken into account to
diagnose AN.
To help us understand whether an individual has AN, other criteria have to be met,
such as a really strong fear of adding weight or becoming fat. People suffering from AN fear
weight gain when at really low weight. Surprisingly, they may not even be aware that they
have this fear and that it is stopping them from being healthy. Accordingly, it is essential that
a general assessment of the individual is conducted before making any diagnosis, so that it
can be assured that the irrational fear is the only explanation as to why the individual is not at
the expected weight. Several scenes in the show demonstrate Emma’s fear of adding weight,
including scenes already mentioned, such as when she obsessively writes the calories in her
diary to make sure she is staying in a calorie deficit. Likewise, Emma’s fear of adding weight
is reflected in episode 10 (2014), when only by looking at all the food on his plate she gets
overwhelmed and refuses to eat it (Mimoun & Holland, 2014). As a result of having these
5
scenes, the public watching the show will understand that a fear of weight gain is very
Along with low body weight and significant fear of gaining weight, another criterion
that a person has to meet to be diagnosed with AN is a misinterpretation of their body shape.
Individuals with AN show a disturbance in the way they see different parts of their bodies.
Even though they may be skeletal, they will always see themselves as fat, or feel like they
could be thinner. This relentless pursuit of thinness makes them forget about the fact that they
are engaging in unhealthy behaviors to get there. Red Band Society does portray the
misinterpretation of own body shape and how difficult it is for AN patients to accept their
disorder. An example is that Emma never accepted she was very thin and therefore sick until
the episode … after about a year and a half of her suffering with the disorder. Also, while all
of Emma’s friends, family, and even strangers when she goes to one of her friends’
homecoming are telling her she is skinny, she does not appear to think so, considering that
every time she looks at herself in the mirror and does not feel content. She tries to grab fat in
her arms and her thighs, but that fat is not there, since there is barely any muscle. So, once
again, the Red Band Society represents competently a very important criterion of anorexia.
No matter how well Red Band Society does at portraying the criteria for AN, such as
having under 85% of expected body weight, unfounded fear of gaining weight, and a
disturbance in the way one’s own body is seen, the show also lacks to accurately represent
some aspects of AN, including its subtypes. There are two subtypes of AN, the restricting
type, in which the person achieves weight loss through dieting, fasting, and/or excessive
exercising; and the binge-eating/purging type, in which the individuals feel they have eaten a
little bit too much, although they probably have not, and to avoid the weight gain engages in
purging behaviors such as misuse of laxatives or inducing vomit. According to the Eating
Recovery Center (2021), AN is the mental illness with the highest mortality rate (National
6
Eating Disorders Association, 2021). Even though females are more prevalent to be affected
by AN, since they represent 75% of the population affected with the disorder, everyone can
chronic unless caught early. While the show does contain a good representation of AN and its
onset age, if the spectator wants to gain profound knowledge about the two subtypes, Red
Band Society may not be the best media source to refer to. In several episodes, Emma’s
character has that restrictive and obsessive mindset and she writes down every bite she eats,
and how many calories it is. Additionally, in episode … characteristics of the binge-
eating/purging subtype are displayed, since Emma purges after her parents force her to eat.
However, purging is not seen again in the show, and it is not mentioned as prevalent in her
struggle with the disease. The show references and represents some of the characteristics of
the two subtypes, but further examples should be included in it for a more accurate portrayal
of those.
mentioned above, doctors may also look for several physical symptoms that cause
impairment in the individual’s life. For example, people with AN usually feel cold all the
time, because starvation causes the body to drop its body temperature. If one pays close
attention, in Red Band Society, Emma is always wearing a lot of clothes and carrying her
blanket around. As well as portraying that coldness that anorexic people usually feel, Red
Band Society also illustrates other common physical symptoms such as lack of strength or
weakness, caused as a result of not eating. This weakness is seen in episode 10 (2014) when
Emma’s younger sister can make her fall just by grabbing her by the arm (Mimoun &
Holland, 2014). Looking at these scenes, it cannot be denied that the show accurately
displays some of the physical symptoms experienced by individuals suffering from AN that
may be helpful to determine the diagnosis or detect the disorder. However, Red Band
7
Society is not perfect and it does not portray a few physical symptoms, such as the growth of
feathery hair all over the body to balance the drop of body temperature.
suffer AN, to say Red Band Society accurately portrays the disorder, it also has to show the
feelings that these individuals most commonly fight, such as that guilt they experience after
eating and/or anxiety. One scene in which Red Band Society, it is in episode 9 (2014)
represents this extreme guilt is when Emma gets frustrated because she ate out with her
friends and has an anxiety attack when she gets back in the hospital room (Fattore & Brock,
2014)). Along with guilt, as seen in the show, anxiety is also very present in AN. Anxiety
may appear after AN is developed, but it is more common that the individuals were already
anxious, and then on top of that, they developed the eating disorder. So, although it is not
known if she was already anxious before she had AN, at least the spectators get to see that
Emma’s case, her environment at home was one of perfection and pressure, which was not
favorable at all, and probably contributed to her developing the disorder. However, further
environment is not everything, since even when in the hospital, with a new group of friends,
psychologists, and nurses taking care of her, Emma did not cope well with her disorder and
she kept getting worse. Nonetheless, the show not only takes into account environmental
factors but also biological factors, since in episode 10 (2014) the director makes sure viewers
know her grandmother also had AN (Mimoun & Holland, 2014). Red Band Society
mentioning Emma’s family history has to be taken into account towards evaluating the
accuracy at portraying the disorder, since it is proved that biological factors and genes also
play a role in the development of AN, accounting from a 50 to an 80% of the risk of anorexia.
8
Other things that need to be taken into account when assessing the accuracy of Red
Band Society depicting AN are the behaviors of those affected by the disorder and how the
disorder is treated. In Red Band Society it is seen how Emma, like most AN patients, is in
denial and does not accept her problem. Moreover, she is far from accepting her mental
disorder. In episode 7 (2014), it is portrayed how Emma hides small weights into her bra to
pretend that she is getting healthier, when she is indeed not eating, and how she manipulates
her psychologists to make them think she is okay (Shukert & Dunne, 2014). And although the
nurses not catching her may not be very realistic, since they would control what Emma is
eating and check through her clothes for hidden weights, if Red Band Society’s main focus
was to show the manipulation and lies that may be encountered when treating with
Apart from portraying typical behaviors and patterns in AN, Red Band Society
portrays treatments of AN as well. Family therapy in AN is very common because of the big
impact the family has on the person affected with the disorder. The comments of family
members often have a bigger impact on people than comments coming from strangers. People
suffering from AN have such low self-esteem that comments or what strangers may think
already preoccupies them, so they don’t need their family judging them or making
inappropriate comments as well. This is why family therapy is so important, to not only
educate the patient on how a healthy relationship with food can be achieved, but also to
educate those who are going to be their main support, and it is very used when treating
adolescents (Mitchell & Peterson, 2020). Changing the thought processes of both the parents
of the affected person and such individual usually turns out in a higher likelihood of the
patient getting better. In the show, family therapy sessions are portrayed and turn out to be
helpful in the treatment of Emma’s disorder. For example, in episode 13 (Ensler, 2015) while
in family therapy, Emma recognizes she was not doing well, and that the only reason why she
9
did not tell her mother was because she did not want to disappoint her. The mother then
comforts Emma and takes a part of the responsibility because she accepts that she already
knew Emma was suffering from AN, but she did not say anything because she felt ashamed
that Emma did not confide in her enough to tell her and because she felt responsible for not
having realized it earlier. The psychologist assures that those confessions are going to help
the family move forward and become stronger since at least they were communicating and
being, which was a sign of a safer environment. However, family therapy gains effectiveness
when a psychologist has previously worked one-on-one with the patient in cognitive
behavioral therapy (CBT). CBT is also portrayed in the show since in earlier episodes, the
therapist works through the disorder with Emma and how she feels about food, her own body,
and her weight. Changing those thought processes, as well as educating Emma on AN, before
involving the family may be very beneficial. Furthermore, it can be concluded that Red Band
Taking into account the DSM V, Red Band Society does a somewhat accurate job at
portraying the main features of AN. In an era so full of media sources it is rare to find reliable
sources of information, especially as far as disorders are concerned. However, Red Band
Society through many episodes, several scenes, but only one character, accomplishes to give
its viewers a good grasp of the criteria and symptoms that need to be met to be diagnosed
with AN. Red Band Society portrays that people suffering from AN are under the expected
weight for their gender, weight, and height, as well as that they have a severe fear of
becoming fat, plus them having a distorted view of their own body. However, the show is not
faultless: the AN subtypes for example are not portrayed very well; and while it includes
most of the physical symptoms and feelings experienced by anorexic people as well as
treatments used with these patients, it does not mention all of them; besides, some scenes
may be a little unrealistic, such as the nurses not knowing that Emma is adding weight on her
10
shirt to make the scale have a higher number. Consequently, Red Band Society may not
contain the perfect representation of AN, but it has a pretty good one that will make its
References
Fattore, G. (Writer), & Brock, T. (Director). (2014, November 26). How did we get here?
(Season 1, Episode 9) [TV series Episode]. In F. Daryl (Executive producer), Red Band
Krebs, B. (Writer), & Rosenbaum, E. (Director). (2014, October 8). There’s No Place Like
Mimoun, R. (Writer), & Holland, T. (Director). (2014, December 13). What I did for love
(Season 1, Episode 10) [TV series Episode]. In F. Daryl (Executive producer), Red
Nagle, M. (Writer), & Ensler, J. (Director). (2014, September 17). Pilot (Season 1, Episode 1)
[TV series Episode]. In F. Daryl (Executive producer), Red Band Society. ABC
Signature.
Renshaw, J. (Writer), & Ensler, J. (Director). (2015, February 7). Waiting For Superman
(Season 1, Episode 13) [TV series Episode]. In F. Daryl (Executive producer), Red
Shukert, R. (Writer), & Dunne, G. (Director). (2014, November 12). Know Thyself (Season
1, Episode 7) [TV series Episode]. In F. Daryl (Executive producer), Red Band Society.
ABC Signature.
https://www.nationaleatingdisorders.org/statistics-research-eating-disorders.
Sudduth, R. (Writer), & Lerner, D. (Director). (2015, January 31). The Guilted Age (Season
1, Episode 11) [TV series Episode]. In F. Daryl (Executive producer), Red Band