Schoolgirl, 13, calls for 'nerd-face' emoji to have glasses removed

Schoolgirl, 13, who made Disney create a heroine with specs now calls for the ‘nerd-face’ emoji to have their glasses removed

  • Lowri Moore’s dream came true when Disney created a heroine with glasses
  • Schoolgirl has now set her sights on taking the spectacles off ‘nerd-face’ emoji
  • Her campaign against the image launched on Thursday — World Sight Day 

A schoolgirl whose dream came true when Disney created a heroine with glasses in a hit film has now set her sights on taking the spectacles off the ‘nerd-face’ emoji.

When Lowri Moore, now 13, was nine, a letter she wrote to Disney pleading for its next princess to wear glasses went viral. 

Earlier this year, the director of 2021 animated film Encanto, Jared Bush, said he had seen the note, but wasn’t able to let on that its bespectacled main character Mirabel was already in production. 

Now, Lowri, of Chilwell, Nottinghamshire, has begged the Unicode Consortium, which rules on emojis, to remove specs from the ‘nerds’ icon, insisting: ‘People who wear glasses are not nerds.’ 

Her campaign launched on Thursday – World Sight Day.

In a letter to the Unicode Consortium, the body responsible for all new emojis, Lowri said: ‘Unfortunately, the only glasses wearing emoji I can find is a nerd face.

‘People who wear glasses are not nerds.

‘But unless we address this, there’s a chance the next generation will grow up believing this lie about themselves.’

When Lowri Moore, now 13, was nine, a letter she wrote to Disney pleading for its next princess to wear glasses went viral

The consortium includes internet and computing powers like Facebook-owner Meta, Google, Amazon, Apple and Netflix.

After unveiling her campaign to an audience of school children in Burton-on-Trent, she said: ‘I am just trying to raise awareness for an issue which is large, especially for people my age, like teenagers, just to get glasses on emojis.

‘Even if it’s just one (emoji), this is a positive change.’

Earlier, she told her audience that bespectacled emojis were currently limited to a teacher, a grandmother and a nerd-type character.

‘It’s very stereotypical and I shouldn’t be put in a box,’ she said.

‘So many human beings just wear glasses so they can see, so why make it a stereotype and make people feel bad?’

Lowri said although glasses were on-trend in the western world, other parts of the world still had entrenched views of glasses being un-cool.

She gathered signatures from pupils and is hoping more will sign up to her GlassesOn campaign.

‘It’s so simple, we’re not asking that every emoji has to wear glasses – let’s just have that option so people don’t feel negative about themselves,’ said Lowri.

‘A small difference can go a long way.’

The campaign has the backing of the International Agency for the Prevention of Blindness (IAPB), which earlier this year awarded Lowri its campaigner of the year award.

Jessica Thompson, IAPB policy, strategy and advocacy director, said: ‘We’re so proud of Lowri.’

Lowri, of Chilwell, Nottinghamshire, has begged the Unicode Consortium, which rules on emojis, to remove specs from the ‘nerds’ icon, insisting: ‘People who wear glasses are not nerds’

She added: ‘It’s such an important issue because certainly, the nerd emoji and having emojis that aren’t representative of people wearing glasses just perpetuates the stigma.

‘It’s really important we encourage children and their parents of the importance of looking after their eyes, getting sight tests and wearing their glasses.’

Citing research showing UK children who wear glasses were more likely to be bullied in school, she added social media giants needed to be ‘encouraging children… glasses are really important’.

She added the IAPB was running a broader World Sight Day campaign aimed at raising awareness about eye health in a world where a billion people have no access to the eye care services common in the UK.

‘It’s a serious message but hopefully today we’ve delivered that with a bit of fun,’ she said.

Ian Brierly, Paget High School headteacher, where Lowri has launched her campaign, said she was a ‘terrific role model for young people who they can identify with’. 

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