There's a part of me that has a kind of grudging respect for her, monetising the male gaze on her own terms and setting herself up for life by essentially exploiting hormone-addled teenage boys. She's absolutely a symptom of what's wrong with our superficial society rather than a root cause of it. And her antics are of course enabled by media both online and and traditional - be it the the Daily Mail's sidebar of shame, the Sports Illustrated Swimsuit Issue (about which I still do a massive WTF every time I hear about it, because how does that persist in 2025?) or the army of demented gym parents trying to push their own little level three darlings as the next Instagram superstars.
But that's increasingly outweighed by the wider damage she has done (and is doing) to the sport and to other women and girls involved in it, the pressure she is (no doubt inadvertently) putting on other gymnasts to look and behave a certain way and the increased sexualisation of gymnastics just as it was beginning to edge away from that narrative and into one based on athletes' strength and skill rather than their appearance. It's deeply selfish, and I'm not convinced she's too dumb to not recognise that.
The pressure on women and girls to look a certain way is of course near-universal but actively bringing it into sport removes a place where ability should be the primary focus. It makes me kind of sad that the world in which Dunne is the best-known college gymnast on the planet solely because of how she looks is the same world in which Alice Kinsella came close to retiring because of the side effects of medication she was taking to combat acne because of worries about how she looks. Jen and / or Jess has recently started doing regular insta story updates about her visits to mid-Buckinghamshire's number one acne-treatment clinic and it just makes me scream inside knowing that masses of their followers are young girls already worried about how others see their own changing bodies and instead of thinking "I could be fit and healthy like her!" are being encouraged to think "I could be spot-free like her!"
"We have used our gains to gild our shackles, but not break them," as Susan Faludi wrote almost 20 years ago.
Sorry, rant over.