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Another makeover — 12 Comments

  1. And because they have nothing to do with politics (although I’m sure someone creative can come up with a tie-in).

    Oh, Dear Lord. Please, no. Let there be SOME refuge from politics, somewhere.

    I recognize that some people love politics so much that they want to bring it into everything, everywhere. Perhaps that’s fun for them. But I’m not fond of games that everyone is forced to play.

  2. That was pretty neat! I love to see women happy!

    (There’s an obvious political angle to this, but I’m stifling myself. You’re welcome.)

  3. I like the before/after and skip through the process. She looks so much better! I wish more could accept their lack of artistic talent and turn to a pro for help. Guys too. God bless my es-wife for cluing me into some things women like appearance wise.

    These vids miss out by not showing unstaged reactions of loved ones post-makeover.

  4. Nothing to do with politics, indeed. Last night I tuned in NEW GIRL, which I mostly enjoy despite last couple of seasons being very uneven, looking for some escape from politics–and blimey, if the episode weren’t about the election!

  5. Welcome respite. Makeover was transformational and I liked it. What woman would not love the new lease on life an objective and creative makeover provides?

  6. She looks very nice after the makeover. I’d like to have seen her with her eyeglasses back on, though, because she seems to really need them to see properly.

  7. Lved thi one, too. O lovely to see the “happiness glow” of the just made-over. Her metaphor was apt: though I didn’t actually see her walk in and thus nor hear any actual thud, for some reason the glow — best word that occurs to me to describe the feeling of change that the subject emanates.

    For some reason it reminds me of a brightly colored helium balloon that is released and just happily weaves and bobs up, up, up….
    (maybe I associate the weaving and bobbing with the delighted smiling and headturning of the madeover person who turns to see this side and then the other side and this side again and again…as if in disbelief..
    Or maybe I just associate times I’ve seen helium balloons with happy occasions?

    Agree with Uffdaphil that seeing the reactions of loved ones o the change would bw fun.
    (Then again a loved one who was not pleased might bring to my minda spoilsotwith a long needle just waiting to pop that cheery balloon)

    Also good point about those “who could accept their lack of artistic talent..,” I would add tothat those who can’t recognize when stylists, fashion gurus and related are just making them into fashio victims! (A number of cekebrities come to mind immediately…)

  8. I’m not trying to be negative, truly I’m not, but I keep worrying about what happens next for these women. They’re going to get home where they don’t have live-in makeup artists and where neither they nor their local hairdressers may be up to the task of keeping their hair so perfectly, artfully colored, cut and arranged forever after. Some of them, at least, aren’t going to be able to keep on looking so great – and won’t that be sad for them, now that they know what they CAN look like?

  9. I made my previous comment before I saw the actual video (can’t watch ’em at work, where YouTube is blocked.) Now that I’ve seen it, I just have to add, wow! What a difference the simple haircut made, alone, even before the makeup went on. THIS lady’s going to be able to take her new beauty home with her and keep it.

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