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South Korea Men Are Starting To Wear Makeup To Get Ahead

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Man applying makeup

Taking care of your appearance can definitely give you an extra boost of confidence in a professional setting.

And the economy is now so competitive that it's not just women racing to makeup counters.

Recent reports show that South Korea has become the makeup capital of the world and it’s because of the growing number of men using cosmetics.

These men are using anything from lipstick to eyebrow pencils to eyeliner. 

According to global research from Euromonitor International, South Korean men spent $495.4 million on skincare last year, making up nearly 21 percent of sales worldwide.

And South Korea’s biggest cosmetics company — Amorepacific — estimates the sales of men’s cosmetics in the country will be more than $885 million this year. 

“Your appearance matters, so when I wear makeup on special occasions, it makes me more confident,"Cho Won-hyuk, a 24-year-old college student who regularly uses a black pencil to color in his eyebrows, told the Associated Press. 

Cho Gil-nam, a 27-year-old insurance fraud investigator in Seoul, agrees: "I can understand why girls don't like to go outside without makeup — it makes a big difference."

Roald Maliangkay, head of Korean studies at Australian National University, told the Associated Press that effeminate male beauty is “a marker of social success.” 

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The New Face Of CoverGirl Is A 13-Year-Old Cancer Patient

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Talia covergirl

13-year-old Talia Joy Castellano of Orlando has had a tough past six years.

At the age of seven, she was diagnosed with neuroblatoma, the most common extracranial solid cancer for children, and in August of this year she was found to have pre-leukemia. 

Despite her hardships, Talia has found happiness in make-up and in creating YouTube make-up tutorials. The description on her videos says, "I don't like wearing wigs so I wear makeup to feel good and pretty inside — and I guess outside."

Talia's makeup tutorial videos each get around 75,000 clicks and her YouTube page has been viewed  over 14.5 million times over.

In September, Talia caught the attention of Ellen DeGeneres and the daytime talk show host featured the 13-year-old on her September 13th episode — and as usual, had a big surprise for her guest.

DeGeneres revealed that Talia had been chosen as an honorary CoverGirl and that the beauty company had sent her a make-up table, make-up, and a check for $20,000.

Talia's CoverGirl campaign image was released today.

Watch Talia's appearance on Ellen below:

Watch Talia break the news of her leukemia diagnosis to her fans. She says, "I'm a very strong person when it comes to dealing with what I'm being told, and taking it in very easily. But, basically there are not really a lot of options for treatment anymore." She tells her fans she is considering not getting the bone marrow transplant because her doctors told her it would be the hardest thing she has had to do thus far. 

Watch one of Talia's many make-up tutorials. 

 SEE ALSO: The 11 worst celebrity product endorsements of all time >

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See The Natalie Portman Dior Ad That Was Banned In The UK

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natalie portman mascara ad

The UK's Advertising Standards Authority (ASA) just banned Natalie Portman's mascara ad for Dior after one solitary objection.

The complainant? None other than makeup competitor L'Oreal.

In February 2012, Britain's ban-happy ASA censured L'Oreal's Revitalift Repair ad for making the anti-wrinkle cream's effects appear "misleadingly exaggerated" due to excessive Photoshop touch-ups on model Rachel Weisz' face.

So when L'Oreal saw Portman's too-good-to-be-true lashes in Diorshow mascara ad, it had to blow the whistle.

Portman's shoot was actually intended to promote a lipstick rather than mascara, but apparently her eyes looked so incredible that Dior couldn't help itself ... after, of course, deciding to digitally "separate/increase the length and curve of a number of her lashes and to replace/fill a number of missing or damaged lashes, for a more stylized, uniform and tidy effect."

And so, even sans consumer objection, the ASA decided that the image could be misleading to consumers and pulled the plug on the ad.

Click here to see the most sexy, violent, and overall offensive ads the ASA banned>

 

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Victoria's Secret Angels Without Makeup

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Alessandra Ambrosio

The Victoria's Secret Fashion Show airs tonight, with an estimated production cost of over $12 million. 

The show has been criticized for promoting unrealistic beauty, especially since a Limited Brands executive famously told the New York Times that fewer than 100 women worldwide were capable of walking its runway. 

But many of the models have appeared without makeup, showing what they look like before several stylists have worked their magic. 

We compiled side-by-side comparisons of some of the most famous Victoria's Secret models with and without makeup. 

See Tyra Banks, Miranda Kerr, Adriana Lima and more without their makeup. 

This is Candice Swanepoel's IMG portfolio shot contrasted with a picture of her from a Victoria's Secret event. She'll appear in tonight's 2012 show.



Angel Miranda Kerr appeared bare-faced to a red carpet event. Her skin is famously smooth, even without makeup.



Longtime angel Adriana Lima smiles for the camera as she prepares for the show.



See the rest of the story at Business Insider

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'Les Mis' Makeup Artist Reveals How She Transformed Anne Hathaway Into A 'Diseased Prostitute'

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"It's tricky to make a beautiful woman not look beautiful,""Les Miserables" makeup artist Lisa Westcott says in a new behind-the-scenes video revealing how she made Anne Hathaway and Hugh Jackman look like 19th century underclass.

In order to make ethereal Hollywood beauty Anne Hathaway look like a disease ridden prostitiute with rotting teeth, Westcott explains "we had to make her look tragic, a bloody mess."

Anne Hathaway Les Miserables

"My template for the whores was very, very crude makeup that had been on for a long time — really smeared."

Anne Hathaway Les Miserables

In one scene, Hathaway has to have a tooth ripped out. Makeup artist Westcott painted over the actress's tooth to make it appear like a stumpy mess.

Anne Hathaway Les Miserables

"Annie Hathway had the idea to cut her hair for real, which I was amazed at," said director Tom Hooper. "We tried to talk her out of it."

Anne Hathaway-Les Miserables Trailer

As for the hunky Hugh Jackman, Westcott gave the actor a scraggly beard extension, contact lenses and "slips that went over his teeth" to make them appear to be rotting in even the most close up singing scenes.

Hugh Jackman Les Miserables

Now watch Westcott show inside the graphic transformations below:

SEE ALSO: Here's how Anne Hathaway lost 25 pounds for her role in 'Les Miserables' >

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Here's Where Teens Spend All Their Money

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teenager with an iphoneThere's no better way to predict where shopping trends are heading than poking your nose around a high school lunch room.

Thankfully you don't have to. A new survey by research firm Piper Jaffrey polled more than 8,000 teenagers on everything from where they eat, to which headphones they use when they tune out Science class. 

Most noteworthy is the fact that teens still rely on their parents for more than half of their spending money. That might explain why they've started to embrace some new "grown up" shopping habits –– namely, organic eating and discount shopping.

Teens are hungry for new clothes. They spend 40% of their cash just updating their wardrobe.



They're really stocking up on athletic wear, which rose 5% in popularity since spring 2012.



More than two-thirds of teenage girls said they shop at low-budget stores and outlets, along with 55% of boys.



See the rest of the story at Business Insider

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The Men's Makeup Industry Is Booming

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man looking in the mirror

Move over mantyhose— men's makeup is the next big gender-bending business.

Though it's dwarfed by what the female beauty industry rakes in annually, men's skin-care products are trumping expected sales, according to Alessandra Codinha in The Daily Beast.

She reports that American consumers spent over $5 billion on men's grooming products in 2012, more than twice what they spent in 1997.

Men aren't just buying shower gels and shaving cream, either. Men's makeup is also on the rise.

We can thank savvy marketers, in part. Advertisements rarely describe men's cosmetics the same way they do women's: Eyebrow pencils are "brow and beard correctors." Foundation is now a "sculpting face stick" or "urban camouflage." And concealer — one of the most popular products — is a "confidence corrector."

Men's cosmetic companies such as 4Voo, Menaji, and Kenmen strive to make products and packaging seem as far from the female beauty industry as possible, writes Codinha.

Even big brands like Sephora and Clinique are cashing in on men's desire for "manly" concealer and lip balm. The goal is stealth makeup that makes men look more handsome, not more feminine.

“The world has come to a different place now when it comes to men taking care of themselves," MAC makeup artist John Stapleton says in a men’s cosmetics instructional video. "I think men spend more time looking in the mirror than women do. Why should the girl get all the attention?"

SEE ALSO: Meet The YouTube Makeup Artist Who Can Transform Into Anyone

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Stats Show Makeup And Spanx Are Getting More Popular Among Millennial Men

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man looking in the mirror

The line between male and female products is starting to blur.

Adweek conducted a study surveying 1,000 American and British adults, and the results show that millennial men are growing more and more prone to use traditionally lady-friendly goods.

For example, 11% of millennials said they were accepting of men in Spanx, 14% were pro man leggings — which have already reportedly been taking Manhattan by storm— but every trend pales in comparison to the 51% acceptance rate of the man bag.

But the real turnaround is in the grooming department. The data showed that millennials were ok with men wearing eyeliner and foundation. There was also a 45% acceptance of waxing and 60% for skin care.

Is this a sign for advertisers to start broadening their campaigns for stereotypically female products? More normalization could equal higher sales, after all.

SEE ALSO: P. Diddy Met With The Most Important Advertisers In The World And Told Them He Hates Their Work

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8 Cosmetics Ingredients Banned In Europe, But Not In America

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When it comes to making sure cosmetics companies aren't poisoning us, Europe is apparently doing a much better job than the U.S.

While there are just 10 cosmetics ingredients banned in the U.S., there are 1,372 in Europe. As if those numbers alone aren't terrifying, the actual ingredients that are banned in the EU but not here are what nightmares are made of.

Here are some examples of ingredients that Europe wants to protect us from, while the FDA looks the other way.

Asbestos: Well, this was fun to learn about. Asbestos, a carcinogen, occurs naturally in close proximity to talc. So, anything with talc in it could theoretically contain asbestos. While the FDA has looked into it, neither substance is actually banned from cosmetics. Here's a direct quote about the FDA's stance on asbestos: "Both talc and asbestos are naturally occurring minerals that may be found in close proximity in the earth. Unlike talc, however, asbestos is a known carcinogen. For this reason, FDA considers it unacceptable for cosmetic talc to be contaminated with asbestos." So, basically, the FDA thinks it's unacceptable to have a known carcinogen in beauty products, but not so unacceptable that they would go so far as to legally restrict it. 

Benzidine: While benzidine is no longer produced in the U.S., it can be imported. It's a dye, as in hair dyes, and guess what? It's a carcinogen.

Coal Tar: This carcinogen, while regulated by the FDA, is used to add color to cosmetics.

Lead: It's probably in your lipstick, and can harm your brain. 

Progesterone: Used in skin conditioning products, progesterone is a hormone that prepares your body for pregnancy. Yes, because that's exactly what we want our bodies gearing up for every time we slather on lotion.

Petroleum: Used in lip products and other cosmetics, petroleum has been linked to cancer.

Animal-tested ingredients: Proof that Europe loves our furry friends more than the U.S.? The EU banned ingredients that have been tested on animals, while those ingredients continue to be used in cosmetics this side of the pond. 

Nickel: Though nickel was named the Allergen of the Year in 2008 by The American Contact Dermatitis Society, there's nothing stopping it from appearing in makeup. 

So, anybody else totally freaked out right now, or is that just us?

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Makeup Company Takes Out Full-Page Newspaper Ad Pretending To Be A Mistress Mocking An Ugly Wife

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A full-page ad appeared in China's Southern Metro Daily in which a mistress tells her boyfriend's ex-wife that she isn't pretty enough to win back her man.

When word got out that the ad was part of a viral marketing campaign for a makeup company, the name of which hasn't been released, everyone from Weibo users to law officers have been slamming the marketing tactic for being amoral.

According to Xinhua:

In the ad which featured in the Southern Metropolis Daily of about 40 Chinese characters, the mistress-turned-wife of a man who convinced her lover to divorce his first wife urged the man's now-ex to give up on winning him back, saying "a good man only belongs to a woman who can make herself beautiful" and declared her wish that "there won't be any mistresses in the world."

But since none of the Chinese publications are publishing the name of the cosmetics company, the brand has yet to receive international backlash. The newspaper reportedly canceled the brand's ad campaign.

Here's an image of the ad that has been making its rounds on Weibo:newspaper china makeup ad mistress

SEE ALSO:  A Convenience Store Clerk Was Critically Injured When Trying To Protect A Life-Size David Hasselhoff Cutout Ad

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Julie Chen Blasts Nose Job Reports, Shows How Makeup Changes Her Face

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Julie Chen

After Julie Chen revealed she had plastic surgery on her eyes"to look less Chinese,""The Talk" co-host is now fighting back against accusations that she has also had a nose job and other face-altering procedures.

"I do not have cheek implants and I did not take fat out of my face. I did not have chin surgery, I did not have a nose job. I have not done my teeth, I've never even had braces," Chen revealed to viewers.

What she does have, though, is a great makeup artist.

For 20-45 minutes every morning, Chen sits in "The Talk" make up artist's chair as her face is quite literally painted on.

"Contouring is done down the nose, sometimes it's heavier than others," says Chen, adding "I've gotten calls from family saying you look like you were in 'The Lion King' today."

To prove her point, Chen showed viewers a photo of herself in the morning without makeup next to a photo of herself before her eye surgery in 1995. Chen argues that underneath all the makeup she doesn't actually look that different. Judge for yourself:

Julie Chen makeup

But if you still don't believe her, watch a 20-second time-lapse video of Chen's daily makeup transformation she showed on today's "Talk":

Meanwhile, the Dayton, Ohio, TV station that Chen said made her feel so insecure about her looks that she had surgery to make her eyes look bigger has issued an apology.

"We are sorry to hear about what happened to CBS' Julie Chen in 1995 when she was a reporter at WDTN-TV," Joe Abouzeid, WDTN and WBDT president and general manager, said in a statement given to the Dayton Daily News. "The station was under different management and ownership during that time. At WDTN and WBDT, we don't tolerate racism or discrimination of any kind."

SEE ALSO: Julie Chen Says Discrimination Forced Her To Get Plastic Surgery On Her Eyes To Look 'Less Chinese'

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Men Should Wear Makeup

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“You know, you don’t really need makeup,” Rose Hill told me when we first met. We were atHill’s studio in Los Gatos, Calif., where I’d come to see what a good makeup artist could do for a man (i.e., for me).

Hill, who’s 60, has been doing makeup for film, television, theater, and commercial photography since she was a teenager. She’s worked on Bill Clinton, Barack Obama, every tech executive you can name, and Hugh Jackman—“my most favoritest person in the whole world,” she said as I thumbed through her portfolio.

Studying my face, Hill told me she didn’t see any obvious areas of concern. As I’d long suspected, I’ve got a good mug on my shoulders. Of course, she went on, nobody really needs makeup, not any more than one needs a fitted suit, a fancy car, or deodorant. But modern cosmetics are amazing. They remove blemishes, redness, signs of aging and fatigue, cuts or nicks from shaving, and most other indications that you’ve had a well-lived life. And they do so without looking like cosmetics.

“When men think of makeup they think it’s heavy, that it’s unnatural, but we’re living in a new century,” Hill says. The most advanced cosmetics are designed to be photographed close-up with high-definition cameras, so they need to add pigment while leaving one’s pores visible. “Today’s makeup looks like skin,” Hill says. When I asked her what I’d look like with makeup, she was definitive: “You’ll just look better. It’s a big difference.”

She was right. This is what I looked like when I entered Hill’s studio:

130919_TECH_MaleMakeup 001 nomakeup.CROP.article568 large.jpg

Mostly I looked OK. But there were some obvious places where my face could be improved. My forehead has a few light blemishes, and there are a few more under my eyes. I’d just shaved, and there were some red marks across my skin, plus some nicks. I had a just-visible pimple under my left eyebrow.

Over the next hour and a half, Hill put me through a series of makeup sessions. She applied “high-definition” makeup with an airbrush, a gun that sprays a very fine mist of color at your face, so fine that the dyes blend into your skin in a way that looks and feels like you have nothing on. Later on, she applied makeup the old-fashioned way, using brushes and sponges. Another time, she made me up using cheap, drugstore-counter foundation. After each session we stopped to photograph my face. Across the range of applications, I could see the good and the bad of makeup, from just enough to too much.

The bad makeup looked worse than no makeup, but the good makeup? It looked awesome. With some quick, easy-to-apply fine-tuning, I discovered that my pretty face can get even prettier. Here’s me looking best—this is after the first application of makeup, a light layer of HD foundation applied with an airbrush.

130919_TECH_MaleMakeup 002 airbrush.CROP.article568 large.jpg

There are very few differences between this picture and the one above. But the differences are enough—overall, with a light layer of foundation, my skin looks more even, less patchy, and less shiny. The red spots and blemishes are still visible, but they’re more subtle. I look more put together; the effect is roughly the same as if I’d combed my hair or put on a well-ironed shirt. Compared to wearing no makeup, with just a bit of color, I look like I took the time to bother about my appearance.

Which prompts the question: Why don’t I wear makeup all the time?

Men should wear makeup. I mean to say: Obviously men should wear makeup. It’s sort of crazy that we don’t, actually. Human beings have been adorning themselves since forever; evidence of the application of body paint dates back at least 50,000 years and is taken to be one of the first signs of modern human behavior. For nearly all that time, both men and women indulged in cosmetics. As recently as a few hundred years ago, it was common for upper-class men in Britain and France to wear rouge and powder. It was only around the turn of the 19th century that facial adornment for men began to go out of fashion—though at the same time, other cosmetic enhancements for men, especially hair-care products, took off. This makes little logical sense (though, granted, it’s folly to apply logic to fashion trends). If it’s seen as necessary for a modern man to comb and sculpt his hair, why isn’t he expected to make up his face, too?

Note that I’m not advocating for men to wear lipstick, blush, or other obvious signs of makeup. Red lips and cheeks and dark eyes are perceived as feminine because they cannily simulate female fertility—when a woman is ovulating,increased blood flow reddens her lips and cheeks, so lipstick and rouge are a way to mimic that effect. But skin tone isn’t sex-specific; studies show that when humans are presented with faces with even color distribution—faces whose skin tone looks the same from region to region—we find them more attractive than faces with uneven color. This has been shown infemale and male faces. (The theory is that even color distribution is a token of youth, and youth, in turn, signals fertility.) Study after study has shown that people are disarmed by makeup—even though it’s obvious when a woman wears makeup, she’s judged as more attractive (by both men and women) than when she’s not wearing makeup.

It stands to reason that men could benefit from the same effect, especially if the makeup isn’t obvious. When you’re trying to impress someone—prospective dates, prospective employers, business associates, your spouse, your family, your employees—there’s no reason not to wear a little foundation. Actually I’d go further: You should wear makeup. We’re in a tough economy that rewards youth and beauty. We live in a world constructed of artifice—where not only magazine covers but even snapshots are now retouched, filtered, presented in the best light possible. You might admirably, justifiably recoil from this trend, you might yearn for a time when people had no trouble accepting a man for what he really looked like. But if there ever was such an age, it’s gone. We live in a Photoshop world. Think of makeup as a real-world digital-effects system. The foundation airbrush is like Photoshop for your face—armed with this gun, you can trick the world into loving you.

There are signs that some men are beginning to understand this. Over the past decade in South Korea, makeup for men has become a culturally accepted fact of life. The conservative, male-dominated society was prompted to embrace male cosmetics in part because makeup worked—men who wore makeup found that it gave them a leg up romantically and in employment markets. Hill says she’s heard the same thing from some of her clients. “I’ve done makeup on corporate executives for photos, and then they see how they look, and they’ll call me to ask if I can order makeup for them,” she says. “Especially if they’re single—they just feel better about themselves and look better.” Over the past few years the market for skincare products for men has been booming, though cosmetic companies have been wary of products that resemble traditional makeup. Lately that seems to be changing. Marc Jacobs recently unveiled a line of makeup for men, including a concealer to cover up bags under your eyes. But even he’s wary of advocating for foundation for men—that seems to be deemed too feminine.

I can see why. When it’s overdone, on a man, makeup can look very strange. Here’s me with two colors of foundation that Hill applied on my face by brush. This application covers up many blemishes and red marks, but to me it looks too pretty.

130919_TECH_MaleMakeup 003 manualbrush.CROP.article568 large.jpg

This one is even worse: After a quick application from a bottle of Revlon foundation—that is, not the high-definition stuff designed to look like you’re not wearing anything—I look way too orange, like I’ve been colorized.

130919_TECH_MaleMakeup 004 cheap.CROP.article568 large.jpg

But I found that it’s easy to avoid this fate. As you know, I’m a sucker for technology, so near the end of our session, I asked Hill if I could use her airbrush on my face. She showed me how to use it—hold it like a pair of chopsticks, press the button to shoot. It was totally easy and fun, very much like using the airbrush tool in any photo editing software. Starting with a clean face, I managed to make myself up in about three minutes’ time. Later that day, I bought anairbrush kit online for about $100, and I’ve since tried it out a couple times at home. I think I’m good at it—I can quickly do my face in a way that improves the skin without looking obviously touched up.

I’m married and I have a job—though we’ll see what happens after this article runs—so I don’t think I’ll be wearing makeup every day. But if I ever need an extra boost, the airbrush will be right there waiting for me. Here’s my face with a bit of airbrushing by yours truly. This is not a face you can easily refuse.

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Here's What The 'Today Show' Hosts Look Like Without Makeup

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The "Today Show" hosts bared all Monday in a segment called “Love Your Selfie.” 

Dubbed "No Makeup Monday," Matt Lauer, Savannah Guthrie, Natalie Morales, Al Roker, Tamron Hall, Carson Daly, Willie Geist, Hoda Kotb, and Kathie Lee Gifford all went au naturel on high-definition TV.

Matt Lauer Savannah Guthrie Natalie Morales Today Show

Kathie Lee no makeup today show hoda kotb

Kathie lee no makeup

Hoda Kotb

Matt lauer no makeup

The hosts then explained what part of themselves they are most uncomfortable with.

Matt Lauer revealed, "The hair thing bothered me for a short period of time. There was a point where I actually had too much hair, this kind of awful bouffant. And I had people make fun of me saying 'you can pick Matt out by his bald spot.'" So I woke up one day and said, 'let's cut it off.'"

Matt Lauer Today Show hair

 Savannah Guthrie admitted, "When I was younger, I didn't like that I was so tall. I actually tried to drink coffee because I heard it stunts your growth. Obviously that didn't work out for me, but now I have a life-long coffee addiction."Savannah Guthrie kid

"Weight is a big issue and I've always been heavy," said Al Roker. "As I got older, I got heavier."

Al Roker

 Natalie Morales "had a serious case of buck teeth. My smile was something I was always insecure about."

Natalie Morales

Carson Daly said "I had a big head so in high school they called me Jughead."Carson Daly

Hoda Kotb humorously revealed, "I was the kid with the crazy, frizzy hair, the stop sign glasses, and the weird name. It was the trifecta of woof."

Hoda Kotb

Kathie Lee Gifford said, "We had something in our family called 'wuggies,' that part on the top of the things that has a little too much to love."

Kathie Lee Gifford

Willie Geist "was a tall, scrawny kid. When I hit puberty I looked exactly like Anthony Michael Hall in 'Sixteen Candles.'"

Willie Geist

New "Today" host Tamron Hall says, "I had braces for six years! Kids would call me 'big teeth' or 'rabbit teeth.'"

Tamron

Watch the full "revealing" segment below:

SEE ALSO: 'Dallas Buyers Club' Nominated For Makeup Oscar Despite $250 Budget

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Sally Beauty Says Customer Card Data May Have Been Stolen In Breach

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Sally Beauty Supply

Beauty products retailer and distributor Sally Beauty Holdings Inc said "fewer than 25,000" credit-card records may have been taken in a recent data breach.

The company said on March 5 it discovered that its network had been hacked but added no card or customer data appeared to have been stolen.

Sally Beauty said on Monday that an investigation by forensics firm Verizon had discovered the evidence that card payment data may have been removed.

"As experience has shown in prior data security incidents at other companies, it is difficult to ascertain with certainty the scope of a data security breach/incident prior to the completion of a comprehensive forensic investigation," Sally Beauty said.

"As a result, we will not speculate as to the scope or nature of the data security incident," the company added.

Hacking has become a major concern for retailers in the United States.

Target Corp said in December that some 40 million payment card records were stolen along with 70 million other customer records during a cyber attack over the holiday shopping season.

Target said last week that the security breach could have been more extensive than reported.

The biggest credit card breach at a U.S. retailer reported to date was an attack against TJX Cos, the parent of TJ Maxx and Marshalls in 2007. The company disclosed that data from 45.7 million payment cards had been stolen by hackers over 18 months.

(Reporting by Aditi Shrivastava in Bangalore; Editing by Sriraj Kalluvila)

SEE ALSO: Target Looks For A New Chief Information Officer After Data Breach

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Powerful Ad Shows What Makeup Really Can Do

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beauty campaign makeup

Beauty advertisements tend to be aspirational at best and wildly unrealistic at worst, implying that their products aren’t just products, but magical potions designed to make you the prettiest princess at the ball, improve your love life, and keep you young forever and ever and ever.

Now, amazingly enough, a new pair of videos by Dermablend (a brand of foundation known for its heavy-duty coverage) refuses to pretend that foundation is anything but practical, dot-it-on-your-face-and-blend makeup, and the result is incredibly moving.

The videos feature two gorgeous young women, both of whom suffer from a severe skin condition.
beauty campaign makeup

Cheri Lindsay has vitiligo, a skin pigmentation condition, which began rapidly spreading across her face and body during her sophomore year of college; Cassandra Bankson has dealt with severe acne since the third grade.

The women pose against a black background and present their beautifully made-up faces to the camera — before wiping it all away with a washcloth.

Cheri says:

All of this came within the past 3 years or so, and it was shocking to me at first, because of how much came so fast. It’s not that easy to deal with … I chose to just find an alternative, something I could put on my face that could help people look through the initial shock of, “Oh, half her face is white but she’s a black girl.”

Nobody’s 100% perfect.

Cassandra says:

School was really hard for me. I got acne in the 3rd grade, and it progressively got worse. I was called “freak of nature,” “exorcist,” — and there was a point where my grandfather was actually on his deathbed, and he means the world to me, and I was told it was a good thing he was dying because he would never have to see my face again. When you hear things like that on a daily basis, it becomes really really hard to love yourself.

campaign makeup beauty

beauty campaign acne makeup

Tears! And what’s especially amazing about these ads is that they don’t bother engaging in any sort of shallowly empowering dialogue about beauty. They don’t try to turn makeup into something it’s not. (What makeup is: “cosmetics such as lipstick or powder applied to the face, used to enhance or alter the appearance.” What makeup is not: fairy dust, essence of happiness, the Fountain of Youth.)

These ads are extraordinarily straightforward about the ultimate function of foundation: to cover. To create an even — wait for it — foundation. It’s practical. It’s paint.

And for Cassandra and Cheri, this simple, utilitarian product is a literal means to a better day-to-day life.

What Cassandra and Cheri seem to be saying is that the “real them” is them, their entire personhood,and not simply their faces.

Makeup is not the real you, nor is it out to destroy the real you. It’s just makeup. It’s okay to cover up.

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2 Business School Pals Want To Spare Women The Hassle Of Visiting Hair Salons

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stylistedFor many women, getting ready for a big event like a wedding or work function can be pretty overwhelming. It's tough to budget enough time to visit a salon, and once you're there, you're basically trusting a complete stranger to achieve the look you want. 

Julia Carmona and Lauren Katzberg, who were classmates at the University of Chicago's Booth School of Business, wanted to create a business that would solve that problem. 

"Something that kind of boggles us is when you, as a client, are on a tight time frame, and you have to make time to go to the salon and wait around," Carmona said to Business Insider. "It just didn't really make sense, and we wanted to streamline that."

Enter TheStylisted, a networking website Carmona and Katzberg created to help women book appointments directly with professional stylists. 

Click here to see what it's like to use TheStylisted »

And the best part? The stylists will come right to your home, office, hotel, or wherever you happen to need them, either before your big event or for everyday styling. 

"We're targeting busy, professional women in major cities," Carmona said. "It's girls very much like us, with very full social calendars but who are sometimes working beyond 9-5." 

thestylistedLast Friday evening, I got to try TheStylisted before a night out with friends, and I've never felt so spoiled. My stylists made my hair and makeup look way better than I would ever be able to make it look myself, and I never even had to leave my apartment.

From the customer's perspective, that convenience really can't be beat. Still, the network that's built into the site can be incredibly valuable to stylists as well.

Both Carmona and Katzberg had previously worked in the beauty industry before founding TheStylisted. By using their contacts, in addition to performing targeted online searches, they were able to recruit an army of stylists to their business, which currently operates in both New York and Chicago. 

"We've really created a free market for these men and women who are essentially their own small business owners," Carmona said. "Compared to competitors, we have a real advantage because we're not limiting quality onto the network. If you're providing a cookie-cutter service at $40 a blowout, you're not providing the same quality that we have available."

There are plenty of places you can go to get a blowout, which is basically a fancy name for having someone blow-dry your hair for you.

But unlike traditional salons or businesses like Drybar that specialize in blowouts, TheStylisted allows the stylists to set their own prices, giving them a great deal more freedom than they would otherwise have. Blowouts will cost you anywhere from $45 to $100, while basic makeup ranges from $50 to $295, depending on which stylist you book. 

thestylisted"It keeps it competitive, but we always want every stylist to feel each appointment has been worth their while," Carmona said. "We don’t want them to feel that they have to change or lower their prices."

When I tried out TheStylisted, my hair stylist, Kailie Joe, said she had been connected with the company while looking for opportunities to freelance outside of her regular work at Drybar. Soon, thanks to TheStylisted, she was working with big-time clients like style bloggers attending New York Fashion Week. The makeup artist I used, Adriana, said she also found TheStylisted while searching for freelance jobs online. 

And since the stylists have to be accepted by Carmona and Katzberg on to the network, users know they can trust that the people showing up to your home will know what they're doing. 

"It’s definitely a carefully vetted network," Carmona said. "We’ve worked with a lot of them at events before, or even had them come to our own homes." 

Disclosure: TheStylisted covered our hair and makeup trial.

SEE ALSO: A New Beauty Startup Sent Hair And Makeup Stylists To My Tiny New York Apartment — Here's How It Worked Out

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This Startup's Brilliant Customer Service Strategy Is To Treat People 'The Way We Wish Our College Boyfriends Had Treated Us'

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Jane Park Julep

Jane Park, cofounder and CEO of the make-up startup, Julep, takes customer service very seriously. After all, Julep relies on its customers: Every new product the company makes is tested on a community of monthly subscribers before it gets mass-produced. 

"We want to treat our customers the way we wish our college boyfriends had treated us," she told Business Insider. 

Julep, which raised a $30 million Series C in April from Azure Capital, Madrona Venture Group and others, is constantly getting feedback to help it launch more than 300 new products every year. It's moving 10 times faster than traditional beauty brands.

Like a good boyfriend or girlfriend, Park says that Julep really listens to and values the input of the people who love it. It collects feedback from social media, its "Maven" subscription service, and a 6,000-strong community of fans that it calls its "Idea Lab." The company wants the relationship to be two-sided, and makes changes and launches products because of feedback. It also keeps a lot of data about its customers' likes and dislikes so that it can surprise them with tailored product recommendations. 

In January, Julep went hands-on with a group of women to brainstorm the design of its unique (and crowd-funded) new product: the Julep Plié Wand, which helps people do their own nails more easily.

Park helps herself stick to Julep's customer service philosophy by interacting with people on her personal social media accounts and remembering to think of Julep's many customers as real people, not just numbers on a balance sheet.

Every day she clicks on several Julep orders and tries to imagine who those customers are as human beings. She then sends out three or four thank you emails, where she she tries to tie-in something personal that she noticed about the person, like relating to where they're ordering from.

Ultimately, Park says that Julep wants to emulate the perfect partner by making its customers feel really good: About how they look, what they can do, and how much their ideas matter. Julep wants to use beauty as a way to connect and to help women realize that there are no rules when it comes to make-up.

"Well, actually, there is one rule," she added. "Always wear sunscreen!"

Julep's office is located in the heart of downtown Seattle



When you walk in, you're greeted by a fun and bubbly lounge and reception area.



There's also has a station for doing nails. Julep has four separate parlors in Seattle and surrounding cities.



See the rest of the story at Business Insider

It Took 3 Hours To Do Zoe Saldana's Makeup Every Day For 'Guardians Of The Galaxy'

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guardians of the galaxy zoe saldana

"Guardians of the Galaxy" is out this weekend and is expected to be a huge hit.

A big part of the $170 million sci-fi film is the extensive makeup process actors underwent to transform into a colorful cast of aliens spanning different galaxies.

According to Disney and Marvel Studios, a team of 50 special-effects makeup artists were on hand to do prosthetics for 22 cast members and dozens of supporting cast during filming. 

We asked the film's special makeup-effects designer, David White, to take us through the process of transforming some of the movie's actors into their roles. Over the next few days, we'll reveal what went into creating some of the different looks in "Guardians of the Galaxy." 

White tells Business Insider by email it took roughly two to three hours daily to prep Zoe Saldana for her role as a deadly, green assassin, Gamora.

Compared to some of the other actors, White says Saldana's character required minimal prosthetics with small enhancements to the cheeks and forehead, which you'll notice as lines drawn into the skin. 

"Templates were offered up to Zoe’s face and an outline of Mac ivory base was drawn around the outline with a fine brush. The forehead pieces were then applied using medical adhesive pros-aide.

Then the cheeks and the skin around the prosthetics were brush painted with a MAC yellow primer and INKZ primer and, when dry, a green MAC base was applied. Beyond this base coverage three more layers of variable green tones are air brushed on, including an AQUA mix highlight and eye shadow mix."

According to White, it took a while to perfect Gamora's green alien skin color. In addition, the actress' eyebrows were replaced with a "sculpted little slick eyebrow shape."

Here's how Saldana looks before and after her transformation:zoe saldana gamora guardians of the galaxy

SEE ALSO: There is only one end-credit scene after "Guardians of the Galaxy"— Here's what it means

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The Most Complex Makeup In ‘Guardians Of The Galaxy’ Took More Than 4 Hours And A Shaved Head

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nebula karen gillanWhen you head out to see “Guardians of the Galaxy,” you’ll probably spend a few minutes trying to figure out who the different actors are under their detailed prosthetics. 

guardians of the galaxy nebula head

A team of 50 special effects make-up artists made stars from Zoe Saldana to wrestler David Bautista nearly unrecognizable. 

However, special effects makeup artist David White tells Business Insider actress Karen Gillan's prosthetic makeup was the “most complex and interesting" to apply.  

In the film, Gillan plays blue villain and assassin Nebula who is at odds with the Guardians throughout the movie. 

White says it took approximately four hours and 15 minutes to apply her make-up and another 30 minutes to remove. 

“The five-piece prosthetic was a puzzle of butt joins and blend offs all on the same pieces and the density of the prosthetic changes to accommodate the need to control the amount of prosthetic movement from one piece to another," White tells us.

White says Gillan’s character also required 22 millimeter contact lenses. 

Gillan probably underwent one of the biggest transformations for the film. Last year, the “Doctor Who” actress, known for her long red hair, shocked fans when she shaved her head for the role. Gillan debuted the look at San Diego Comic-Con last year by pulling off a wig during the Marvel panel.guardians of the galaxy marvel karen gillan comic-conHere's Gillan's complete transformation:

karen gillan makeup guardians of the galaxy

SEE ALSO: It Took 3 Hours To Do Zoe Saldana's Makeup Every Day For 'Guardians Of The Galaxy'

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Awesome Photos Of Wrestler Dave Bautista's 5-Hour 'Guardians Of The Galaxy' Makeup Process

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drax the destroyer guardians of the galaxy"Guardians of the Galaxy" has been in theaters for two weeks and has already made more than $313 million worldwide.

Before the film's release, we asked special makeup-effects designer David White to take Business Insider through the process of transforming some of the stars from Zoe Saldana to Karen Gillan into their onscreen characters.

Out of all the actors, wrestler David Bautista was among the cast members who spent the most time on set.

To transform Bautista into his character Drax the Destroyer it took a team of five makeup artists five hours each day to apply 18 prosthetic pieces to the wrestler, according to Marvel Studios.

"Drax started as a five-hour makeup, and slowly the time began to fall away, as expected," White tells Business Insider. "A makeup that extensive is a real slog for the team as it’s so complex."

"Every day, a Vac forma [plastic mold] of David’s exact body shape with perforated holes in it to indicate exactly where the prosthetics start and finish was offered up," White says. "This had rice paper skin illustrator airbrushed through it showing the map."david bautista vac forma drax guardians of the galaxy

White says Bautista was then brush sealed with a chemical and medical adhesive mix. Afterward, makeup artists started applying the 18 pieces onto the actor's shoulders and the rest of his body.

"The crew all had different tasks in the sequence. Some move[d] onto the paint system while some finished off the prosthetic blending offs," White says. 

Elaborate tattoos and markings cover Bautista's entire upper body. As you can see, they're incredibly detailed.

dave bautista gotg makeupdave bautista guardians of the galaxy makeup

Because Drax isn't predominantly blue or grey or red, there were different paint layers the artists then had to apply.

"We added thin layers of browns, reds and greens within the base grey to break up the tone and make it come alive before the final color sweep," White tells us. "Then the whole body is sealed with a fixative so that it can withstand the day’s shoot."dave bautista makeup guardians of the galaxy

In addition to all of that, Bautista also had to wear dentures to "dirty down his real teeth," along with contacts that gave him "ice blue eyes with a red circling the eye iris."

Co-star Chris Pratt told Buzzfeed that Bautista stood the entire time while his makeup was applied.

"Bautista had to stand like this with his arms out rested on posts ... stands that had tennis balls on them," Pratt said. "He had to stand for hours like that every single day. Never complained about it." chris pratt buzzfeed guardians of the galaxyEventually, White says, Drax's makeup took an average of three hours to do. Bautista recently told /Film that the makeup team was able to get it down to two hours, 47 minutes one day. However, it takes about another hour and a half to remove.

Here's a side-by-side of Bautista's transformation:dave bautista guardians of the galaxy


NOW WATCH: We Followed A Cosplayer Into The World Of Anime, Tight Vinyl Costumes, And Nerd Culture

SEE ALSO: It took 3 hours to do Zoe Saldana's makeup every day for "Guardians of the Galaxy"

AND: The most complex makeup in "Guardians of the Galaxy" took more than four hours and a shaved head

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