NIU
wrinkle treatment
wrinkle treatment
Posted by Stacy on Friday, August 01, 2008 1:57 PM
I was watching this show in which this boy very much wanted to become a model. It was his life long dream, however, I did not find this guy attractive at all and was wondering how he even stood a chance of becoming a model looking the way he did. He had very long straggly looking hair and it was frizzy. He had lots of acne and a big wrinkle in his chin. He was pale white and slightly saggy looking in his stomach and chest. Well, honestly when he went around to build his confidence with a model, you could see how much he was lacking including confidence. Also, there was some concern because he was only 5'7" which is quite short for a male model, or any model for that matter.
Well, I watched as they transformed him. They had him workout in the gym and they airbrushed his color. Thank goodness they gave him this really great shorter looking hair style with blonde highlights and he really was starting to look like a new person. They dressed him in some really nice clothes and did an acne treatment on him which really helped, and what ever they that treatment didn't take care of they fixed with makeup. They also waxed his eyebrows which really gave his eyes a whole different appearance. They looked much deeper and they gave him some colored contacts which made his eyes really pop. This whole transformation was just amazing and when they put up the before and after pictures next to each other, the transformation was so good that you couldn't even believe it was the same person.
This just proves that models are no better than the average person walking around. This guy in my opinion was about a 3 when they started working on him, he was the type of guy you probably wouldn't even turn your head to look at. Within weeks they changed him to at least a 9, and this version would definitely get a second glance from everyone. It just goes to show that anyone can look like a supermodel, and all is not what it seems in the television world.

