On 5/21/2020 1:51 PM, Sheldon Martin wrote:
> On Thu, 21 May 2020 13:19:39 -0400, Gary <
g.ma...@att.net> wrote:
>
>> Cindy Hamilton wrote:
>>>
>>> On Thursday, May 21, 2020 at 8:03:57 AM UTC-4, Gary wrote:
>>>
>>>> - spray on (airbrushed) skin color
>>>
>>> Is that actually common? Shows how little I know.
>>
>> I have no idea how common it is but I do see full face
>> crap on news women all the time. Not here in real life
>> often.
>>
>> The commercials for that product is shown 50 times a day
>> on a few channels for many months now. One would think that
>> they must be selling lots as they continue to advertise
>> so often.
>>
>> I dated a woman for years that always had her entire face
>> covered (but this was before the spray-on stuff). It was
>> pretty weird but I liked her and never said anything.
>>
>> To me, yes full-face makeup looks nice from a distance
>> but get close and it's pretty creepy. And the bright
>> colored lipstick is strictly clown stuff and should
>> never be worn by women.
>>
>> How would you women like to see some otherwise handsome
>> man wearing bright lipstick in a grocery store?
>>
Or blue? From the TV show 'Friends', Joey's famous commercial:
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=E4F0UnnHFzM
Lipstick for men! BTW, men wearing makeup isn't new. It's been going
on for centuries.
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/History_of_cosmetics
>> The only other people I know that do the mega makeup deal are
>> the dead ones that have an open casket (for viewing) funeral.
>> They all look like wax figures simulating the live person.
>
> Without heavy make up you'd not want to view someone who's been dead
> for a week.
Good thing I don't plan to view anyone who has been dead for a week. (I
never did understand the whole "viewing" thing anyway.)
> Then again many women are heavily made up because they have blemished
> skin or are otherwise disfigured. Women may wear heavy make up for
> the same reason some women wear heavily padded bras, or why Gary
> stuffs gym socks in his shorts. Most women who are heavily made up do
> not enjoy applying it or paying for it. People on TV or in movies
> would look too grotesque in front of the cameras and all those bright
> lights without make up. Something for Garry to consider is that most
> women remove their make up and dim the lights before getting into
> bed... not everyone is as perfect as Gary.
>
LOL and happy belated birthday, Sheldon!
Gary has a weird obsession about this. His biggest hangup seems to be
red lipstick. Frankly, I don't see many women wearing red or any really
bright shades of lipstick. Not even women in their 20's at the grocery
store.
I remember hearing on some talk show last year about actress Julia
Roberts being slammed for appearing in a video post on social media with
her daughter and <gasp> Julia wasn't wearing makeup! Oh, the calamity!
Cut the woman some slack, she was at home and didn't feel like putting
on makeup that day. The earth didn't tilt off its axis.
Jill