This guy does amazing retouch work, and the difference between the before and after images are quite astounding.
I won't get too much on a soapbox about advertising and the beauty myth, because I see educating my daughter on how advertising works and how she needs to think more critically about ad images and slogans, (even the feel good 'anti-fashion' ones like Dove), and how sophisticated the advertising industry is at social engineering.
These beauty myth exploding adverts are very cleverly designed. It reminds me of when The Body Shop had that campaign about how there were a couple of billion woman in the world, and only 8 were supermodels, and we are all different sizes and shapes and should feel good about that - or something to that effect. Everybody loved it, and The Body Shop's profits went through the roof! The Body Shop also put out t-shirts with the slogan: we should all be proud to be various shapes and sizes and wear that politik proudly! LOL. They were hypocrites, though - the stores only sold smaller sized t-shirts. Bigger people just don't carry the anti-beauty myth fashion as well as smaller, hipper, prettier people.
So, yeah - good on Dove for exploding the beauty myth? Or is it just another slick marketing campaign, designed to boost profits, based on meticulous market research, customer profiling, psychology, fashion trends, etc, etc?
Trust me; the moment it's more profitable for Dove to change marketing tactic and jump back on the unreal beauty thing, they will.
(Yup. I'm a bubble-poppin' cynic!

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