Bad Plastic Surgery - all the pics

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That's called a Roman nose, and she really did look more attractive with it. She's not ugly by any means in the second picture, but yeah she looks weirdly generic.
I think what they did to her nose ended up making the tip look too large for the rest of its length.
I'm just fascinated at how people are treated differently almost unconsciously, due to genetic factors a person has no control in.
Rate me autistic or whatever but I'm convinced all K-pop stars lighten their skin and get regular glutathione IV drips. Even the paler Asians are still yellow (they skew towards the yellow-brown pigment than reddish) but these celebrities blast themselves into looking totally pigmentless like Nicole Kidman which just doesn't happen, it's just not in the phenotype. For instance, take that picture of Park Bom from @Porthos post, that's not pale enough, the ideal really is as white as Kidman (again) which you can't get if you aren't a European. Sorry this is kind of OT but it's such a cope, they want to look white no matter how often they repeat that thing about nobility avoiding the sun. If the most extreme skin lighteners could swap their race to be that pale, I bet my sunscreen they'd do it.
 
I'm not sure if this is true. It may be just a rumor. But I've heard eye surgery can cause people to sleep with their eyes open.

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Rate me autistic or whatever but I'm convinced all K-pop stars lighten their skin and get regular glutathione IV drips. Even the paler Asians are still yellow (they skew towards the yellow-brown pigment than reddish) but these celebrities blast themselves into looking totally pigmentless like Nicole Kidman which just doesn'thappen, it's just not in the phenotype.
I don't disagree that Kpop stars are unnaturally pale, I just assume they get photoshopped a whole LOT.
Is there downsides to constant glutathione drips? I keep seing it mentioned online in relation to kpop, how did we start doing that?

Don't know about Korea but in Jun'ichirō Tanizaki's book In Praise of Shadows there's a page about Japanese people (women especially) wanting to be pale, and specifically wanting the kind of extreme paleness white people have. But contrary to them "a kind of darkness is always creeping up between Japanese's people knuckles" or something like that . The image strayed with me, It's quite weird and the kind of stuff you couldn't write today. I guess he is just trying to say that they have more melanin even if they stay out of the sun, and that it shows particularly where the skin is thicker.
 
Is there downsides to constant glutathione drips?
There might not be but IVing anything into your bloodstream for long periods of time does not sound like a good idea. The idea of getting an IV just to lighten your skin in itself sounds shocking and imo it should stay that way. You can get glutathione orally as tablets, maybe they thought an IV was an even better way of getting it into your body where it's already right under your skin. I also think there's a lot of editing going on in so many places so make them appear lighter. It seems that humans universally prefer lightness, there's nothing wrong with a preference but it's unfortunate as such a loaded concept.
I'm not sure if this is true. It may be just a rumor. But I've heard eye surgery can cause people to sleep with their eyes open.
That's what I read about double eyelid surgery when it's crappy. An Asian friend told me how prevalent it was over there to get the procedure done (it's a country that's not Japan, Korea, or China by the way). She didn't like that I was openly disgusted by it, to her it's no big deal and an alternate method if you don't want to apply eyelid tape for the rest of your life and she compared it to people getting nose jobs. Am I the only one who thinks that's a false comparison, I'm pretty sure the average-looking woman in the West getting botox and fillers would have been considered really strange up until 2010 or so, people don't get nose jobs just for a tweak unless they can blow thousands just to get 2mm shaved off.
 
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There might not be but IVing anything into your bloodstream for long periods of time does not sound like a good idea. The idea of getting an IV just to lighten your skin in itself sounds shocking and imo it should stay that way. You can get glutathione orally as tablets, maybe they thought an IV was an even better way of getting it into your body where it's already right under your skin. I also think there's a lot of editing going on in so many places so make them appear lighter. It seems that humans universally prefer lightness, there's nothing wrong with a preference but it's unfortunate as such a loaded concept.

That's what I read about double eyelid surgery when it's crappy. An Asian friend told me how prevalent it was over there to get the procedure done (it's a country that's not Japan, Korea, or China by the way). She didn't like that I was openly disgusted by it, to her it's no big deal and an alternate method if you don't want to apply eyelid tape for the rest of your life and she compared it to people getting nose jobs. Am I the only one who thinks that's a false comparison, I'm pretty sure the average-looking woman in the West getting botox and fillers would have been considered really strange up until 2010 or so, people don't get nose jobs just for a tweak unless they can blow thousands just to get 2mm shaved off.
I may be wrong, but how common really is plastic surgery? Not like orthodontics, but nose jobs, etc.?
 
I may be wrong, but how common really is plastic surgery? Not like orthodontics, but nose jobs, etc.?
I still believe it's not common at all even though we've got more women and girls wanting it than ever. But we're in peak clown world so I dunno, maybe Anglo countries have scores of 16 year olds waiting till they're old enough to do OF to fund their buccal fat removal wishlists.
 
I still believe it's not common at all even though we've got more women and girls wanting it than ever. But we're in peak clown world so I dunno, maybe Anglo countries have scores of 16 year olds waiting till they're old enough to do OF to fund their buccal fat removal wishlists.
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About Koreans and plastic surgery.

I always find it so difficult to distinguish Korean actors in media apart from each other because they all end up looking like a plastic surgery copy of each other with minute differences. The amount of times I've thought to myself, "I've definitely seen this woman in something else." only for it to be their debut performance, or simply not having seen any of their other works.

Or maybe I'm racist, I don't know, I really do not have this much trouble with identifying people in Japanese or Chinese media.
Plastic surgery is big in SK to the point where getting little things (like double eyelids) are pretty common. Wealthier parents even "gift" their daughters those things and nose jobs before they enter college as a way to help them meet potential partners/ get jobs faster. The working culture there is big on appearance and when you go by certain businesses there, bosses put all the attractive employees up front.

When you walk through Gangnam, you will see plastic surgery advertisements everywhere along with foreigners covered in badages since they came for plastic surgery (especially from China). There is even a term "Gangnam Face" with the chin shaved, undereyes puffy, and lips super full.
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The current trends are the "V" face with big eyes, long nose, and pointed chin that gives them the illusion of having doll faces. A lot of the line models there have an uncanny valley look to them that only look good in heavy filters.
 
Plastic surgery is big in SK to the point where getting little things (like double eyelids) are pretty common. Wealthier parents even "gift" their daughters those things and nose jobs before they enter college as a way to help them meet potential partners/ get jobs faster. The working culture there is big on appearance and when you go by certain businesses there, bosses put all the attractive employees up front.

When you walk through Gangnam, you will see plastic surgery advertisements everywhere along with foreigners covered in badages since they came for plastic surgery (especially from China). There is even a term "Gangnam Face" with the chin shaved, undereyes puffy, and lips super full. View attachment 3258340

The current trends are the "V" face with big eyes, long nose, and pointed chin that gives them the illusion of having doll faces. A lot of the line models there have an uncanny valley look to them that only look good in heavy filters.

Yeah plastic surgery in South Korea is so prevalent, that netizens end up searching for celebrities childrens photos to see if they had work done, so they can label them a 'natural beauty' or not.

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I've posted about Kim Jion from the band N. tic a loooong time ago but since we are talking about South Korea it's time to show how he completely ruined his face again. Dude is 35 btw.

Before
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After
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His head doesn't match his body anymore & he sticks out like a sore thumb.
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The older he gets the weirder he is going to look. Body of a man face of a kid.
 
I've posted about Kim Jion from the band N. tic a loooong time ago but since we are talking about South Korea it's time to show how he completely ruined his face again. Dude is 35 btw.

Before
View attachment 3258855

After
View attachment 3258859

His head doesn't match his body anymore & he sticks out like a sore thumb.
View attachment 3258869
View attachment 3258870

The older he gets the weirder he is going to look. Body of a man face of a kid.
his face looks hyper feminine, but in an unnatural and alien way. it's like they took the face of one of these kpop girls and transplanted it on the body of this kpop man.
 
I’ve seen some pictures in this thread alone with Koreans getting surgery to have the puffy eyes. Is this just a Korean beauty thing? What is the appeal of it?

Women in Korea are also turning to cosmetic surgery to create 'aegyo-sal', taking fat tissue from their abdomens, thighs or hips and injecting it under-eye to create more volume. There's even a two-in-one procedure that removes under-eye bags, while adding a cute 'puff' immediately beneath it.
 
I’ve seen some pictures in this thread alone with Koreans getting surgery to have the puffy eyes. Is this just a Korean beauty thing? What is the appeal of it?
Fake smile in front of the mirror, like one of those Pleasantville, Black Hole Sun, sneering beauty pageant contestant smiles. One of these things
My theory is that some guy in kpop product development came up with it so they can keep beating performers like red-headed step-children and still give a semblance of happiness
 
maybe we should bring back freak show carnivals and display ugly and botched plastic surgeries in there as a cautionary tale on that plastic surgery is terrible and you shouldn't get it
 
Kim has basically destroyed his face with plastic surgery! A lot of Koreans often make fun of him for being a "plastic monster" and all of his social media posts are heavily monitored by his pr team that are STILL trying to market him as a "pretty boy" in his mid thirties.

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He denies getting any work done and even compares how he looks to his heavily filtered baby pictures...
 
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