Sujet : Re: Totall OT: Chins on American actresses
De : jlarkin_highland_tech (at) *nospam* nirgendwo (john larkin)
Groupes : sci.electronics.designDate : 19. Aug 2024, 15:25:51
Autres entêtes
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On Mon, 19 Aug 2024 15:43:53 +0800, Sylvia Else <
sylvia@email.invalid>
wrote:
When I first saw Reece Witherspoon in "Legally Blonde", my immediate
thought was that she was deformed, and I wondered why she would have
been cast.
>
But I've since noticed that protruding chins seem very common amongst
American actresses, leading me to wonder whether they reflect an
anatomical difference between American Caucasians, and Caucasians in
other countries. Or perhaps a cabal of chin-loving directors has taken
over US drama production.
>
What is, or is not, anatomically normal in a population, is purely a
matter of statistics, so I'm not suggesting there's anything wrong with
these people.
>
Still, I wonder what others here think, both US and non US.
>
Sylvia.
>
Movie stars and fashion models are selected from the wider population,
based on fads about what "beauty" may be this year.
They all tend to look alike in any given year, especially when layers
of make-up are applied. Big heads, alike and boring.
There are many web sites that purport to present the 100 (or whatever)
most beautiful woman around now, or ever in history. Mostly yuk, in my
opinion.
Audrey Hepburn and Lauren Bacall were beautiful. Kiera Knightly is.
They usually make the top 100 list.