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I brought one of th
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Isadora offline 2,956 Forum Posts Today at 7:50 AM Last Edited: Reference: Oh and throw in the ones advertising long lashes with a certain mascara - when the models are all wearing false eyelashes. How do they get away with that? My daughter brought that mascara and was surprised to see it didn't work
Surely it is false advertising though?  No way are you going to get your lashes to look anything like the false eyelashes the models are wearing to advertise the product.    It'd be some product if it did
Liverpoollass
Reference:
Frannie offline 32 Forum Posts Today at 8:52 AM Last Edited: There is really small writing at the beginning of the adverts saying something along the lines of 'model styled using lash inserts'.
I thought there might be.  Still false advertising imo.  Why not just show a model with her own lashes to advertise the product?  Why? because the product will not do what it claims to do.
Liverpoollass
Reference: kmarx
I just can't see Davina McCall or Eva Longoria dying their hair in the kitchen sink.

Me neither - or Claudia Schiffer, Penelope Cruz, etc..
Who do they think they're kidding?
L'Oreal and co get away with all these mascara ads with false eyelashes, hair ads with extensions and so on, by putting a tiny bit in the corner of the screen that says "styled with extensions/natural lash inserts, digitally enhanced in post-production, etc.."

The ones that make me laugh are the "scientific" skin creams with amazing promises - look at the small print and it's usually something like "65% of 73 women tested agree.." Hardly extensive or scientific research!

Demantoid

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