There’s a big bust star named Martina Big (Search at your own peril) who claims she changed her skin color from peach to brown using chemical treatments. Is this possible? Or is she just using a really dark spray on tan like product?
Isn’t a dark spray tan a chemical treatment?
Famously, the white journalist John Howard Griffin darkened his skin color by taking methoxsalen plus spending time under UV lamps in order to see first hand what it was like to be a black person in the South in the 1950s. The book Black Like Me was the result.
Years ago, a white author did this to investigate and experience racial prejudice from the inside.
There was a rumor that Griffin ultimately died because of the treatments he received to darken his skin. Not true. Other interesting facts about Griffin’s life and experience can be found here. From that link, re the skin-darkening treatment itself:
That’s all I got.
That is so 1950s. These days we do a reality show.
Of course, that was through makeup rather than medication, and so not pertinent to the OP.
There are quite a few drugs that can result in skin darkening. Whether any of them would be safe enough and produce an even enough tone to be used by the person mentioned in the OP I couldn’t say.
There was an actually rather interesting TV program on British television about ten years ago where a black man was transformed into a white man by make-up artists and vice versa to experience what it was like being a different race in society.
I do recall that it was a lot easier to darken the skin of the white man than to lighten the skin of the black man, to the extent that for the former they somehow dyed his skin and for the latter they had to use something more akin to a latex mask and coverings. The effects were pretty convincing though, to the extent that in one segment while talking to ‘other black people’ who knew he was only made up to appear black one woman still forgot and asked him “Where did the colour come from?” (what was his ancestry). There was a bit of an awkward pause before she realised, to everyone’s amusement.
Its too late in the morning and I’m too tired to google it, but if you’re interested I may be able to have a look tomorrow. I’ve already tried but I’m worried that with the results I’m currently getting I may end up on some government list somewhere…
I don’t know a lot, but I wouldn’t expect such changes to be permanent, since you’re constantly making more skins. But, looking at her pics, her skin color does indeed look artificial, like a spray tan or similar. I could see her being someone who keeps that up.
That’s interesting. My knowledge of Black Like Me pretty much begins and ends with that episode of WKRP, and I had always assumed that the journalist dyed himself like Herb Tarleck.
Two things, both gross:
A YouTube clip keeps popping up on my phone featuring some blond-ish woman who hit the tanning booths too hard and looks like a Tootsie-roll in a wig.
If you overdose on beta-carotene (?) you could turn orange; apparently popular with the Swedes. Cecil had a column on this eons ago.
Melvin Van Peebles’ Watermelon Man starring Godfrey Cambridge explores the notion of a white man waking up turned black one morning.
You can also turn blue from drinking silver (or for a variety of reasons).
I’ve read that The Blue Man reported that being blue was kind of like being invisible: nobody knew what the expected behavior of a blue man was, or what the expected response to a blue man is, so he could do anything. (I know that black Americans have reported something similar in some contexts).
I remember seeing that guy on TV. Here is a clip that I found.
Argyria is what it’s called.
Gold salts can also inflict a similar condition called chrysiasis.
The vitiligo on my knees was a real pain; I kept getting sunburned knees while kayaking. I had a tattoo artist tattoo my knees (very difficult area to tattoo) a light skin tone. Now my knees just look like knees, but they no longer burn.
I’ve considered a similar approach for the backs of my hands, but ouch. (ETA: easier to just wear kayaking gloves)
Fyi, “black like me” is a really good book, and I recommend it if you haven’t read it.
Grace Halsell, investigative journalist, also did a Griffin and wrote a book about it, Soul Sister: The Journal of a White Woman Who Turned Herself Black and Went to Live and Work in Harlem and Mississippi.