You’ve seen the commercials. Maybe you’ve even sat through the feature-length infomercial. They show before and after shots of ‘satisfied customers.’ Actually, the new hair the guys are sporting looks pretty good…on TV anyway.
They say that it’s not a medical procedure like implants, and there’s no drugs involved.
What is it, then? Is it some kind of hairpiece (like a sparse toupee) interwoven with the remaining ‘natural’ hair and permanently affixed to the scalp?
I’m, uh, my friend’s forehead is getting bigger, and he was just curious.
The hair looks pretty good in real life, too. How do I know?
I had the privilege of meeting Sy Sperling–you know, the president of the Hair Club for Men who says in the commercial “I’m not just the president, I’m also a client!” His hair looked natural. I never would have known it was fake. But I’m sure he has the top-of-the-line hairdo.
A guy I used to work with looked into this and he said he was told that he’d have to come back for the haircuts every few weeks and they were outrageously expensive (like $100 or something). The reason for this is that supposedly a “regular” barber wouldn’t be able to tell the difference between the real hair and the faux tresses. I’m suspecting that once you buy into this, you’d be stuck with the same hairstyle and color until you wanted to pay to have it ripped out and re-done; which now that I think about it wouldn’t be that big a deal for most guys, but for a woman would be torture!
Now there’s nothing unexpected about the water giving out; “Land” is not a word we have to shout.
As a slight aside, i’ve been losing my hair for a couple of years now. It doesn’t bother me, but maybe it will if, say, in my late 30’s/early 40’s i’m still single and felt conscious of this. So how do medications (I see Merck advertising regularly) which appear to cure this work? Do they halt hair loss (ie start treatment now) or restore thick hair growth (leave it 'til i’m rich)?
I don’t know how the medication works but I do know that it’s been known to cause miscarriages in pregnant women who have handled it…not ingested, mind you – HANDLED. I would not be so keen to swallow something that has the ability to terminate life with mere skin contact.
Now there’s nothing unexpected about the water giving out; “Land” is not a word we have to shout.
voguevixen is talking about propecia. I wasn’t aware that it could cause miscarriages, but Propecia may cause genital abnormalities in the male children of women who have come into contact with the drug, even in the small quantities one would experience when handling a broken tablet.
I was pretty sure everyone already knew this, but if you can give me a few I’m sure I can find a cite for it. Believe me the FDA does know and it’s in the commercials while the guy is rushing through all the possible side effects. I don’t remember where I heard about the miscarriages, but they found out about it because all the female factory workers had to be pulled off the packaging line for that product.
Now there’s nothing unexpected about the water giving out; “Land” is not a word we have to shout.
Here’s a link with the side effects when women are exposed, I guess I was wrong about the miscarriages (even though I swear I remember seeing it on the news), but I think genital deformaties and transient nipple development are plenty bad on their own! http://www.rxlist.com/cgi/generic/finas_wcp.htm#E
Now there’s nothing unexpected about the water giving out; “Land” is not a word we have to shout.
Not only must a Hair Club client go to a Hair CLub barber in perpetuity… actor Jason Alexander (a former client) says that sweat and dead skin under the hairpiece form a smelly cheelike substance. So, the hairweave must be removed and shampooed vigorously (it also starts to smell a bit rank after a few weeks).
Goodness gracious, Astorian! It sounds like you are describing a kind of head-smegma. That is the most disgusting thing I have heard in ages. Yuck yuck yuck!!!