Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:As ZaZa Gabor said, “At a certain age, you’ve got to choose between your ass and your face.”
I think that’s why older actresses used to look better. Now they have to stay rail thin. Back in the day, it was ok for an actress to carry a little bit of extra weight.
I'm not sure why we often hear this quote pointing out that it's better to carry some extra weight since we'll have less wrinkles. You'd still walk around with some extra weight and I'm sorry, but that never signals "young", unless you're a baby.
ZaZa Gabor's quote is about compromising. Yes, with some extra weight you will look younger in your face, but not your body.
Meg Ryan's figure looks younger than Liz's and I'm pretty sure she'd look as good in her face if she had some makeup on.
You people can’t be serious. Find an unretouched picture where Meg Ryan looks as good as Liz (after 50) and post it. I think the problem is that actresses are under pressure to fit into couture sample sizes for the red carpet, and they so little body fat it makes their faces look terrible, so they resort to fillers, and that looks worse.
Here’s Meg with fresher fillers and more makeup. When she tries to smile, she looks like the Joker.
What's your point, that excessive plastic surgery makes one look terrible? Ok...
The question remains, does carrying extra weight makes middle aged women look younger?
Liz Taylor in 1982, age 49. And Meg Ryan in 2019, age 58:
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Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:As ZaZa Gabor said, “At a certain age, you’ve got to choose between your ass and your face.”
I think that’s why older actresses used to look better. Now they have to stay rail thin. Back in the day, it was ok for an actress to carry a little bit of extra weight.
I'm not sure why we often hear this quote pointing out that it's better to carry some extra weight since we'll have less wrinkles. You'd still walk around with some extra weight and I'm sorry, but that never signals "young", unless you're a baby.
ZaZa Gabor's quote is about compromising. Yes, with some extra weight you will look younger in your face, but not your body.
Meg Ryan's figure looks younger than Liz's and I'm pretty sure she'd look as good in her face if she had some makeup on.
You people can’t be serious. Find an unretouched picture where Meg Ryan looks as good as Liz (after 50) and post it. I think the problem is that actresses are under pressure to fit into couture sample sizes for the red carpet, and they so little body fat it makes their faces look terrible, so they resort to fillers, and that looks worse.
Here’s Meg with fresher fillers and more makeup. When she tries to smile, she looks like the Joker.

Anonymous wrote:I'm 52 and don't fool myself that I look a day younger.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:If Kylie can look older at 20 I can look younger at 40
Omg. That poor girl


Anonymous wrote:I’m 32 with two young kids. I think I look like I’m 32 when I’m with my kids but when I go out with girlfriends, many still single or newly married, I am approached by guys in their 20s so I think I can pass as mid 20s.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I think I looked about mid-20s until I was ~32 and had my first child. I aged at least 5-10 years during that first year of parenthood. I then probably looked about mid/late-30s until ~47, when the stress of working long hours, parenting/schooling kids during the pandemic, and a mild illness made me age rapidly in a short period of time again. Now, I think that I look like a rather haggard 48. Wishing I had the bandwidth to take better care of myself so that I could feel and look better.
This was my timeline almost exactly.
mid-20s until mid-30s
rapid aging due to kids/sleep deprivation/stress
mid-30s until early 40s
at 45 started to see more lines
at 47 could see changes almost daily
now at 48 look very much 48

Anonymous wrote:If Kylie can look older at 20 I can look younger at 40
Anonymous wrote:I am late 40s and work with people in mid thirties. They all think I am younger than them and some even think I am in my 20s/boast about their careers, not realizing I have been at it longer. So I will take looking 20 years younger if it is true. I know I know, photos or it ain't true.
But I hear once you hit 50s, white women age in dog years so fingers crossed/trying to enjoy the ride.
FWIW I wear sunscreen, don't sun myself, am not a frowner, don't smoke or drink, wear fairly basic clothing (nothing too tight, loose, colourful or trendy) and am medium sized- not fat, not skinny.