Powerful Women Like Short Hair?

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Posted on 9th May 2012 by shearpointe in Aging and Hair Loss |hair styles

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Have you ever noticed that some of the most powerful and wealthy women in the world have short hair? A great example is Hillary Clinton on her 2008 presidential campaign. If you notice, Hillary’s hair was often shoulder length or longer until right before she announced her campaign to run for the first female president of the United States. If you start to look deeper at some of the world’s wealthiest women you’ll also notice that many of them keep their hair well above their shoulders. Here a few examples:

(1) Liliane Bettencourt, founder of L’Oréal, one of the world’s largest cosmetics and beauty companies is on the list of wealthiest woman. She is worth over $24 billion. She decided to cut her hair at the end of World War I when short hairstyles became fashionable, and still has short hair today.

Susanne Klatten

(2) Susanne Klatten inherited a stake in automaker BMW from late father Herbert Quandt and is worth thirteen billion dollars. She has made slight changes to her hair over the years, occasionally adding or removing a bang or part, but has always kept it quite short and strikingly blond.

(3) Rosalía Mera Goyenechea is one of the richest women in Spain and is listed on Forbes.com as one of the wealthiest people in the world. She is a clothing and lingerie designer whose net worth is $4.5 billion. Even with her sandy blond highlights, her hair has never been longer than a few inches!

(4) Politician Mayawati is the President of the Bahujan Samaj Party in India and Chief Minister of Uttar Pradesh, one of India’s most populous and influential states. She is one of the most powerful women in the world. Her style remains masculine as she combs her hair back with a simple side part.

On the Forbes list of 100 most powerful women in the world, about two thirds of the women have short hair.  Could this be a coincidence? Certainly hair-length is not a measure of power. The US magazine has measured “power” as a composite of public profile, calculated using press mentions, and financial heft. So the question becomes why does short hair seem to go hand and hand with power?  Do women cut their hair on the road to success?

There are several possibilities.  There is a trend that encourages women to dress conservatively, wear only light make-up, and to wear little or no perfume in the business world. Perhaps the hair cut is among these features that tend toward masculine norms. Those more masculine tendencies are often more closely associated with authority. Additionally, long hair is often associated with beauty, as we see with most of our celebrities, actresses, singers, and models. Thus to distinguish themselves, businesswomen may opt for an alternative short look.  Some may even say that these powerful women prefer to keep their hair short just for the sake of convenience. As long hair requires more maintenance, the women in the corporate world choose something short for its ease. What have you found in your experience? Does short hair help you in your career?

References:

Forbes.com, Economic Times

 

Cold Feet’s James Nesbitt Has Warm New Hair

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Posted on 6th October 2011 by shearpointe in hair loss |hair loss solutions |Hair Transplants |male hair loss

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(DAILY STAR – London, UK) — Actor James Nesbitt has landed his best part yet, thanks to a great head of hair.

The Cold Feet and Murphy’s Law star was worried going bald might lose him work. But after two transplants he is sure of top billing. James, 45, admitted: “It’s horrible going bald. Anyone who says it isn’t is lying.

“Several years ago, I began losing my hair and like a lot of men it was a major concern to me. In fact it was practically an obsession. But, also I’m an actor so I’m in the public eye a lot and I really felt that my hair loss could affect my career prospects. So after many agonies and a great amount of thought, believe me it’s something I didn’t take lightly, I took the decision to visit a Hair Restoration centre.”

At first James was shy about his treatment at the Dublin centre but has since opened up.

And the Manchester United fan proudly revealed his new barnet this week while a guest of Sir Alex Ferguson, 68, at a United For Unicef charity bash.

James, who is to star in medical drama Monroe on ITV next year and has landed the role of dwarf Bofur in Lord Of The Rings prequel The Hobbit, added: “I have had two hair restoration procedures.

“And I am very pleased with the results. In fact, I would go as far as to say they have changed my life.”

TV Chef Gets Hair Transplant

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Posted on 11th January 2011 by shearpointe in male hair loss

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According to the London Daily Mail, celebrity chef and TV personality Gordon Ramsay had a hair transplant using a “radical new treatment” called follicular unit extraction that “leaves no scars.”  Unfortunately the Daily Mail reporter apparently didn’t do their homework.  Follicular Unit Extraction (FUE) has been a proven and widely respected hair transplant procedure for well over 10 years.

Follicular unit (FU) extraction is a procedure for obtaining follicular graft units from donor areas on the scalp. Follicular unit transplantation is the surgical procedure for transplanting follicular unit into the scalp.

The FU is identified as a small bundle consisting of 1 to 4 hair follicles, full-thickness as well as fine hairs, and the oil glands, muscles and connecting tissue that accompany and support hair follicles. According to the ISHRS, if you look closely at the closely-clipped scalp from above as you would look at a wheat field from an airplane, you can see that scalp hair does not grow in even distribution like wheat in a field but rather in little groups of hairs that seems to be clumped together. These little groupings of hairs are called follicular units (FUs). When the scalp is examined under a magnifying glass or microscope, these FUs look like islands. The identification, harvesting and transplanting of FUs requires the training and skill of a physician hair restoration specialist. 

The extracted FU may be used intact, or may be divided into smaller units for transplantation. Single follicular units are often used to fill in a hairline, multiple FUs to provide greater density in the center of the scalp. Follicular unit transplantation is a newer surgical technique that continues the modern emphasis on achieving a “natural” look from hair transplants. It is a technique that, like micrografting, uses 1 to 4 units to achieve an even distribution of hair coverage over the scalp and avoid the “row of corn” appearance that was common many years ago.

The availability of FU transplantation expands the number of options a patient may consider for surgical hair restoration. Whether it is the best option for an individual patient depends upon the individual patient characteristics, including cause of hair loss, type of hair loss, likelihood of hair loss progression over future years, cost of procedures the patient may consider, and the patient’s wishes for the “look” that he or she wishes to achieve from hair restoration.

In the case of Chef Ramsay, one source close to him is reported to have said that ”while his hair may not have been obviously receding, it had become an issue for him.”