L'oreal scammin hard

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  • 05-04-2013 03:33 AM
    john2399
    L'oreal scammin hard
    http://www.dailymail.co.uk/health/ar...les-scalp.html

    450$ bucks??? I feel bad for the poor innocent kids buying this crap. Such aholes this company.
  • 05-04-2013 03:55 AM
    UK_
    This isnt designed for MPB - its aimed at rich upper middle class white women.

    https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=3Yb6...T5Jmfn&index=1
  • 05-04-2013 09:59 AM
    hellouser
    Quote:

    Originally Posted by john2399 View Post
    http://www.dailymail.co.uk/health/ar...les-scalp.html

    450$ bucks??? I feel bad for the poor innocent kids buying this crap. Such aholes this company.

    For that price I get 20 grams of RU which works a whole lot better and lasts me anywhere 6+ months.
  • 05-04-2013 11:08 AM
    PatientlyWaiting
    Unfortunately millions of MPB sufferers will buy this.
  • 05-07-2013 06:38 PM
    thatkidd
    So the 1700 hair claim is false you all believe? Seems like not too much of an effect, but it could be the start of something big possibly? But yeah Loreal is typically a big scam...
  • 05-07-2013 11:33 PM
    UK_
    Quote:

    Originally Posted by thatkidd View Post
    So the 1700 hair claim is false you all believe? Seems like not too much of an effect, but it could be the start of something big possibly? But yeah Loreal is typically a big scam...

    Do you know what a 'legal high' is? Labs in the Far East change the molecular structure of some well known illicit street drugs such as MDMA and are then able to sell them legally in Western nations.

    That's all Loreal have done, they've had a lab play about the compound minoxidil and have renamed it stemoxydine and sold it as the holy grail of hair loss from the palms of Jesus himself.

    Same bullshit different day.
  • 05-09-2013 08:37 AM
    mattj
    I read an article about this and in it they had a report from someone who said that it thickened their hair in 11 days (or a number around that).

    Obviously it's impossible to regrow hair in that space of time. Lots will read it and hand over £285 and be disappointed.
  • 05-10-2013 04:29 PM
    Pentarou
    Another laughable DM article about hair loss "treatment". This is as good as it gets from that newspaper.

    http://www.dailymail.co.uk/news/arti...d-wonders.html

    Quote:

    I quickly found out hair loss for men is big business. There are 5.5 million hair products for men, many of which are devoted to stopping it disappearing.

    A few weeks before my 50th birthday, I went for the magic pill route: Propecia, which costs around £660 for a year’s supply. You need to have a prescription, but apparently it works well at saving hair on the crown of the head.

    There was one drawback, though. The tablets can adversely affect your libido.

    To hell with it, I thought, and bought them anyway — to no avail. The relentless march of baldness continued. I gave the trichologist approved drops a whirl. All you have to do is rub them into your head. They cost £52 and last six weeks, but they were useless.

    Then I discovered a treatment called Nanopeptide Mesotherapy. It involves a ****tail of vitamins and minerals injected directly into the scalp.

    It is claimed this stimulates the hair’s natural regeneration process by strengthening it, while energising the follicles to produce long hair shafts.
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    CaitlynGrimes
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