![]() ![]() "You can have your hair down without it hanging directly over your eyes, which is the biggest criticism every director has: 'Can we get her hair out of her face?' You curl the hair back, and it's automatically opening up the face and especially the profile, which is the hardest thing to shoot on a woman with her hair down." Not only does it help with continuity, The Hair also makes shooting easier in other ways. You can cheat easier when there's more movement within the hair." Straight hair moves a lot, and if one piece is out of place, you can totally tell. "Also, it's so much more manageable with shooting. "Over the last couple of years, straight hair went out and embracing more of a curl or wave took over," says Cynthia Vanis, a hair department head for film and television who has worked for Younger, Law & Order: SVU, and Louie. ![]() So many questions, but mostly: why? Also, when? Bolton, who appears in exactly one episode of the show: Here is The Hair on exceedingly boring secondary character Detective Susanna Barnett:Īnd here's The Hair on Dr. ![]() You know who else does? Her doctor! Who is an extra! With barely one line! Petra, who has edged her way into A-story territory this season, has The Hair while laid up in the hospital. Jane, the show's delightful protagonist, is seated in the middle next to her mom, Xiomara. It's why your Hulu welcome screen may look like this: Every female character regardless of role, age, or race has this hair. You don't see it in real life particularly often, and if you do, you think, "That girl's hair is really done." But on TV, it's the norm. This hair, this everywhere TV hair, is entirely artificial, heat tool-engineered for your viewing pleasure. Natural waves are never this three-dimensional, and natural curls contain way fewer strands per spiral. This is the kind of hair that does not occur in nature. The same straight-up-top, loose-curls-on-bottom hair. Everyone (well, every woman) on TV has the same damn hair. It doesn't matter if you watch a little TV or a lot of TV, dramas or comedies, network shows or Netflix, you've likely noticed a startling trend. ![]()
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