Cincysweetie
Well-Known Member
This expert on 20/20's beauty myth busting episode tonight is saying natural ingredients do little to no good for your hair. She said products such as aloe, chamomille, Vitamin E, and all those flower ingredients, etc. do nothing for your hair and you're just as well off using cheaper, synthetic ingredients. She said that natural ingredients in products come in such small traces and they typically get washed down the drain and not penetrated into the hair shaft. She also suggested that it's much better to eat the ingredients (such as vitamins, etc.) or slather them on your skin. So don't waste your money ladies!!!
However, I know many around here use products that contain natural ingredients, so what do you all think? Did anybody see this?
Here is a small portion of what she said on the show:
Myth No. 7: Natural Ingredients Make Shampoos Better
Do you think botanicals and natural ingredients are better for your hair than chemicals? If you said yes, you'd be wrong, according to Paula Begoun, who has researched more than 4,000 products for her book, "Don't Go Shopping for Hair Care Products Without Me."
"All of those cute little plant extracts they throw in, the teeny amounts of apples or chamomile or whatever sexy-sounding herb or plant that grows, that's not what's cleaning your hair," Begoun told "20/20."
"The unsung heroes of the hair care industry are synthetic ingredients," she added. "But it's hard to sell synthetic ingredients as having any sex appeal."
Ingredients like the laureth sulfates are what's actually cleaning your hair, but nobody's touting chemicals on shampoo bottles.
However, I know many around here use products that contain natural ingredients, so what do you all think? Did anybody see this?
Here is a small portion of what she said on the show:
Myth No. 7: Natural Ingredients Make Shampoos Better
Do you think botanicals and natural ingredients are better for your hair than chemicals? If you said yes, you'd be wrong, according to Paula Begoun, who has researched more than 4,000 products for her book, "Don't Go Shopping for Hair Care Products Without Me."
"All of those cute little plant extracts they throw in, the teeny amounts of apples or chamomile or whatever sexy-sounding herb or plant that grows, that's not what's cleaning your hair," Begoun told "20/20."
"The unsung heroes of the hair care industry are synthetic ingredients," she added. "But it's hard to sell synthetic ingredients as having any sex appeal."
Ingredients like the laureth sulfates are what's actually cleaning your hair, but nobody's touting chemicals on shampoo bottles.