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| Balderdash"Let's look at 4 groups of people who might be harmed by her denying of having gone under the knife:
1) Tinsel Management, which signed her up with "an artiste management contract" - They are misled about her looks, the source of which she presumably misrepresented.
2) Fellow females - They look at her and think she looks good naturally, yet what they don't know is that she has been artifically enhanced. Some might even get plastic surgery themselves because they want to look as good as she does "naturally".
3) Any males who might go after her - Similarly, her misrepresentation has misled them. (imagine having to hide your children from everyone because they look nothing like you)
4) Dawn herself - She's causing irreparable harm to her psyche by deluding herself that her new looks are what she was born with, and thus letting her innate low self-esteem about her natural looks go on unchecked. And when her not-so-well-concealed secret is exposed, her reputation will suffer."
Dawn and her sister Claire:
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| Because, like, everyone reads MAXIM for the text...
We must give credit to the interviewers for restraining themselves. They did well to mask their personal feelings. (haha)
"We weren't due till much later, choosing to not distract the team while the hair and make up artists tease at her luxurious hair, pile the goo on her face and wield their magic to transform a living doll into a ... well, a doll." (from page 57)
They hint at the unreal quality of her beauty, but do not confront the issue. Subtle. And then:
"When we say hi, she looks at us blankly and utters a single greeting in return. The mark of a well-behaved girl. But when we remind her we've met her a year before, she grabs both our hands and says - looking deeply into our eyes - "Oh hi! How are you?" in her slightly husky voice. The mark of a good actress."
If ever there was a paragraph overloaded with double entendre, this is it. "Blank"ness (bad) melts into well-behaved (good); poor memory (bad) segues into warmth and friendliness (good); insincerity ("good actress", bad) turns into professionalism ("good actress", good). All very subtle again.
"At first we dismiss her moodiness as the aftermath of another of her famous parties. After all, this is the girl who shot to fame detailing her romps at exclusive invite-only parties, had pictures of her and certain local celebrities, and her fixation with her Mercedes SLK on her blog ... it isn't until we ask if she was alright, that she reveals her grandfather had just passed away in the morning and she hasn't been able to get any sleep before the shoot.
Dawn the fame whore is vapid and subject to moods ... but then her grandfather just passed away." We, the readers, are shamed for judging her blog, her lifestyle, her moodiness; but the writers have the last laugh. For they know that it is only a matter of time before we think: "Grandfather passed away this morning? And she's here prancing around in a bikini for a MAXIM photo shoot?? Isn't she supposed to be in mourning?!" This intuition is so easy to anticipate that the interviewers do not even mention it. The double bluff leaves us suspecting that our sympathy might be misplaced.
"I was close to my grandfather, but not very" What does this even mean? | | |
| Hi there! This blog dedicated to Dawn Yeo, better known as Dawn Yang/clapbangkiss, because of her famous "natural beauty"
Hee hee Pretty? Sorry, narcissism is contagious :) oh, before I forget, here's some old pics of Dawn, before she went mad and turned into Michael Jackson:

Sorry, couldn't help that last one :D An afterthought: If we all had as much money and free time as Dawn, we could all look like white models! let's all throw away our heritage! cut our eyes bigger, nose higher, cheekbones sharper, lips fuller, and boobs bigger! well, in the end ugly rich parents = beautiful plastic children on another note, i have yet to see a pic of her parents....i wonder if they're "euroasian" like she claims.... | | |
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