These are the
top plastic surgeons on Earth, said Dr. Robert Rey. Irked by the
bold and ostentatious statement I just heard, I was about ready to
turn it off, but I continued to watch on. In the television series,
The Celebrity Plastic Surgeons of Beverly Hills, produced by Adam
Witt, artfully portrays the pinnacle of a
woman's beauty.
Couple that with savvy surgeons, mansions, supercars, and flashy
character development, and you got yourself a reality show. In the
first episode, Meet the Doctors, Dr. Rey is the limelight of the
show; he is flamboyant, robust, and has the wavy hair of a teenage
adolescent. The scene and script preparation involves the encounter
of what appears to be a 48-year-old woman whose name is Sheila at a
place called Gracie Jui-Jitsu. The show craftily introduces Sheila
physically dissatisfied with her butt. Dr. Rey coincidentally
happens to be sparring with Shiela, and she begins to confide with
him concerning her desires of a voluptuous butt. Shiela and almost
the rest of the women in our society have been influenced by the
covetous value of the ideal
show more content
Those who do
not appropriate the reflection of sexiness and youth will be a
social outcast. Specifically, the show targets a lot of these women
to feel disgusted with how they look. Reality shows like these want
our society to feel an unending burn and desire to be more
beautiful at the cost of our own character. Reality shows want us
to fuel their personal agenda, so we can continue to buy into
beautifying products, such as anti-aging lotions,
too-good-to-be-true products, to eventually cosmetic surgery.
Consequently, women will reflect the character and image Sheila
portrays. Society wants to be pretty, but a lot of them will never
get there because media and television pressures us to always do
more and more to improve our physical





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