- Girl Scout Cookies Are Big Business
- Christmas Memories: The Dollhouse
- Going Back To School
- 20 Women Who Shaped Our World
- New Grandbaby News & Unicorn Flu
- Obesity, Deadly Sins & The American Plague
- Grandmother’s House
- Another Grandchild Makes the Grade
- Obama Salad & Berry Cakes
- LA Paper Sounds GMO Warning
- Accomplishments
- Adoption
- Autism
- Baby Furniture
- Baby Names
- Baby Shower
- Baby Stuff
- Babysitting
- Beauty
- Birthing
- Breastfeeding
- Budgeting
- Child-Parent Relationships
- Child-Space
- Clothing
- Crafts
- Customs
- Decorating
- Diet
- Discipline
- Division of Labor
- Dreams
- Dying
- Entertainment
- Family Gatherings
- Family Life
- Family Planning
- Famous Moms
- Feasts
- Generational Learning
- Girl Scouts
- Gourmet Cooking
- Grandchild Visits
- Grandma Time
- Green Choices
- Guessing Baby Sex
- Healthy Babies
- History
- Holidays
- Humor
- Marketing to Kids
- Marriage
- Maternity Wear
- Medicine
- Mom-Time
- Morning Sickness
- Musings
- Nursery
- Nutrition
- Old Wives' Tales
- Older Children
- Politics
- Pregnancy
- Prenatal Care
- Projects
- Recipes
- Relational Stress
- Relationships
- Research
- Rules
- Safety
- Science
- Skin Care
- Ultrasound
- Uncategorized
- Vacations
- Vaccination
- Vegetables
- Vegetarian
- Weapons
- Weather
- February 2012
- December 2010
- November 2010
- October 2010
- September 2009
- August 2009
- July 2009
- June 2009
- May 2009
- April 2009
- March 2009
- February 2009
- January 2009
- December 2008
- November 2008
- October 2008
- July 2008
- June 2008
- May 2008
- April 2008
- March 2008
- February 2008
- January 2008
- December 2007
- November 2007
- October 2007
- September 2007
- August 2007
As Beautiful as those TV Mamas!
January 27th, 2009
I encountered a post on the PopCrunch blog this past week, The 15 Hottest TV Moms of All Time, which if you don’t remember what life on planet earth was like before there was television, might be forgiven its “all time” hyperbole.
We do know that casting roles of 30 to 40-something actresses for television fills in the entertainment media ‘wasteland’ in between honest-to-starlet status as a Sweet Young Thing and the usual grandmother roles older actresses can get if anyone in Hollywood remembers their names when they get that old. These glamorous middle-age women all radiated a certain ageless beauty from the small screen that made them memorable, and for some, allowed them to move gracefully into the older-lady roles.
The #1 pick is Florence Henderson as Carol Brady. And while that role was good for her after she grew out of the starlet stage she began with in Oklahoma!, I can’t say she was all that hot in the movie Shakes the Clown. Notables like Desperate Housewives’ Gabriella Solis and Married… With Children’s Peg Bundy are on the list, along with some whose TV shows I apparently missed altogether. Go on over to see if your favorites are included.
Meanwhile, one may wonder about those Hollywood types and how much of their long-lasting good looks, perfect skin and ageless beauty is mechanical – obtained via creative plastic surgery – and how much is attributed to outrageously expensive beauty treatments and cosmetics. We older ladies definitely know that one could spend a large chunk of annual income just trying to defeat wrinkles, dry skin, gravity, split hair ends, etc., and let’s be honest – most of us don’t bother anymore.
So it was with some sense of relief that I found a post on Brainz listing 10 Home Remedies for Beautiful Skin that just happened to include some tried-and-true ingredients this Granny swears by. The sugar and olive oil scrub is honestly the best way to soften tough skin anywhere that I’ve ever encountered, and olive oil is the #1 best general skin treatment out there so long as you’re past the acne stage. Oatmeal, honey, yogurt, lemon, cucumbers, avacado, chamomile and green tea… all the so-natural sounding stuff in the expensive treatments can all be used at home by YOU without having to spend a fortune.
Let us know your favorite at-home concoctions for staying beautiful, or at least less-than-mummified. One thing not on the list that my readers who live outside inner cities can try is a chickweed bath. I gather a good handful of fresh chickweed, rinse it in cold water and tie it into a muslin bag. Run hot bathwater over the bag, let it steep as the water cools to tolerable and take a liesurely soak. The chickweed will give you a slick feeling all over, moisturizes everywhere and stays with you. After drying off, go ahead and apply a little olive oil to make it last a bit longer, and you’ll be soft all over!
Related Ads:
One Response to “As Beautiful as those TV Mamas!”
Leave a Reply
really interesting post