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Read the newsletter on buzzfeednews.com. Some beauty gurus are adjusting to a more ~au naturel~ look in quarantine YouTube / Anastasia Karanikolaou During quarantine, I have become very into watching cooking shows and elaborate beauty routines on YouTube. In both cases, I love to watch others do these things but would never try it myself, and it soothes my soul.
“I’m a spray tan lady — I get spray tans weekly — and since we’ve been in quarantine, I obviously haven’t been able to get my spray tans. So this is the lightest shade I own. And I don’t even know if it’ll match, but we’re just going to roll with it,” she says.
In several other “get ready with me” videos on YouTube over the past week, gurus and other personalities have also made comments about slight tweaks to their makeup routines and products because their “tans … are coming off.” Big beauty vlogger Jaclyn Hill joked that it’s been “rough” not having her fairer face tone match the color of the rest of her body. YouTube / Jaclyn Hill This is all to say that even though these small, relatively insignificant effects of a pandemic are, well, so minuscule and maybe trivial, everyone’s norms are being affected. For influencers who depend on their faces and looks for their lifestyles and income, those changes can be as small as having to buy lighter shades of makeup, or as existential as coming to terms with the more ~natural~ version of themselves.
Will quarantine culture normalize being a full-time YouTuber? During my interview with a young YouTuber for a story about how she and others are still making Coachella-related content even though the festival was canceled, she mentioned something pretty interesting. YouTube / Bianca Bello Bianca Bello is a 24-year-old in NYC who now does YouTube full time but was once a driver for DoorDash. She said the one positive outcome of the vast majority of the country being in lockdown is a new “respect” she feels she is getting for her unique line of work that requires working independently, and on the fly.
Now that most people are forced to work from home — with the exception of essential workers, of course — Bianca said she “feels as if people have a newfound respect for people who work from home all of the time.”
Influencing and YouTubing may never be accepted without judgment, and I'm not saying that it's right or wrong to pass judgment. But perhaps these new and strange kinds of freelance and WFH jobs may become more normal.
Tanya Want more? Here are other stories we were following this week. YouTubers are still making their Coachella content because it took weeks to prep and because it’s their jobs. Even though the popular music and fashion festival was postponed, many YouTubers did not let all those weeks of prep work and excitement go to waste.
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