Perfect not necessary on Brit makeover show
As opposed to Americans, British viewers just want to look better
LOS ANGELES - After performing makeovers on virtually every willing man, woman and house in America and beholding the result — attractive ratings — television had only one logical course of action. It had to improve the world.
Thus was born an international flood of programs aimed at taking an average-looking planet and giving it the kind of overhaul once reserved for Hollywood starlets eager to maximize their assets.
“Extreme Makeover: Home Edition” has aired from Scandinavia to Africa to Latin America; a poignant Iraqi version, “Labor and Materials,” restores war-damaged homes. The original “Extreme Makeover,” which started it all in 2002 on ABC, also is worldwide and jockeying for attention with other surgery shows.
The corporal makeover trend has allowed American standards of beauty, often as determined within Beverly Hills city limits, to established new beachheads abroad. Don’t just dream of looking like your favorite actor; copy their perfection with plastic surgery!
But adopting American looks doesn’t translate to gaining an American psyche. Doctors who have worked on shows both foreign and domestic say there are distinct differences in how patients think about self-improvement and what it means.
There’s also a gulf between doctors here and abroad when it comes to TV fame and how, or whether, they can capitalize on it.
No need for perfection
A British show, “Brand New You,” offers a window of insight into cultural variations among patients. Airing on Channel 5 in the United Kingdom and on BBC America, the series tracks British women who gained a U.S. beauty rehab with plastic surgeons, a dentist and stylists.
“Americans want perfection. The British just want to look better. They look better, they’re happy,” said Dr. Paul S. Nassif of Beverly Hills, a specialist in facial plastic surgery who worked on “Brand New You” and a number of U.S. shows.
With plastic surgery long entrenched here both on screen and off, Americans are familiar with their options and know what questions to ask and how to paint a detailed picture of their desired outcome, Nassif said.
According to data compiled by the American Society of Plastic Surgeons, there’s been a 700 percent increase in cosmetic plastic surgery procedures from 1992 to 2004. There were more than 9 million U.S. procedures last year, compared to an estimated 75,000 in the United Kingdom. (Note, of course, the U.S. population totals 297 million vs. the U.K.’s 60 million.)
“British patients don’t ask a lot of questions. They’ll book surgery without even seeing you. They’re low-maintenance, might be a way to say it,” said Nassif.
Patricia Pitts, a clinical psychologist who evaluated potential patients for “Brand New You” and TLC’s nonsurgical series “10 Years Younger,” noted sharp differences between Americans and British applicants.
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Americans wanted the same thing but had higher expectations. They focused on how their appearance could affect their chances for success in work and love.
“They’re big on first impressions. If you look younger, you have a better chance of getting ahead in life,” Pitts said. They also were demanding of themselves, stressing the effort they put into exercising and eating right.
“When I asked ‘Brand New You’ contestants what they do for exercise, practically all of them answered, ‘Walk the dog,”’ she said.
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