I have yet to see somebody who looks as young as they claim...
#61
Posted 10 December 2008 - 03:34 AM
#62
Posted 10 December 2008 - 04:17 AM
Personally, I wear nappies/diapers and suck on a dummy/passifier. This makes me look substantially younger than 37 years old.
#63
Posted 10 December 2008 - 05:00 AM
There are so many things that one can do to make themselves look younger, substantially younger, that have nothing to do with "longevity" genes. For example, color grey hair to a darker color, style your hair in a progressive fashion, use botox on the forehead and around the eyes, dress in younger clothes, use foundation to smooth out lines, and so on.
Personally, I wear nappies/diapers and suck on a dummy/passifier. This makes me look substantially younger than 37 years old.
LMAO.....now that thare is funny.
#64
Posted 10 December 2008 - 05:48 AM
If I stay out of the sun does that mean I can have some longevity genes too?
What the hell is a "longevity gene" anyway? That's like calling something a "good fat".
based on what I 've read in evolutionary biology, there seems to be a tendency for superior species towards increased neoteny,
a physical correlate of which is (physical) arrested development at the teenage stage. By this logic, people with youthful appearance constitute a phenotype that reflects an underlying genotype blessed with a higher than average percentage of those allele that have driven the evolutionary trend towards neoteny.
The mechanism across thousands of years would be:
neoteny genes ---> youthful looks ---> more sex ----> more offsprings ---> increased frequency of neoteny genes in the population
Maybe silly, maybe not...
Neoteny is very intesting.
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Neoteny
I wonder how one would tweak manipulate neoteny in an organism.
Also is the concept of someone having a babyface.
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Baby_face
People with babyfaces might also be associated with honesty. lol
Edited by caston, 10 December 2008 - 05:49 AM.
#65
Posted 10 December 2008 - 02:49 PM
Let me revise my earlier estimate. Here she looks about 47.
Edited by andre, 10 December 2008 - 02:50 PM.
#66
Posted 10 December 2008 - 02:57 PM
Edited by Matt, 10 December 2008 - 05:22 PM.
#67
Posted 10 December 2008 - 05:28 PM
#68
Posted 10 December 2008 - 09:09 PM
#69
Posted 10 December 2008 - 09:54 PM
Is it really so hard to admit that Nicole Kidman looks pretty phenomenal?
#70
Posted 11 December 2008 - 06:30 AM
a physical correlate of which is (physical) arrested development at the teenage stage.
Indeed.
The mechanism across thousands of years would be:
neoteny genes ---> youthful looks ---> more sex ----> more offsprings ---> increased frequency of neoteny genes in the population
While not via this route, neoteny has been hypothesized to be responsible for increased human lifespan in a book by Shostak a few years ago. I kind of doubt it, but you never know.
well longevity genes is what makes people to become supercentenarians.
The point was that this is an over-simplified way to think, as genes in isolation don't mean anything.
#71
Posted 11 December 2008 - 06:44 AM
Is it really so hard to admit that Nicole Kidman looks pretty phenomenal?
Yes.
#72
Posted 14 December 2008 - 07:43 PM
Click these links:
http://verdoux.files...dead-calm-4.jpg
http://farm3.static....80e9869.jpg?v=0
Everyone else I know who has seen this film had the same dumbfounded reaction.
She's at least had: cheekbone implants (this is the most obvious because she had no bone structure before and suddenly her cheekbones became one of her most prominent features), skin lightening, lip work, nose job and botox. She's not a naturally beautiful woman. She started out as a cute plain Jane and managed to transform herself into a beautiful woman with the help of surgery and good styling. The reason she could achieve this is because her original features were very regular and nondescript. They weren't flawed in any obvious way -- just lacked beauty.
Edited by marqueemoon, 14 December 2008 - 07:44 PM.
#73
Posted 14 December 2008 - 09:15 PM
Nicole Kidman is pointing that double barreled gun straight at the next person who claims she´s not all natural. Her all-seeing giant forehead is watching us. Dare say she´s had work done and she´ll pull the trigger and perform instant rhinoplasty on ya.
Edited by Fredrik, 14 December 2008 - 11:11 PM.
#74
Posted 15 December 2008 - 06:13 PM
On the other hand, I don't have a problem with people using technology to improve themselves, whether it's their brains, bodies or faces. So in a way it's also encouraging.
#75
Posted 15 December 2008 - 06:21 PM
#76
Posted 16 December 2008 - 01:31 PM
Pippa black looks a lot like a younger version of nicole, but natural
What is that rubbish? And does he have man boobies?
Really.
Edited by Ben - Aus, 16 December 2008 - 01:31 PM.
#77
Posted 17 December 2008 - 04:12 AM
#78
Posted 19 December 2008 - 07:57 PM
Edited by NarrativiumX, 19 December 2008 - 08:09 PM.
#79
Posted 19 December 2008 - 08:12 PM
There are so many things that one can do to make themselves look younger, substantially younger, that have nothing to do with "longevity" genes. For example, color grey hair to a darker color, style your hair in a progressive fashion, use botox on the forehead and around the eyes, dress in younger clothes, use foundation to smooth out lines, and so on.
Personally, I wear nappies/diapers and suck on a dummy/passifier. This makes me look substantially younger than 37 years old.
You young people and your rave parties.
#80
Posted 21 December 2008 - 02:22 PM
#81
Posted 21 December 2008 - 03:20 PM
Pharrell Williams is 35 but looks 17.
This makes me wonder what kind of 35-year olds, or for that matter 17-year olds you are used to. Do you perhaps live in a climate where people tend to get a lot of sun damage, like some parts of Australia?
#82
Posted 21 December 2008 - 03:29 PM
originally from canada
travels to EU a lot
#83
Posted 21 December 2008 - 11:32 PM
There are so many things that one can do to make themselves look younger, substantially younger, that have nothing to do with "longevity" genes. For example, color grey hair to a darker color, style your hair in a progressive fashion, use botox on the forehead and around the eyes, dress in younger clothes, use foundation to smooth out lines, and so on.
Personally, I wear nappies/diapers and suck on a dummy/passifier. This makes me look substantially younger than 37 years old.
You young people and your rave parties.
He looks 24-27 to me. Still remarkably young for his age, but 17 -- no way.
#84
Posted 22 December 2008 - 12:22 AM
There are so many things that one can do to make themselves look younger, substantially younger, that have nothing to do with "longevity" genes. For example, color grey hair to a darker color, style your hair in a progressive fashion, use botox on the forehead and around the eyes, dress in younger clothes, use foundation to smooth out lines, and so on.
Personally, I wear nappies/diapers and suck on a dummy/passifier. This makes me look substantially younger than 37 years old.
You young people and your rave parties.
He looks 24-27 to me. Still remarkably young for his age, but 17 -- no way.
He looks no older than 20. But this is based on average standards of what most 20 year olds tend to look like. Again, I think you overshoot based on some unknown, unreasonable need to.
#85
Posted 22 December 2008 - 02:04 AM
There are so many things that one can do to make themselves look younger, substantially younger, that have nothing to do with "longevity" genes. For example, color grey hair to a darker color, style your hair in a progressive fashion, use botox on the forehead and around the eyes, dress in younger clothes, use foundation to smooth out lines, and so on.
Personally, I wear nappies/diapers and suck on a dummy/passifier. This makes me look substantially younger than 37 years old.
You young people and your rave parties.
He looks 24-27 to me. Still remarkably young for his age, but 17 -- no way.
He looks no older than 20. But this is based on average standards of what most 20 year olds tend to look like. Again, I think you overshoot based on some unknown, unreasonable need to.
How am I overshooting when I'm estimating ages below their actual ages in all cases? Lol.
I've always been good at guessing age. As I said earlier, I tend to be extremely accurate when guessing the ages of actors and actresses down to the year. Same in person. I think a lot of people actually underestimate age, especially people who are older and kind of clump all young people together.
Edited by marqueemoon, 22 December 2008 - 02:13 AM.
#86
Posted 22 December 2008 - 12:49 PM
There are so many things that one can do to make themselves look younger, substantially younger, that have nothing to do with "longevity" genes. For example, color grey hair to a darker color, style your hair in a progressive fashion, use botox on the forehead and around the eyes, dress in younger clothes, use foundation to smooth out lines, and so on.
Personally, I wear nappies/diapers and suck on a dummy/passifier. This makes me look substantially younger than 37 years old.
You young people and your rave parties.
He looks 24-27 to me. Still remarkably young for his age, but 17 -- no way.
He looks no older than 20. But this is based on average standards of what most 20 year olds tend to look like. Again, I think you overshoot based on some unknown, unreasonable need to.
How am I overshooting when I'm estimating ages below their actual ages in all cases? Lol.
I've always been good at guessing age. As I said earlier, I tend to be extremely accurate when guessing the ages of actors and actresses down to the year. Same in person. I think a lot of people actually underestimate age, especially people who are older and kind of clump all young people together.
The opposite also happens, i.e., younger people who misguess the age of older people (the "he looks so much better than my parents and their friends, he must be 15 years younger" fallacy). IME people are good at estimating the age of anyone close to their own age, and mostly pretty bad at guessing the age of anyone not close to their own age. This guy is close to my age, so 35 seems about right. But then, I hang out with a young-looking, mostly single, body-conscious crowd of contemporaries, not the common married with kids couch potato.
#87
Posted 23 December 2008 - 02:36 AM
There are so many things that one can do to make themselves look younger, substantially younger, that have nothing to do with "longevity" genes. For example, color grey hair to a darker color, style your hair in a progressive fashion, use botox on the forehead and around the eyes, dress in younger clothes, use foundation to smooth out lines, and so on.
Personally, I wear nappies/diapers and suck on a dummy/passifier. This makes me look substantially younger than 37 years old.
You young people and your rave parties.
He looks 24-27 to me. Still remarkably young for his age, but 17 -- no way.
He looks no older than 20. But this is based on average standards of what most 20 year olds tend to look like. Again, I think you overshoot based on some unknown, unreasonable need to.
How am I overshooting when I'm estimating ages below their actual ages in all cases? Lol.
I've always been good at guessing age. As I said earlier, I tend to be extremely accurate when guessing the ages of actors and actresses down to the year. Same in person. I think a lot of people actually underestimate age, especially people who are older and kind of clump all young people together.
The opposite also happens, i.e., younger people who misguess the age of older people (the "he looks so much better than my parents and their friends, he must be 15 years younger" fallacy). IME people are good at estimating the age of anyone close to their own age, and mostly pretty bad at guessing the age of anyone not close to their own age. This guy is close to my age, so 35 seems about right. But then, I hang out with a young-looking, mostly single, body-conscious crowd of contemporaries, not the common married with kids couch potato.
I generally agree with you, though I think the guy looks younger than 35...but then again I'm not 35 so maybe your theory is correct! I have the most trouble guessing the ages of people who are much older than I am. Anything over 45 becomes a little murky to me. It may also be that there's a larger range how old a particular age group looks as the chronological age increase. If people are aging at different rates, the gaps between individuals would increase with age. One way of testing this theory might be comparing biomarkers of young adults to older adults. If you look at the biomarkers of say people aged 18 to 20, is there less variability in that group than between the individuals in a 70 to 72 set?
Edited by marqueemoon, 23 December 2008 - 02:39 AM.
#88
Posted 24 December 2008 - 11:25 AM
http://www.imdb.com/...06496/nm0000084
Shes 42 years of age, this photo came up as 2007 on the imbd page. Shes definitely looks much younger than her age I think, but don't know much about her.
Edited by Matt, 24 December 2008 - 11:27 AM.
#89
Posted 24 December 2008 - 11:31 AM
By the way, the Asian actor above.....what's her face like. I'm trapped in the high beams
Edited by zoolander, 24 December 2008 - 11:32 AM.
#90
Posted 24 December 2008 - 11:40 PM
to a westerner an Asian is always going to look younger than they are because we tend to associate aging with wrinkles and the greying of the hair. This does not really seem to happen in Asians. I'm not sure whether it's a cultural thing to color their grey hair or if it's genetic. I do know that Asians have a thicker dermis when compared to westerners and therefore do not tend to wrinkle as much however, Asians tend to get age spots. You generally do not see Asians getting botox.
By the way, the Asian actor above.....what's her face like. I'm trapped in the high beams
That's Gong Li she's quite popular in China and around the world, her recent crossover roles have been in Memoirs of a Geisha and Miami Vice. The photo is from the latest Hannibal film.
Edited by Dmitri, 24 December 2008 - 11:41 PM.
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