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Author: Admin | 2025-04-28
Was that the "before" picture was scowling and the "after" picture was smiling. Also, the "before" picture was a close-up of the model's face, while the "after" was a full-body shot. Maybe the lighting was a little better in the "after", but the fact still remains that a business trying to advertise that they'll make a "before" look like an "after" essentially just told an "after" model to look stern and closed in on her face in order to make their "before". Gay.com uses ads like this occasionally, and what's notable is that the models tend to look better in the before pics. One was for some kind of makeover special. In the "before" shot, the guy was wearing a flannel buttondown and jeans with natural hair. In the "after" pic, he had on the most hideous Flamboyant Gay outfit you can imagine, and his hair was stuck rigid with gel. Another was for some dietary supplement that helped build muscle. The man wasn't fat to begin with, and he was much more attractive before he looked like a steroid-hooked Gym Bunny. Enzyte or Extenze should show before and after photos... har har har. One penis pill (sold by many of the same "pharmacies" that sell black-market Viagra) actually does have before-and-after pics. There are before and after pics of penis enhancement surgery on a porn site, only it was hard to tell which pic was supposed to be better. The after pic was certainly longer, but it also showed the side effects of penis surgery. Floppy erection. Some of them have after photos which are the result of highly sophisticated Photoshop manipulation. By which is meant they zoomed in. Ads for cleaning products. They show, for example, someone using an ordinary mop to clean an ordinary, somewhat dirty floor.
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