First of all, the three don’t understand much about the latest beauty trend of painted lips and huge hair. “Everyone looks alike,” notes Justine. But what about themselves? What are they happy with and where less? Bridget says she’s happy with her ‘nose’. “That is nice. Very happy with it. What I find less is my height. Because I have a mother who has a kind of model height with nice long legs, I have the short stumps of my father.”
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The presenter adds that she thinks wrinkles are beautiful in some women, such as with Sonja Barend, but that not everyone gets old so beautifully. She says she doesn’t like the transformation of Brigitte Bardot. “It’s a shame, isn’t there a middle way? I sometimes go with someone for a long time who makes me a little fresher”, she starts about her botox use. “That I just look a little cozier and rested. Without being pulled all the way tight.”
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When Clarice, who, like Justine, has never had anything done about her appearance, asks her what she’s getting done, Bridget replies: “Some residual silane or botox in other places.” Restilane is a substance in the body that produces collagen, she explains. She sprays Botox ‘on her lines’. “My skin starts to wrinkle in my neck. I’ve always had stripes, but now I also have that little turkey with it. And I spray something in that. Certainly.”
Yet they all agree that you shouldn’t go too far. “It’s such a shame when you squirt so much that your facial expressions go away,” Clarice notes. Bridget: “It should be the way it was again, with a few minor adjustments, but not the way it was before.”
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Together with her son Mees, Bridget was allowed to act as the actors of the film Yes Day interview. And of course the presenter could only say ‘yes’ to a lot of salty popcorn and kilos of skittles. Moreover, she has promised her son that he too can use a ‘yes day’ once in a while:
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