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2. A Fake Beard ^HOT^


Tom, one of the Others, used a fake beard as well as some ragged clothes as a disguise during his encounters with the survivors of Oceanic Flight 815. Along with Tom, all of the Others that encountered the castaways wore ragged clothes in order to create the impression that they were uncivilized and undeveloped and to hide the fact that they lived in houses and were more advanced than they look.




2. A Fake Beard


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In one of Claire's flashes from the time she was held captive by the Others, Tom approached Ethan in the Staff, in Claire's field of vision. He was not wearing his ragged clothes or his beard but looked clean and shaved.


About a month after these events, Claire, along with Kate and Danielle Rousseau, discovered the station and found a locker room where the beard, theatrical glue, and some ragged clothes were contained. ("Maternity Leave")


During the prisoner's exchange at the Pala Ferry dock, Kate revealed to Tom that they knew his beard was fake. Tom then removed his fake beard, commenting that it itched. When Ben arrived at the dock with the Others' boat, he asked Tom where his beard was. Tom said that the survivors knew it was fake.


Billy Bob Thornton is dusting off his awkwardly fitting fake beard for Bad Santa 2, a sequel to the filthy 2003 Christmas comedy. Geyer Kosinski (The Bad News Bears, the TV adaptation of Fargo) will produce; Miramax and Broad Green Pictures will co-finance and co-produce, with American distribution from Broad Green during the 2016 holiday season.


"Fear the Beard" is an outgrowth of the black-dyed lumberjack-style full beard Wilson started sporting over the summer. And with the Giants in the NLCS for the first time in seven years, the catchphrase has become all the rage throughout the Bay Area, with fans wearing fake beards and carrying signs and wearing T-shirts bearing the catchphrase.


"You see that beard out there and he's pitching and that gets the fans riled up," said Will Arambula, a San Francisco auto body shop owner and lifelong Giants fan. " They like to see something out of the ordinary and he's definitely out of the ordinary."


His beard complements a mohawk that flows behind his cap, and the neon orange cleats he debuted at this year's All-Star game, which he had to partially color with a black Sharpie after MLB complained it wasn't Giant orange-and-black color compliant.


And whether they're applied to a prosthetic piece or woven in, movie makeup artists have to painstakingly apply each micro hair to create something as realistic as this, Kurt Russell's beard in "Guardians of the Galaxy Vol. 2." In some of these shots, Kurt is sporting his real beard, while in others it's a fake.


There are four methods makeup artists use to apply fake facial hair, all of which have to look real. Three types are applied onto an actor's face, and the fourth type is actually applied to a hyperreal prosthetic head.


Kenneth punched stubble into a fake head when working on the 2020 film "The Rental." But when working with a prosthesis, giving it the illusion of hair can be almost as realistic as punching in the real thing.


Here, makeup artist Kristy Staky is tying an especially long beard for the show "Dwight in Shining Armor." At the top of the beard, she only ties one hair per hole. Farther down, she ties more hairs to a hole, but spreads them out. If she did one hair per hole throughout the whole piece, it would get too dense and then look fake.


It's why John Blake needed to work with four other makeup artists to tie Kurt Russell's fake beard together in a pinch for "Guardians 2" after the actor had to shave his real beard for a flashback and didn't have time to grow it back.


Because all the hairs are tied in, lace pieces stay tight on the face, making them ideal for action movies and even more ideal for blending into the skin. This is why you might've never guessed that Captain Barbossa's beard in the "Pirates of the Caribbean" franchise was fake. It's one of John Blake's many masterpieces.


Ian: To get the right effect, choosing the right type of hair was key. Yak hair, which is thick and coarse, is commonly used to replicate beards, but eyebrows are so thin and delicate that John went with angora hair instead, which is much smaller in diameter but still made the actor's eyebrows look thicker than his real-life brows.


Where lace-applied fake facial hair can leave an actor feeling stiff, the third method lets an actor move their face more freely. It's called hand laying. John C. Reilly is wearing a hand-laid beard in "Walk Hard," and you can see just how expressive he is.


Hand laying hair is also the best technique if you want to add more hair to an actor's already existing facial hair. The key is hiding the line between where the real facial hair ends and where the fake hair starts, like the makeup artist for "Silicon Valley" had to do to actor Martin Starr for the series finale. To make sure the line between real and fake was invisible, he curled the hairs in and out until it looked like this.


To make a floated beard, Kenneth forms the beard on a fake head, then hairsprays it. Then the whole piece gets glued onto an actor's face. Even though the process is simpler, it still requires attention to detail.


The crepe wool is so curly that it needs to bathe in warm water first. You can make a lot more shapes with the crepe wool, so it's better for the curlier parts of the beard, while the yak hair is better for the straighter hairs. And like any piece of real facial hair, there's a lot of grooming and styling along the way.


As far as glaring continuity errors go in the "Star Wars" prequel series, Obi-Wan's shape-shifting beard isn't all that problematic. But once you see it, it's just impossible to un-see. It's also one of those things that leaves you wondering how such a gaffe made it into the final cut of a major motion picture where the budget was presumably not much of a concern.


For Ewan McGregor's part, the actor actually did grow a beautiful bushy beard for his portrayal of Obi-Wan in "Attack of the Clones." As glorious as that beard is, it actually became a big problem when McGregor was called back for reshoots months later. As noted by What Culture, the issue was that the always-in-demand McGregor had already moved on to his next project, "Black Hawk Down," for which he shaved his beard and buzzed his hair.


The series of robberies began May 8 when police said a man wearing a large fake beard and a camouflage hooded sweatshirt committed an armed robbery of a Dollar General in Rogers on Walnut Street. Police said the fake beard bandit struck next May 13 when he robbed a Murphy USA gas station, also on Walnut Street. In both instances, the suspect made off with an undisclosed amount of money, police said.


The last reported fake beard bandit robbery occurred May 14 at the Career Academy of Hair Design in Springdale. It is unclear if the suspect collected any money out of the robbery. A victim of the robbery said a gun was never seen, but the suspect gestured like he had a firearm, according to the Springdale Police Department.


Ferguson argues that the following facts rendered the lineup impermissibly suggestive: (1) in profile the fake beards worn by some of the stand-ins are obvious and, (2) all stand-ins were younger than the defendant.


I have examined the photographs taken of the Ferguson lineup and I am unable to determine which stand-ins have fake beards. In fact, Ferguson's beard looks somewhat unreal. Moreover, I have carefully scrutinized the photographs attempting to discern which beards are fake. A witness would not be so intent on determining this fact. In addition, the ages as disclosed in the transcript were quite close. This is reflected in the photographs; it is not clear from the photographs that Ferguson is the oldest. Thus, neither of these factors renders the lineup unduly suggestive. 041b061a72


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