Archive September 6, 2025

‘My award-winning hairdresser says this treatment is amazing for fine blonde hair’

Meghan asked the hairdressers of her choice for fine and fair hair because they just won the Gold Award for Hair and Beauty Salon of the Year.

‘My award-winning hairdresser says this treatment is great for fine blonde hair’(Image: Meghan Coon)

I’ve been going to the same salon ever since I was ten years old, and I couldn’t be prouder when I won the British Hair and Beauty Awards 2025 Gold Award for Best Hair and Beauty Salon of the Year and Best Employer of the Year. So when I needed a haircut, I asked my go-to hairdresser, Tannis, what her suggestions were for maintaining healthy and strong blonde hair.

Tannis claimed that Moroccanoil Light Treatment is specifically designed to treat blonde, thin hair without staining, dulling, or weighing down the fine hair.

Copy Stacey Solomon’s “beautiful” brown jacket with this £40 high street alternative.

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Moroccanoil Treatment Light
Meghan’s hairdresser recommends this Moroccanoil Treatment Light(Image: Lookfantastic)

For fairer hair, the Moroccanoil Treatment Light is designed specifically. The original treatment reportedly caused blonde hair to change color, turning it a shade lighter and a little yellow. Instead, this light supplement is intended to clearly hydrate and hydrate fine, light-colored hair without staining it.

This formula, which claims to be hydrating, contains argan oil, which nourish, protect, and clearly restores and rejuvinates fine and light-colored hair.

The delicate requirements of fine and light-colored (including white) hair are specifically addressed by the Moroccanoil Treatment Light. This treatment, which is referred to as “an essential foundation for hairstyling,” can be used as a conditioning, styling, and finishing tool, nourishing and strengthening the hair with each use.

This transformative treatment, which is rich in antioxidant-rich argan oil, strengthening proteins, and shine-enhancing vitamins, detangles, shortens the drying process, and increases shine, making hair smooth, manageable, and nourished with use.

This treatment costs £38.50 for 100ml and can be purchased for the same price at Lookfantastic, All Beauty, or Amazon. If you’re not convinced, try this Moroccanoil Gifts &amp, Sets Treatment Light 25ml, which costs £14.45.

On the website of Lookfantastic, this hair treatment currently has a nearly-perfect 4.9 out of 5 star rating. One enthralled customer exclaims, “Love this oil! It greatly improves the health of my damaged and manageable hair.

My hair is long, blonde, and fine, says another buyer, who beams. This lightweight oil is the best because it absorbs quickly, doesn’t make my hair greasy, and leaves my hair shiny and smooth.

The perfect hair oil for my thin, brunette hair is Moroccanoil Treatment Light, according to a third chiminea. I can only use it on my hair to give it a smooth, healthy appearance. Very pleased. The 100 ml bottle with a pump is what I like. Works perfectly for me. loyal consumer of this product.

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One customer did express disappointment, writing, “I finally got to order this product after months of dreaming about it. The oil did a great job of nourishing my long, fine hair. My hair feels soft and hydrated afterward. Even though I prefer to use it as a conditioner, my inexpensive L’oreal conditioner isn’t that great. I’m still thinking about purchasing this product again.

Pamela Anderson addresses Liam Neeson romance and slams PR stunt claims in speech

In an address at a major film festival where she appeared in recent headlines about her personal life, Pamella Anderson addressed the romance speculation about Liam Neeson during an awards speech.

Pamela looked stunning at the star-studded awards ceremony(Image: WireImage)

Pamela Anderson made a glamorous appearance at the Deauville American Film Festival on Friday, where she accepted the 2025 Talent Award and set the record straight on her rumoured romance with The Naked Gun co-star Liam Neeson.

Looking elegant in a strapless black fishtail gown, the 58-year-old actress opened up about the recent headlines about her personal life.

She remarked, “I never engage in PR stunts and will never do so.” adding, “That would be the death penalty. She denied making up any evidence that her relationship with Neeson was a publicity stunt. Instead, she admitted that she was “authentically driven.”

“I’m superstitious when it comes to love. And I’m not comfortable sharing any shred of my romantic life,” she added. The pair fuelled speculation of a romance earlier this summer while promoting The Naked Gun, sharing affectionate red carpet moments. A source at the time claimed the two had been “dating for a while,” and both stars made warm public comments about each other.

Pamela Anderson collected an accolade at the Deauville American Film Festival
Pamela Anderson collected an accolade at the Deauville American Film Festival(Image: WireImage)
Pamela Anderson and Liam Neeson
Pamela and Liam have grown closer in recent years(Image: Getty Images for SiriusXM)

Neeson previously stated to People, “I’m madly in love with her. She’s just a fantastic partner. She deserves more praise than I can. In response, Anderson described him as “the ideal gentleman” and stated that their relationship was “very sincere, very loving.”

Pamela completely veered off the topic of romance in her speech. She stated, “I know I’ll end up falling in love with the screen time and time again. That is my responsibility. You will feel it, a projection, if we do it well. The best compliment is this.

There are no silly games being played, they say. I’m sincere. She continued, “I urge you to not mistake my kindness for weakness or my bravery for bitterness.” I’m on this journey to see what I’m made of, not for money or fame.

Meanwhile, a source close to the pair also denied claims that their relationship was for show, telling the Daily Mail, “Everything between them has been genuine. Neither would ever take part in a publicity stunt. They have a great time. Neither of them needs the publicity.

Their relationship is not just for show, they say. They actually connect, in fact. No justification exists for either of them to stage something similar.

Some fans were initially apprehensive about how their cozy red carpet moments came together, but others are certain that the spark was genuine, whether or not it was romantic. According to a celebrity fan, “If you didn’t believe it, you don’t believe in love, unlike I do.

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Neeson portrays bumbling detective Frank Drebin Jr. in the Naked Gun reboot, which featured Anderson as nightclub singer Beth.

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Medicine is being invented in Gaza

My childhood dream was to pursue a medical degree. To assist people, I aspired to become a doctor. Never did I ever imagine studying medicine in a hospital instead of a university, or from textbooks, but from real-world experience.

I made the decision to enroll in al-Azhar University’s medical school after finishing my BA in English last year. I left school at the end of June. We, medical students, are forced to watch lectures on our mobile phones and read medical books while using the flashlights on our mobile phones because all of Gaza’s universities have been destroyed.

The lectures from older medical students, who the genocidal war has prematurely forced into practice, are a part of our training.

At Deir el-Balah’s Al-Aqsa Martyrs Hospital, a fifth-year medical student named Dr. Khaled gave my first lecture of this kind.

Al-Aqsa doesn’t appear to be a typical hospital. The patients don’t have privacy or room for privacy. Patients groan throughout the entire building while lying on beds or the floor in the corridor.

We are unable to deliver our lectures in the hospital yard due to the overcrowding.

Dr. Khaled began, “but from days when medicine was something you had to invent,” “I’ll teach you what I learned not from lectures.”

He began by performing cardiopulmonary resuscitation (CPR), opening the airway, and checking breathing. The lesson, however, quickly changed to how to save a life from nothing, which is not a typical course of instruction.

A young man pulled from beneath the rubble, legs shattered, and head bleeding, was a recent case, according to Dr. Khaled. Before moving the patient, the standard protocol calls for stabilizing the neck with a stabiliser.

However, there was no stabiliser. No splint . Nothing, no.

Dr. Khaled then sat on the ground, cradled the man’s head between his knees, and held it motionless until the equipment arrived, which was what no medical textbook would do.

He continued, “I wasn’t a student that day.” The brace was me. I served as the tool.

Dr. Khaled continued to walk as the supervising doctor prepared the operating room because it was all he could do to stop further injury.

Dr. Khaled’s about improvised medical solutions was one of the stories that came to mind.

One of the conversations was particularly upsetting.

A woman with a severe pelvic injury entered the hospital in her early 30s. Her flesh was torn. She required immediate surgery. However, sterilization of the wound was required first.

Betadine was absent. alcohol is not consumed. No up-to-date tools. only chlorine .

Chlorine, yes. the same substance that causes eye sting and burns the skin.

She had no consciousness. There was no other choice. The chlorine was poured in by them.

Dr. Khaled yelled at us with a resounding remorse as he told us this tale.

He said, “We used chlorine,” but he didn’t look at us. Not because we were unsure of our situation. but because there was nothing else.

What we heard shocked us, but perhaps not so much. Many of us were aware of the desperate actions doctors in Gaza had to take. Many of us had seen the heartbreaking video of Dr. Hani Bseiso attempting to save his niece from a table.

Dr. Hani, an orthopaedic surgeon from al-Shifa Medical Complex, was in an impossible situation last year when his niece, Ahed, was seriously hurt in an Israeli airstrike. Because the Israeli army had besieged the area, they were stranded in their apartment complex in Gaza City and unable to move.

Ahed was bleeding and her leg had become so severe that it needed to be repaired. Dr. Hani had few options.

No anesthesia was present. no tools for surgery. A plastic bag, a pot of water, and a kitchen knife are all you need.

Ahed sat down at the table with her face pale and half-closed, while her uncle, who was filled with tears, prepared to amputate her leg. Video was used to capture the situation.

He pleaded, “Look,” and his voice sounded hollow, “I am amputating her leg without anesthesia!” The mercy is absent. “Humanity is where? “

His surgical training collided with the moment’s raw horror as he worked quickly, hands trembling but precise.

Even young children who have been amputated without anesthesia have been subjected to this scene numerous times throughout Gaza. And as medical students, we are becoming aware that this might be true, that we may have to operate on a relative or a child as a result of their unbearable suffering.

The hardest lesson we are learning, however, is when we don’t treat wounds because those who still have a chance of survival need to be helped. This discussion is theoretically ethical in other countries. We need to learn how to make this choice because we might soon have to do it ourselves.

Dr. Khaled once said, “In medical school, you are taught to save everyone. You are taught that you can’t live with that in Gaza.

To carry the inhumane weight of knowing you can’t save everyone and to continue, to develop a superhuman level of emotional endurance to deal with loss after loss without breaking and losing one’s own humanity is what it means to be a doctor in Gaza today.

Even when they are exhausted and starving, these people still teach and treat them.

Our instructor, Dr. Ahmad, stopped midway through a trauma lecture, leant onto the table, and sat down. He yelled, “I just need a minute.” My blood sugar is low.

He hadn’t eaten since the previous day, we all knew. The war is consuming the very bodies and minds of those who attempt to treat others, not just the plight of medicine. And we, the students, are actually gaining real knowledge that medicine in this place is more than just a matter of knowledge and skills. It’s about surviving long enough to use them.

Being a doctor in Gaza means constantly reviving traditional medicine, using only natural resources, using only modern technology, and bandaging with your own body.

Not just a resource crisis, either. It’s a moral test.

And in that test, the wounds penetrate deeply: through hope, dignity, and flesh.