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" ... About 1 in 5 Americans needs a license to do their job, up from 1 in 20 in the 1950s. Acquiring a license is often expensive and time-consuming. And required education and experience isn’t strictly about ensuring health and safety standards are met. In every state, it requires far less time to get an EMT’s license than it does a cosmetologist’s or barber’s license. ... "
" ... Consider Melanie Rivers. One of the plaintiffs in the lawsuit, Melanie has been a licensed cosmetologist since 2012, after she took out $40,000 in student loans to attend cosmetology school. But even after finishing 1,550 hours of cosmetology courses, she still can’t legally do hair and makeup at special events. To earn her salon manager license, Melanie had to take time away from growing her business to work part-time cutting men’s hair at a salon—a far cry from bridal beautification. ... "
" ... First, the new braiding license is completely unnecessary. Not only will braiders be forced to take 40 to 50 hours of classes, if braiders want to own their own shop, they will need at least three years of experience. Otherwise, they will need to find a cosmetologist or beautician to manage the shop. ... "
" ... In “Medical Ethics in Plastic Surgery: A Mini Review,” Nasrin Nejadsarvari et al. note how demand for cosmetic surgery is overwhelmingly attributed to “psychosocial factors,” paying particular attention to the role of the media in the surge of plastic surgery. Additionally, this paper shows how cosmetic surgery has grown outside the medical profession and become a field in itself for “beauty service providers” where such desires for change bridge the medical and now the hyper-capitalist field of the cosmetologist. Where one speaks to medical necessity, the other speaks to neoliberal desires of the self. Might these two desires have become fully conflated in recent years? ... "
" ... Reid’s on-air hair journey really resonates with me. I’ve always had a lot of pride in my thick and healthy hair. My mother, who was a licensed cosmetologist and daughter of the rural segregated south, suffered her own struggles with the respectability politics of Black hair. It was ingrained in me at an early age that as a Black woman, our hair was our crowning glory and should always be well coiffed. When I first started guesting on television news shows, my hair started breaking off and falling out in clumps. Like Reid, I was also traumatized. I, too, spent thousands of dollars on treatments to regrow my hair and invested in half-wigs to cover my naturally damaged hair as I endured a years -long grow out process. My experience brought shame, insecurity, and stress. As if working in national television isn’t stressful enough, Black women who work in this space must also contend with this added traumatizing element of our professional experience. ... "