Bangkok Post

Introducin­g generation ageless

Octogenari­an Martha Stewart is the new face of skincare on TikTok

- LINDA DYETT

Gen Z has a juggernaut of a new beauty influencer: Martha Stewart, age 80. In February, the world’s most celebrated domesticit­y virtuoso went viral with five startlingl­y sassy, coquettish, goofy, rambunctio­us video ads she made with Clé de Peau, a Japanese skincare and make-up company, for that online stronghold of 13- to 25-year olds, TikTok. In the first seven weeks after the videos were posted on TikTok and Instagram, they had 78 million views.

The most watched of these ads, shot in Stewart’s kitchen and bathroom, begins with her saying: “I hear you’re looking for the perfect recipe for hydrated skin.” It has been viewed 47.9 million times.

But what is Martha Stewart doing promoting a prestige beauty line to Gen Zers, one that sells a US$550 (18,900 baht) La Crème moisturise­r, Enhancing Eye Contour Cream Supreme for $280 and $75 concealer?

The settings for the videos are various rooms (sort of like the game Clue but without the murder) and the swimming pool of Stewart’s home in Bedford, New York, creating an intimate, entre nous mood.

And no question — they are attention grabbers. Making the most of her 15- to 30-second screen time in each, she winks, pouts, shrugs or sticks out her derrière; she mimes putting on serum, eye cream and lip balm, urging her viewers to “project fabulous”. All the while she seems to be channellin­g that supreme blonde bombshell of her youth, Marilyn Monroe.

But true to form, Stewart dresses conservati­vely, in loose fitting tops, throughout the videos. She also executes her famous finger wag and utters her “it’s a good thing” meme. So rest assured, beneath it all, this is still the cake-baking, mulch-spreading Martha, as she is known to her millions of followers.

Contempora­ries of Stewart, like Rita Moreno (90), Tina Turner (82) and Helen Mirren (76) look great — alluring, in fact. Faces like theirs, showing at least a modicum of honest wear and tear above a trim and toned body, are becoming a familiar look today.

That is not Stewart’s look. She, too, is alluring. But in her Clé de Peau videos, and in her own TikTok and Instagram videos and in real life, too, she doesn’t remotely look her age.

TikTok and Instagram posts, as well as comments from interviews, attest to this with comments like “Martha you stunning fox” and the stream-of-consciousn­ess “lovethislo­vethis”.

But there can be a cognitive dissonance to seeing an 80-year-old who looks so youthful.

“Honestly, I thought I was seeing an impersonat­or pretending to be Martha,” said Vianna Carlsen, 49, a stylist who divides her time between Copenhagen and New York.

“I had trouble watching the videos,” said Cynthia Medalie, 66, a psychother­apist in New York. “I felt that she was trying to inhabit a much younger part of herself.”

And focusing on the videos, 13-year-old Nilah Rivera, a middle school student in New York, found them “trying too hard to be trendy”.

“It seemed like a team of young people created them,” she said.

She is partly correct. The Clé de Peau shoot was produced by Haus of SOS, a digital production company, working with Whalar, a tech-influencer agency, and led by Whalar’s head of creators (as the title is known), Ashley Rudder, 41. Assisting her was her 19-year-old actor daughter, Ke’Andra Rudder, who choreograp­hed Stewart’s twists, turns and fast-paced transition­s.

“She brought her own flair to it,” Ashley Rudder said. “I feel now that we’re making pop culture history.”

At the very least, they’re making Clé de Peau a name on TikTok.

“A segment of Gen Z aspires to look and act ‘expensive’, and luxury products are a part of creating this lifestyle,” said Biz Sherbert, culture editor of the Digital Fairy, a London creative agency specialisi­ng in the internet and youth culture. Items like three- and four-figure Air Jordans and the Dyson Airwrap, which costs up to $600, as well Clé de Peau’s products, are sought-after, with young people “dropping hundreds and hundreds of dollars on skincare”, as Peyton Abrams put it.

Achieving a perfected face is a goal in itself today. The blame for that is easily placed on social media.

“With smartphone­s and the pandemic’s reliance on videoconfe­rencing, it was game over,” said Charlotte Palermino, CEO of Dieux, a skincare line in New York. “All of us were constantly on view, constantly seeing ourselves. No other generation has seen their faces more than Gen Z is doing right now.”

So no wonder many young people today, confronted with images of their own faces as never before, are willing to spend whatever it takes to perfect them. Dr Sheila Farhang, a dermatolog­ist in Tucson, Arizona, and Los Angeles, said that she has heard that local college students squirrel away funds their parents send them for meals so they can save up for Botox. Personally, however, she rarely administer­s Botox for cosmetic purposes to anyone younger than the late 20s.

And while many other doctors do not give this neurotoxin to those younger than 20, spa and beauty salon personnel are known to administer it with little concern for age.

And then there’s the lure of the updated Stewart herself.

“Youth is a mindset that Martha is still really owning,” said Eve Lee, founder of the Digital Fairy. “We define this category as ‘Generation Ageless.’ She is a perfect example, consistent­ly demonstrat­ing icon behaviour by being both chic and messy. She also shows Gen Z the possibilit­ies for maintainin­g its hot, sexy vibes, making ageing less scary and more exciting.”

Not to forget that Stewart is also “an entreprene­ur, a hard worker, confident and smart — very appealing to my generation”, said James Goldstone, 23, a fashion student in Los Angeles.

Nor to mention her well-publicised friendship­s with the Kardashian­s and Pete Davidson, or the line of CBD gummies (very directiona­l) and a chardonnay selling for $11.99 to $16.99 (whose bottle label has a QR code that directs users to an augmented reality experience — also directiona­l) she recently introduced, or her longtime relationsh­ip with Snoop Dogg.

And not to overlook her 2004 felony conviction and prison sentence, which even Gen Zers yet to be born back then are aware of.

“That’s the salient thing,” said Kimberly Macleod, 54, head of Kmacconnec­t, a

YOUTH IS A MINDSET THAT MARTHA IS STILL REALLY OWNING

strategic communicat­ions firm in New York. “She’s a supreme capitalist — absolutely a sellout. But she’s also indomitabl­e, a force to be reckoned with.”

Or as Alessa Miki, 30, an accountant in Honolulu, put it: “She’s gone on a rebrand.” That’s exactly the point. The indelible felony conviction may be a key factor in Stewart’s loosening up in recent years, when she has joked about herself and even allowed herself to become, as in the Clé de Peau videos, a parody.

But it can’t be forgotten that she holds a unique status for the daughters and granddaugh­ters, the sons and grandsons, of her longtime loyal TV fans. Many of them recall with nothing short of awe nestling on the sofa with their mother during episodes of The Martha Stewart Show. Miki remembers watching alongside her grandmothe­r, as well.

There it is — nostalgia and nourishmen­t in one neat package. Climate change, Covid-19 and the threat of war may beset Gen Zers. But just as Stewart showed their mothers how to bake a cake, she offers her face to this up-and-coming demographi­c, doling out hope for an unwrinkled future, and while she’s at it, access to “traditiona­lly female traditions — the core”, as Sascha Stannard, 31, a home goods designer and e-tailer in Los Angeles, put it.

Stewart’s smooth, glowing complexion has spurred the widespread assumption that photo and video appearance enhancers — filters, as they’re known — were employed to alter her face in the Clé de Peau videos. Not so, she said, asserting that filters have not been used in her personal life or in the TikTok videos.

Speculatio­n is likewise widespread that Stewart has had a face-lift.

“I have never had plastic surgery,” she said. “You can absolutely say that. No knife on my face, neck or back.” And as John Barrett, her hairstylis­t, put it: “Martha has never had the time off to let a face-lift heal.” But he added: “Basically, women of a certain age, if they look amazing, they’ve had something done. That’s the way it is.”

She has had work done, by Dr Daniel Belkin, one of her two New York dermatolog­ists. “Nonor minimally invasive,” is how he described it, with repeat visits “probably twice a year. She’s doing it thoughtful­ly and conservati­vely”. Belkin uses lasers for redness, gentle resurfacin­g and brown spots; fillers for volumising and collagen stimulatio­n; and radio-frequency and micro-focused ultrasound for sprucing up the brow area and for “lifting, tightening and plumping” under the chin. And for her lips “a soft hyaluronic acid, more for hydration than for plumping”.

Stewart’s other dermatolog­ist, Dr Dhaval Bhanusali, customises a holistical­ly grounded, CBD-infused hydrating serum, calming mist and night cream for her. He and Stewart are developing similar CBD topicals for consumer use. These will be in addition to a line of therapeuti­c creams — for muscle recovery, sleep and stress — that she already has with Canopy Growth, a cannabinoi­d company.

So it may be that Stewart’s smooth, glowing, wrinkle-free face is just the jolt that’s needed as our collective eye adjusts to a new vision of vital old age. No — make that expanded middle age, or agelessnes­s. Whatever else Martha Stewart is, she’s ready for the long haul.

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