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Inspired by market research that suggested only 4% of women describe themselves as beautiful (up from 2% in 2004), and around 54% believe that when it comes to how they look, they are their own worst beauty critic, Unilever's Dove brand has been conducting a marketing campaign called Dove Campaign for Real Beauty that aims to celebrate women's natural beauty since 2005. [2]
Rebecca Watson (born 1980 [1]) is an American atheist blogger, [3] [4] [5] vlogger, [6] and YouTuber. [7] She is the founder of the blog Skepchick and former co-host of The Skeptics' Guide to the Universe podcast.
Rebecca Lynn Zamolo was born on the 28 September 1982 in Arlington, VA.. Zamolo is the oldest of 5 siblings. She was a competitive gymnast and track runner, and prior to being diagnosed with ulcerative colitis, moved to Los Angeles, California, to become an actress.
Rebecca Jane Brown (born 4 December 1992 in Chelmsford, Essex, England) is an English vlogger, artist and YouTube personality. She has been active on YouTube since 2006 when she started videoblogging at the age of 13, under the name Beckie0. She attended MET film school from 2012 to 2014. [1]
Rebecca Wall was born to Sharon Steed and Lloyd Wall, both of whom were members of the Fundamentalist Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-Day Saints (FLDS) and had a polygamous family. [1] At the time of her birth, Musser's father had two wives; his first wife was Myrna and his second was Sharon. [ 2 ]
Rebecca Forstadt is an American voice actress, best known for playing young female roles in various animated series. After studying theater at Orange Coast College , in Costa Mesa, California , Forstadt began her acting career by working at Knott's Berry Farm 's Bird Cage Theater, performing melodramas , often as the damsel in distress character.
[5] [18] Her videos have inspired remixes, slowdown/speedups, commentary, lip-sync, and analysis on YouTube. [27] In 2012, Swerdlow's online presence was hacked; her Twitter account, YouTube channel and AOL address were defaced with "Nazi swastikas and obscenities." Prior to the attack, her YouTube channel had accumulated a total of 25 million ...
Her video, "The Known Universe," [21] created as part of an exhibit with the Rubin Museum, is an early example of a science video going viral on YouTube in 2009. According to Google Scholar, Oppenheimer's peer-reviewed articles as of 2021 have been cited 10,878 times. Her h-index is 55 and i10-index is 133. [22]