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28 Beauty Products That May Seem Sus, But Actually Work

28 Beauty Products That May Seem Sus, But Actually Work

Buzz Feed10-05-2025

A pack of Mighty Patches, which use hydrocolloid to practically disappear your pus-filled blemishes and pimples, while keeping you from picking and popping. Who knew such a small thing could make such a big impact? But these invisible circular patches are designed to work their absorbent magic over the course of six hours, aka right before your eyes.
Or these XL Surface Mighty Patches, which boast the same hydrocolloid ingredient, but are large enough to cover several pus-filled pimples or zits at once on your jawline, back, or neck! Get at those blemishes in harder-to-reach areas and worry less as the pimple patch works overnight. Oh, and even if you move around in your sleep, these sticky strips won't budge!
A purple shampoo trio set with shampoo, conditioner, and a hair mask to help keep your platinum, silver, gray, and blonde hair looking salon-fresh by removing yellow and brassy tones. I'm no artist, but I'm pretty sure the way the color wheel is designed...purple somehow cancels out orange, and this shampoo is proof!
The Cosrx Snail Mucin Power Essence, a top-rated serum made up of 96.3% snail secretion for a lightweight formula that helps hydrate and restore dry, dull skin, leaving you with a glowing complexion. Even if you raise an eyebrow at escargot, the results of this skincare fave will make you think whoever took a chance on a snail's skincare "secret" might actually be a genius.
Plus, a powerful snail repair cream that's also created with the popular K-beauty secret, snail mucin extract, to help moisturize, brighten, and even your skin tone for a glass-like finish. If you're looking to revamp your daily skincare routine without spending hundreds of dollars, this multipurpose product will help you get glowing skin and last you a long time according to reviewers!
A professional-grade callus-removal gel to use as you soak your feet and literally do a triple take watching cracked, dead skin slough off with the help of your favorite foot file! I mean, no wonder it has over 41,000 5-star reviews — it's obviously witchcraft!
Revlon's oil-absorbing volcanic face roller — it's an infinitely washable volcanic stone roller ball that soaks up excess oil and delivers an instant matte finish in seconds, leaving your makeup intact. It's pretty sus that dried up lava could help with oily skin, but just look at these results!
Elizabeth Mott's Carbonated Bubble Clay Mask featuring a foaming charcoal formula to get deep into your pores and remove dead skin, dirt, and other impurities, so your skin looks and feels all shiny and new like a just-emerged soft-shell crab! Sometimes the most ridiculous-looking products are the most efficient, and this cleansing mask will prove it!
An odd but fun lip stain mask that applies with a deep blue hue that will have you so skeptical you might think you're doing it wrong! But when wiped off, the stain reveals a dramatic bold or natural-looking lip shade with a lovely matte finish that won't be plastered on your champagne flute when it's time to take capture the iconic millennial Boomerang of glasses clinking!
The Stila One-Step Color-Correcting Facial Serum, which is designed to help you color-correct and brighten your complexion by combatting redness and dark spots with the combination of color theory and a nourishing blend of vitamins, minerals, and antioxidants. The reviewer below used this facial serum to cover up a bad sunburn, but it would also work well for correcting dark circles that pop up after a late night waiting in queue for concert tickets. 😮‍💨
A two-pack of dark spot corrector bar soap boasting a revitalizing and hydrating blend of retinol, hyaluronic acid, shea butter, turmeric, and vitamins C and E for a hydrating cleanse to help even skin tone and reduce dark spots wherever you want to. You'll stare at this yellow bar of soap in the shower and roll your eyes, but just wait until you're wearing less in the 95 degree temps and actually notice the difference.
An internet-famed Bum Bum Body Cream that boasts a blend of caffeine-packed guarana extract and coconut oil to help *visibly* firm and moisturize skin, so you can step out this season feeling as confident as ever. You're telling me, this lotion will help make my skin look TIGHT and it smells ah-may-zing?!
A stainless-steel blackhead spatula, which helps unclog pores using high-frequency vibrations, helping your skin better absorb your favorite toners, moisturizers, and serums. Each cycle runs for just five minutes before automatically shutting off, and the gunk leftover on the spatula is all you need to convert from a skeptic to a 5-star reviewer!
The top-rated, reviewer-beloved Hard as Hoof nourishing cream to help condition cuticles and promote nail growth with a nourishing combination of urea, shea butter, coconut oil, beeswax, and other reparative ingredients. Each time you moisturize your hands you'll think you're kidding yourself, but with consistent use you'll be showing off lengthy manicure-ready claws in no time!
A waterproof eyeliner stamp, which makes it easier than ever to nail a perfect winged liner look. It may not look like much (and costs even less!), but when you're getting ready to go meet the crew for karaoke it will take less time than rapping Nicki Minaj's "Monster" verse to get the *flick* you want and deserve!
An adorable polar bear hydrating eye stick featuring Icelandic glacier water to help reduce puffiness, tighten skin, and make dark circles seem as if they were never there. If you didn't believe in the magical properties of skin-tone-evening niacinamide and soothing seaweed before...use this after a long night of binge-watching and witness the disappearing trick yourself!
Vacation's Classic Whip SPF 30 — a water-resistant and sensitive skin-friendly sunscreen that comes in a literal whipped cream can! You'll boggle the mind of any onlooker as you apply this forbidden "dessert for your skin", and it's so lightweight you might not switch back to whichever sunscreen you were using before!
A bottle of sulfate-free biotin shampoo, which doubles as a clarifying shampoo to help remove product buildup *and* thicken the appearance of your lovely tresses. Reviewers are amazed with how quickly it works, reporting less shed hair!
Essence's "What the Fake!" Plumping Lip Filler with a moisturizing blend of hyaluronic acid and vitamin E, so you can show off the JUICIEST pout on this side of the Mississippi. You might scoff, and it might tingle a little, but the results are 100% worth it.
A moisturizing bruise cream for anyone prone to bumping into chairs, stumbling, or accidentally hitting yourself — whoops! This cream is formulated with arnica, which can help reduce the appearance of discoloration, swelling, or bruises and speed up the healing process. With this cream in your back pocket, you won't have to cancel plans to avoid showing up with a random bruise from running into your dresser in the morning!
The TikTok famous Lumify Eye Drops to help reduce redness in record time. It didn't climb its way to being a number one seller for no reason — according to reviewers, you see results in just minutes! This will really come in handy now that allergy season is here to stay, so you'll want it in your purse alongside tissues. 🤧
The splurge-worthy Shark FlexStyle system, which is designed for drying and styling with a set of interchangeable attachments for you to achieve the volume and style of your dreams with minimal heat damage and quick drying times. It may not be completely heatless, but if you told anyone in the early 2000s you could complete your daily hair routine with only one product, they would have laughed in your face!
Or a RobeCurls heatless hair curler with luxe satin to help keep your tresses moisturized and frizz-free throughout the day. Simply wrap your hair around this flexible rod (yup, just one!) and wear it to sleep like a headband. When you wake up and remove it, you'll be obsessed with your voluminous, bouncy curls, ringlets, or beach waves and already being halfway through your morning routine!
A tea tree mask kit with a powder-to-jelly formula that offers a professional esthetician vibe from the comfort of your home. Don't be surprised when you start feeling the gelatinous formula practically sculpt to your face, getting into every fine line or wrinkle to help soothe and hydrate your skin all over. At first, the jelly might feel like a gimmick until you're enjoying the cooling feeling on every pore and wondering why you haven't used this before!
An under-eye brightener that's designed with a lightweight, color-balancing formula infused with hydrating hyaluronic acid and nourishing shea butter for a reliable coverage solution. Color-balancing in makeup is truly nothing short of practical magic...especially if it can disappear dark circles and under-eye bags!
A pair of teeth-whitening pens to help remove years (!!!) of staining from your pearly whites, simply by applying a thin layer twice a day! Coffee, red wine, chocolate, and other things that stain your teeth no longer have to be your nemesis after adding this pen to your routine — you'll wish you started using this years ago!
MagicMinerals AirBrush Foundation, which has become a fan-favorite for reviewers over 30 for its easy application and stunning Photoshop-worthy results. Simply spray the lightweight foundation on the included brush (so no worrying about covering your lashes or brows) and marvel at how it glides onto your skin and delivers a flawless complexion! Spray on foundation? That doesn't look a mess? You better believe it!
I Dew Care "Tap Secret" mattifying powder shampoo, a benzene-free non-aerosol formula that you simply sprinkle onto your roots and massage into your scalp for quick cleansing after a hard workout. You might be asking yourself: Could a powder really let me skip a wash day? Well, the cleansing formula helps eliminate grease and oil along your roots and scalp, so your hair will even look and smell fresh after a little zhuzing!

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Labubu, the plush toy from China's Pop Mart is a social media darling, but the toothy little monsters are far from an overnight success. Having appeared a decade ago, Labubus may have finally cemented their place in the collectible toy market for years to come. The Labubu, by artist and illustrator Kasing Lung, first appeared with pointed ears and pointy teeth, in three picture books inspired by Nordic mythology in 2015. In 2019 Lung struck a deal with Pop Mart, a company that caters to toy connoisseurs and influencers, to sell Labubu figurines. But it wasn't until Pop Mart started selling Labubu plush toys on key rings in 2023 that the toothy monsters suddenly seemed to be everywhere, including in the hands of Rihanna, Kim Kardashian and NBA star Dillon Brooks. K-pop singer Lisa of Blackpink began posting images of hers for her more than 100 million followers on Instagram and on TikTok, where Labubu pandemonium has broken out. There are 1.4 million #Labubu TikTok posts and counting, videos of fans unboxing them, showing styles inspired by them, and of course, Labubu cosplay. Fans have latched on to Labubu's mashup of play and fashion, making them accessories on handbags, backpacks and belts, or hanging them from car mirrors. 'The character has evolved into a collectible and style symbol, resonating with fans who connect with its quirky aesthetic and unique backstory,' Emily Brough, Popmart's head of IP licensing in the Americas, said. Labubu has been a bonanza for Pop Mart. Its revenue more than doubled in 2024 to 13.04 billion yuan ($1.81 billion), thanks in part to its elvish monster. Revenue from Pop Mart's plush toys soared more than 1,200% in 2024, nearly 22% of its overall revenue, according to the company's annual report. Aside from their ability to pique the interest of toy aficionados and fashionistas, Labubu latched on to the blind box phenomenon, where the purchaser doesn't know exactly which version of the plush toy they'll get. And Pop Mart made sure there is a Labubu for everyone, regardless of income. Most are priced in a wide rage between $20 and $300, with certain collaborations or limited editions priced higher, according to Brough. Unlike many toys, Labubu devotees include a large number of adults. Buyers ages 18 and over drove a year-over-year increase of more than $800 million in the U.S. toy market in 2024, according to market research firm Circana. Adult shoppers, mostly female, bought the toys for themselves. In 2025's first quarter, toy sales for those ages 18 and over rose 12% from the prior-year period. At $1.8 billion, adults also accounted for the highest spending among all age groups in the quarter. Like many retailers, Pop Mart is actively monitoring negotiations between the U.S. and just about every one of its trading partners as prices may be impacted. The situation with China is at the forefront, with President Donald Trump saying on Friday that the country 'violated' an agreement with the United States on trade talks. Right now Pop Mart, whose products are manufactured across Asia, says that it is continuously scaling production and expanding distribution across its online shop, retail stores and blind box vending machines to meet increasing demand. Short supply has led to long lines at stores and at least one physical fight at a shopping center in the United Kingdom. Pop Mart said in an Instagram post late last month that it was temporarily suspending all in-store and blind box machine sales in the U.K. Peter Shipman, head of Europe, said in a Facebook post that the company is currently working on a new method to distribute toys to stores. Resellers have become problematic and many Labubu fans are still willing to pay exorbitant price markups. Kena Flynn was at The Grove shopping center in Los Angeles recently when she stumbled upon some Labubus being sold at a kiosk. Flynn said in a TikTok on Sunday that the prices were 'really bad,' but her boyfriend bought two anyway. 'At a certain point, you can't buy them,' Flynn said in her video. 'I just want a Labubu and I cannot buy one from Pop Mart, so here we are.' Looking to keep up with the overwhelming demand, Pop Mart says it's on track for 50 more retail locations in the U.S. by the end of the year. That'll give shoppers more chances to hunt for Labubus, as Pop Mart says it's planning multiple new Labubu releases tied to seasonal moments and holidays throughout the rest of the year.

Is Kylie Jenner's surgery revelation a setback for beauty standards?
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Cosmetic surgery has, despite its obvious prevalence, long been taboo among the rich and famous. The few stars who do publicly discuss procedures are usually bowing to intense speculation or pressure to account for changes in their appearance. Even then, celebrities often share less invasive procedures (Ariana Grande admitting that she previously had lip fillers and Botox), offer medical justification (Zac Efron saying his newly chiseled features were necessitated by a jaw injury) or caveat their decision with regret (Bella Hadid telling Vogue she wished she had 'kept the nose of my ancestors'). So, when 'Keeping up with the Kardashians' star Kylie Jenner detailed her breast augmentation on TikTok this week, it was not just the specificity that surprised fans — it was the jubilant tone and casual, almost offhand manner with which she did it. Responding to a direct request from content creator Rachel Leary ('please can you just tell me/us/anyone that's interested, what it is you asked for when you had your boobs done?' Leary had implored in a video), Jenner unexpectedly replied with the implants' exact size, type and placement, as well as the Beverly Hills surgeon responsible. '445 cc, moderate profile, half under the muscle!!!!! silicone!!! garth fisher!!! hope this helps lol,' she commentedwrote in a comment, which has since been deleted. In some quarters, Jenner's frankness was celebrated as the act of a 'girl's girl' (which is, incidentally, the name that her multi-million-dollar company, Kylie Cosmetics, gave to a shade of lip plumper). 'The people's princess for real,' read one reply on TikTok. 'This is why she's for the girls,' wrote another user. Being open about body modification makes total sense to me in this day and age… (But) beauty imperatives aren't victimless. They teach us to internalize our external appearance as our worth. Elise Hu, author of "Flawless: Lessons in Looks and Culture from the K-Beauty Capital" The beauty mogul was also praised by several fashion publications for her apparent openness. Harper's Bazaar heralded a 'new era of plastic surgery transparency,' with the magazine's beauty director Jenna Rosenstein contending that celebrity secrecy is 'gatekeeping the names of reputable, trustworthy plastic surgeons.' Jenner follows in the footsteps of her own mother, Kris, whose representative last month reportedly took the unusual step of confirming that the star's much-hyped facial transformation (where she appeared to reverse age by decades) was the work of plastic surgeon Dr. Steven Levine. Various other stars have, in this age of bare-all social media, gone public about not only what they've had done, but who carried it out — from Kelly Ripa shouting out her dermatologist (while getting Botox injections) to Amy Schumer publicly thanking the doctor who performed liposuction following her pregnancy. In 2021, fashion designer Marc Jacobs documented his facelift recovery, complete with blood-stained post-op selfies, on Instagram. For better or worse, Jenner's frank revelation further chips away at the surgery taboo. But some critics see her comment as an overly flippant endorsement of an invasive procedure that can lead to illness or infection and has been linked to BIA-ALCL, a form of non-Hodgkin's lymphoma (a cancer of the immune system). Breast augmentations are on the rise in the US: The country's surgeons carried out over 300,000 of the procedures in 2023, up from 212,500 in 2000, according to the latest data from the American Society of Plastic Surgeons. But so, too, are breast implant removals, which jumped 9% in 2023 alone. Indeed, Jenner has previously expressed regret about getting implants. 'I had beautiful breasts. Just gorgeous. Perfect size, perfect everything,' she said on a 2023 episode of 'The Kardashians,' recounting the breast augmentation she underwent before the birth of her daughter Stormi in 2018. 'And I just wish, obviously, I never got them done to begin with.' According to Elise Hu, author of 'Flawless: Lessons in Looks and Culture from the K-Beauty Capital,' Jenner's recent admission reflects 'how body modification has become normalized.' 'Being open about body modification makes total sense to me in this day and age, because I understand it as part of a larger culture in which good looks lead to social and economic capital, and 'working hard' means working hard to change your appearance to whatever fits the conventional norm,' said Hu, a former NPR bureau chief in South Korea (where an estimated one-fifth of women have undergone cosmetic surgery), over email. Jenner's transparency may nonetheless serve to reinforce unrealistic — or for many women, unaffordable — beauty standards, Hu added: 'Beauty imperatives aren't victimless. They teach us to internalize our external appearance as our worth, and in hyper capitalism, offering specific doctors to see or amounts of silicone to buy (and) situate our looks as a matter of choice and resources — that if you have enough money, you can buy an external look that we've (wrongly) equated to worthiness.' 'It also problematizes the bodies whose boobs aren't just right or don't 'fit' one way or the other,' Hu added. 'Kylie offering a 'how to' for her breast augmentation is part of the way visual and beauty industries create a market for 'solving' whatever they've problematized about our bodies.'

Is Kylie Jenner's surgery revelation a setback for beauty standards?
Is Kylie Jenner's surgery revelation a setback for beauty standards?

CNN

time9 hours ago

  • CNN

Is Kylie Jenner's surgery revelation a setback for beauty standards?

Cosmetic surgery has, despite its obvious prevalence, long been taboo among the rich and famous. The few stars who do publicly discuss procedures are usually bowing to intense speculation or pressure to account for changes in their appearance. Even then, celebrities often share less invasive procedures (Ariana Grande admitting that she previously had lip fillers and Botox), offer medical justification (Zac Efron saying his newly chiseled features were necessitated by a jaw injury) or caveat their decision with regret (Bella Hadid telling Vogue she wished she had 'kept the nose of my ancestors'). So, when 'Keeping up with the Kardashians' star Kylie Jenner detailed her breast augmentation on TikTok this week, it was not just the specificity that surprised fans — it was the jubilant tone and casual, almost offhand manner with which she did it. Responding to a direct request from content creator Rachel Leary ('please can you just tell me/us/anyone that's interested, what it is you asked for when you had your boobs done?' Leary had implored in a video), Jenner unexpectedly replied with the implants' exact size, type and placement, as well as the Beverly Hills surgeon responsible. '445 cc, moderate profile, half under the muscle!!!!! silicone!!! garth fisher!!! hope this helps lol,' she commentedwrote in a comment, which has since been deleted. In some quarters, Jenner's frankness was celebrated as the act of a 'girl's girl' (which is, incidentally, the name that her multi-million-dollar company, Kylie Cosmetics, gave to a shade of lip plumper). 'The people's princess for real,' read one reply on TikTok. 'This is why she's for the girls,' wrote another user. Being open about body modification makes total sense to me in this day and age… (But) beauty imperatives aren't victimless. They teach us to internalize our external appearance as our worth. Elise Hu, author of "Flawless: Lessons in Looks and Culture from the K-Beauty Capital" The beauty mogul was also praised by several fashion publications for her apparent openness. Harper's Bazaar heralded a 'new era of plastic surgery transparency,' with the magazine's beauty director Jenna Rosenstein contending that celebrity secrecy is 'gatekeeping the names of reputable, trustworthy plastic surgeons.' Jenner follows in the footsteps of her own mother, Kris, whose representative last month reportedly took the unusual step of confirming that the star's much-hyped facial transformation (where she appeared to reverse age by decades) was the work of plastic surgeon Dr. Steven Levine. Various other stars have, in this age of bare-all social media, gone public about not only what they've had done, but who carried it out — from Kelly Ripa shouting out her dermatologist (while getting Botox injections) to Amy Schumer publicly thanking the doctor who performed liposuction following her pregnancy. In 2021, fashion designer Marc Jacobs documented his facelift recovery, complete with blood-stained post-op selfies, on Instagram. For better or worse, Jenner's frank revelation further chips away at the surgery taboo. But some critics see her comment as an overly flippant endorsement of an invasive procedure that can lead to illness or infection and has been linked to BIA-ALCL, a form of non-Hodgkin's lymphoma (a cancer of the immune system). Breast augmentations are on the rise in the US: The country's surgeons carried out over 300,000 of the procedures in 2023, up from 212,500 in 2000, according to the latest data from the American Society of Plastic Surgeons. But so, too, are breast implant removals, which jumped 9% in 2023 alone. Indeed, Jenner has previously expressed regret about getting implants. 'I had beautiful breasts. Just gorgeous. Perfect size, perfect everything,' she said on a 2023 episode of 'The Kardashians,' recounting the breast augmentation she underwent before the birth of her daughter Stormi in 2018. 'And I just wish, obviously, I never got them done to begin with.' According to Elise Hu, author of 'Flawless: Lessons in Looks and Culture from the K-Beauty Capital,' Jenner's recent admission reflects 'how body modification has become normalized.' 'Being open about body modification makes total sense to me in this day and age, because I understand it as part of a larger culture in which good looks lead to social and economic capital, and 'working hard' means working hard to change your appearance to whatever fits the conventional norm,' said Hu, a former NPR bureau chief in South Korea (where an estimated one-fifth of women have undergone cosmetic surgery), over email. Jenner's transparency may nonetheless serve to reinforce unrealistic — or for many women, unaffordable — beauty standards, Hu added: 'Beauty imperatives aren't victimless. They teach us to internalize our external appearance as our worth, and in hyper capitalism, offering specific doctors to see or amounts of silicone to buy (and) situate our looks as a matter of choice and resources — that if you have enough money, you can buy an external look that we've (wrongly) equated to worthiness.' 'It also problematizes the bodies whose boobs aren't just right or don't 'fit' one way or the other,' Hu added. 'Kylie offering a 'how to' for her breast augmentation is part of the way visual and beauty industries create a market for 'solving' whatever they've problematized about our bodies.'

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