• Springflower16@lemmy.ca
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    1 month ago

    This is a totally different, very juvenile looking face filter??! 😑 it’s the first photo on her latest post, so she either likes to push limits and see if anyone will call her out, or she actually thinks she’s a shape shifter? I don’t understand at all. Holy jeez.

    • Whaaambulence@lemmy.ca
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      1 month ago

      A month ago her body was square as can be. No shape…but now she has an hourglass figure? Cool story bro…

      • facialSwelling@lemmy.ca
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        1 month ago

        Sarah’s post yesterday was an undeniable display of vanity and deception. Without filters, Botox, fillers, or Joanna’s relentless support, she has no real image to maintain. Joanna’s loyalty to Sarah has crossed the line into obsession—how else can one justify standing by someone who repeatedly lies? Women are fed up with Sarah’s deceit, and the increasing demand to boycott Knix makes that clear. The distrust toward Sarah has inevitably drawn attention to Joanna Griffiths and Knix as well. With Meg Boggs speaking out on social media, the negative reviews of Joanna on Glassdoor, and the flood of online comments about Knix, the brand’s reputation is plummeting. Why should anyone trust anything associated with Sarah or Joanna anymore?

        • cupidslazydart@lemmy.ca
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          1 month ago

          What did Meg Boggs say? I used to follow her but unfollowed ages ago because the non stop ads were annoying, but I did enjoy her content besides that.

          • ChupaChups@lemmy.ca
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            1 month ago

            Meg, once a devoted ambassador for Knix, wore their panties for years, swathed in the comfort of assumed integrity. Then, without much fanfare, she posted her discontent. Vengeful? No, that’s not Meg’s way. But her quiet disillusionment echoed a sentiment shared by many—a chorus of voices rising from the seams of Knix’s customer base, all recounting similar experiences.

            In their responses, a dangerous undercurrent surfaces: the brittle idealism of the “Girl Boss” and the ever-echoed mantra of “women supporting women.” Noble on the surface, but what happens when the bonds crack, and loyalty becomes a façade?

            Knix, despite their glossy promises, holds PFAS within their threads, a fact that stretches beyond Joanna Griffiths’ denials. Two lawsuits have already unraveled her claims of a PFAS-free product, but the denial persists, like a stain that won’t wash out, no matter how hard one scrubs the fabric of truth.