We need to talk about that Renee Zellweger photo.
And not in the way you might think.
Here is the photo of Renee that everyone has been talking about:
But let’s take a second to zoom out on that image. Here’s the full image:
HOW IS IT POSSIBLE that the world only reported that RENEE was looking a bit strange?
This is Renee’s boyfriend of two years, Doyle Bramhall II. He is a musician and keeps all of his lyrics and musical knowledge stored in his hair.
“It’s okay babe, I’m pulling focus.”
At the very least, they do look happy together. Renee, Doyle, and the ‘fro. Hairily ever after.
More photos from the event that sent the Internet into plastic-surgery-rumour-spins:
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Top Comments
I must have been under a rock lately because I hadn't heard about this at all. I didn't even know it was Renee, she looks like a completely different person. Such a shame because I thought she looked so lovely and different from the other women in Hollywood - cute, quirky and feisty. She does look lovely now as well but she's no longer recognisable.
I will always support anyone doing whatever they like to their own body, I do though worry about the pressure that women - and increasingly men - feel to live up to some mostly unobtainable standard. I have fears that in 20 years time everyone will look pretty much the same, we will all be homogenised. We will lose the cool 'flaws' in people that makes them unique. Owen Wilson's broken nose; Cindy Crawford's mole; Madonna's tooth gap; Freddie Mercury's buck teeth; Barbara Streisand's nose - they all give them a cool distinction and in my opinion makes them more attractive and I can think of plenty of people in my life who I think that way of as well.
As I said, people have a right to alter their appearance as they see fit but I do hope that Renee did it from her own violation and not because she felt she had to fit a stereotype. I do feel sad as well that she couldn't see how great she looked before. I hope that we can teach the upcoming generations to embrace their bodies and society starts to appreciate people's inner chacertistics more - teach kids how much value there is being funny, smart, sensitive, ambitious, creative, socially aware, kind, compassionate, assertive, loving, generous, fair, curious, etc and also to honour to love their bodies for what they can do - walk, talk, jump, skip, sit, eat, etc - rather than what they look like.
I think anything Reese did to her face would be an improvement. She may be a great actree but she certainly didnt look attractive.