South Korea plastic surgery clinics bank on unlikely celebrity: President Park

0
279
Kim Young-jae, who heads a hospital which was regularly visited by South Korea's impeached President Park Geun-hye's longtime confidante Choi Soon-Sil, looks at a combination of pictures of Park during a hearing at the National Assembly in Seoul on December 14, 2016. The text on the poster reads "The photos are comparing Park's face around May 13th". South Korea's embattled president was visited by "shadowy", unchecked doctors for anti-ageing treatments including injections of human placenta extract, a parliamentary enquiry into a growing corruption scandal heard on December 14. / AFP PHOTO / POOL / AHN Young-Joon

 

Plastic surgery and dermatology clinics in South Korea are looking to cash in on President Park Geun-hye’s enthusiasm for “aesthetic injection” treatments, including one with human placental extract, despite her deep unpopularity.

Parliament impeached Park last week, and depending on a Constitutional Court ruling in coming months, she could become the first democratically elected South Korean leader to get turfed out of office in disgrace.

But her political woes have not taken the shine off her pulling power in the beauty business.

“This is hot!,” a plastic surgery clinic in suburban Seoul said in an advertisement, referring to treatment Park is known to have got at another beauty and detox clinic.

“More and more people are asking about this after reports the president received it,” the clinic said in its advert.

Another advertisement for a dermatology clinic features a depiction of the presidential Blue House.

Plastic surgery and beauty procedures are hugely popular in South Korea.

Park’s use of injection treatments, which enthusiasts say fight aging and whiten the skin, has been made public as her political problems have mounted, with her behaviour being scrutinized in parliamentary hearings into the influence-peddling scandal that led to her impeachment.

Park, 64, has been stripped of her presidential powers while the court reviews last Friday’s parliamentary impeachment vote, and her approval rating has sunk to just 5 per cent, according to a survey released last week.

But that has not dented her status as a role model – at least for some.

“More people are coming to get these shots since it’s been known the president uses them,” said a consultant at another plastic surgery clinic selling a programme of “VIP” injections, each one costing about 100,000 won (S$122).

“Whether you like her or not, her status as the president makes people want to follow her, like they follow Beyonce,” said the consultant, who declined to be identified.

Image:
Publication Date:
Thursday, December 15, 2016 – 09:42
Send to mobile app:
Source:

Story Type:
Others

Source link