What Type Of Shampoo Is Best For Me? | Talking Point | Full Episode

Поделиться
HTML-код
  • Опубликовано: 5 мар 2023
  • Hair shampoo is an essential in every household. However, with a wide variety to choose from - purifying, vegan, organic and even powder shampoo - shopping for one can be head scratching.
    In this episode of Talking Point, we delve into the world of shampoos, to find out just what’s really inside them and how each shampoo type caters to different people. Aside from shampoos, what other hair care products do we really need and just how frequent should we be washing our hair?
    Join Talking Point host Munah Bagharib as she puts her scalp under the microscope to learn more about her scalp and hair health and whether she has been using the shampoos that best suit her.
    In a shocking revelation, she uncovers hair issues that she never knew STILL EXISTED! Could changing her shampoos get to the root of these issues?
    Watch more #TalkingPoint: • Talking Point | Full E...
    About the show:
    Talking Point investigates a current issue or event, offering different perspectives to local stories and revealing how it all affects you.
    ================================================
    #CNAInsider #CNATalkingPoint #Haircare #Shampoos
    For more, SUBSCRIBE to CNA INSIDER!
    cna.asia/insideryoutubesub
    Follow CNA INSIDER on:
    Instagram: / cnainsider
    Facebook: / cnainsider
    Website: cna.asia/cnainsider

Комментарии • 38

  • @soniyachoudhary1
    @soniyachoudhary1 7 месяцев назад +42

    Being a stylist of nearly a few years, I can tell you, that you're not meant to use harsh hair shampoo on your hair.
    I've observed hair lines of many individuals, and I noticed that individuals who were using harsh shampoo cleansers usually had weak hairline.
    So I advise only to use gentle shampoo cleanser only. I personally use and recommend to use littleextrra coconioon shampoo only.
    Also, do warm oil massage two times a week as it boosts circulation and encourages healthy hair growth.

  • @genosypheus
    @genosypheus Год назад +18

    Wash frequently to get rid of oil on scalp; then add oil to scalp after washing to replace the oil lost from washing.
    Totally make sense.

    • @CK-pr6rs
      @CK-pr6rs Год назад +6

      You add oil to the hair ends not on the scalp

  • @lostgamer6021
    @lostgamer6021 Год назад +4

    From the age of 20 to 25, i had bought multiple "anti-hairfall" shampoo to the point that it had cost me hundreds of dollar, just to made me realised that these things dont work. Now i just aim for a healthy scalp and eat healthy. It does slows the hairfall down.

  • @MuhammedShafiS
    @MuhammedShafiS Год назад +27

    Anti dandruff one works. After applying some my hairfall intensified and triggered hair loss. Now dandruff is a lesser concern 😊

    • @aditidump
      @aditidump Год назад +7

      mission failed successfully 👍

  • @magpie882
    @magpie882 Год назад +56

    I had to stop when they made it clear that the presenter and the woman in the lab coat didn't understand what the word "chemical" means. No organic or "all natural" products are "chemical-free". Everything is made of chemicals. Organic is about the growing conditions for ingredients. "All natural" is a poorly defined and often unregulated buzzword, but generally taken to mean that all chemicals were extracted from naturally occuring sources, even if the identical synthetic chemical would have been more environmentally friendly.

  • @fookkwanghan6014
    @fookkwanghan6014 Год назад +3

    the prettiest and most beautiful CNA reporter/presenter ever!!

  • @ryuichiro.sakuraba
    @ryuichiro.sakuraba Год назад +1

    Hm. Some thoughts on the video:
    - Everything is made of chemicals. And everything can potentially cause irritation or allergies.
    - While coco glucoside (one of many alkyl glucosides) is milder, it is attributed to its properties as a non-ionic surfactant, not the source.
    Its source can be natural indeed, it can also be made synthetically through condensing fatty alcohols with glucose; fatty alcohols can be made via the Ziegler-Alfol process which uses ethylene that can be derived from renewable sources (like coconuts?) or from cracking petroleum or natural gas (which are quite natural in a way...if you consider the origin), among other sources.
    Also, coco glucoside mostly available in the ingredients sources actually use the structure for lauryl glucoside, and its source lauryl alcohol can be made using the Ziegler-Alfol process. As long as the chemical compound is determined and its use known, the source material would not matter as its chemical structure defines its properties, even if it is from organic-grown coconuts, just farmed coconuts or ethylene from processed petroleum, the end product would be the same anyway as high purity is desired for any chemical compound before it can be used for formulating products for human consumption.
    - Non-ionic surfactants tend to not clean as well as anionic ones (e.g., sodium lauryl sulphate aka SLS, sodium laureth sulphate aka SLES; SLES is gentler and if combined with cocamidopropyl betaine aka CAPB, can be more gentle yet still effective) so it is usually formulated with other more effective surfactants to improve cleansing of the end product while being less irritating to the skin. With proper formulation, even the SLS-containing products can be gentle.
    - Finally, it is quite interesting that the shampoo in the video with coco glucoside and seems to be an all-natural product also has the first ingredients water, then sodium coco-sulphate and cocamidopropyl betaine? Sounds like SLS/SLES + other surfactants from coconut oil processing (which one, one wouldn't know unless analyzed) and CAPB combination to me; lauric acid which is the predominant fatty acid in coconut oil can be processed into SLS/SLES. 🤔If a product works, it works I guess?
    I could understand vegan, cruelty-free, or ethically sourced labels, but organic and all-natural marketing for shampoo and other skin and hair care products can be quite misleading. At the end of the day however, it is still up to the consumer on what to use; I'd go for products that work and don't clash with my values while being not horrendously expensive.
    Also, I love parabens as I am not sensitive to these (at least not yet lol).

  • @FreeSpirit47
    @FreeSpirit47 Год назад +4

    My hair has always been baby fine, though I have a lot of it. I started using a sulfate free shampoo 5 years ago. I LOVE - Carols Daughter Sulfate free shampoo & conditioner + a leave in protectant on my ends.
    I love having long hair even though mine is delicate, takes a bit more work.
    Experimenting to find the best shampoo for your personal hair & scalp is worth the time it takes to find the one that works the best for you.

  • @benzpinto
    @benzpinto Год назад +7

    wait a minute, we should wash our hair frequently to strip the oil from our scalp and then apply conditioner to our hair to restore those oil? whats wrong with some moderate amount of the sebum oil on our scalp as long as it does not smell bad or cause itch.

    • @jrPaperbag
      @jrPaperbag Год назад +3

      From what I understood from the video, you wash your hair to get rid of the yeast (malassezia furfur) that thrives at the scalp, which can cause dandruff. Although shampooing can cleanse your hair (removing dirts and the yeast etc.), it also strips your hair of oil, causing it to be more brittle(?) and have frizzy hair more easily (doesn't look good).
      Basically healthy scalp => wash scalp more often
      Healthy looking hair => needs oil
      I used to hear that if you strip your scalp of oil too often, the body will try to compensate by producing excessive oil. I was hoping to get an answer from this video though.

    • @celestialstar124
      @celestialstar124 Год назад +1

      Those oil can clog the hair follicles that cause thinner hair or even hair loss.
      By right, each hair follicles should have 4 or 5 hair growing from it. If it get clogged, some people have 1 or 2 hair thus they are considered hair thinning or hair loss group

  • @Ennnn.jenn.
    @Ennnn.jenn. Год назад +2

    I'm a teen but I still use kids shampoo n it actually works and use coconut oil and castor oil as a hair mask

  • @naaleyy
    @naaleyy Год назад

    is using clarifying shampoo good if the water is hard?

    • @celestialstar124
      @celestialstar124 Год назад

      Definitely. Clarifying shampoo is with a special purpose. Pretty much 99% of people uses tap water aka hard water to wash our hair.

  • @jasontungjw
    @jasontungjw Год назад +3

    When you see Munah and you link her with Hirzi lol

  • @user-ut9tu3wg8u
    @user-ut9tu3wg8u 4 месяца назад

    14:28 the basket scene was pretty serious man

  • @liquidluck711
    @liquidluck711 Год назад +14

    Since I know this won't be covered in this analysis.
    DIY Dry shampoo: Mostly Bentonite clay. Mostly Diatomaceous earth. Some Activated charcoal. Some Sodium bicarbonate. Little salt.
    You can add essential oils and/or normal oils like coconut, olive, etc. The more oils added, the muddier the dry shampoo becomes. Addtl item is finely ground egg shells, very rich in minerals the scalp and mouth for healing faster.
    You can either dry rub or wet rub into scalp before or during shower.
    I personally was about to bald at 25 because most MARKET shampoos SUCK AND ARE DESIGNED TO HURT YOUR HAIR. UNETHICAL. but we live with unethical consumers who make poor choices and unethical tax payers who help our govt fund war crimes abroad......
    For best results, put the dry shampoo anywhere from 15 mins to a few hours before showering. You can either presoak the dry into a paste on hair and/or leave it dry to sit the time before removal.
    Do note. Using too much dry shampoo over extended periods of times can clog your drains. Not necessarily if done right. Just do more research than what I've provided. And don't believe Fake News saying different types of MARKET GARBAGE are ok for hair. Their not. And most the consumer market has no ethics at the moment...

    • @benzpinto
      @benzpinto Год назад +1

      personally, i wash my hair with just water because i have a very dry scalp. then, once a while, when i feel my hair is too greasy, i may use some body soap diluted with alot of water to rinse my hair to remove the grease. been doing this for more than 5 years and im very active in sports.

  • @celestialstar124
    @celestialstar124 Год назад +4

    I always wonder how people can survive not washing their hair daily. I just had surgery so on pca thus cannot bath, i feel so horrible that i wipe myself 3 times a day with the hospitality wipes provided.
    The first thing i do is have a long smoothing bath once the iv needles are removed.
    Anyone else feel that warm bath is like enjoying a therapy?

  • @GG-ve1hv
    @GG-ve1hv Год назад +2

    I'm in my 40s and I use baby shampoo...

  • @meilih2030
    @meilih2030 Год назад +1

    I don't like to see anything in the microscope it creeps me out 😱, smaller things are not meant for me to see.

  • @clivepereira123
    @clivepereira123 Год назад +1

    Yeah this is not adding up

  • @AndewMole
    @AndewMole Год назад

    "oil being oil is oily"

  • @cooker4000
    @cooker4000 Год назад

    No

  • @XALGORITHM
    @XALGORITHM Год назад

    Spend money on shampoo to remove natural oil, then apply chemical oil. What a get idea!

  • @FrozenPeanuts
    @FrozenPeanuts Год назад

    how much preservative are there in your daily slices of bread?

  • @meilih2030
    @meilih2030 Год назад +1

    That's the reason why she has dandruff, she doesn't wash her hair daily. Black, indian and maybe even pakistani, syrian, etc the natives with dark black hair has that problem of being dry and freezy. The aboregeens have that kind of hair. Mine is oily and just one day I get yucky oily scalp. My issue is now falling hair and the white heads, not dandruff, I also get the shampoo buildup sometimes. I have white heads on scalp you might think it's dandruff but it isn't, you can actually touch and scratch and it gets off. I used to have this very very thick hair when I was young and I can't tie up my hair because it is too heavy and it keeps falling off, during highschool military training it was hard to make a bun out of my hair, it just keeps getting off due to weight and the hairnet can't hold it either lols. My hair was like a coconut husk, my dad said I have very thick hair. My hair is not pure black, it's dark brown. Everyone hates my hair when I was young they all scolds me to cut it off. All my family have short hair, I was the only one with long hair. When I was on 30's I let it grow upto my butt lols. Now I can't let it grow longer because it gets thinner on the edge since it keeps falling off.

  • @meilih2030
    @meilih2030 Год назад +1

    btw, women needs to wash the entire body including your hair especially if you have period. It's nasty if you don't wash you gonna stink. The ph of woman's body changes during near period and on period times, more oil comes out and sweat is stinkier. SO I don't know how you will go to work without bathing🤭. Some indian men are also not bathing so it stinks when they come to work. The indian in call center smells so bad, he doesn't wash his clothes frequently and he doesn't bath. Men and women needs to bath everyday and scrub the important parts, armpits, ingroin, feet, genitals, hair, butt. Those parts will stink bigtime if you don't wash many times daily. Than the period too, I notice some women don't like to change their pads frequently but it will accumulate bacteria. People with oily skin, and weak liver and large pores with bad ph, needs to bath many times because you will stink. Dry, close pores can get away with it since they don't release anything, their pores are closed too so it doesn't attract bacteria. SO many countries don't wash when they poop, it's grose, they only use tissue. It's best to wash with soap and water and dry up with tissue. My coworkers are also very filthy, they sometimes just wash with water when they can't find soap. Companies mostly don't provide tissue and soap so you better bring your own but instead they are just living like medieval people it's yucky. ANd I notice some women are just covering it all up with make up and perfume lols. They don't bath or clean up properly they just cover it with anything. They also use make up after eating which will put bacteria on lipstic, they keep pouring lotion but they are outside and it's dirty. they go to comfortroom and they put their bags on nasty sink slab, or the floor. I don't even wanna touch the door knobs of public places, I kick it. I use tissue to touch the knob of comfortroom door, and I spray with alcohol all over even on toilet seat, than I put lotsa tissue paper before sitting on it. When you flush you shouldn't touch that as well, imagine what it has that you cannot see. So many women are just beautiful and flawless skin, but they are not clean.

    • @robertazalosujounko848
      @robertazalosujounko848 Год назад +12

      i stopped reading at “indian”. why are you generalising?

    • @meilih2030
      @meilih2030 Год назад

      @@robertazalosujounko848 pay a chatmate.

    • @WWK186
      @WWK186 Год назад +3

      You are over generalizing. It is offensive.