The blue plastic pump-bottle sits on the second shelf of the medicine cabinet, right next to a half-empty tin of mustache wax Ari hasn’t used since . It is a sleek, clinical-looking vessel, its label dominated by a calm, cerulean banner that promises “Balance for Combination Skin.”
To Ari, this bottle represents more than just a morning ritual; it represents an identity. It is his membership card to a very specific tribe of people who believe their foreheads are a different ecosystem than their cheeks.
He reached for it this morning without looking. It’s an autonomic response now, a muscle memory developed over of habit. It started with a quiz in a magazine he found in a waiting room-one of those “What’s Your Skin Type?” flowcharts that inevitably leads 63% of the population to the same confusing middle ground.
You’re not oily enough to be a teenager in a pizza commercial, but you’re not dry enough to be a desert explorer. You are “Combination.” You are the grey area. You are the person the industry built an entire aisle for.
The Foley Artist’s Perspective
I work as a Foley artist. My job is to recreate the sounds of reality using things that are decidedly not real. If I need
