![]() ![]() “Growing up around drug dealers and the women that I hung out with, they wore furs-long sables and silver foxes and red lipstick. You want a hockey jersey? It’s whatever you feel you can do with whatever you can afford,” she defined. You want Timberland boots to rock with your furs. What can you afford? What can you do with it? You want stones on your nails. Touching on her ghetto fabulous fashions and expanding on the definition, “Ghetto fabulous is just, when you come from the hood, you at your flyest. “When I saw Salt’s hair was platinum, it was done. Every little Black girl wanted wavy hair.”īut when she discovered Salt-N-Pepa’s iconic asymmetrical cuts and color, platinum blonde tresses became her signature. It looked nice when she pressed it, but when it was kinky, it just looked nuts.” She added, “Because of the texture, growing up I always wished I had wavy hair. “It felt like cotton,” she explained “My mother pressed it, and she put all these ponytails in it. Mary’s struggle to love herself extended to her natural hair. Nothing’s ever good enough,” she explained. “If you’ve been beat down mentally by someone, you’re never pretty enough. The Power Book II: Ghost actress covers Elle Magazine where she opened up about the emotional abuse she sustained in her last marriage that left her feeling “beat down.”
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