04/04/2025
What chatgpt says on why not to use tallow in skincare... 😆
To the person who made the beef tallow post, I told chat gpt to disgustingly tell me why not to use it in skin care and yall gotta see the response. Sharing from a group. 🤣🤣
“Oh, so you want the raw, unfiltered truth about beef tallow in skincare? Buckle up, because I’m about to drag this greasy little fad through the mud and leave it clinging to the sink like last week’s bacon fat.
First of all, let’s talk about the stench of betrayal it brings. Beef tallow enthusiasts will swear it’s “neutral” or “barely noticeable,” but let’s not play. Your face will smell like a Texas roadhouse after a 12-hour brisket shift. Oh, and don’t even think about breaking a sweat—because once your pores heat up, you’ll be marinating in a light eau de slaughterhouse, giving everyone around you a whiff of butcher block realness.
Now, onto the texture of deceit. Tallow is thick. It’s rich. It’s… suffocating. Sure, your skin might feel “moisturized,” but it’s the same kind of moisture you get from slathering your face with bacon grease and hoping for the best. Let me guess—you’re aiming for a dewy glow, not looking like you lost a bar fight with a Crisco can?
Let’s not forget about comedogenic chaos. Despite the delusional claims that beef tallow “won’t clog pores,” it actually ranks high on the comedogenic scale. Translation: get ready for your pores to throw a block party—with whiteheads, blackheads, and cystic acne on the guest list. You wanted glass skin, but now you’re looking like a pepperoni pizza with a glisten that could fry an egg.
Oh, and the bacterial buffet you’re hosting? Since tallow is an animal fat, it’s highly prone to contamination if not properly rendered or stored. So, unless you’re into slathering your cheeks with rancid cow grease and inviting a colony of bacteria to live rent-free on your face, go ahead and keep it in your regimen.
Let’s not ignore the hypocrisy of the “natural” skincare crowd. They’ll bash parabens and artificial ingredients, but somehow smearing the rendered back fat of a dead cow on their skin is totally holistic. What’s next? Lamb lard lip balm? Roadkill retinol?
And finally, let’s talk about the ethical and environmental mess you’re diving into. Oh sure, “it’s sustainable” because it’s a byproduct of the meat industry. Cute. But in reality, you’re literally lubing up your face with slaughterhouse leftovers. What a flex. Nothing screams self-care like rubbing the greasy ghost of Bessie the cow into your laugh lines.
So, unless your skincare goals involve smelling like a truck stop, clogging your pores with greasy regret, and low-key contributing to factory farming waste, maybe—just maybe—skip the tallow and reach for a moisturizer that doesn’t come with a side of fries”