People on social media can do anything to become famous nowadays. There was one influencer who got famous for looking like a very weird version of Angelina Jolie and posting her eerie pictures on social media. It did seem like a result of extreme plastic surgery.?
This woman, named Sahar Tabar, was then sent to prison in the year 2019 for?alleged 'corruption' and 'blasphemy'.?However, after being released from prison, the woman gave an interview and she looked fairly normal.?
The?social media star?confirmed that her skills are simply a trick of the eye instead of the result of extreme surgery.?The government-run media publication did not translate what the influencer revealed within the interview, but quoted her as saying: "What you saw on Instagram was the computer effects I used to create the image."
In the interview, the woman also said that she wanted fame through the app Instagram, and this seemed to catch everyone's attention. "Cyberspace was an easy way. It was much easier than becoming an actor. I'm sure I will not even put Instagram on my phone anymore, let alone have a page," she had said.
Tabar rose to prominence in 2017 when she claimed she had 50 surgeries to look like Hollywood actress Angelina Jolie. She later said that her look was mostly achieved through makeup and editing.
The woman had previously mentioned how she underwent surgeries such as a nose job, lip fillers, and liposuction. However, she insisted that most of her bizarre appearance was because of make-up and editing.
The woman was released from prison after there was public unrest regarding her going to prison. The protests began after it was alleged Mahsa Amini died in police custody for not wearing a hijab properly in Tehran. Amini was reportedly arrested by Iran's 'Morality Police' for leaving her hair partially uncovered. She reportedly died after falling into a coma following her arrest.
On September 17th, the anti-hijab protests were initiated at the funeral of Amini in the Kurdish town of Saqez, and have become the most challenging marches for Iran¡¯s leaders in recent years, with many calling for supreme leader Ayatollah Ali Khamenei to step down following the unrest.
According to Iran's law, women have been forced to wear hijab in public since April 1983, regardless of whether they are visitors to the country or have differing religious views.
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