Julian reminisces on old hats that he used to wear when he was losing hair. Now that he got the hair transplant, he doesn’t need them anymore! Julian: One of the greatest things about living in a sunny climate is getting to drive around in a car with the top down. I love convertibles. It’s just so much fun. Any one that knows me knows I love cars. I’m a nut about cars and just driving them. I just love it. And I guess it started back in my 20′s. I mean I take drives and I get the hat off and the wind would be in your hair and it’s just a great feeling. But as I got into my 30′s, I’ve continued to do the same old thing but I get home after one of these long drives and my head would be sunburned because I was bald. And the sun, this great sunny climate would beat down on my head and burn my head. So I think all you guys can attest to this. When you start to thin, you start to buy more hats. And I’ve got this huge collection of baseball caps and come on guys, we’re all sentimental about our baseball caps. You remember where you got them. And I mean like my BMW hat. The salesman got me that as a gift after I bought the car. Oh, my Lotus Esprit Club. I have so much fun with that car club. We’d take a lot of drives and I wear this hat a lot you know … the sunburn. Another BMW hat, I don’t even know where I got this hat from. I mean the color, I’m not sure why I got that hat. Uhm, ah my Yankees hat. I mean my favorite team, my world champs. That’s a great one. And this is my …
Archive for September, 2011
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CBS 19 talks to Trinity Clinic Pediatrician Dr. David Osteen about sun exposure and children. Getting too much sun is bad for anyone, but it’s especially dangerous for babies, whose sensitive skin hasn’t developed enough layers of natural protection to withstand intense summer rays. “People don’t realize the concerns of exposing a child less than [age] 2 to the sun,” says Joan Tamburro, DO, director of pediatric dermatology at UH Rainbow Babies & Children’s Hospital, in Cleveland. In fact, sun-related skin changes that occur as early as the first year of life may trigger a cascade of reactions that could lead to melanoma and other forms of skin cancer later in life, according to a new review in the July issue of Pediatrics. Health.com: Sunproof your skin from A to Z The skin acts as a physical barrier to ultraviolet (UV) rays, but it also plays a role in keeping the immune system healthy. UV radiation can suppress the immune system and damage skin cells — a process that may happen more quickly in babies than in adults, the authors note. (Two of the authors are employees of Johnson & Johnson, which makes baby sunscreen and other products, and the others have received speaking fees or research funding from the company.) Few studies have looked specifically at baby skin and sun exposure. However, researchers do know that young skin has lower levels of the skin-protecting pigment melanin and a thinner outer layer, which allows UV rays to more easily reach the melanin …

