What Arab Country is the Most Appearance Obsessed?

Shop for our cultural merch here:

We got Arabs from Lebanon, Egypt, Kuwait, Morocco and Tunisia to rank themselves least to most beauty obsessed, men and women. Which country has the most beauty obsessed men and women?

E-guide for dating women around the world? πŸ’πŸ»β€β™€οΈ
Dating in Scandinavia? Read:
Join DBB mailing list:
We used Epidemic Sound. Get your FREE MONTH:

Dating Beyond Borders is a Youtube channel that focuses on highlighting the cultural differences that come into play while dating people from other countries.

Videos out every Thursday – hit the bell button to receive notifications! πŸ””

0:00 Intro
0:28 is your country beauty obsessed?
1:30 are men beauty obsessed?
3:01 most beauty obsessed men?
3:58 RANKING least to most beauty obsessed men
4:55 what is important for a man in your country?
5:27 are women in your country beauty obsessed?
8:41 most beauty obsessed women?
10:40 RANKING least to most beauty obsessed women

Follow DBB on Social Media!

Facebook:
Instagram:
TikTok:
Website:

CREW:
Marina Iakovleva (directing)

Eddie Cristobal (video)

Lauren Neeson (audio)

Oleh Voitovych (editing)

CAST:
Hadeel (Lebanon):
Fatma (Egypt):
Sami (Morocco):
Maryan (Kuwait):

Filmed in:
Toronto, Canada

Premium
 

  • @oliverfa08 says:

    “Kuwait is basically oil money” πŸ˜‚πŸ˜‚ the lady already have attention and respect , even thoght she isn’t 100% from there

  • @oliverfa08 says:

    I like how they agreed with Lebanon as the number one , take care of yourself isn’t homosexual or feminine , everyone have to take of themselves

    • @OverTheVoids says:

      I guess it depends on what one means by “taking care of yourself”. Showering, shaving, oral hygiene, and other similar activities are pretty basic necessities and important for health. Once you get into the realm of plucking individual eyebrow hairs and getting a nose job, then it starts to get more into the area of activities and behaviors that are typically pursued by women on a global basis. Ultimately though, if men want to get involved with it, then I think it is definitely a huge stretch to claim that they are homo’s for doing so.

    • @Ahmed-pf3lg says:

      Lebanese people have a very feminine accent to begin with, and they are the most not typically macho/Arabian in their values, so that’s why many people view them as “more gay/homosexual/feminine” even though it’s not related anyways… but you get the point.

  • @henri_ol says:

    Apart the fact they proved are really good at football , World Cup changed the way i see Marocco as a country , i agree with the gentleman right there on this point

  • @aciuschristophores7789 says:

    Fantastic video as usual Marina and the team! Just a small request- would you guys put the country names next to the flags please, so its easier to follow for us non-Arabs?

  • @Anseyon says:

    1 man, 4 girls
    Hotel Trivago? πŸ˜‚

  • @maryyaaannnn says:

    loved this video!

  • @markbigelow2608 says:

    Very interesting.

  • @tobiojo6469 says:

    Awesome video

  • @klimtkahlo says:

    You are all beautiful!

  • @lissandrafreljord7913 says:

    The Syrian/Kuwaiti woman has amazing hair. Her hair looks so healthy, hydrated, shimmery, and bouncy.

  • @incogb6696 says:

    6:24 I love that Safaa talked about that..

    caught me off guard😜

    • @Revitalization4241 says:

      Most of Tunisia is not originally Amazigh unless your from the Arabised southern Ourghemma tribe, or some sub-tribes of the central Zlass tribal confederation or the Arabised northen tribes Hanancha, Mogods & Bejoua’s or if you belong to the 1-2% Amazighphones of Tunisia, rest of Tunisians including this girl aren’t Amazigh(more than 60%)

      Why does everybody think that tattoos is only a Amazigh thing? The Arab Hilali tribes also had tattoos

      P.S i say this as a real Amazigh myself

    • @incogb6696 says:

      the amazigh spread those tattos to the ancient bedouins and kurds @@Revitalization4241

    • @incogb6696 says:

      amazigh went to north arabia and also in levant they brought henna, known as amorites and amalakites@@Revitalization4241

    • @incogb6696 says:

      tunisia is mostly ethnically amazigh@@Revitalization4241

  • @antoniohagopian213 says:

    I am speaking for Lebanon and I assure you that when someone has had plastic surgery to “enhance beauty” they just start looking hideous, I don’t know if that’s just me but I absolutely hate the overly puffy lips and cheeks, it’s simply awful. They take the “plastic” part to the extreme and they start looking like plastic. As for the nose job part I agree, the amount of nosejobs is insane BUT it was still less then a quarter of my promotion’s girls who had them. The worst part about those nose jobs is that the girls who didn’t need one were the ones getting them (and the before after was literally the same to the micrometer).

  • @willileo2373 says:

    Shallow beauty standards and mentality

  • @elokuusorrow says:

    as a tall light-skinned woman with green eyes and blond straight hair, I’ve always been dreaming to be shorter, ’rounder’, with curly dark hair and brown eyes… crazy how somewhere else it can be exact the opposite and people would like to be skinnier or lighter in colors of their eyes/hair…God created us different, and we’re trying to look the same…

    • @Ahmed-pf3lg says:

      Arab people now a days don’t want to be blonde with light hair, it changed. Now everyone wants to be curvy, tan, with dark hair.. so basically more satisfied with their natural genetics.

  • @cekic9098 says:

    As a turkish i want to point out that men and women here are the messiest you will ever see, we have terrible sense of fashion. During highschool, everyone just came with full black or grey comfy clothes and messy hair. I want to say that don’t pressure yourselve to look like hollywood looking people, just be healthy comfy❀

  • @erzascarlet5078 says:

    Woah that Moroccan guy😍

  • @monirah says:

    I love these discussions. I’m Kuwaiti, and I feel like the Syrian/Kuwaiti girl got it right about Kuwait. The Moroccan guy is very well-spoken. I like that he mentioned that women used to straighten their hair as a standard of beauty, but now more of us are embracing our natural hair more.. very true.

  • @linanafie8571 says:

    No, at least in Egypt the beauty standards that white people with bright hair and eyes are better looking has definitely not changed. Many people are extremely poor and they only see people like this on TV therefore they grow up thinking that if they look like this they’re more beautiful which is a shame. I find brown people with curly hair to be so gorgeous!

  • @JosephCj136 says:

    The lady with the pink top. Yes

  • @darklanov says:

    As a Tunisian man, I have never heard of any man in Tunisia that had lip fillers and whatnot, but there are all sorts of crazy people out there.

  • >
    Verified by MonsterInsights