Some people clearly didn’t watch my previous video on this topic. In that video, I said that I understand there are many non-black woman who have textured hair and these videos are not for them. And for the people saying “ the company can just make more” you’re not understanding when white people take an interest in black products the company changes the formula to cater to them. And we can no longer use those things. And I meant what I said it’s selfish. They’ve always had hundreds of brands for their hair so you do not need this product even though you can buy it.
Little Sister, You are right. This is what happened to Cantu and some Shea Moisture lines. YT people you have you own products, been having for years, use it and leave black hair care products to people with textured hair! Thank you for "reading" my Ted talk!
Those other products I still can’t need I did research to find the hair out to help with my scalped and it helped of you really want to complain about it but your stuff online
Shoot as long as the ingredients do no change idc, let their hair fall out 🤷🏽♀️. They always think they can copy or one up us, you can never beat the original 💅🏽.
Well especially when their hair naturally produces oil in a way that ours typically doesn’t. Like they’re not understanding why these products are even made in the first place.
Well no Jonathan unfortunately the world isn’t black and white. Brands do cater for certain hair types singling out certain demographics. It’s okay to acknowledge this.
@@B00GH0STIEthat's because they are for BLACK PEOPLE. Do you see Asians with kinky hair? White people? Are you slow or purposely ignorant? 🤌🏽 This isn't racism. It's common sense. It's like men complaining that sanitary pads are not sold for men. You don't need it, it's not FOR YOU.
They want to gate keep products yet continue to wear plastic horse hair or someone's old indian grandmas hair, Asian hair, Brazilian hair, Caucasian hair. Stealing left and right.
They did? good! I make my own oils. but I do support when I can and this one has good reviews from our ppl. I'm glad be whew!! shea moisture was not as strong under pressure
This isn’t about culture. There are many cultures where hair oiling is common, including many black cultures. But you’d rather argue points no one is making than use common sense and active listening skills.
I don’t think that’s true. Black folks are the oldest living people and been oiling their hair before anyone else. They invented their shea butters, nut butters, Jamaican castor oil, Haitian castor oil. Oiling is deeply practiced within the aboriginals
lmao no, hair oiling literally originated from india, and all the wigs yall be wearing are the hair of indian women as well so stop ❤@@butterflyqueen9792
Soo true who are they catering to. we will never have anything, if Black owned don’t what the initial goal was in the first place “BLACK HAIR CARE” now I’m scared to even use black hair products because nothing seems to be catered to us by us…. Non black society always try to make us feel bad about doing something for us caring about ourselves for us go and change our initial thought or view on a subject (and ingredients) Black owned stay true!!!!
other races can have textured hair. im white and this product works for me so i will continue purchasing and using it, it isnt selfish whatsoever. i agree that people shouldn’t leave bad reviews for a product that isn’t specifically for their hair type, but if the product works for someone who is white, asian, hispanic, etc. then you don’t need to shame them for it
@@beauxangesdamn and you really thought you did something by spreading negativity and continuing with the same racist views of segregation of races, even through products and haircare..
I’m black but personally I don’t think it’s that big of a deal. Like I just don’t think it’s right for people to be like theses products are for white people and theses are for black. I feel like if white people like the product or it works well for there hair then so what. Instead of people making products only for black people or only for white people, they should make products for everyone instead of segregating hair products.
Thank you. Stop shaming others for wanting to trh something that may make their scalp and hair healthier. We all have hair. We are all part of the human race. I don’t get it
Not everyone's hair is the same, there should never be a one size fits all when it comes to hair. That would be a disaster. It's not hard to understand
It’s a big deal because its not a matter of just saying this product is for this group and this one is for another group and it’s not as simple as just making beauty & hair products that will be beneficial for every group of people skin & hair because there’s a fundamental differences in each ethnic group’s skin & hair. Each group has specific skin & hair needs that has to be met in order to be at it’s best & healthiest, therefore to accomplish that, products has to be specifically formulated for each group. Sadly for over 100 years companies has made thousands of skin & hair products that were not formulated for black women and unfortunately in many cases when black women used those products they have experienced undesirable results and or damage. And that’s the same thing some of these white women are claiming to have experienced when using Mielle and other products which were formulated for black women and not them. Yet they go online and post negative videos about Mielle and other products made for black women. ANALOGY: That’s like putting diesel fuel in your car and then complain about how it damaged the engine, it damaged the engine because it wasn’t formulated for your car’s engine it was formulated for trucks with Diesel engines not cars with gasoline engines.
Because honestly instead of doing research and using the products that works for them, a lot of them are just grabbing whatever they see is popular. Then act confused and tricked when it has a negative reaction to their hair
@@missjackiierdz clearly there is a confusion. They are leaving negative reviews complaining about things that are actually beneficial to black hair. So obviously this product has consistently better results with certain hair types.
@Yes Sir Then perhaps the company needs to be changing some labels? How is this other woman's fault exactly? If something says it's for all hair types and my hair falls out then I have every right to leave a reviews based on my experience 🙃
@@yessir6618 negative reviews exist for every company that makes a product. Its expected. Imagine how many products Ive tried and I said I didnt like it. Omg all of sudden that means its a bad thing. No. It's literally just something that either 1, i didnt like. 2, i bought to see how my hair will react. 3, I wanted to get something out of my comfort zone. Online, it literally states its for ALL types of hair. Tell me where it says for "black" hair. She has a line for type 4 hair.. but never "black". Some white women have 4c hair
The oil just works better on specific hair types, it comes from a black hair brand, therefore it would obviously work best on black hair. The issue is that, folks who are not black, in this case, white people, tend to use products made for black hair and negatively review them when it does not work for them. And there is no reason for the brand to be all inclusive, all hair types are different, and not everything is a one size fits all. Simply checking out the website and asking yourself, does it look like these products cater to my hair. If no, then at least make it known that you are using a product that does not seem to work with your hair type but you are trying it anyway. People slammed the product that was not even made for their hair type, like that makes no sense.
@@ruffledfilms5270that makes sense. I use Mielle for my hair and my brother uses it too. I’m glad it is a black people product and anyone that isn’t black not trying to be rude, but don’t use the product and do research on a product before buying it so people know what will work for their hair type.
The product was mad for people with a specific hair type. Straight hair types have alllllll those products to wash their hair with but choose to sell out the ONE product that was made for black hair. Then when their hair falls out or gets messed up they wanna complain and forces a change in the ingredients of the product which will no longer suit the intended purpose.This has nothing to do with victimhood😂
It is not “victimhood” lol, if hair oil is made for a specific type of hair then it’s going to achieve a different thing. If you have lots of options to choose from, why would you choose a hair oil made for coils/curly hair then complain when it’s not working for you. Black ppl have been dealing with hair products that didn’t work for them for ages and now that they have something that works. Other hair types want to take over the little that they do have when it wasn’t meant for them.
@@funnybunny4932 the bottle said for all hair types. Entire comment is invalid. It is victimhood to take a (wrongly)perceived issue of hair type and turn it into a racial narrative all over preconceived notions and not reading. Be for real, this content creator assumes that because the creator of Mielle is black and includes black women in marketing, that all of her products are exclusively for black women and/or textured curly hair. So instead of reading a bottle of OIL, she assumes she shouldn’t have to, so her slanderous racially divisive narrative is good enough. No it is not and neither is you for repeating it.
Use products according to your hair type, not your ethnicity. If you are white, Hispanic, Asian, etc. and it works for your hair, use it. If the mielle works for you, you are ok to use it. you are NOT selfish. If it doesn’t work for you, it may not be the product.
this! I use this oil (same oil but different brand but that doesn't matter) for my white hair because it's the only thing that helps my itchy and irritated scalp, "white" hair products, especially the ones she shows suck so much
I literally had an older white woman ask me what I used to keep my skin clear and I told her African black soap and she came back in my store a few months later and thanked me because her skin had never been clearer…y’all petty
Tbh? As a white boy who lets black girls degade me for my kink these girls tell me they just wanna see them selves as a 🌟Black Goddess🌟✨️why? Well ever since childhood for the most part they have felt insecure about their race mostly hair an degrading white people makes them feel better. I dont mind. Besides its happened to me so much iv kinda grown to like it.
@@wtfsouppthe fact you really watched this very short clip and processed “gate-keeping” are your 5 years old? Or just an ignorant grown ass 40 year old?
SMH!! 🤦🏻♀️ RACISM IN ALL SHAPE AND COLORS! Can we just purchase a product we like without adding a particular race. Is a good product, and the company who created this did a good job creating something that can help other race besides black. I am straight Rican and my hair is curly, and I will support white, black Chinese, Puerto Rican, ect products that gives me the best results. We need to do better. Is always. Something. 🤦🏻♀️
Some people don’t know how to read the instructions either. YOU NEED TO WASH IT OFF AFTER 30 MINUTES. Only people with very coily or textured hair can leave it on, because their hair can easily absorb the oil. That oil is extremely strong and can cause your hair to fall off if you leave it on overnight or for wayyy too long. If you want something that you can leave on your hair, then get an actual rosemary plant and boil it in some water, let it sit till it’s cooled down, and apply it to your hair with a spray bottle.
U obviously have no education or never even read if u actually had common sense u can read the product it literally says “4c hair only” MEANS ITS FOR BLACK PEOPLE YALL NEEDA STOP GIVING EVERYTHING AWAY TO WHITE PEOPLE OMG
Some of you here sound SO BITTER, your negativity is not going to change anything. Wishing womens hair would fall off for trying a product, y’all sound miserable
it’s like u white ppl r just responding not listening 💀she doesn’t care whether it works or doesnt, the problem is when ppl w straighter hair textures try other products meant for black hair, they change the product to fix y’all’s hair too which is annoying considering there’s so much hair products for y’all 💀plus ik some white ppl have curly hair i’m talking abt the straight/wavy haired girlies
Bc white peoples have more products then our brownies. But still choose to get brown peoples hair which means we don’t have anything because of y’all greedy ass. 😱😱😱😱😱😱😱😱
@@tvdlover7488 nah, I’m white and it works amazingly on my hair and a lot of my friends hair who are all sorts of ethnicities. Love the product and after a few years of use, my hair is incredible 😁 but thanks for the suggestion. I’ll just use a razor if I want the bald look 👍
nah, the video was saying if it dont work they shouldnt be complaining. It works for your hair thats why you should be buying it. Instead of thevideo person saying blacks they should of said curly or like thick hair types that are able to use the products@@jred3642
@@sockdonutsbecause black people already have less than a fraction of the options white people have and vastly different hair needs Once white communities take interest in a product intended or marketed for black people… This leads companies to change the recipes and marketing to lean into said white audience that’ll make them more money
@@lexijones8019 no problem and I understand how ppl outside of the black community feel because it’s not right at all. I even have a white friend I did box braids on and ppl had judged her for it and it made me mad.. ppl are just so mean 😪 🤬🙄
I think these people are mad because companies change products and it no longer suits their hair type however your comment does make a lot of sense it’s not race it’s hair type
@@iamskylynnewell the box braids is probably cause it belongs to African culture, other braids belong to other cultures too, so thats why they were rude to her and just to be respectful she shouldn't do that again, but you are right the hair products don't HAVE a specific race to be used on
I am dominican I have been using rosemary oil based products for decades, I even make my own oil. That's not a black African American exclusive product
one of the racist videos i've ever seen, These black girls are very bad, imagine the cancellation, if a girl of another color made comments like that, all the time I see videos of this type of girls of color referring badly to products such as not black girl friendly or that are not inclusive blahblah, but When it is their product, you cannot make any type of comments against it, you represent what is wrong in this world, they are absurd
Description Our Rosemary Mint scalp and hair oil is a nutrient-rich, intensive formula meant to help you address your hair concerns. From nourishing hair follicles, smoothing split ends and help with dry scalp, this hair oil uses natural, organic ingredients and essential oils to provide the care your hair deserves. Use it on protective styles, including braids and weaves, and enjoy its fresh, invigorating scent during your next hot oil treatment. Benefits: Infused with Biotin Use for daily hair care or specialized scalp treatments Features more than 30 essential oils and extracts Helps improve length retention Conditions dry scalp Smooths split ends Formulated without: No Parabens, No Sulfates, No Paraffins, No Mineral Oil, No DEA, No Animal Testing 2 fl. oz. | Formulated for all hair types and textures | Safe for chemically treated hair.
And yet, who made money for a half filled product that will be produced again? The owner. You do realize that is what buying and selling does. They bought it, it sells, if they like it, it will continue to sell. Yall want black owned companies but are mad because people are supporting a black company when it was a black woman Linda Lynn who said something negative towards the company and a drama broke out from the owners husband. 🤷♀️💁♀️
@@crystalmethany6286hat’s probably just for marketing. And don’t quote me on this but I heard someone say that the owners of the oil said that it isn’t recommended for people with non-kinky hair.
Girl it’s a store. First come, first serve. Ain’t nobody selfish for going shopping. You should have either been there earlier or ordered it ahead of time
"Our products " "their products ".. did I miss the "blacks only" sign?? Are you suggesting we bring that crap back??? I can't even believe people still behave like this..
The ours products and their products when you walk into a hair store, such a sally beauty store, or any other beauty store that you have there is aisles that is for color peoples hair only and then there’s also aisles that is for Caucasian people. they don’t have to say it’s for blacks only or whites only when you walk in and you see the product you know what aisle to go out on that is directed towards you.
Listen.... Products that work for white people DO NOT work for us! We cant use those products!! And the natural/black hair products sections are usually so much smaller than the "main" hair section, which usually caters to white hair
@Momo Mon'amie that does NOT mean that non-black people CAN'T shop for products in that section 🙄. That's just stupid. Not all products work for everyone and if someone finds a great product, they should freely get to purchase it regardless of what shelf they found it on. Ingredients know no race.
Black women, you can make this oil for way cheaper. Just get some olive oil or carrier oil of choice and add dried rosemary, peppermint essential oil, and any other herbs of choice. Put in a glass jar in a dark place for a few weeks. Then strain when you’re ready to use into a bottle. You don’t need to support Mielle. You can make bigger batches of hair growth oil for less. ❤
Thanks! I make my own oil, plus I add biotin oil in mine. I think black women needs to stop catering to companies who continue to disrespect black women. These companies know what they're doing...it's all about money.
It’s about supporting Mielle they didn’t cause the problem. They never even marketed to those people. Why harm a black business that is choosing to stand with us?
Why are black women so pressed about other ethnicities using this product? If Mielle is a black company wouldn't you be happy that your brother is making money & that a positive change is happening for black entrepreneurs?
First of all, mielle hair oil is for EVERYONE not for only black ppl cause yall should be lucky to have hair oil while ppl are struggling to grow hair, so pls be repectful
I don’t think the product is “catered” to a specific color of skin. Please stop with the racism. We all bleed red and we’re made in the image of the same creator who loves ALL of His creation.
I may be late, but it's not the skin that's different. It's the hair texture that is. Of course, there are races other than black with textured hair, but they're buying out products that typically cater to textured hair as people with pin straight, non textured hair, complaining their hair is oily, and then pressuring the brand to change the formulation of the product. The result of that is people with textured hair having one less hair care option that caters to their hair type. And there's already not many brands that work for textured hair. Meanwhile, people with straight hair have millions of brands that are formulated for their hair type, and those with textured hair do not. This has happened many times with other brands. Those with straight hair start using textured hair products, and their hair falls out, gets weighed down, or is too oily, and then leave bad reviews, pressures the company to change their formulation, and then those with textured hair loses yet again another brand that caters to their hair. And trust me, there are not many. The bottom line is that textured hair and non textured hair require different routines to thrive. There aren't many brands that make products that are good for textured hair.
I just bought a bottle and I’m white. Cause I just thought “ouuu rosemary, isn’t that what all the influencers are pushing for hair growth?” So yeah I just put it in my head lol
Are you saying that white women or people that are not black can’t purchase your product but how would you feel if a white person made a product and said why are Black people buying it they shouldn’t be? You would get pissed
@@martinam7806What are you talking about. There arent aisles of products that cater just to blck people. Yall need to stop making dumb comparisons that arent based on reality. It DOES suck when companies change formulas to cater to other groups especially when they have a lot of other choices. These people are literally using the wrong products to be trendy.
@@martinam7806 Sorry to break it to you but the rest of us live in reality. When the majority buys a product, companies will change formulas to cater to the majority. It is absolutely against reality to act like as if people have the exact same hair texture. In America, the people there are descendants from mostly west Africans. They have a specific hair type that is very rare or completely absent in people of the majority group. So it is inappropriate to assume that they need the exact same products. Especially when they historically have been ignored as a market and have been forced to buy products from segregated aisle sections or stores. I mean those products are still separated in some stores. The only reason they’ve gotten more popular is because people have embraced their natural curly hair. So now those companies are changing formulas so they no longer work for them. So she 100% has a valid concern. It’s 100% valid to be frustrated about those changes. She’s not saying it should be illegal for them to buy those products. She’s just pointing out the negative consequences of catering.
This is so real. If it was the other way around and a white person was walking down aisles recording saying that black people need to stop buying something because their black they would be slandered.
For real I can't with these people and their victim mentality like how old is she? At some point you learn the world doesn't owe you shit just because you paint yourself as a victim at every opportunity
@@lucille_2438 no ones painting themselfs as victims shes just saying its unfair how white people are using black hair producs in there hair when its not made for them and then leaving bad reviews saying it doesnt work ofc is doesnt work bc its not made for your kind of hair so no one is pai ting themselfs as victims
@@aaliyahgrinnon8760 but girl that's my whole point. This is regarding being butthurt about ROSEMARY OIL. SCALP OIL. How is that an only black hair product? Every race has people wanting to grow their hair out and things like alopecia, hormonal thinning, thinning related to age etc
@@aaliyahgrinnon8760 and besides that how immature and self centered is it to claim a hair product can ONLY be used by your race? It's so childish and daft. It's almost comical.
It's a hair growth oil for the scalp and ends. It has no race on it. It may be a black hair brand but the oil does not say it's for any specific type of hair. If they've found something g that works for them leave it tf alone.
Hope all ts falls out to tf Edit:I’m sorry to everyone I was fighting with I didn’t realize that’s what u guys was on my ass abt and I apologize to the original commenter I must’ve been in a pissy ass mood when I made this comment
^^ Envious and malicious bc she has beautiful hair, huh?! How nefarious can u be? Lots of black women wear Peruvian & Brazilian hair so are they pretending to be Latina bc that's our actual hair not even a style or a product! My hair is nothing like a black person's, and I see them wearing my hair pretending to have soft & flowy VS curls, straight silky hair, or non-kinky & soft luscious curls! It must beautiful and preferable over their own hair texture which they hide with other race's hair while getting mad bc non-blacks use a product like this or wear breads??😂 The hypocrisy is much‼ Meanwhile, a hair product or hairstyle is for everyone whether it's Dove or this brand. At least, my people don't wear other races hair while claiming cultural apropriation and the "blueprint" of races (def racist). Oh well. Racists and envious people will reap that which they sow.
There should be no “black” or “white” products, it can be for everyone. But when people start leaving bad reviews for a product that was not specifically made for their type of hair anyway that’s what makes me angry.
I don’t see that company putting out a statement saying this product is only to be used by a specific ethnicity . If the product works for someone then they use it who are you to tell anyone what product they can and can’t use.
Why do we as black women think we own all rights to these products though? If a product works for my hair I’m buying it. Whether it’s for white, Asian, muppet wool hair I don’t care. Same for skin care. If it works for you it works for you. Many of those “white” hair products work for my hair too and I’m buying them. Seems reasonable to me imo
I bought this oil for my hair, I didn’t know it was not for white peoples hair. I have alopecia so I’m always looking for something to help that. Would someone please explain what the difference is as far as how it affects white vs black hair. I’m not here to argue it, just trying to understand cause the alopecia thing is very real and a constant battle to fight.
@@corinnematthews5636 The main reason is that it weighs down your hair if it’s straight. It can also make your hair look really greasy. The same goes for a black person whose hair is straightened. It’s not even actually a race thing but a straight hair thing. It’s made specifically for textured hair. There’s a lot of cases of straight hair falling out so if your hair is straight I probably wouldn’t recommend. Hope that helps ❤
I have straight hair and use the oil for the psoriasis on my scalp, and it helps so much. Please don't spread hate and try to separate who can or can't use what. At the end of the day, if they change the formula you could always purchase another Rosemary oil from another black owned brand and actually put love and support towards the community.
The entitlement of your comment reeks of whiteness... if BLACK women built the brand, the company made the product for BLACK hair in mind, then you want to use it and say 'well it's too oily, too thick, blah, blah, blah' and they turn around and change the formula to cater to a people that didn't build their brand, then it starts to feel like these 'brands' are using us to get hot, that's selfish AF when you literally have whole aisles of product for yt hair.
@@brownsugako7772so wait what you’re saying is… that whatever race the owner of the company is that made the product… is the only race the company can sell the product to? Doesn’t matter what hair type they made the product for, or the fact people who live in this society have the freedom to buy what they want, no that doesn’t matter. Only thing that matters is if you’re not black, because the owner is black, then you can’t buy the products? Regardless of your hair type?
@@brownsugako7772, i can agree on some of this, however this product is for all hair types(it says on that on their website). This oil has many ingredients in it that are so important to scalp health. now dont get me wrong, the people comapling of it being thick and oily sound unreasonable. This oil is for thick hair. It is marketed for people who have thick and curly hair. Hense black hair. However this product isnt just for black people. It can be used on anyone at their own risk. And this person has a good point of it helping with their scalp problem. As it has active ingredients that provide help for that. I use this oil for many things. And yes I have thick curly hair. Also yes there are isles of hair products marketed for white hair. However almost every one of them is bad for their hair. So who could blame them for wanting somethng without t.- hat. If it doesnt make their hair weighed down or oily who cares?
True a lot of products go out but in this case, it’s a little different because the people that are selling it out Don’t have curly hair whatsoever and the people who actually have curly hair which this hair product is supposed to be used for is being changed into something different. And even though it seems like it’s not a big change, it is a big change.
sorry this is a dumb take. if more people are using black hair products the stores will just make it more available. also rosemary oil is recommended for any woman with hair loss and plenty of white people and other races have female hair loss.
Boo the store don't make the product that's not even a major corporation owned business a black women works on that product herself they complaining about its oily while using a product that says hair oil like bffr black peoples hair doesn't produce oil the way it should which is why we need it
The problem is when they change their formulas to fit non black textures black peoples are the main consumers of company so if they want to do so they need to make a formula suitable for non Afro hair textures I believe the original owner sold her company as well so that could be it
Um, sweetheart I can totally tell you’ve never even taken a look at this product 😂there’s so many more oils in this that are considered carrier oils (if you don’t know what that means google it) aside from rosemary. The others are probably way too heavy for WW hair such as castor oil and that’s why it’s affected their hair the way it has.
Girl no. Look at shea moisture now. They literally changed the formulas on some of their best products os white women would use them. Now their once thick coily custard is basically water.
What do I do then if I’m Hispanic but also half white with curly hair? As a hairstylist I can say that it doesn’t matter your race for a product but what the product contains and what it is supposed to do for your hair type. This stigmatism has to stop. 🛑 I can’t go to products that will literally strip my hair. Stupid Garnier. Pantene. Ugh. 😅
I’m a white girl with extremely curly hair… I just started using this and it really helps my curls not be frizzy I recommend it to people with CURLY hair NOT straight! So I totally agree!
I understand where you are coming from but regardless I'm super annoyed by this whole "them and us" as if we aren't all human. This just divides US even more...
Don't say you understand and say but "we're all humans". Yes we are but we're still all different and that's what make everyone unique. We've been having problems with products that doesn't cater to our hair for years, just because it's not made for us. When we do make products for us it's always being bought out and changed to not fit our hair or skin. Can us kinky/curly haired women have a couple options over the hundreds of options for straight haired women?
this is like saying a firefighter should be able to walk into a hospital and preform surgery despite not having the proper training because "we're all human". firefighters dont belong in the operating room, surgeons do and thats okay because we're all humans but humans are different.
This content creator is wack so she suggests garnier full of Chemicals to the non black audience because blacks somehow are the only ones its made for smh 🤮🤮🤮
Thank you honestly it's disgusting because the company will turn around and change its formula why are these companies so afraid to be honest that they cater to African hair textures we can have our own products they have three to four ails full of them in stores why can we not have our own the same thing happened to shea moisture and guess what no one cares about them anymore and they're trying to get their black audience back 🤦🏾♀️🤦🏾♀️🤦🏾♀️🤦🏾♀️ beyond annoyed thank you Queen for the honesty
Description Our Rosemary Mint scalp and hair oil is a nutrient-rich, intensive formula meant to help you address your hair concerns. From nourishing hair follicles, smoothing split ends and help with dry scalp, this hair oil uses natural, organic ingredients and essential oils to provide the care your hair deserves. Use it on protective styles, including braids and weaves, and enjoy its fresh, invigorating scent during your next hot oil treatment. Benefits: Infused with Biotin Use for daily hair care or specialized scalp treatments Features more than 30 essential oils and extracts Helps improve length retention Conditions dry scalp Smooths split ends Formulated without: No Parabens, No Sulfates, No Paraffins, No Mineral Oil, No DEA, No Animal Testing 2 fl. oz. | Formulated for all hair types and textures | Safe for chemically treated hair
They either need to market the product differently or change the formula. According to my above pasted info….it’s formulated for everyone, so we need to have some sympathy for women who bought this product and experienced hair loss. Because unless these white women are actually not human, it’s supposed to be for them as well.
@@litttlewolf4599 what are you talking about, this video is about the mielle rosemary mint oil…are you talking about the OP’s comments about Shea moisturiz? But I am referring to the oil that has ho’s losing hair
Y’all need to watch her first video and look at her comment. The issue is not that they’re selling it out, its that people are putting pressure on the company to change its formula which leaves black people without the proper products for their hair, something that has happened several times. Having to change our product because it just doesn’t apply to us anymore sucks because finding new ones always costs a lot of money, time, and experimentation. White people (who don’t have the hair texture, don’t even try that we all know a majority don’t have curly hair like us don’t whataboutism this) have so many products catered to them and yet try to use one that just isn’t meant for them and many of the big companies buy out smaller black-owned brands which then have to change their formula to reach “a wider consumer base.” Just because you don’t know about the issue doesn’t mean it doesn’t exist…
Exactly. Everywhere I go it's sold out or wayyy to expensive. Like 15 dollars. I'm just going to make my own and reuse the container. This is so irritating because my hair and scalp actually found an oil that worked wonders .
@@Jashera ohhh that’s so smart could I know exactly which oil you personally use? I ran out of my mine and now I just have the little bottle and I can already see my hairs not happy without it and it’s only been a week while I was waiting for more CAUSE I CANT FIND IT NO WHERE :( it sucks cause I finally found a hair oil that stuck and sealed in moisture for my hair. I’ve done natural hair masks and used olive oil and saw similar results but I don’t know if I should keep that in my hair indefinitely
I hate this, this happened a while back with all the Miss Jessie's (especially the multicultural curls) and I was steamin mad. I'm Black/Latino and It's hard enough having our "ethnic" hair products get put behind security walls while Caucasians products DON'T..and now this sh*t is happening more and more
@@hellokittydimaggioshampoos created to dry up oils in oily, nasty, stringy hair…will do just that. Black people hair is like plants. Our hair needs moisture in order for it to grow. Pick up a book
As a black afro person, its gone for a reason it might have not worked for your hair doesn't mean it definitely doesn't work for others aswell as you sure should not call them "selfish" because it works on them i have it and it works miracles keep your "opinion" to urself.
This is why I started making my own hair oils and deep conditioner treatments at home. They switch up the formulas on us, knowing that we need different things for our hair. If they are catering to us, they would stay about us.
This is why I buy real black owned hair products that aren’t factory made. They’re cheaper and mainly cater to my 4c hair which are the hardest products to find. I stop trusting those companies a long time ago. Once they get on we get left behind. And yes these girls are being selfish because there are plenty of products for curly hair that aren’t aimed towards black hair go buy those
It’s cool we can make our own Rosemary essential oil Tea tree oil Amla powder Ginger powder or herb Fenugreek seeds Boil 1 or 2 hours Or let it sit in a dark cabinet for at least 4-6 weeks; shaking it once a week.
@@seliahh9451 I would individually do this if your sensitive. But essential oils add them slowly just because you can control the amount. Amla powder makes me break out. So I say add a teaspoon at a time. Max 3 teaspoon Ginger just a teaspoon It’s more of a booster Rosemary is a stimulator (benefits) Tea tree is a antibacterial (benefits)
Sis this is bordering racism. Leave the white people alone and go try another store. Also blaming people of a race ideas of being upset with the company’s restocking team is crazy.
I am white and have pin straight hair, last year I have lost a great amount of hair like in clumps thanks to a shampoo you’re coincidentally showing in that aisle. Mielle Rosemary oil, rosemary water and caffeine treatment literally saved my hair, and in about 8 months of use I am back to normal. Of course is greasy and of course you shampoo it out after 3/4 hours. I am glad seeing some white girls losing hair makes you all giggle of satisfaction, maybe stop for a second and think that they started using it because they had an excessive effluvium problem which is by the way the reason why when you start the treatment you keep losing hair for a while. According to your foolish statement I shouldn’t have got the oil for the sake of the black community which must be one of the most idiotic things I’ve ever heard in my life. By the way the vast majority of products you show in that aisle are cheap and low quality especially OGX and Fructis. Take care.
I'm a white girl with slightly wavy hair, this is one of the only products that has helped my androgenetic alopecia, I'm finally seeing baby hairs after years of trying to cover my bald spots !
Your race is irrelevant. What is relevant to this discussion is your hair type. Women with afro-textured hair naturally have diverse hair types from bone straight and course to tiny coils and fine and everything in between. Women with euro hair textures have hair that is completely different. You can rant all about how this oil is the only thing that works for you, but what you are failing at understanding is, it's not the oil that is helping you, it is the ROSEMARY ESSENTIAL OIL ITSELF that is DROPPED IN THE HEAVY NUT OILS THE MIELLE OIL IS MADE FROM that is helping you. You can get the same benefits if you take a sprig of rosemary oil and put it in a water spray bottle and spray your hair with it. In fact, you would have even more benefit because you don't have to wash rosemary essential oil water out of your hair. This oil is a heavy nut butter oil which causes people with euro hair textures to have to wash it out when it's designed to be applied to the hair daily and worn until wash day. Wash day for black women's hair is on average anywhere from one week to 3 weeks because our hair doesn't produce any oils at all. That is the difference. You can literally go to your grocery store and buy rosemary essential oil and put it in your shampoo, your conditioner, or in a water bottle. But for some reason (we know why) you buy a hair oil, use it improperly just to get the effects of the essential oil. The only way people with afro texture hair can get the benefit of Rosemary Oil is when it's suspended in heavy nut oils because we need a carrier oil to make it penetrate our hair shaft and scalp. Our hair and our scalps are not the same even though you think that's what equality means.
@@yeahaboutthatthough3656 nobody said shit about their hair being the same. And her hair isn't like other white women's, she has a fucking medical condition. You're making assumptions based on her race despite the fact that she straight up said she has a very specific condition that affects her hair type and growth. "Black hair" isn't the only hair that can benefit from this shit. And most "white" products don't really go for hair health anyways. If you look into "non-black" cultures, they all have their own hair care "secrets" full of shit they had access to and work in their hair. And NONE of it is this wash daily with harsh cleaners bullshit. Yeah the shit works for her, get tf over it. No she can't just use the shit everyone else is using, frankly they probably shouldn't be using it either. It's just black women seem to get the most struggles when it comes to everything and as a result or forced to figure shit out the most. They know how to maintain their hair because it's so different from everyone else's. And while people using black products because they are trendy and NOT because they need them is fucked and a result of societal attitudes towards everything black. This is one example of it working. Quit assuming shit about people's hair based on their race, gatekeeping haircare ain't gonna help shit. Next you're gonna start bitching about white chemo patients wearing wigs because "non-black hair grows faster" or some shit. If it works, it works. The problem are the people who are buying shit that DON'T work for them and ruining for the people it does work for, something that correlates to race but is not necessarily tied down to it. If you think diying is such an easy great thing to do, then why don't you just make this shit yourself? Not all black women, just you.
@@IDontKnow-pf6en I'm assuming it's a brand. If not, I'm assuming its a sunscreen for melaninated skin, since melaninated skin isn't the same as unmelaninated skin.
@@IDontKnow-pf6en it’s a sunscreen made specifically for people with darker skin tones. A lot of regular sunscreen leaves a white tint on skin that’s darker than medium brown, so that company made a sunscreen specifically for black and dark skinned POC that worked as a moisturizer and didn’t look white on the skin.
@@kabaribiah6419Who has many products whyte or blck? You have got to be kidding me, we have a very limited selection for blck hair. Just like how she showed in the video of a mile long aisle of whyte hair care products. We have a very small section & It’s been that way for YEARS. Now all of a sudden straight hair girlies are using the products that are made for OUR hair then have the audacity to leave one star reviews and trash the company because it doesn’t work for them. What are y’all not understanding in these comments my GOODNESS.🙄🙄🙄
I'm white and have pin-straight hair. This oil has been the only product that has helped me regrow and strengthen my hair after losing so much of it. People should be able to use what works for them without being labeled as selfish. Stop causing more division- it's the last thing this world needs.
Thank you for this. Didn't even know this was happening. So ridiculous! Everytime Black people get anything. Here come the others tryna take advantage.
I don’t think my eyes have ever rolled into the back of my head as they did watching this. There is something seriously fundamentally wrong with your perception.
@@jazlyn2721 id prefer to listen to his opinion than someone who uses somebodys name on an argument. Your name is jazlyn why would anyone wanna hear your opinion 🤭
So at first it was “support black owned businesses” and now it’s “stop using black people products, you’re selfish”. Please… Let’s not support anyone because of their skin color but support them because the product they’re making is actually good. Plus, In the description of this oil it says it’s for all hair types.
It's selfish when you buy an oily product (not for your hair type) then complain about how oily your hair is and how it's falling out. That's like me Using Pantene and Treseme (which is catered to Caucasian hair) and getting mad saying that it doesn't work for my hair and demanding them to change the ingredients. It wasn't made for my hair type in the first place, so it'll be selfish of me to want it to be changed to cater to my hair (which it wasn't meant for my hair type anyways). That's selfish.
@@HssnsidndjdndBdndndjndk-yn4vh You’re absolutely right. I do think those people who complain about the product not working lack common sense, but I still think it’s weird to complain about us buying the product (most of us use it as a pre wash, and it works just fine) since before all I was hearing was “buy from black owned businesses”, so my point still stands, we should buy good products, regardless of who made it and this product seems to be working for a lot of people, but I do also agree with you. Have a good day.
@@user-rv9jq6qf3p when we say 'support black owned businesses ", we aren't talking about non black people, we are talking to our community....and exactly, most of you guys use it as a pre wash because it can not stay in your hair for long (as it was meant to be used). I go through a bottle a week and I use it every day on my hair without washing it out (I wash my hair once a month). So of course y'all would have to use it as a pre wash. The white influencers calling for a ban of this product and saying that it made their hair fall out and greasy (even though it's an oil) are selfish, considering it wasn't made for their hair types. Like I said that's like me Using Pantene and complaining about my hair being dry and brittle and breaking off and calling for a ban of a product that wasn't meant for my hair type anyways, that takes away from the group of people it was originally made for. This happens ALOT with BLACK hair care and makeup products, people who the products aren't catered to will buy it and leave bad reviews and the product ends up getting pulled off the shelves or the formula changes to suit the people it wasn't originally made for and now BW are assed out of another product. For example Black skin tones need darker contour, highlight and blush and when there where makeup products that where finally being made for brown/dark skin white influencers where buying the products and giving it bad reviews saying that it made them look too dark. Same with Mielle and She's Moisture. She's moisture was originally made for Black Women but white people litteraly bullied the CEO to change the product to suit their hair too and when the ingredients where changed to suit non afro hair it no longer worked for afro hair. It's extremely selfish and annoying af. Imagine if black people went out our way to use hair products that don't cater to our hour KNOWING THAT IT DOESN'T CATER TO OUR HAIR just for us to complain how it doesn't cater to our hair and the product gets changed no longer benefitting Caucasian hair. The fact that y'all see absolutely NOTHING wrong with that is WILD. Then most of y'all saying "there's no such thing as hair products that belong to a specific group of people considering the fact that you have to walk down the BLACK HAIR CARE ISLE to get Mielle or She's Moisture.😂😂😂😭😭😭.
Why are we blaming none-back women when the “issue” is popularity? I’m black too and I don’t see the need to get so petty. I don’t know where “it’s getting changed” is coming from cause as far as I know this is a black owned company and it makes products designed for your curls. It didn’t ruin your life or anything it didn’t say “sold out forever”
@Hadassahh Reyes Yea, that's the point. She saying that's what happens because they complain and so she showed how they complain about that one specific product. She's stating that it might happen just like how it has with other products. She's also saying they don't have many products for curly tight hair basically because *insert reasons she listed*.
The reason people change their formulas for example Cantu is because they initially have harsh products that even effect black women’s scalps harmful ingredients such as silicones and alcohol. It has nothing to do with skin tone it has everything to do with scalp sensitivity.
@Hadassahh Reyes You missed the mark again lol and I don't know why your comment won't appear, but I see it through my notifications. The other products became worse for tight curls after they changed the ingredients 😑 did you not watch the video. They did not become better for tight curls afterwards, only inclusive for other hair types. I personally don't care, but don't lie about what was mentioned in the video (it was not ill intended) it was made to bring awareness on something that impacts people of tighter curl pattern.
So you expect brands to cater to black people and "be inclusive" but when people of other races want to use those products too then they're "colonizing your space". It's all about inclusivity until it comes to other races, then suddenly you want to shut them out. If that's the case, then don't complain about the market for black businesses being smaller, more expensive and less available because according to you they should only sell to black people which means they will always generate less sales.
I’m white and I use this product. Not only one race is allowed to use this product. Everyone can use it as long as it works for your hair. And for the record, people are not being selfish. It’s called using what works for you.
That’s not what black ppl think you guys have a bunch of shampoo that gets advertised on TVS when’s the last time you’ve seen a shea moisture? None exactly!
Y’all need to watch her first video and look at her comment. The issue is not that they’re selling it out, its that people are putting pressure on the company to change its formula which leaves black people without the proper products for their hair, something that has happened several times. Having to change our product because it just doesn’t apply to us anymore sucks because finding new ones always costs a lot of money, time, and experimentation. White people (who don’t have the hair texture, don’t even try that we all know a majority don’t have curly hair like us don’t whataboutism this) have so many products catered to them and yet try to use one that just isn’t meant for them and many of the big companies buy out smaller black-owned brands which then have to change their formula to reach “a wider consumer base.” Just because you don’t know about the issue doesn’t mean it doesn’t exist.
@@Xoxo.Kayla2that’s bc u have curly hair 🤦🏽♀️ no one said only black ppl can use it, only if u have curly hair which is mostly every black person which is the she fixated it on black ppl
@@Xoxo.Kayla2that's amazing but that's not what this video is about lmao.. it's about white people complaining about how it doesn't work for their obviously straight hair. If that doesn't apply to you good for you..i-
@@madamdmadam7542 well people should stop fucking up their hair with products they can't use, that's not good for growth either. It's one part the fetishization of blackness and two part these people are buying shit that isn't for their hair a d getting mad about it because they didn't actually research their haircare. Frankly most white hair products and hair care practices suck ass because we've not only decidedly to erase other people's cultures, but our own as well. Which includes hair care. We really do not need to be washing our hair daily with harsh shampoos. We really do need to apply some oils to our ends. And we REALLY need to quit fetishizing other cultures in lieu of researching our own hair care. From our own protective stylings to our bathing routines, we have just shifted to whatever makes capitalism the most money which is fucking up our hair and buying everything to fix it while constantly using it. It's just that Whiteness is a social concept and thus not all of us are the same, so some of us could find som utility in using these products. And if we base it on that, then you have a much better result. White hair care does need improvement, we do need to stop just listening to advertisements/trends rather than doing actual research, and we need to then shop based our needs rather than gatekeeping products based on race.
It is for everyone! Its sold for everyone..i agree with the other comment about self-segregation. There is no reason to tell other people what they can and can't use especially due to skin color. It works on all hair and even states so on the product 😊
Some people clearly didn’t watch my previous video on this topic. In that video, I said that I understand there are many non-black woman who have textured hair and these videos are not for them. And for the people saying “ the company can just make more” you’re not understanding when white people take an interest in black products the company changes the formula to cater to them. And we can no longer use those things. And I meant what I said it’s selfish. They’ve always had hundreds of brands for their hair so you do not need this product even though you can buy it.
Where can I go to view and order your supplies?
Little Sister,
You are right. This is what happened to Cantu and some Shea Moisture lines. YT people you have you own products, been having for years, use it and leave black hair care products to people with textured hair! Thank you for "reading" my Ted talk!
So glad you are bringing attention to this matter.
Those other products I still can’t need I did research to find the hair out to help with my scalped and it helped of you really want to complain about it but your stuff online
I was literally trying to buy it too and it sold out online! Can't have nothing. Hopefully they don't change the formula
“My hair is falling out! This product sucks!”
Says the person with bone straight hair and viscosity that won’t take the product 💀
fr, i think of this whenever i see videos of people with straight hair using curly/coily hair products to try getting wavy or somewhat curly hair
You're right
Yea Pantene, L’Oréal, TRESemmé, Nexxus, head & shoulders I use to use those and wondered why my hair wasn’t growing and was always dry 🙃
Shoot as long as the ingredients do no change idc, let their hair fall out 🤷🏽♀️. They always think they can copy or one up us, you can never beat the original 💅🏽.
Serves them right tbh
I just can't get over the fact people are buying literal oil to put in their hair, then complaining that their hair feels oily.
Karen's will use anything us Black Queens use,,they are so 🫣😭nvm
😂😂
🤷♀️🤦♀️
The "Karens" are funny that way!
Well especially when their hair naturally produces oil in a way that ours typically doesn’t. Like they’re not understanding why these products are even made in the first place.
'our products', 'their products', is ridiculous. Talk about self segregation. There is no 'blacks only' for that oil.. this is embarrassing.
Well no Jonathan unfortunately the world isn’t black and white. Brands do cater for certain hair types singling out certain demographics. It’s okay to acknowledge this.
@@Yourmomsfavourite69 but that is no means to tell someone what they can and cant buy bc of the color of their skin
@@jonathan_8100it’s not because of the Colour of their skin it’s because of their hair type
@@Dina-tt6lx and yet they were referred to as black products in the video
@@B00GH0STIEthat's because they are for BLACK PEOPLE. Do you see Asians with kinky hair? White people? Are you slow or purposely ignorant? 🤌🏽 This isn't racism. It's common sense. It's like men complaining that sanitary pads are not sold for men. You don't need it, it's not FOR YOU.
on the literal bottle it says “all hair types”💀
Fr
This
Fax
They want to gate keep products yet continue to wear plastic horse hair or someone's old indian grandmas hair, Asian hair, Brazilian hair, Caucasian hair. Stealing left and right.
because they changed it after receiving hate💀💀
If Mielle changes to fit this trend they don't deserve our business anyway. Which is why I no longer buy shea moisture.
They're owned by a white man
I stopped using it too, but I didn't know they did that
Thankfully, Mielle released a statement saying they won’t be changing the formula. White folks gon learn today lol
EXACTLY!!!!!❤
I have 4b hair and Shea moisture still works wonders for me
To be fair, Mielle did make a statement saying they were not changing the formula
🥳🥳🥳🥳
Rightfully so
Can you make a updated skincare routine hair please....I'm a new fan
They did? good! I make my own oils. but I do support when I can and this one has good reviews from our ppl. I'm glad be whew!! shea moisture was not as strong under pressure
Good! It's NOT for the obsessed fans hair. I hope everyone on their hair falls out.
Hair oiling literally originates from India 💀 let go of the victim mindset
This isn’t about culture. There are many cultures where hair oiling is common, including many black cultures. But you’d rather argue points no one is making than use common sense and active listening skills.
No it's doesn't
I don’t think that’s true. Black folks are the oldest living people and been oiling their hair before anyone else. They invented their shea butters, nut butters, Jamaican castor oil, Haitian castor oil. Oiling is deeply practiced within the aboriginals
@@butterflyqueen9792look up “where does hair oiling originate from” and it’s literally ancient Indian sanskrit.
lmao no, hair oiling literally originated from india, and all the wigs yall be wearing are the hair of indian women as well so stop ❤@@butterflyqueen9792
Black hair products need to stand firm on their formulas, remembering their initial goal in creating the products in the first place.
RIGHT
Soo true who are they catering to. we will never have anything, if Black owned don’t what the initial goal was in the first place “BLACK HAIR CARE” now I’m scared to even use black hair products because nothing seems to be catered to us by us…. Non black society always try to make us feel bad about doing something for us caring about ourselves for us go and change our initial thought or view on a subject (and ingredients) Black owned stay true!!!!
The beauty industry is ruthless, they were probably forced to sell to P&G.
@Dani Dani money talks and it’s said that black women spend the most on beauty, so that money should be speaking the loudest.
@@sageisdeadtome3315 yeah well a Mexican woman created it let’s start there 😂
I am a white MAN and I proudly use mielle rosemary oil
We do not care😂
@@uranus2849 white men are up
Nobody cares 😇
@@Thatoneperson3884 You’re trying keep a white man down and I won’t stand for it ✊🏻
I don’t care if you’re black, white, or the colors of the rainbow. Like Coach Tomlin said we do not CARE!!!
other races can have textured hair. im white and this product works for me so i will continue purchasing and using it, it isnt selfish whatsoever. i agree that people shouldn’t leave bad reviews for a product that isn’t specifically for their hair type, but if the product works for someone who is white, asian, hispanic, etc. then you don’t need to shame them for it
No duh.. you rly thought you did something with this comment. This video doesn't even apply to you then 😂😂😂 girll
I agree!
@@beauxangesdamn and you really thought you did something by spreading negativity and continuing with the same racist views of segregation of races, even through products and haircare..
@@beauxangesthe uploader clearly said BLACK products, maybe you should clean your nasty ears before defending a racist. Just saying girl🤷♀️
You ppl are culture vultures. Anything black you wanna be a part of it.
I’m black but personally I don’t think it’s that big of a deal. Like I just don’t think it’s right for people to be like theses products are for white people and theses are for black. I feel like if white people like the product or it works well for there hair then so what. Instead of people making products only for black people or only for white people, they should make products for everyone instead of segregating hair products.
Thank you. Stop shaming others for wanting to trh something that may make their scalp and hair healthier. We all have hair. We are all part of the human race. I don’t get it
Not everyone's hair is the same, there should never be a one size fits all when it comes to hair. That would be a disaster. It's not hard to understand
@@Ash-nk8lk so you mean to tell me that 4c hair and 1a hair is the same and need the same needs?
It’s a big deal because its not a matter of just saying this product is for this group and this one is for another group and it’s not as simple as just making beauty & hair products that will be beneficial for every group of people skin & hair because there’s a fundamental differences in each ethnic group’s skin & hair. Each group has specific skin & hair needs that has to be met in order to be at it’s best & healthiest, therefore to accomplish that, products has to be specifically formulated for each group. Sadly for over 100 years companies has made thousands of skin & hair products that were not formulated for black women and unfortunately in many cases when black women used those products they have experienced undesirable results and or damage. And that’s the same thing some of these white women are claiming to have experienced when using Mielle and other products which were formulated for black women and not them. Yet they go online and post negative videos about Mielle and other products made for black women.
ANALOGY: That’s like putting diesel fuel in your car and then complain about how it damaged the engine, it damaged the engine because it wasn’t formulated for your car’s engine it was formulated for trucks with Diesel engines not cars with gasoline engines.
FR also there are more important issues then hair oil like people dying
Because honestly instead of doing research and using the products that works for them, a lot of them are just grabbing whatever they see is popular. Then act confused and tricked when it has a negative reaction to their hair
There's no confusion. It literally states for all hair types but she has a line that is for type 4 hair.
@@missjackiierdz clearly there is a confusion. They are leaving negative reviews complaining about things that are actually beneficial to black hair. So obviously this product has consistently better results with certain hair types.
@Yes Sir Then perhaps the company needs to be changing some labels? How is this other woman's fault exactly? If something says it's for all hair types and my hair falls out then I have every right to leave a reviews based on my experience 🙃
@@yessir6618 negative reviews exist for every company that makes a product. Its expected. Imagine how many products Ive tried and I said I didnt like it. Omg all of sudden that means its a bad thing. No. It's literally just something that either 1, i didnt like. 2, i bought to see how my hair will react. 3, I wanted to get something out of my comfort zone.
Online, it literally states its for ALL types of hair. Tell me where it says for "black" hair. She has a line for type 4 hair.. but never "black". Some white women have 4c hair
There's three texture for type four hair so I'm pretty sure that's why it says all hair types as in all hair type that has texture four hair
That's ridiculous! Everyone deserves healthy hair. The oil is for everyone. How does it feel to be racist?
kinda true ngl
Fr just bc it's the other way around doesn't mean it's OK 😡
The oil just works better on specific hair types, it comes from a black hair brand, therefore it would obviously work best on black hair. The issue is that, folks who are not black, in this case, white people, tend to use products made for black hair and negatively review them when it does not work for them. And there is no reason for the brand to be all inclusive, all hair types are different, and not everything is a one size fits all. Simply checking out the website and asking yourself, does it look like these products cater to my hair. If no, then at least make it known that you are using a product that does not seem to work with your hair type but you are trying it anyway. People slammed the product that was not even made for their hair type, like that makes no sense.
It's not racist that our hair type isn't your hair type. Get a life 😹
@@ruffledfilms5270that makes sense. I use Mielle for my hair and my brother uses it too. I’m glad it is a black people product and anyone that isn’t black not trying to be rude, but don’t use the product and do research on a product before buying it so people know what will work for their hair type.
Victimhood isn't a profession; If you get upset about hair oil, get a helmet because life is going to kick your ass.
The product was mad for people with a specific hair type. Straight hair types have alllllll those products to wash their hair with but choose to sell out the ONE product that was made for black hair. Then when their hair falls out or gets messed up they wanna complain and forces a change in the ingredients of the product which will no longer suit the intended purpose.This has nothing to do with victimhood😂
It is not “victimhood” lol, if hair oil is made for a specific type of hair then it’s going to achieve a different thing.
If you have lots of options to choose from, why would you choose a hair oil made for coils/curly hair then complain when it’s not working for you. Black ppl have been dealing with hair products that didn’t work for them for ages and now that they have something that works. Other hair types want to take over the little that they do have when it wasn’t meant for them.
Candace , is that you ? 👀
@@Sbb816 bottle said for all hair types
You can’t read and your comment is invalid
@@funnybunny4932 the bottle said for all hair types. Entire comment is invalid. It is victimhood to take a (wrongly)perceived issue of hair type and turn it into a racial narrative all over preconceived notions and not reading.
Be for real, this content creator assumes that because the creator of Mielle is black and includes black women in marketing, that all of her products are exclusively for black women and/or textured curly hair. So instead of reading a bottle of OIL, she assumes she shouldn’t have to, so her slanderous racially divisive narrative is good enough. No it is not and neither is you for repeating it.
Use products according to your hair type, not your ethnicity. If you are white, Hispanic, Asian, etc. and it works for your hair, use it. If the mielle works for you, you are ok to use it. you are NOT selfish. If it doesn’t work for you, it may not be the product.
this!!!
this! I use this oil (same oil but different brand but that doesn't matter) for my white hair because it's the only thing that helps my itchy and irritated scalp, "white" hair products, especially the ones she shows suck so much
Facts! I use mielle products abd it’s works great on my hair …you are right …buy products according to hair type ..not ethicity
You ARE SELFISH
yeah totally. i’m white with fine blonde hair and it works absolute magic. everyone should enjoy it if it works for you!
I literally had an older white woman ask me what I used to keep my skin clear and I told her African black soap and she came back in my store a few months later and thanked me because her skin had never been clearer…y’all petty
Tbh? As a white boy who lets black girls degade me for my kink these girls tell me they just wanna see them selves as a 🌟Black Goddess🌟✨️why? Well ever since childhood for the most part they have felt insecure about their race mostly hair an degrading white people makes them feel better. I dont mind. Besides its happened to me so much iv kinda grown to like it.
Plus who else is gonna peg me an pull my hair fr. Black mean girls definitely cooking
Ah I see, my bad the way she write it made me believe she was saying the white people were petty 😭😭 thanks for clarifying@@bill855
@@user-ly4ty5rx4bgirl she’s saying the people who are gatekeeping products are petty🤦🏻♀️🤦🏻♀️🤦🏻♀️
@@wtfsouppthe fact you really watched this very short clip and processed “gate-keeping” are your 5 years old? Or just an ignorant grown ass 40 year old?
SMH!! 🤦🏻♀️ RACISM IN ALL SHAPE AND COLORS!
Can we just purchase a product we like without adding a particular race. Is a good product, and the company who created this did a good job creating something that can help other race besides black.
I am straight Rican and my hair is curly, and I will support white, black Chinese, Puerto Rican, ect products that gives me the best results.
We need to do better. Is always. Something. 🤦🏻♀️
Right I was completely turned off by that, this is our and that’s yours, disgusting
Some people don’t know how to read the instructions either. YOU NEED TO WASH IT OFF AFTER 30 MINUTES. Only people with very coily or textured hair can leave it on, because their hair can easily absorb the oil. That oil is extremely strong and can cause your hair to fall off if you leave it on overnight or for wayyy too long. If you want something that you can leave on your hair, then get an actual rosemary plant and boil it in some water, let it sit till it’s cooled down, and apply it to your hair with a spray bottle.
Let's be clear. There is no such thing as white products and black products. We've got to do better!
Exactly. Black girls are missing out on great products because they think they are only for “white girls”
U obviously have no education or never even read if u actually had common sense u can read the product it literally says “4c hair only” MEANS ITS FOR BLACK PEOPLE YALL NEEDA STOP GIVING EVERYTHING AWAY TO WHITE PEOPLE OMG
I think if they created a new hair line for white hair. But leave our section out
@@mosesthomas3976 THERE IS NO SUCH THING! It's all about hair texture not skin color.
@@squeint but 4c hair = black people so basically it is a black product dumb as🤦🏽♀️
Some of you here sound SO BITTER, your negativity is not going to change anything. Wishing womens hair would fall off for trying a product, y’all sound miserable
it’s like u white ppl r just responding not listening 💀she doesn’t care whether it works or doesnt, the problem is when ppl w straighter hair textures try other products meant for black hair, they change the product to fix y’all’s hair too which is annoying considering there’s so much hair products for y’all 💀plus ik some white ppl have curly hair i’m talking abt the straight/wavy haired girlies
Mmmmhhmmm!
Yeah.. if you go on Mielle’s shop and go to collection, the rosemary mint selection is made for all hair types 😭
Thats what I'm saying...
Bad karma
Cultures don’t own a brand or hairstyle clothing type
i’m white with loose curls but this oil has helped thicken my hair so much this past year. it’s great for most hair types 🫶🏻
No way people are trying to gatekeep hair oil 😭😭
Bc white peoples have more products then our brownies. But still choose to get brown peoples hair which means we don’t have anything because of y’all greedy ass. 😱😱😱😱😱😱😱😱
If it's on the shelf, anyone has the right to buy it, sweetie.
then be bald then😂
@@tvdlover7488 nah, I’m white and it works amazingly on my hair and a lot of my friends hair who are all sorts of ethnicities. Love the product and after a few years of use, my hair is incredible 😁
but thanks for the suggestion. I’ll just use a razor if I want the bald look 👍
yea fr, how is it selfish?
nah, the video was saying if it dont work they shouldnt be complaining. It works for your hair thats why you should be buying it. Instead of thevideo person saying blacks they should of said curly or like thick hair types that are able to use the products@@jred3642
@@sockdonutsbecause black people already have less than a fraction of the options white people have and vastly different hair needs
Once white communities take interest in a product intended or marketed for black people…
This leads companies to change the recipes and marketing to lean into said white audience that’ll make them more money
As a black woman, just please stop if they want to use it then let them hair product has no race on it 🙄🙄🙄tf
Thank you friend. ❤
@@lexijones8019 no problem and I understand how ppl outside of the black community feel because it’s not right at all. I even have a white friend I did box braids on and ppl had judged her for it and it made me mad.. ppl are just so mean 😪 🤬🙄
I think these people are mad because companies change products and it no longer suits their hair type however your comment does make a lot of sense it’s not race it’s hair type
@@NiaRiggins my comment makes perfect sense u just slow asf 😂
@@iamskylynnewell the box braids is probably cause it belongs to African culture, other braids belong to other cultures too, so thats why they were rude to her and just to be respectful she shouldn't do that again, but you are right the hair products don't HAVE a specific race to be used on
I am dominican I have been using rosemary oil based products for decades, I even make my own oil. That's not a black African American exclusive product
Stfu and use the product
Thank you. I've been deep oiling for a while now and I'm brown. There's not one race which hair oiling belongs to 😊
How is this not racism 😒😒😒
one of the racist videos i've ever seen, These black girls are very bad, imagine the cancellation, if a girl of another color made comments like that, all the time I see videos of this type of girls of color referring badly to products such as not black girl friendly or that are not inclusive blahblah, but When it is their product, you cannot make any type of comments against it, you represent what is wrong in this world, they are absurd
It is.
It is. Don't let anyone else convince you otherwise.
Bc it’s not get over it. 😊
It is
At the end of the day, people can buy whatever they want, even if it damages their hair.
it’s that white girl’s constitutional right to be bawlheaded
what damages their hair ? this hasn't damaged mine
@Annie then you're not apart of the ppl theyre talking abt. 😐
Relaxers doing just fine on the shelves. 😂
@@ivyVbby what
It’s always for a trend. Then a half full bottle collects dust in their bathroom for years until they throw it out :/
Fr!
Description
Our Rosemary Mint scalp and hair oil is a nutrient-rich, intensive formula meant to help you address your hair concerns. From nourishing hair follicles, smoothing split ends and help with dry scalp, this hair oil uses natural, organic ingredients and essential oils to provide the care your hair deserves. Use it on protective styles, including braids and weaves, and enjoy its fresh, invigorating scent during your next hot oil treatment.
Benefits:
Infused with Biotin
Use for daily hair care or specialized scalp treatments
Features more than 30 essential oils and extracts
Helps improve length retention
Conditions dry scalp
Smooths split ends
Formulated without: No Parabens, No Sulfates, No Paraffins, No Mineral Oil, No DEA, No Animal Testing
2 fl. oz. | Formulated for all hair types and textures | Safe for chemically treated hair.
And yet, who made money for a half filled product that will be produced again? The owner. You do realize that is what buying and selling does. They bought it, it sells, if they like it, it will continue to sell. Yall want black owned companies but are mad because people are supporting a black company when it was a black woman Linda Lynn who said something negative towards the company and a drama broke out from the owners husband. 🤷♀️💁♀️
My above comment shows the description of the oil… it’s “formulated for all hair types”. So NOBODYS hair should be falling out.
@@crystalmethany6286hat’s probably just for marketing. And don’t quote me on this but I heard someone say that the owners of the oil said that it isn’t recommended for people with non-kinky hair.
Stop creating hair segregation
Hair is different bro u didn’t get the video… they have so many brands that cater to their hair type but curlier hair has little 😊
@@Serpentsubliminal are you saying that rosemary oil is only for black hair?
@@Nermeen. Fr I use rosemary oil and I'm brown 💀
Girl it’s a store. First come, first serve. Ain’t nobody selfish for going shopping. You should have either been there earlier or ordered it ahead of time
That’s not the point…there is a bigger picture/problem here.
"Our products " "their products ".. did I miss the "blacks only" sign?? Are you suggesting we bring that crap back??? I can't even believe people still behave like this..
The ours products and their products when you walk into a hair store, such a sally beauty store, or any other beauty store that you have there is aisles that is for color peoples hair only and then there’s also aisles that is for Caucasian people. they don’t have to say it’s for blacks only or whites only when you walk in and you see the product you know what aisle to go out on that is directed towards you.
@@frankiemckane6314 no there is not only certain products for ONLY black people
@@Jesusisthekingg I’m going to agree to disagree, respectfully.
Listen.... Products that work for white people DO NOT work for us! We cant use those products!! And the natural/black hair products sections are usually so much smaller than the "main" hair section, which usually caters to white hair
@Momo Mon'amie that does NOT mean that non-black people CAN'T shop for products in that section 🙄. That's just stupid. Not all products work for everyone and if someone finds a great product, they should freely get to purchase it regardless of what shelf they found it on. Ingredients know no race.
Black women, you can make this oil for way cheaper. Just get some olive oil or carrier oil of choice and add dried rosemary, peppermint essential oil, and any other herbs of choice. Put in a glass jar in a dark place for a few weeks. Then strain when you’re ready to use into a bottle. You don’t need to support Mielle. You can make bigger batches of hair growth oil for less. ❤
I appreciate your knowledge and information
Thank you
Thanks! I make my own oil, plus I add biotin oil in mine. I think black women needs to stop catering to companies who continue to disrespect black women. These companies know what they're doing...it's all about money.
@@QueenEsther414 you should sell it I would definitely buy it !!
It’s about supporting Mielle they didn’t cause the problem. They never even marketed to those people. Why harm a black business that is choosing to stand with us?
Why are black women so pressed about other ethnicities using this product? If Mielle is a black company wouldn't you be happy that your brother is making money & that a positive change is happening for black entrepreneurs?
I agree!
Exactly
First of all, mielle hair oil is for EVERYONE not for only black ppl cause yall should be lucky to have hair oil while ppl are struggling to grow hair, so pls be repectful
"great for all types and textures" on the bottle.
We need a black companies that will not sell out
I'll create the one!
Hold my mule....
We need to learn to make our own trust me we can all do it I believe we can and WP are starting to piss me off
@@Classicallyodd Yeah.....and?
Amen,remember Famous Amos Cookies?After selling, they were never the same.
Lol sounding like the seagull in finding Nemo out here
😂
I don’t think the product is “catered” to a specific color of skin. Please stop with the racism. We all bleed red and we’re made in the image of the same creator who loves ALL of His creation.
I may be late, but it's not the skin that's different. It's the hair texture that is. Of course, there are races other than black with textured hair, but they're buying out products that typically cater to textured hair as people with pin straight, non textured hair, complaining their hair is oily, and then pressuring the brand to change the formulation of the product. The result of that is people with textured hair having one less hair care option that caters to their hair type. And there's already not many brands that work for textured hair. Meanwhile, people with straight hair have millions of brands that are formulated for their hair type, and those with textured hair do not. This has happened many times with other brands.
Those with straight hair start using textured hair products, and their hair falls out, gets weighed down, or is too oily, and then leave bad reviews, pressures the company to change their formulation, and then those with textured hair loses yet again another brand that caters to their hair. And trust me, there are not many.
The bottom line is that textured hair and non textured hair require different routines to thrive. There aren't many brands that make products that are good for textured hair.
🙄
Mielle is for everyone! Its a good product so people buy it.
It’s not for everyone
@@mya3601 yess it's only for people with curly or afro
I just bought a bottle and I’m white. Cause I just thought “ouuu rosemary, isn’t that what all the influencers are pushing for hair growth?” So yeah I just put it in my head lol
@@mya3601you should buy hair care stuff for your hair type not ethnicity.
@@higgins_foreverIf it makes your hair fall out don’t try to tarnish the brand and trash the company by leaving one star reviews.
Are you saying that white women or people that are not black can’t purchase your product but how would you feel if a white person made a product and said why are Black people buying it they shouldn’t be? You would get pissed
FOR REAL
nowhere near whats being said
real
@@martinam7806What are you talking about. There arent aisles of products that cater just to blck people. Yall need to stop making dumb comparisons that arent based on reality. It DOES suck when companies change formulas to cater to other groups especially when they have a lot of other choices. These people are literally using the wrong products to be trendy.
@@martinam7806 Sorry to break it to you but the rest of us live in reality. When the majority buys a product, companies will change formulas to cater to the majority. It is absolutely against reality to act like as if people have the exact same hair texture. In America, the people there are descendants from mostly west Africans. They have a specific hair type that is very rare or completely absent in people of the majority group. So it is inappropriate to assume that they need the exact same products. Especially when they historically have been ignored as a market and have been forced to buy products from segregated aisle sections or stores. I mean those products are still separated in some stores. The only reason they’ve gotten more popular is because people have embraced their natural curly hair. So now those companies are changing formulas so they no longer work for them. So she 100% has a valid concern. It’s 100% valid to be frustrated about those changes. She’s not saying it should be illegal for them to buy those products. She’s just pointing out the negative consequences of catering.
The double standard is uncanny. The ignorance is unmatched.
This is so real. If it was the other way around and a white person was walking down aisles recording saying that black people need to stop buying something because their black they would be slandered.
Fr, referring to ppl as non-black pisses me off if someone were to say non-white you wouldn't hear the end of it.
This sounds ignorant sorry love
Ew the racism ain’t it
You can’t be racist to white people :))
Black people: stop colonizing us.
You dumbasses: Thizz Iz rAverze RayIzUm!
This is so true, she needs to grow up
@@user-kp6zg1cv5dreal like she actually needs to chill out fr
@@tsunanii_ facts
Oh, you poor thing…boohoo. My heart just bleeds for the injustice 😂😂😂
For real I can't with these people and their victim mentality like how old is she? At some point you learn the world doesn't owe you shit just because you paint yourself as a victim at every opportunity
@@lucille_2438 no ones painting themselfs as victims shes just saying its unfair how white people are using black hair producs in there hair when its not made for them and then leaving bad reviews saying it doesnt work ofc is doesnt work bc its not made for your kind of hair so no one is pai ting themselfs as victims
@@aaliyahgrinnon8760 but girl that's my whole point. This is regarding being butthurt about ROSEMARY OIL. SCALP OIL. How is that an only black hair product? Every race has people wanting to grow their hair out and things like alopecia, hormonal thinning, thinning related to age etc
@@aaliyahgrinnon8760 and besides that how immature and self centered is it to claim a hair product can ONLY be used by your race? It's so childish and daft. It's almost comical.
@@lucille_2438 You are obviously anti Black 🤷🏾♀️
the mean girl energy is crazy
It's a hair growth oil for the scalp and ends. It has no race on it. It may be a black hair brand but the oil does not say it's for any specific type of hair. If they've found something g that works for them leave it tf alone.
And a side note. If you actually read the bottle it says it's for all hair types and textures.
White Hispanic here 🇨🇺🇺🇸
LOVE Mielle (my- elle) on my curly hair and WILL NOT stop purchasing.
Not sure what the point of commenting this is
Hope all ts falls out to tf
Edit:I’m sorry to everyone I was fighting with I didn’t realize that’s what u guys was on my ass abt and I apologize to the original commenter I must’ve been in a pissy ass mood when I made this comment
^^ Envious and malicious bc she has beautiful hair, huh?! How nefarious can u be? Lots of black women wear Peruvian & Brazilian hair so are they pretending to be Latina bc that's our actual hair not even a style or a product! My hair is nothing like a black person's, and I see them wearing my hair pretending to have soft & flowy VS curls, straight silky hair, or non-kinky & soft luscious curls! It must beautiful and preferable over their own hair texture which they hide with other race's hair while getting mad bc non-blacks use a product like this or wear breads??😂 The hypocrisy is much‼ Meanwhile, a hair product or hairstyle is for everyone whether it's Dove or this brand. At least, my people don't wear other races hair while claiming cultural apropriation and the "blueprint" of races (def racist). Oh well. Racists and envious people will reap that which they sow.
that’s amazing i bet it looks great!
@@Cyn444 u have no life
This time they won't stop us. Keep pushing baby girl.
Exactly 🌹🙏🏽💝☮️💠🙏🏽
👏🏿👏🏿👏🏿
She isn’t rlly helping
Yes!! I love that she goes HARD for us!! 💜🙏🏾🫶🏾✊🏾
Period
There should be no “black” or “white” products, it can be for everyone. But when people start leaving bad reviews for a product that was not specifically made for their type of hair anyway that’s what makes me angry.
I don’t see that company putting out a statement saying this product is only to be used by a specific ethnicity . If the product works for someone then they use it who are you to tell anyone what product they can and can’t use.
Why do we as black women think we own all rights to these products though? If a product works for my hair I’m buying it. Whether it’s for white, Asian, muppet wool hair I don’t care. Same for skin care. If it works for you it works for you. Many of those “white” hair products work for my hair too and I’m buying them. Seems reasonable to me imo
Exactly
Exactly! We looked real silly when we found out that Dark & Lovely products and African Pride was made by Caucasians.
Amen 🙏👏🏼
I bought this oil for my hair, I didn’t know it was not for white peoples hair. I have alopecia so I’m always looking for something to help that. Would someone please explain what the difference is as far as how it affects white vs black hair. I’m not here to argue it, just trying to understand cause the alopecia thing is very real and a constant battle to fight.
@@corinnematthews5636 The main reason is that it weighs down your hair if it’s straight. It can also make your hair look really greasy. The same goes for a black person whose hair is straightened. It’s not even actually a race thing but a straight hair thing. It’s made specifically for textured hair. There’s a lot of cases of straight hair falling out so if your hair is straight I probably wouldn’t recommend. Hope that helps ❤
I have straight hair and use the oil for the psoriasis on my scalp, and it helps so much. Please don't spread hate and try to separate who can or can't use what. At the end of the day, if they change the formula you could always purchase another Rosemary oil from another black owned brand and actually put love and support towards the community.
The entitlement of your comment reeks of whiteness... if BLACK women built the brand, the company made the product for BLACK hair in mind, then you want to use it and say 'well it's too oily, too thick, blah, blah, blah' and they turn around and change the formula to cater to a people that didn't build their brand, then it starts to feel like these 'brands' are using us to get hot, that's selfish AF when you literally have whole aisles of product for yt hair.
@@brownsugako7772cry more im on my way to buy 5 bottles of mielles rosemary oil right now
@@brownsugako7772so wait what you’re saying is… that whatever race the owner of the company is that made the product… is the only race the company can sell the product to? Doesn’t matter what hair type they made the product for, or the fact people who live in this society have the freedom to buy what they want, no that doesn’t matter. Only thing that matters is if you’re not black, because the owner is black, then you can’t buy the products? Regardless of your hair type?
@@brownsugako7772, i can agree on some of this, however this product is for all hair types(it says on that on their website). This oil has many ingredients in it that are so important to scalp health. now dont get me wrong, the people comapling of it being thick and oily sound unreasonable. This oil is for thick hair. It is marketed for people who have thick and curly hair. Hense black hair. However this product isnt just for black people. It can be used on anyone at their own risk. And this person has a good point of it helping with their scalp problem. As it has active ingredients that provide help for that. I use this oil for many things. And yes I have thick curly hair. Also yes there are isles of hair products marketed for white hair. However almost every one of them is bad for their hair. So who could blame them for wanting somethng without t.- hat. If it doesnt make their hair weighed down or oily who cares?
@@brownsugako7772you sound dumb the person your replying said none of that you just disregarded everything she said
Still looking in the listing for where it says “for black person hair”
🤔🤔🤔 can’t find it… wonder whyyyy
Somebody mad it wasn’t in stock 😂😂
Any product that goes viral sells out, then they move on to the next thing and stock adjusts and goes back to normal.
True a lot of products go out but in this case, it’s a little different because the people that are selling it out
Don’t have curly hair whatsoever and the people who actually have curly hair which this hair product is supposed to be used for is being changed into something different. And even though it seems like it’s not a big change, it is a big change.
Yeap, stock is already back to normal
Nah…but changing the formula so white peope enjoy it more doesn’t just GO AWAY
sorry this is a dumb take. if more people are using black hair products the stores will just make it more available. also rosemary oil is recommended for any woman with hair loss and plenty of white people and other races have female hair loss.
Boo the store don't make the product that's not even a major corporation owned business a black women works on that product herself they complaining about its oily while using a product that says hair oil like bffr black peoples hair doesn't produce oil the way it should which is why we need it
The problem is when they change their formulas to fit non black textures black peoples are the main consumers of company so if they want to do so they need to make a formula suitable for non Afro hair textures I believe the original owner sold her company as well so that could be it
Um, sweetheart I can totally tell you’ve never even taken a look at this product 😂there’s so many more oils in this that are considered carrier oils (if you don’t know what that means google it) aside from rosemary. The others are probably way too heavy for WW hair such as castor oil and that’s why it’s affected their hair the way it has.
no it doesn’t. these companies then change the formula to suit “all hair types” which then ruins are hair
Girl no. Look at shea moisture now. They literally changed the formulas on some of their best products os white women would use them. Now their once thick coily custard is basically water.
What do I do then if I’m Hispanic but also half white with curly hair? As a hairstylist I can say that it doesn’t matter your race for a product but what the product contains and what it is supposed to do for your hair type. This stigmatism has to stop. 🛑 I can’t go to products that will literally strip my hair. Stupid Garnier. Pantene. Ugh. 😅
I’m a white girl with extremely curly hair… I just started using this and it really helps my curls not be frizzy I recommend it to people with CURLY hair NOT straight! So I totally agree!
I understand where you are coming from but regardless I'm super annoyed by this whole "them and us" as if we aren't all human. This just divides US even more...
agreed. reinforces the oppressors hate
@@porschenator you can reinforce something that never wavered nor changed. It’s not reinforcing anything that’s the norm
Don't say you understand and say but "we're all humans". Yes we are but we're still all different and that's what make everyone unique. We've been having problems with products that doesn't cater to our hair for years, just because it's not made for us. When we do make products for us it's always being bought out and changed to not fit our hair or skin. Can us kinky/curly haired women have a couple options over the hundreds of options for straight haired women?
this is like saying a firefighter should be able to walk into a hospital and preform surgery despite not having the proper training because "we're all human". firefighters dont belong in the operating room, surgeons do and thats okay because we're all humans but humans are different.
Oh shut the hell up. YT people created race. DEAL with it!
Gotta love the divisiveness in this world. Even over hair oil. 🙄
This content creator is wack so she suggests garnier full of Chemicals to the non black audience because blacks somehow are the only ones its made for smh 🤮🤮🤮
FR
YES! Bring back segregation!
“Ours” 💀
The owner sold her brand to Procter & Gamble lmao
Black founded but WOMAN LED
You young ppl are ridiculous
Thank you honestly it's disgusting because the company will turn around and change its formula why are these companies so afraid to be honest that they cater to African hair textures we can have our own products they have three to four ails full of them in stores why can we not have our own the same thing happened to shea moisture and guess what no one cares about them anymore and they're trying to get their black audience back 🤦🏾♀️🤦🏾♀️🤦🏾♀️🤦🏾♀️ beyond annoyed thank you Queen for the honesty
They already stated that they would not be changing their formula 😊
Description
Our Rosemary Mint scalp and hair oil is a nutrient-rich, intensive formula meant to help you address your hair concerns. From nourishing hair follicles, smoothing split ends and help with dry scalp, this hair oil uses natural, organic ingredients and essential oils to provide the care your hair deserves. Use it on protective styles, including braids and weaves, and enjoy its fresh, invigorating scent during your next hot oil treatment.
Benefits:
Infused with Biotin
Use for daily hair care or specialized scalp treatments
Features more than 30 essential oils and extracts
Helps improve length retention
Conditions dry scalp
Smooths split ends
Formulated without: No Parabens, No Sulfates, No Paraffins, No Mineral Oil, No DEA, No Animal Testing
2 fl. oz. | Formulated for all hair types and textures | Safe for chemically treated hair
They either need to market the product differently or change the formula. According to my above pasted info….it’s formulated for everyone, so we need to have some sympathy for women who bought this product and experienced hair loss. Because unless these white women are actually not human, it’s supposed to be for them as well.
@@crystalmethany6286 she's talking about a different oil that works for 4c type hair. The one you posted is of another product
@@litttlewolf4599 what are you talking about, this video is about the mielle rosemary mint oil…are you talking about the OP’s comments about Shea moisturiz? But I am referring to the oil that has ho’s losing hair
Everyone wants their favorite restaurant to be empty until they find out they have to close down because of the lack of customers.
Perfect example
And then they still complain
Y’all need to watch her first video and look at her comment. The issue is not that they’re selling it out, its that people are putting pressure on the company to change its formula which leaves black people without the proper products for their hair, something that has happened several times. Having to change our product because it just doesn’t apply to us anymore sucks because finding new ones always costs a lot of money, time, and experimentation. White people (who don’t have the hair texture, don’t even try that we all know a majority don’t have curly hair like us don’t whataboutism this) have so many products catered to them and yet try to use one that just isn’t meant for them and many of the big companies buy out smaller black-owned brands which then have to change their formula to reach “a wider consumer base.” Just because you don’t know about the issue doesn’t mean it doesn’t exist…
Seriously
They didn't complain about lack of customers though did they
A popular oil brand doesnt just belong to any race
As a Puerto Rican girl, I love this product. I am happy the company is selling out 🙌🏻 Btw I did videos on it really does work 😂
Exactly. Everywhere I go it's sold out or wayyy to expensive. Like 15 dollars. I'm just going to make my own and reuse the container. This is so irritating because my hair and scalp actually found an oil that worked wonders .
That’s what I do! Double boil your favorite oil with mint and rosemary. I only use Mielle when I’m super lazy.
@@beautifulicebergwithicecre9922 well, you're a delight.
You want respect? Earn it. Your attitude stinks.
@@Jashera ohhh that’s so smart could I know exactly which oil you personally use? I ran out of my mine and now I just have the little bottle and I can already see my hairs not happy without it and it’s only been a week while I was waiting for more CAUSE I CANT FIND IT NO WHERE :( it sucks cause I finally found a hair oil that stuck and sealed in moisture for my hair. I’ve done natural hair masks and used olive oil and saw similar results but I don’t know if I should keep that in my hair indefinitely
@@Jashera I want to try this oil, but since this is happening, might as well DIY it myself. 😮💨 Thanks for the tip, love ❤️
It’s in stock online at target y u crying you went to ONE store and suddenly it’s FAMINE. Sweetie go down the street and check the other target
I hate this, this happened a while back with all the Miss Jessie's (especially the multicultural curls) and I was steamin mad. I'm Black/Latino and It's hard enough having our "ethnic" hair products get put behind security walls while Caucasians products DON'T..and now this sh*t is happening more and more
Then maybe some of the people using these products need to stop stealing them. Sad but true
I don’t use this oil but I do use miss Jessie’s. I have 3a hair. I’m Italian.
What’s a “Caucasian “ product? You sound unintelligent .
@@hellokittydimaggio projection
@@hellokittydimaggioshampoos created to dry up oils in oily, nasty, stringy hair…will do just that. Black people hair is like plants. Our hair needs moisture in order for it to grow. Pick up a book
Your perspective and racist comments on this are absolutely embarrassing. Do better.
As a black afro person, its gone for a reason it might have not worked for your hair doesn't mean it definitely doesn't work for others aswell as you sure should not call them "selfish" because it works on them i have it and it works miracles keep your "opinion" to urself.
This is why I started making my own hair oils and deep conditioner treatments at home. They switch up the formulas on us, knowing that we need different things for our hair.
If they are catering to us, they would stay about us.
Me 2
This is why I buy real black owned hair products that aren’t factory made. They’re cheaper and mainly cater to my 4c hair which are the hardest products to find. I stop trusting those companies a long time ago. Once they get on we get left behind. And yes these girls are being selfish because there are plenty of products for curly hair that aren’t aimed towards black hair go buy those
Me too!
Same here...I love making my own hair, face cream and more💯🌹💜
Yes!!!
It’s cool we can make our own
Rosemary essential oil
Tea tree oil
Amla powder
Ginger powder or herb
Fenugreek seeds
Boil 1 or 2 hours
Or let it sit in a dark cabinet for at least 4-6 weeks; shaking it once a week.
lol
Wait my mom has already been doing this😭😭 almost the exact ingredients wow!
Equal parts of each?
Thank you queen.
@@seliahh9451 I would individually do this if your sensitive.
But essential oils add them slowly just because you can control the amount.
Amla powder makes me break out. So I say add a teaspoon at a time. Max 3 teaspoon
Ginger just a teaspoon
It’s more of a booster
Rosemary is a stimulator (benefits)
Tea tree is a antibacterial (benefits)
This girl is literally so embarrassing
Sis this is bordering racism. Leave the white people alone and go try another store. Also blaming people of a race ideas of being upset with the company’s restocking team is crazy.
I am white and have pin straight hair, last year I have lost a great amount of hair like in clumps thanks to a shampoo you’re coincidentally showing in that aisle. Mielle Rosemary oil, rosemary water and caffeine treatment literally saved my hair, and in about 8 months of use I am back to normal. Of course is greasy and of course you shampoo it out after 3/4 hours. I am glad seeing some white girls losing hair makes you all giggle of satisfaction, maybe stop for a second and think that they started using it because they had an excessive effluvium problem which is by the way the reason why when you start the treatment you keep losing hair for a while. According to your foolish statement I shouldn’t have got the oil for the sake of the black community which must be one of the most idiotic things I’ve ever heard in my life.
By the way the vast majority of products you show in that aisle are cheap and low quality especially OGX and Fructis.
Take care.
They are cheap and low quality but that's what non black people make. Not our fault
I'm a white girl with slightly wavy hair, this is one of the only products that has helped my androgenetic alopecia, I'm finally seeing baby hairs after years of trying to cover my bald spots !
Thank you
Your race is irrelevant. What is relevant to this discussion is your hair type. Women with afro-textured hair naturally have diverse hair types from bone straight and course to tiny coils and fine and everything in between. Women with euro hair textures have hair that is completely different.
You can rant all about how this oil is the only thing that works for you, but what you are failing at understanding is, it's not the oil that is helping you, it is the ROSEMARY ESSENTIAL OIL ITSELF that is DROPPED IN THE HEAVY NUT OILS THE MIELLE OIL IS MADE FROM that is helping you. You can get the same benefits if you take a sprig of rosemary oil and put it in a water spray bottle and spray your hair with it. In fact, you would have even more benefit because you don't have to wash rosemary essential oil water out of your hair.
This oil is a heavy nut butter oil which causes people with euro hair textures to have to wash it out when it's designed to be applied to the hair daily and worn until wash day. Wash day for black women's hair is on average anywhere from one week to 3 weeks because our hair doesn't produce any oils at all. That is the difference. You can literally go to your grocery store and buy rosemary essential oil and put it in your shampoo, your conditioner, or in a water bottle. But for some reason (we know why) you buy a hair oil, use it improperly just to get the effects of the essential oil.
The only way people with afro texture hair can get the benefit of Rosemary Oil is when it's suspended in heavy nut oils because we need a carrier oil to make it penetrate our hair shaft and scalp.
Our hair and our scalps are not the same even though you think that's what equality means.
@@faithmaire7119 For what?
@@yeahaboutthatthough3656 nobody reading all that
@@yeahaboutthatthough3656 nobody said shit about their hair being the same.
And her hair isn't like other white women's, she has a fucking medical condition.
You're making assumptions based on her race despite the fact that she straight up said she has a very specific condition that affects her hair type and growth.
"Black hair" isn't the only hair that can benefit from this shit.
And most "white" products don't really go for hair health anyways.
If you look into "non-black" cultures, they all have their own hair care "secrets" full of shit they had access to and work in their hair.
And NONE of it is this wash daily with harsh cleaners bullshit.
Yeah the shit works for her, get tf over it.
No she can't just use the shit everyone else is using, frankly they probably shouldn't be using it either.
It's just black women seem to get the most struggles when it comes to everything and as a result or forced to figure shit out the most.
They know how to maintain their hair because it's so different from everyone else's.
And while people using black products because they are trendy and NOT because they need them is fucked and a result of societal attitudes towards everything black.
This is one example of it working.
Quit assuming shit about people's hair based on their race, gatekeeping haircare ain't gonna help shit.
Next you're gonna start bitching about white chemo patients wearing wigs because "non-black hair grows faster" or some shit.
If it works, it works.
The problem are the people who are buying shit that DON'T work for them and ruining for the people it does work for, something that correlates to race but is not necessarily tied down to it.
If you think diying is such an easy great thing to do, then why don't you just make this shit yourself? Not all black women, just you.
The bottle literally says made for ALL hair types
Edit if you read the bottle it says made for all hair types and textures
Not all black people have kinky coily hair , some do have silky hair as well
This happened with black girl sunscreen too, instead of using what they have always been able to use, they sell out black girl sunscreen, it’s crazy.
im not tryna be rude at all, but what exactly is Black girl sunscreen? am i just being stupid
@@IDontKnow-pf6en I'm assuming it's a brand. If not, I'm assuming its a sunscreen for melaninated skin, since melaninated skin isn't the same as unmelaninated skin.
@@IDontKnow-pf6en it’s a sunscreen made specifically for people with darker skin tones. A lot of regular sunscreen leaves a white tint on skin that’s darker than medium brown, so that company made a sunscreen specifically for black and dark skinned POC that worked as a moisturizer and didn’t look white on the skin.
Sunscreen that protects dark and darker skinned individuals and does not leave the white residue or film.
I don't think I've ever met a black person that actually uses sunscreen
There is always something new to complain about 💀🤦♀️
Exactly like be grateful you have many products
@@kabaribiah6419Exactly SO MANY other textured hair products, be grateful there is more than this one!
@@kabaribiah6419Who has many products whyte or blck?
You have got to be kidding me, we have a very limited selection for blck hair. Just like how she showed in the video of a mile long aisle of whyte hair care products. We have a very small section & It’s been that way for YEARS. Now all of a sudden straight hair girlies are using the products that are made for OUR hair then have the audacity to leave one star reviews and trash the company because it doesn’t work for them. What are y’all not understanding in these comments my GOODNESS.🙄🙄🙄
Always, it’s embarrassing atp
I'm white and have pin-straight hair. This oil has been the only product that has helped me regrow and strengthen my hair after losing so much of it. People should be able to use what works for them without being labeled as selfish. Stop causing more division- it's the last thing this world needs.
Thank you for this. Didn't even know this was happening. So ridiculous! Everytime Black people get anything. Here come the others tryna take advantage.
Bottle said for all hair types her analysis is racist
I don’t think my eyes have ever rolled into the back of my head as they did watching this. There is something seriously fundamentally wrong with your perception.
Your name is Johnny, why would anyone listen to your opinion 😟
@@jazlyn2721 just because of his name?
@@jazlyn2721now that’s discrimination bub 😟
@@jazlyn2721 id prefer to listen to his opinion than someone who uses somebodys name on an argument. Your name is jazlyn why would anyone wanna hear your opinion 🤭
@@rayray-ly4su My name isn’t Jazlyn LOL. It’s a username I picked out because it’s cute.
It’s crazy how some black people will try to make everything about race😦
They're bitter af and it shows 🙄
Yep. They are racist af and jealous
They want segregation
@@robynreeeeebabe who’s “they” ur wanna be as curly hair don’t make no body bitter😂
that’s the most ironic comment i’ve ever seen like yt ppl don’t hold the most racism and can’t mind they damn buisness😂
So at first it was “support black owned businesses” and now it’s “stop using black people products, you’re selfish”. Please… Let’s not support anyone because of their skin color but support them because the product they’re making is actually good. Plus, In the description of this oil it says it’s for all hair types.
It's selfish when you buy an oily product (not for your hair type) then complain about how oily your hair is and how it's falling out. That's like me Using Pantene and Treseme (which is catered to Caucasian hair) and getting mad saying that it doesn't work for my hair and demanding them to change the ingredients. It wasn't made for my hair type in the first place, so it'll be selfish of me to want it to be changed to cater to my hair (which it wasn't meant for my hair type anyways). That's selfish.
@@HssnsidndjdndBdndndjndk-yn4vh You’re absolutely right. I do think those people who complain about the product not working lack common sense, but I still think it’s weird to complain about us buying the product (most of us use it as a pre wash, and it works just fine) since before all I was hearing was “buy from black owned businesses”, so my point still stands, we should buy good products, regardless of who made it and this product seems to be working for a lot of people, but I do also agree with you. Have a good day.
@@user-rv9jq6qf3p when we say 'support black owned businesses ", we aren't talking about non black people, we are talking to our community....and exactly, most of you guys use it as a pre wash because it can not stay in your hair for long (as it was meant to be used). I go through a bottle a week and I use it every day on my hair without washing it out (I wash my hair once a month). So of course y'all would have to use it as a pre wash. The white influencers calling for a ban of this product and saying that it made their hair fall out and greasy (even though it's an oil) are selfish, considering it wasn't made for their hair types. Like I said that's like me Using Pantene and complaining about my hair being dry and brittle and breaking off and calling for a ban of a product that wasn't meant for my hair type anyways, that takes away from the group of people it was originally made for. This happens ALOT with BLACK hair care and makeup products, people who the products aren't catered to will buy it and leave bad reviews and the product ends up getting pulled off the shelves or the formula changes to suit the people it wasn't originally made for and now BW are assed out of another product. For example Black skin tones need darker contour, highlight and blush and when there where makeup products that where finally being made for brown/dark skin white influencers where buying the products and giving it bad reviews saying that it made them look too dark. Same with Mielle and She's Moisture. She's moisture was originally made for Black Women but white people litteraly bullied the CEO to change the product to suit their hair too and when the ingredients where changed to suit non afro hair it no longer worked for afro hair. It's extremely selfish and annoying af. Imagine if black people went out our way to use hair products that don't cater to our hour KNOWING THAT IT DOESN'T CATER TO OUR HAIR just for us to complain how it doesn't cater to our hair and the product gets changed no longer benefitting Caucasian hair. The fact that y'all see absolutely NOTHING wrong with that is WILD. Then most of y'all saying "there's no such thing as hair products that belong to a specific group of people considering the fact that you have to walk down the BLACK HAIR CARE ISLE to get Mielle or She's Moisture.😂😂😂😭😭😭.
@@HssnsidndjdndBdndndjndk-yn4vhit's made for all hair types!!! If your hair is falling out it's because of allergic reaction not race!!
They’re making a black woman rich, so let them buy it!
Why are we blaming none-back women when the “issue” is popularity? I’m black too and I don’t see the need to get so petty. I don’t know where “it’s getting changed” is coming from cause as far as I know this is a black owned company and it makes products designed for your curls. It didn’t ruin your life or anything it didn’t say “sold out forever”
Other black owned companies changed their formula that were designed for "black" hair/ tight curls.
But this is not one.
@Hadassahh Reyes Yea, that's the point. She saying that's what happens because they complain and so she showed how they complain about that one specific product. She's stating that it might happen just like how it has with other products. She's also saying they don't have many products for curly tight hair basically because *insert reasons she listed*.
The reason people change their formulas for example Cantu is because they initially have harsh products that even effect black women’s scalps harmful ingredients such as silicones and alcohol. It has nothing to do with skin tone it has everything to do with scalp sensitivity.
@Hadassahh Reyes You missed the mark again lol and I don't know why your comment won't appear, but I see it through my notifications. The other products became worse for tight curls after they changed the ingredients 😑 did you not watch the video. They did not become better for tight curls afterwards, only inclusive for other hair types. I personally don't care, but don't lie about what was mentioned in the video (it was not ill intended) it was made to bring awareness on something that impacts people of tighter curl pattern.
Mielle isn't even black owned anymore so we black people should pipe it down
You can sit quiet but the rest of us won't
It’s people like you that keep racism alive
So you expect brands to cater to black people and "be inclusive" but when people of other races want to use those products too then they're "colonizing your space". It's all about inclusivity until it comes to other races, then suddenly you want to shut them out.
If that's the case, then don't complain about the market for black businesses being smaller, more expensive and less available because according to you they should only sell to black people which means they will always generate less sales.
This is why I love Camille Rose. Several years, and the products I use have not changed.
🤫 before they start on this brand too🤣
That honey hydrate is the truth
#FACTS 👍🏾
Love me some Camille 🌹
@@naturalwoman3552 exactly 😭. That’s when mayhem will happen. Best believe i will stock up 😭😭😭
I’m white and I use this product. Not only one race is allowed to use this product. Everyone can use it as long as it works for your hair. And for the record, people are not being selfish. It’s called using what works for you.
That’s not what black ppl think you guys have a bunch of shampoo that gets advertised on TVS when’s the last time you’ve seen a shea moisture? None exactly!
@@selahcarson-pq3cs but the thing is, this product works for me, I’ve tried the other ones and they don’t work!
Y’all need to watch her first video and look at her comment. The issue is not that they’re selling it out, its that people are putting pressure on the company to change its formula which leaves black people without the proper products for their hair, something that has happened several times. Having to change our product because it just doesn’t apply to us anymore sucks because finding new ones always costs a lot of money, time, and experimentation. White people (who don’t have the hair texture, don’t even try that we all know a majority don’t have curly hair like us don’t whataboutism this) have so many products catered to them and yet try to use one that just isn’t meant for them and many of the big companies buy out smaller black-owned brands which then have to change their formula to reach “a wider consumer base.” Just because you don’t know about the issue doesn’t mean it doesn’t exist.
@@Xoxo.Kayla2that’s bc u have curly hair 🤦🏽♀️ no one said only black ppl can use it, only if u have curly hair which is mostly every black person which is the she fixated it on black ppl
@@Xoxo.Kayla2that's amazing but that's not what this video is about lmao.. it's about white people complaining about how it doesn't work for their obviously straight hair. If that doesn't apply to you good for you..i-
This that “Them against us” mentality that’s keeping you blind
On Amazon and other platform it clearly says for all hair types
Rosemary or is for any hair type it helps thicken and regrow bald spots
If anyone needs thier hair to grow and they find it in Miele, then they are free to buy the product. We need to stop this nonsense.
@brownsugrr good. No one should be stopped. Hence, the video should not have been made.
@@madamdmadam7542 well people should stop fucking up their hair with products they can't use, that's not good for growth either.
It's one part the fetishization of blackness and two part these people are buying shit that isn't for their hair a d getting mad about it because they didn't actually research their haircare.
Frankly most white hair products and hair care practices suck ass because we've not only decidedly to erase other people's cultures, but our own as well.
Which includes hair care.
We really do not need to be washing our hair daily with harsh shampoos.
We really do need to apply some oils to our ends.
And we REALLY need to quit fetishizing other cultures in lieu of researching our own hair care.
From our own protective stylings to our bathing routines, we have just shifted to whatever makes capitalism the most money which is fucking up our hair and buying everything to fix it while constantly using it.
It's just that Whiteness is a social concept and thus not all of us are the same, so some of us could find som utility in using these products.
And if we base it on that, then you have a much better result.
White hair care does need improvement, we do need to stop just listening to advertisements/trends rather than doing actual research, and we need to then shop based our needs rather than gatekeeping products based on race.
@Ginger Snaps The Pumpkin Kitty i think you replied the wrong person.
@@madamdmadam7542 this video should have been made. And your comment shouldn’t have 🙋🏼♀️
Exactly. THis is so insanely far out!!
It is for everyone! Its sold for everyone..i agree with the other comment about self-segregation. There is no reason to tell other people what they can and can't use especially due to skin color. It works on all hair and even states so on the product 😊
Stop always being a victim for everything. So racist.