The story that everyone seems to be talking about lately in the entertainment world is about Jon Gosselin. I’ve got at least half a dozen magazines in my office lobby with his face on the cover. Last week, Life & Style Magazine even had a blurb about his hair transplant (see it here). This week, Jon’s the cover story on the June 15 issue of People magazine, and I’ve scanned a great image from that issue and posted it below. A few weeks back I wrote about Jon’s personal troubles only after receiving a number of inquiring emails, and while I’m still not going to discuss that stuff further, I don’t see anything wrong with taking the opportunity to use his increased spotlight as a way to see photos of his awesome hair!
It should be no surprise that Jon Gosselin has had a hair transplant — there was an entire episode of Jon and Kate Plus Eight devoted to it — but as I’ve yet to get good After shots from Jon, I’ve been relying on paparazzi shots and magazine photo shoots to see how it turned out. The angle and lighting of the photos below aren’t exactly the same, but the result still looks great and you can click here to see other Before photos.

Note: After photo from June 15, 2009 issue of People Magazine, by Melanie Dunea.
Patient had one procedure of 2087 grafts performed by Dr. Jae Pak at New Hair Institute in Los Angeles.



I can not tell you what using Andractim (topical DHT gel) will do for your gynecomastia. This condition is common in boys of your age as the hormones your testicles produce along with other hormones are all over the place while you are maturing. I doubt that the topical medication will hurt you or make Propecia stop working, but I would not go along using it for too long without having your doctor examine you and determine just what is going on.
For every one email I post on the site, I probably answer 10-15… and even then, I can’t get to all of them. There have been a high number of people writing in asking for my opinion on this or that, and their email usually focuses on just one thing. In some cases, what that ends up doing is raising a lot of questions for me to ask back to them so I can help get them an answer. To render an opinion and help those that email the site, I must have lots of information and sometimes even good photos (and permission to publish them is encouraged). All too often there is nothing of the sort. I don’t want to be rude by simply saying that “you” need to see a doctor, but this is not a guessing game for me and while I do want to help, reason must prevail. Bottom line… if you are writing to BaldingBlog, make your case as concise as possible with as much relevant information that you can provide. It might sound like a contradiction, but I’ll try to clarify if you need more help. I enjoy writing the blog, but I can only answer what I’ve got to work with, so keep that in mind if you don’t get the reply you were hoping for.