Most of us already know what we see in a Victoria's Secret catalogue or runway show is, largely, smoke and mirrors.
We know human skin isn't naturally quite that uniform or gleaming; thighs not naturally that robotically smooth; bosoms generally not quite so ample on such very thin frames. Not without some serious digital manipulation/lighting effects/body makeup, anyway.
After all, people like me in columns like this drone on about it all the time.
But, eventually, labouring all those points becomes a bit like earnest white noise. Even though on an intellectual level we understand the huge amount of work that goes into the creation of 'perfection' ('creation' being the operative word), sometimes it actually takes someone from the shop floor to really, properly hammer it home.
Because the most effective myth busting dialogues - the sort that really open and change minds - come from the inside. When someone who's setting the standards admits the standards they're setting are a sham.