Wednesday, December 19, 2007

Crowning glory

You may not think that Prince William and I have much in common, but in fact we both share a love of polo. I was at a match recently with an old friend of mine and we got talking about the royal family.

Last month the Queen and Prince Philip celebrated their 60th wedding anniversary with a service at Westminster Abbey. It was a great example of British tradition, with all the great and the good present. There was also a reading from Prince William and I noticed that he was suffering from a thinning crown.

It is particularly distressing to lose one’s hair especially at such a young age and especially when you are in the public eye. But he needn’t suffer in silence. We could return William’s thinning hair to a crop fit for a king. I think the results speak for themselves.



It just goes to show that hair replacement treatment is a subtle and effective way to look and feel great.

Tuesday, December 4, 2007

Winners need hair!

After England’s defeat against Croatia last Wednesday, Steve McClaren faced a lot of criticism resulting in his dismissal.

There has been plenty of speculation about McClaren’s management style, but here at AHS we have got our own ideas about McClaren’s problem.

Since McClaren took on the role as England manager, his hair receded as dramatically as England’s qualification chances.

By contrast the managers of Germany, Holland and Italy, Joachim Loew, Marco Van Basten and Roberto Donadoni, who all have a fine head of hair, comfortably steered their teams to the European Championship. Here at AHS we wondered if there is a link between receding hairlines and a team’s performance.

Perhaps, a fuller hair of head is exactly what Steve McClaren needed. We decided to have a bit of fun and give McClaren a Shane Warne make over and look at the results!

Warnie went from strength to strength after he got the AHS treatment. It’s a winning style. If McClaren wants to see us, we’ll give him the strength of Samson, ensuring he can bounce back to winning ways.