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Celebrity Makeup Artist Does My Makeup ft. MakeupByMario

Feb 27, 2020
- Hello sisters. - Hello sisters. - James Charles here and welcome back to the YouTube channel. As you can see, I'm with a very, very special guest. Magic. Mario's

makeup

, Mario Dedivanovic. King, we're here in the studio getting you guys ready. A few weeks ago, we did an iconic beauty battle with our good friend Sister Kim, and a lot of comments were saying that you guys wanted to see Mario glam me up and we just needed to have you back. I feel like we've been working on this video for so long that we wanted to do it forever.
celebrity makeup artist does my makeup ft makeupbymario
I feel very honored to have you here today. - You know, thank you. I feel very honored to be here. This is like my first YouTube, the first time I'm on a YouTube channel doing

makeup

. - Oh, I love that. It's a good first visit. Are you excited, are you nervous, how are you feeling? - Okay, I'm a little nervous, I have to be honest and I never get nervous with anyone, but I don't do makeup on guys, this is literally like the first time I do glamor makeup on a man. , in a child, in a sister.
celebrity makeup artist does my makeup ft makeupbymario

More Interesting Facts About,

celebrity makeup artist does my makeup ft makeupbymario...

So when I worked in television news about 12 or 13 years ago. I had a very bad experience with one of the male presenters, he basically pressured me because he didn't want a guy to do his makeup, and since then I vowed to never do makeup on men. - Well, I'm basically a woman anyway, so it's okay. - Yes, then this will be interesting. I'm excited though. -So for those of you who don't know, sister Mario or dad Mario is a legendary makeup

artist

and he is Kim's makeup

artist

but also many other celebrities. Would you like to humbly brag and name drop some? - Well, I've worked with Jennifer Lopez, Katy Perry, obviously Kim, Arianna Grande, Mary.J Blige, Gabrielle Union, just a lot of people. -There are so many people and they all look absolutely stunning and he also has a master class that he teaches with makeup classes.
celebrity makeup artist does my makeup ft makeupbymario
I have been to one of them and very, very soon I will go to another. - You come every night, okay? - Yes absolutely. I'll be sitting in the front row, so much fun. You should definitely check them out for more information, but Mario is simply a living legend and I'm so excited to have him here today. (soft, upbeat music) - When I first met you, I discovered you online, I didn't discover you, but I first saw you online before CoverGirl. - Yes. A long, long time ago, I will never forget that day when I found out that I said I was going to be a big star.
celebrity makeup artist does my makeup ft makeupbymario
Yes, I have a great ability to discover or know who will be really great. - Oh, that's so sweet, you're the best. What do we want to do today? - I don't know, I'm so used to talking to a crowd of people in classes, this is weird. Because I want to ask them but I can't. Do you want glamor or do you want natural? - I feel like we should make a glamorous look, especially if we use the palette. Just because I've done so many colorful looks, everyone says, "We get it, you can do a rainbow." "We want to see something nice." - Alright. - And I feel like there's no one better to do that. - We'll do a pretty makeup, okay.
So when I start doing your makeup and especially if it's a new client, which you basically are now, because I've never done your makeup, I just start to feel the features of the face. And I'm just imagining the techniques I'm going to do. If I want the hairs to go up or down, I'll start filling in your eyebrows and then while I'm doing that I'll start planning the look. Right now I have no idea what I'm doing. Honestly, this is how I do most of my makeup looks. - Yes. Eyebrows are always the hardest part for people when they do it and... - Really?
But you have a very good brow lift and I feel like it's easy. - Thank you. Well, only because they have undergone such a transformation. - OMG, can we talk about your eyebrows for the holidays? - Oh God, they were disgusting. - What were you thinking? - I don't know. And the thing is in a bad mood, everyone told me they were bad. There wasn't a single person within the makeup community that was like, oh yeah. Your eyebrows are good. Like everyone says, ah huh. Even Anastasia said... - Isn't it crazy that no one says it?
When I first grew a mustache two years ago, it was literally very long, it reached my lips, and when I look at the pictures I cringe. I don't think anyone, not even my family, told me that you have to trim your mustache. - Because no one wants to be mean, but I wish more people had bullied me because of my eyebrows. I could have fixed it sooner. - If I had been close to you at that time I would have told you. - Well ok. - I'm going to go back to the eyebrows, I'll try a little application. - Actually? - The reason I do this is because it depends on how dramatic the eye makeup is.
If the eye makeup is super dramatic, then I don't want to overdo the eyebrows too much. I just feel like I've mentally pointed out the eyebrows from time to time, and then I go ahead and deepen them a little bit more here. - Okay, do you want to tell the sisters a little more about how long you've been doing makeup, your education and training so they know a little more about... - Yes, I started doing makeup in the year 2000. So it's going to be 19 years now. . - Oh Lord. - How old are you? - 19. - Are you 19? - Yes. - Wow. - Well, I was born in 1999 but yes, 19. - So he was about four months old when I started putting on makeup. - Oh Lord. - It's not crazy? - That's crazy. - That's great, just the level of success you've achieved and the fact that you've been doing it for how long? - Only three years.
But this isn't about me, it's about you. - Oh sorry, it's okay. I hate talking about myself. - No. - I started doing makeup 19 years ago in New York and got a job at Sephora when I was 17, as a fragrance consultant. And I started doing makeup there, it's where I discovered makeup on the first day of work and I became obsessed, I fell in love. I started researching it. Right now the industry is very different from what it was and what it is now. - Yes, I definitely want to talk about that. - Yes, it was very, very difficult back then.
There was no social media, there was no way to get attention, so I started working in retail and then... you know, I really struggled, I mean for the first seven or eight years, and when I say struggling I mean barely being able to pay the rent, eat pizza and eat tuna and it was difficult because you had to help and many of the assistance jobs you had to do for free. - Good. - So you will be on set for 16 or 18 hours a day working with these master makeup artists, but you will do it for free. - Absolutely not. - Well, that's how it was and then I worked in retail and then when I finally left retail, I started working in TV news on the weekends so I could earn a steady income. - Good. - I started making my own clients, I started working with photographers.
Finally, I want to say that after the sixth year, I started working with celebrities in New York. Some pop singers and some actresses. - How did that happen? I feel like it's very intense... to go from starting at Sephora and just trying it out and replicating it with news anchors and then also celebrities, I feel like there's a... - Yeah. - Pretty intense work. - It wasn't intense work, it was very... - Gradual. - Little by little, it was little by little, just step by step. Working with a certain stylist who would recommend me to a

celebrity

.
You know, that kind of thing. But I also had an agent at the time, so I had an agent since I was 21, but even with an agent you still struggled at that time. - Yes. - Because there was no way to get the attention of a

celebrity

. Like today, you can write them on social networks and on Twitter or Instagram. - Which is great. - And that's how they discover you today too. But back then there was simply no way. The industry has definitely changed. - You mentioned how the industry has changed a lot when it comes to artists emerging on social media and there is no denying that you were one of the first to pioneer makeup on social media.
You have a lot of followers on Instagram and your work is a great inspiration to me and also to many other artists. Would you say social media has improved the makeup community and how do you think it has affected it? - It is interesting for me to answer this question because they consider me old school. Anyone who has been in the business for 15 years or more is considered old school, right? - Well, yes, it's a lot of experience. - And most old school people, they don't like social media and they think they've ruined it and they think they've ruined the industry and they think YouTube has ruined it and influencers have ruined it. - That's something huge. - Yeah, it's a really big thing and I feel like I'll understand it when this video comes out too because people will turn their nose up and think, why would I do that with an influencer?, but for me, I feel.
Although Instagram is number one amazing, I feel that has changed the industry for the better. For me, definitely and for many others too. It has given us many more opportunities that we would never have had as makeup artists. There are so many more types of work that we can do and just the fact that you can get followers and share your work and have control over it. Instagram is like a personal magazine, so you can share your work and get followers, build a business, a legitimate business. - One million percent. - And for me, I have always supported influencers and YouTubers.
On the one hand, because I know the amount of work that goes into what you do. I think a lot of people don't realize it, and the older generation in particular, even some members of the newer generation. They don't realize how much work goes into doing YouTube and creating content, and it's actually a full-time job, and I think someone like you in particular, who I really admire when it comes to work ethic. I can see the amount of work you put into it. By the way, the fact that you were able to get followers probably wins you the award for craziest engagement.
You literally have a million followers every three days, which is crazy, but I don't look at it like, arg, I look at it like, holy shit, that's amazing. It's inspiring, you know what I mean? The work is there to support you because you work non-stop, even on your days off, I feel like you are plotting and planning, thinking about your next video and... - Yes. - You know it's entertaining to see it on social media and that's very difficult, not everyone can do that. - Thank you. - So, I respect you and all the other content creators because it really is a difficult job and people don't realize how much you put into it.
The only thing that happens to me is that the industry has changed, right? So there are all these kinds of new opportunities emerging for these young artists. I also see it because I had to fight for almost 10 years at the beginning of my career and now people don't do it. I feel like I'm happy for them because now they have these interesting opportunities, like if it's my brother or my cousin or my son and these opportunities are presented to them at 18 and 19 years old, I'm not going to tell them to sit back. a room and say no to everything.
I'm going to say, take advantage of opportunities, be successful, keep going and I feel like that's how people should think about it too. - I've been in the makeup community for three years, but obviously CoverGirl was an important and pivotal moment and I feel like Boys in Beauty because it really brought it to the mainstream media and even in the last three years I've seen things like that. a positive change and so many young people trying makeup and I imagine myself saying, oh no. You can't, like, be mad because they were gaining followers. - Or imagine you said no to CoverGirl. - Good.
I hate when makeup artists say, oh, influencers are taking our jobs, when have you ever seen me on set doing makeup for a campaign unless it's mine? Ever. - They are two totally different things. - They are two totally different things and I don't understand why there is so much hate between people literally within the same industry who simply do different tasks. I mind my own business, I'm in my own studio creating content for a younger demographic and the working makeup artists are on set every day working just as hard, doing makeup on celebrities and doing photo shoots and campaigns. - And sometimes our worlds collide.
So celebrity makeup artists, when they do the Oscars or the Grammys, they work with the same brands as you because they are sponsored by brands for the red carpet looks. So sometimes worlds collide and I feel like there

does

n't need to be a divide between the older and younger generation. I just feel like people need to support him more and not criticize him. - Everyone can learn from each other. I feel like I've learned a lot from you and other industry professionals that I've also sought out and followed for a long, long time and people like you and people like Anastasia are people who have really been a great mentor. to me to give me advice and say, Hey, I've been here for over 19 years.
Don't do that or you should do this or you should talk to this person. I really value it because I love makeup and marketing, there are always things I can learn and improve, and the same goes for the older generation. Suchlike you said, social media has been a huge immersion into the makeup community and I think it's really changed it for the better, but obviously a lot of the older generation is out of touch with that and I think there's a lot to learn. They, even for working makeup artists, how they can further develop their brand and still book those jobs and not let influencers take it. - You have two options: either you accept it and accept the change, pay attention to your social networks, work on it and try to be part of it. - Because it's not going anywhere. - It's not going anywhere, no one has control over it, so you either do it or you just stay behind.
Some of the older makeup artists have resorted to publicly attacking, shaming, or bullying certain people, even within the celebrity makeup artist community. Some celebrity makeup artists do it to other celebrity makeup artists if they have a large following or if they work with a certain client. - That's crazy. - For someone who has over 20 years of experience, let's say a makeup artist, to have their legacy be that they are known for attacking and bullying people on social media, that's just horrible and I feel bad... - It's embarrassing. - It is shameful, yes, and that is why I feel that we must respect the fields and work of others.
You know they call it the beauty community, but I think it needs to be more of a community. - Agreed. I couldn't have said it better myself. - That's what I'm doing, I call it booting. - I'm very excited about this. - I can't believe you've never done this. - No. - Well, I'm basically covering his eyes with duct tape and then maybe tying him from behind with rope, and what that

does

, allows, pushes the eyes back. This is a very, very old Hollywood trick, it has been done for a long time in Hollywood movies and on red carpets.
I do this cute, I mean not very often but I do it quite a bit especially in photo shoots and you can also do it on the red carpet if your hair is down because it covers it. - Yes. - Many celebrities do it. We just don't know because... - Many drag queens do it too. - Oh, the drag queens, of course. I mean for sure. So that dries and then I basically take it out. - My God, you can barely see it. - Yes, then you have to do it very clean, sometimes it is very noticeable and you can even cover it with makeup.
We are going to see this in the video but you know, we are making a fantasy, it is more like for the photo or the video, do you know what I mean? Like that and then we throw it away, and it just rips off the face and the eyebrows. - Oh Lord. You're making fun of me. - You could use them every day. - I think I need them every day of my life. Can we get one out of my double chin? I will order a lifetime supply on Amazon right away. - When you do this with clients, they just transform into others... they really feel it, you know what I mean? - Yes. - It's literally like getting a facelift without any surgery.
They just send me their face wash and feel so swept away and beautiful. - I love my face wash at 19 years old. - Yes of course. - Oh Lord. - So the reason I did this to her is because I was imagining a black line, like an Arianna Grande line. I just felt like the brows needed to be raised more in the corners and the eyelids too. So I'm using your palette for the first time. What to use. So I have one of these, he sent it to me, but I haven't used it, I haven't touched it yet because I think I swatched a color, but I'm saving it.
So there are certain products that I save for the future because I think in 20 or 30 years they will be super iconic and I want to make sure I keep them intact. - That's so cool. - So yes. Yours is one of them, so you'll have to send me another one so I can use it. - I have a lot today, I can give it to you. - Okay, we'll probably work in these ranges here, it's more natural. - Like I said, people have seen me doing rainbows, rainbows, rainbows, but no one has really seen me glam it up yet, so this is perfect.
Well, if you learn new tips and tricks, your master class, very fun and innovative. I went to one. - Yes, you did it. - And I flew to New York to get it. - They harassed you. - Yes, I do. I was really excited to see Mario because we'd met a few times and we've always been good friends, but I'd never seen you work before, so I was super, super excited and I walked in with my little notebook and my little pen. Taking notes on everything, but it was a great experience watching you work and looking glamorous, Kim, and all the different tips and techniques that you've been using forever.
It was a lot of fun, I feel like I learned a lot. - I think people don't realize, it's much more than technique and stuff too because I feel like most of the people who are there are aspiring makeup artists or are makeup artists with different levels, some of them are YouTubers. but some of them are, they prefer to deal with girlfriends and they go around hustling and serving clients every day and stuff like that. So they learn more than just techniques, they really learn how to approach different face shapes and how to think about how to approach a face and how to do certain different looks and how to build and how to... you know, it's a very, very intense field experience. and people don't realize that, at first they think it's just a matter of technique, but it's literally five hours on one face, so you can imagine the amount of information that's going on. - That's a lot. - Its alot. - Spoiler alert. - For me it is the most important part and the one I am most passionate about about my job. - Yes. - Because I wanted to be a teacher all my life. - Yes. - So I found a way to become a teacher and a makeup artist at the same time. - How long have you been teaching classes? - I started the master class almost 10 years ago in Los Angeles.
So there was a YouTube video 10 years ago that Kim and I put on YouTube, and obviously Kim, around that time she was really starting to become a beauty icon, girls. The world really admired her and they loved her glamorous looks, so after that video came out, I started getting messages from people all over the world, basically just asking me questions and asking me how can I do this or how can I move forward. this? What are the steps I should follow to be successful? So one day I was sitting at home and I thought, wow, all these people, unless they start helping someone, because this was before YouTube really existed.
Unless they start helping someone and they live in Paris, London, New York or Los Angeles. They will never have a chance. - Yes. - And that's when I decided to take this class. I thought, let me teach you the tricks of the trade in this class and let you at least be a little more advanced. - Good. - So my first class had 16 students. - Very cool. - Yes, it was very small. - And now there are thousands. - Yes, and that's how the masterclass began. It's the one thing I'm extremely proud of in my career. - So now I'm going to set, using Laura Mercier's translucent powder, I'm just going to set the concealer and very lightly, I won't do it too much.
Alright, so I'm grabbing the shade Ring light, which is beautiful... oh damn, that's good. Taking the Ring light shadow and I'm going to put it here in the inside corner. - James Charles Morphe Palette. - With the James Charles Morphe palette. I really like this palette, I could even use it in certain commercial outlets. - Yes, it's very shiny, so I really like it to highlight the brow bone and the inner corner. - Yes, and it also looks very good. And now I'm going to take a flatter brush, I'm going to use Ring light again but I'm actually going to blend it with, what's this one called? - That's very good. - I'm going to mix Ring light and So good together and put it at the highest point of this eyebrow.
Raise it a little more. - What are your favorite types of looks for people? What is your favorite look you've done? - I don't know, I mean, there have been thousands, so it's hard to say, but you know with you too it's like your work changes over the years and sometimes you look at your previous work and say: hmmm, you know. It always changes, my favorite looks always change. - What is your favorite at the moment? What have you done recently? If that's easier. -There is one I did for Kim for her Glam Bible campaign that I really liked with the lightning rod going up to her eyebrows. - Yes, that was very nice. - I like that.
I'm going to go in now and use a deeper shade to go over that concealer. How is this called? - That's a 10% discount. - You know, I'm really impressed that you can remember it, that means you were very involved because I have a bad memory, I couldn't memorize all these names. -The palette, when Morphe approached me to make the palette, he already had it completely designed in Photoshop with all the shade names included. - You sent me that Photoshop that I remember before it was released. It was like a photo of... - I did. I remember texting you like, what would you add to this?
I was trying to get a lot of people to respect the opinions of people similar to the palette before it was released. The goal then, obviously, was to do it for working artists and for all makeup lovers. - I remember being at your house when you lived downtown and I remember-- - Trigger. - And I remember you were working on it back then. - Yes. - I was trying out some of the shadows on you, but they were actually amazing back then too. So I'll probably do it, the direction it's going now is cool, dull, smoky.
I love cut pleats and all that, I really appreciate them and stuff, but it's just not like that. For me, personally, my aesthetic. Most of the aesthetic is more of a zoomed-in look, like a really zoomed-in and blurred-out look because to me it's sexier and I love sexy makeup. And then I'll probably end up doing that. - I want to ask you the question because after launching this palette, I have been asked it literally 10, a million times. Talking about creating a palette. Would you be interested in doing a Mario Dedivanovic makeup line? - Yeah, I mean that's been my goal for 17, 18 years.
I think it will happen in the future. I don't have specific dates or anything, but it's something I've been working on very slowly for the last three or four years. - Yes. It's a lot of work. - A lot of work, a lot of money and, obviously, I receive many offers from investment firms, large companies, investors, corporations and retailers to do lines with them. - Good. - But I really want to do it myself without any investment. - Yes. - So I can have total control over it and... - Which I think is great because I would do the same thing. - Yeah, so I'm not sure when it will happen.
I'm not really in a rush, it will start small and then slowly grow from there, but I don't mind rushing or just jumping on the market because Instagram is all the rage right now. - I love that. - Yes, I will do it when I'm good and when I'm ready. - Yes. I really love that and that, I mean, obviously you know I already respect you, but that makes me respect you even more. - I'm just putting a cream product here, a cream pigment. And I'll just mix it up. I love it, what is this color called? - Tuning. - Tuning? - Next to the face. - This is my, I think this is my favorite color in the entire palette. - Actually? - I love a matte color that has that yellowish undertone. - Oh, huh.
Many medium and dark skinned people have been using it as banana powder. - Yeah. - Which I think is great. - This would be a great color for a deeper skin tone to put under the eyes and make it like... - Yeah. - Okay, then. - This looks very pretty, my God. - So this is one coat of eyeliner, people are always surprised by the classes because I usually use four to five coats of eyeliner for one look, so this is just the first one. I won't make you that many. So I'm going to go ahead and start with your skin. - I'm very excited about this. - I'll do more eyeliner and lashes on the look later. - Well. - Why are you excited about skin? - Because I used to have very bad skin growing up and I love making eyes.
I know I can kill an eye, you know what I mean? So for me skin is always a fun challenge because I always want my skin to look as perfect as possible. And it's been a big learning process for me throughout my makeup routine because I used to apply pastels on all my products, but I think I've gotten a lot better at still using a lot but making it look a lot prettier and a lot... - Okay . - Better, both in real life and also on camera. So I always love seeing how different artists do skin because I feel like that's the area I can really learn the most about. - Yes, with that being said, should we make the James base dark orange or should we make...?
Coming from inner art, I am now literally an artist because of my spray tan, look at my hands. - Well, I've always had a lot of trouble matching my foundation because my body is quite a yellow tone but my neck and chest are literally like... - Yes. I actually go a little darker with the foundation. - At this point, who cares? I have given up. At this point, who cares? I have given up. Alright sisters, that's officially every base I have now, both in myface as well as on my neck and chest. So, do concealer before foundation? - Yes sir, yes ma'am. -How long would you say someone's normal paint lasts? - It is always different because it depends on the situation you are in, who you are working with.
Some clients want it done quickly, like 30 minutes, and others give it two or three hours. - Oh I love it. - So it really depends on the client, it also depends on the circumstances you find yourself in. People don't realize when you're a celebrity makeup artist, the kind of conditions you normally work in every day. - They are quite intense. - Intense, yes. I will never have someone like that who is just quiet, off the phone, calm. They are always talking on the phone and with their heads down. Their publicist is in the room, they're doing an interview, they have their kids there.
They are having surgery on their fingers and toes. They are blowing their hair or putting on a wig or extensions. So it's a really intense movement, a lot of movement, you can never have someone sitting still. That's reality and that's how work tends to be, every day. So everyone keep this in mind when you judge. - Literally. - And then they go to the red carpet, of course, everyone judges and... - Right. - Okay, actually I like working under pressure. Sometimes I have three hours and other times 15 minutes, it depends. - What is your ideal situation?
Would it be quiet, where you could just sit and play? - Yes. I am a very calm person and I like to be able to concentrate and not be in a hurry. But again, that being said, when I'm in a hurry, I usually do a really good job. I remember one time when Kim and I had 10 minutes. - Oh, absolutely not. - The flight landed late in New York, which was many years ago, we were on MTV, she was on live TV and we had 10 minutes to do our hair and makeup. And he made it work, tabs and all.
You know, again I remember... - Oh my God. - I've had some crazy experiences, again I remember having them, this was in New York too. The celebrity arrived late to the hotel room and we had to go to an event in Manhattan and we were in Jersey, her hotel was in Jersey and then we...-That's mistake number one, whoever booked her hotel over there. -I'm not sure why she was in Jersey, I think she had another job in Jersey or something. - Well well. - Then we had to crash the car, this was years ago before I had an assistant so I had to pack everything myself.
We had to run to the car and she put her head on my lap in the back seat of the car in the dark, it was dark outside. We turned on the little light in the car and I made all her face while she was lying in the back seat on top of my lap. - Oh Lord. - Yes, and in fact the photos came out very nice. - That's the most satisfying moment when those things happen. You've been doing makeup for 19 years. - Yes. - Long time. You've seen trends come and go, what would you say are your staple makeup trends that you live by? - I don't really love makeup trends, I'm not a big follower of trends because for me it's just because of the type of makeup I have to do every day.
I'm not allowed to just make trends, I have to make what they want, what looks best on them. That said, recently, for example, there's been a big trend for glitter, right? - Oh, huh. - Bright and bold colors, and that's why I've been doing all that because when people see something on social media every day. Celebrities, it's almost like they get used to it and then everything gets a little better and then I... - Which is super cool. - Yeah, I'm even finding that the client says, oh yeah, let's do glitter, let's do pink eye, you know, things like that.
That being said, I don't love trends though because I usually can't follow them. I really appreciate them. It's like one of those questions that editors always ask, oh, what trends do you hate? It's like I don't hate any of them. They're all fun to me, it's like makeup is fun. - Well, that brings me to a big question I was preparing to ask you, so the perfect sister solved it. Obviously, you've pioneered so many different makeup trends, like highlighting and contouring, but have there been any techniques or tricks that you've learned from other influencers or artists that you've influenced and that you now use all the time? - Well, first let me clarify this because it is controversial.
I did not create or invent highlights and contouring, specifically contouring because they call it the King of Contouring, blah, blah, blah. Contour has been around, I mean, Mona Lisa has contour in her painting, it's been around for a long time. Drag queens always did the contouring. Me and Kim really popularized it in the digital world... - In the mainstream world. - In the conventional world. You know, when I was an assistant for several years, I learned a lot of tricks of the trade from literally the best makeup artists in the world. I knew a lot of that stuff at a young age because I saw it every day on set.
Things like contouring and highlighting obviously, like cutting creases, like all that stuff that I learned or how to do the tapes and how to remove the eyebrows. I learned all these kinds of things. I think I learn more from normal women. I'm really interested in seeing how normal women do their makeup. And I think there is something extremely charming and cute. I love seeing normal women's makeup because in my mind, let's say I see someone in a restaurant or something. I never judge, but I see something, I look at it and I create something in my mind.
From what they did at home to influencers and things like that. I get inspired because they do really cool and different things. We're dusting you off for the next important date. - Hello, being full of gunpowder. What is your favorite step in your makeup routine? - Okay, I know which ones are my favorites. - That? - So my least favorites are the eyelashes. - Same. 100%/ - I hate doing lashes. - I absolutely despise it. - Especially false eyelashes because my hands are big and I find it annoying to get in there. I don't love putting on lipstick either. - Same.
I hate, I absolutely hate putting on lipstick, especially on other people, it's so hard. - Yes, especially dark colors. - Yes. - My favorite would probably be, it depends on the face. Like if someone had amazing eyes, they would be eyes. Or if someone has amazing skin, I would love to fix their skin. Do you use blush or not? - Not much but I use it, yes. I always wear a peach blush. - This is how the colors are shaded... - Yes, let's dive into Face. - What is it? - Face. - Face face. - So before I start putting on my lips, so I'll shut up.
I want to know, because people who look at me are very divided, I definitely have a lot of people who don't wear makeup, but I also have a lot of really amazing and talented aspiring makeup artists. As someone who has been in this place for so long and has been a role model for so many of us. What would be your biggest advice for aspiring makeup artists? - Well, if you want to be something, if you want to grow in your career and you want to be successful. One of the most important things is to sacrifice, you will have to sacrifice.
You won't be able to go on vacation constantly, go out to clubs and bars every day and every weekend, you will have to work hard to see results. And that's number one. I sacrificed an enormous amount of my life. And then my mom grew up in another country and she wasn't allowed to go to school. So she is a very simple type of woman, what she always taught me and what I always followed is just to be a good person and I always tell my students that no matter what you do and the decisions you make and the way you lead your daily life.
She just remembers to be a really good person, when you are making decisions do it from a good place in your heart and she always said, if you are a good person Mario, everything good will come to you sometimes it can take years. sometimes days. But it will come. Alright, I think we're done. - Oh my God, really? - And this is literally the first time I've done glamor makeup on a man in 20 years. - A sister. - A sister. (upbeat music) - Mario, oh my God, I look so beautiful. Are you literally kidding me? I look like a doll. - You look like a doll.
A sister doll. - This is the best. Kim, I think I'll have to take it from you, sorry sis. No way. - Oh my god, I literally feel so beautiful. How do you feel? Are you happy with the look? - Yes, I have to say it. You know, I said earlier that I was nervous because I don't do kids' makeup, but I really think it turned out well. - I feel so beautiful. Thank you very much for beautifying me today. This look is like it's red carpet ready, which isn't very often for me. I feel very, very powerful in this look and I feel like... - Confident. - Confident and feel rapturous too like these face tapes. - Can I get my tapes back? - No. - Come on, I need them for... - No, I think I need them now forever. - Alright. - Do not be rude. - Alright. - Well, thank you so much for coming to my channel today, you are literally one of my biggest role models and even a very good friend to me over the past few years and it means a lot to me that I was your first guy and YouTube Collaboration. - Hurrah. - Literally great.
Guys, if you don't follow Mario yet, go check him out @Makeupbymario. Mario Dedivanovic. Makeup legend, I will also be at the masterclass on February 9th, here in Los Angeles. Sister Kim will do it too, she'll be amazing. And like I said, the last time I went I feel like I learned a lot. He is an incredible role model and teacher to aspiring makeup artists around the world and I really hope you enjoyed this fun little video today. If you're new to this video today, don't forget to give her a big thumbs up and show support for her sister and say hello to Mario and show him all her love too.
And also be sure to click the big red subscribe button below and join the brotherhood. We are, I don't even know how many sisters we are because these videos will come out in the future, so I hope there are a lot of sisters... - It will probably be 12 or 13 million at that time. - You can imagine? Oh Lord. And also click the bell icon to get notified every time I upload a new video. If you want to follow me on my makeup journey, you can follow me on Instagram and Twitter, both just James Charles. Join Snapchat to learn more about tea.
It's James Charles with an extra S after Charles. - Jesus. - Damn, that's a mouthful. - You can find me @Makeupbymario on Instagram, Twitter and Snapchat. The sister's gratitude in this video goes to Sister Thomas, thank you very much love for always following us and supporting us. You know I love you literally so, so, so much. And if at home you would like to be the sister of the next video, don't forget to always retweet the video links when they are published on Twitter. Alright sisters, I think that's all we have for today's new video with Sister Mario.
Thanks so much for looking. I love you and see you next time. (upbeat music)

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