The Hills star, 37, hasn’t aged a day in 20 years since TV debut and quitting fame for very different job
THE HILLS star Lo Bosworth hasn’t aged a day in 20 years since quitting fame for a very different job.
Lo, 37, made her TV debut in MTV's Laguna Beach back in 2004, which followed a group of privileged teens attending the namesake high school.
She went on to star in sister show The Hills too, but soon tired of the drama and waved goodbye to reality TV.
Now, she’s the founder of Love Wellness, a line of vitamins and bodycare products for women.
In a new TikTok, she shared her journey from reality star to wellness entrepreneur.
After struggling with severe health issues, including vitamin deficiencies and women's health problems, she discovered the connection between gut health and overall well-being.
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This led her to create her brand, focused on women's wellness products without harmful ingredients.
She speaks about the brand's recent relaunch in the post and emphasises its commitment to using clinically researched ingredients.
Sharing a throwback snap of herself, Lo, real name Lauren, began: "Yep, that is me. You may remember me from Laguna Beach, which was on MTV in 2004.
"And then, after high school, I was on The Hills for a couple of years.
"If you're just like, 'Hi Lo, what are you doing? Haven't seen you in 20 years?' or ,'Hi Lo. I have no idea who you are at all,' welcome.
"The show ended in 2010 and I ended up moving to New York in 2012. I love cooking. I love food. I actually decided to go to culinary school when I came to New York City.
"And I went to the French Culinary Institute. Basically became a classically trained French chef and it was one of the best things I've ever done. And then I really started to create a lot of food content.
"It was at about this time that I started to become sick as well. I started to experience anxiety and depression for the first time in my life and then, on the other side of the spectrum, I was experiencing a lot of women's health issues.
Yet for the 2019 reboot, show producers said that they've tried to keep .
Without the use of typical reality television "confessionals," producers tried their best to relay cast emotions as scenes unfold.
Creator Adam DiVello said, “If we wrote the show, we would have had much bigger story lines than what we were dealing with. I think we would have had gigantic, soap-opera-type story lines.
"We were kind of shackled to the reality of what these people’s situations were."
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Adam also said that he accepted that there were times when they would miss certain things that happen off-camera, and in those instances, they would need to be re-created by the cast.
After they had all the footage they needed, production then reworked it in editing.