Josh Wood s Journey From Saturday Sweeping to Redefining At-Home Hair Color
Welcome to Big Break, where some of the most influential figures in the beauty industry reflect on the moments that made them from the good to the bad and everything in between. Here, colorist and founder of his eponymous brand Josh Wood shares what inspired him to pursue a career in hair and his lightbulb moment during the pandemic.
Josh Wood had no idea he wanted to work in the hair industry. In fact, he got his start at 17 by mistake, which all began with a Saturday job.
Growing up in Barnsley, Yorkshire, Wood didn t know what he wanted to do when he left school. He attended an art foundation course, and two or three months into his course, a friend of his got him a Saturday job sweeping hair in a salon. After about a month of working in that salon, I thought this is my place, Wood told POPSUGAR. So he ditched the art course a decision his mother wasn t very happy about.
In an interview with My Big Break (via Fightful), Quinn McKay spoke about starting out as a wrestler only to become an interview during her time in Ring of Honor. Here are highlights:
On transitioning from wrestling to interviewing: “When I came into Ring of Honor, I didn’t have much experience. I had a handful of matches and by the time I was on TV, ECWA was my last match, so I had ten matches total when I got signed to ROH. I didn’t have a ton of experience, but I think I had a lot of potential. I was training to wrestle and got invited to be a wrestler. The opportunity came up to be a backstage interviewer and it wasn’t so much of a tryout, it was just, ‘we want to see if you can do this and if you don’t do well, no hard feelings, you’re still training to wrestle.’ I kind of knocked it out of the park and even I was surprised because it was never my strong suit.”
Updated May 3
Longtime Phillips volunteer Winona Davenport celebrates 86th birthday with friends
The Queen of Volunteers was honored for her many years of community service for the town.
By Valerie TuckerSpecial to the Sun Journal
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Winona Davenport, seated at left, fondly known as Phillips’ “Queen of Volunteers,” claps Sunday during the 86th birthday party she threw for herself at the Phillips Area Community Center. She gathered hundreds of her old photos, newspaper clippings and useful items she no longer used or needed. She and her helpers put everything on tables and told visitors they were expected to take something home with them. Celebrating with her are, left to right in background, former Senator Tom Saviello, library director Hedy Langdon Stinchfield and library volunteer Anna Plog and her sons Eli and Emerson.
How Daniel Winter Went From a Self-Taught Tattoo Artist to a Go-To For Celebrities
Welcome to Big Break, where some of the most influential figures in the beauty industry reflect on the moments that made them from the good to the bad and everything in between. Here, self-taught tattoo artist Daniel Winter (aka Winter Stone ) looks back at his whirlwind career with clients like Miley Cyrus, Chrissy Teigen, Sophie Turner, and more.
Daniel Winter got his first tattoo at 16 with his 12-year-old brother. It was a W on their feet to represent their last name. They used a needle, ink, and string.
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