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  • This is the hackle.

  • Respect the hackle.

  • This is Merria.

  • She's a master wig maker, whose skill and expertise has made her a celebrity favorite.

  • This is what they do after they cut it off the ponytail to get that shorter hair out.

  • She painstakingly sews each wig by hand in a process that can take months to complete

  • and cost as much as fifteen thousand dollars.

  • Close it off, and then there you go.

  • And how you tie it determines the way the hair flows and falls and parts.

  • She knows everything there is to know about hair,

  • except for one thing.

  • Where does most of the hair being sold in the industry come from?

  • I try to source from people who I know where it's coming from, but I don't know.

  • As Refinery29's senior beauty editor, I've been on set for dozens of shoots and interviewed

  • hundreds of hair stylists.

  • Nearly everyone of their kits holds the same things: flat irons, curling irons, brushes,

  • product and hair.

  • But Hollywood's best kept secret is far from new.

  • Both Black and Orthodox Jewish communities have openly worn hair for generations.

  • But it's just now that the popularity has exploded into the mainstream.

  • Celebrities have opened up on social media about wearing human hair, revealing just how

  • common wigs and extensions are on the red carpet, and in everyday life.

  • Extensions have really pushed the hair trade up.

  • People want things that are disposable.

  • They just want long hair today and that's that.

  • There's something intimate and uncanny about wearing the hair of another person.

  • It can transform the way you look, but at what cost?

  • Close your eyes.

  • I couldn't help but wonder who this hair once belonged to.

  • It's difficult to trace the origin of much of the hair on the market.

  • It's no surprise because the hair trade has always been shady.

  • For centuries, hair brokers have used any

  • means necessary to get their hands on hair.

  • In the 1800's, peasant women in France were lured into being shorn like sheep.

  • In the early 1900's, it was reported that hair sold in the states was coming from sewers

  • and corpses in China.

  • Hair dealers were thought to be so shady, they were banned from Ellis Island.

  • Controversy continued into the 21st century, as reported by CNN.

  • She lost eight inches of hair.

  • From the robbers perspective, it's quick and relatively easy money.

  • One constant in all of this is that the hair trade sets up shop wherever women are the

  • most disenfranchised.

  • And the people who end up wearing the hair are often unaware of the journey it took to

  • get to them.

  • Most people do not know where their hair comes from.

  • And I don't think they care.

  • Riqua Hailes, the founder of a hair extension salon in Los Angeles,

  • didn't particularly care either.

  • Until, she got scammed.

  • I had already lost ten thousand dollars, I couldn't afford to lose any more.

  • They had these great pictures that tell you how it was going to perform, they sell you on a dream.

  • That's the issue with it.

  • Riqua went on a hair buying trip to try and get some answers.

  • We want to know if all the hair in Malaysia is really coming from Malaysia.

  • She travelled across six countries and found the lack of regulation in America and around

  • the world, makes it hard to guarantee what you're getting.

  • Push it, push it, push it.

  • There you go.

  • Oh it fried the hair.

  • It fried the hair.

  • I can smell it.

  • It smells like...what is that, is that burnt hair?

  • Or is that plastic?

  • That's plastic.

  • Plastic.

  • Mixed with what's known as fallen hair.

  • It's the cheapest tier of human hair, collected from salon floors, hairbrushes and drains.

  • The hair is detangled, processed with chemicals, coated with silicon and sometimes mixed with

  • synthetic and animal hair.

  • While okay for some uses, it's a less expensive version of a higher quality, more elusive hair:

  • virgin remy.

  • So everybody is secretive about where their hair actually comes from.

  • That's where the hair broker makes his money.

  • Remy.

  • Remy.

  • Remy.

  • Passing off non-remy hair as a remy, is just one of the many tactics of hair dealers.

  • Where do you get your hair from now?

  • I get my hair from India.

  • Widely considered to be one of the most ethical places to source hair,

  • Hindu temples are a crucial part of the industry.

  • Every year millions of devout followers travel to temples like this one.

  • The Shri Venkateswara Temple in the southern state of Andhra Pradesh.

  • It's the most visited Hindu temple in the world and perhaps the most lucrative.

  • Here devotees shave their hair as an offering to the Gods,

  • which becomes an easy revenue source for the temple,

  • bringing in more than seven million dollars per year.

  • It's a practice that provides a constant supply of cheap, high quality hair.

  • But it's not for everyone.

  • For some, matching specific textures and colors is worth paying top dollar for.

  • Blond, red, wavy, coyly.

  • The more niche the hair is the more expensive and harder it is to source,

  • making this type of hair prime for exploitation.

  • After months of back and forth,

  • only one of them agreed to show us their operation.

  • We set out to Vietnam to meet him.

  • Vietnam is in a moment of major transition.

  • With one of the fastest growing economies in Asia,

  • it's growth is a mix of opportunity and exploitation.

  • Hair sellers here have been known to offer women next to nothing for their hair,

  • or offer them what sounds like a good rate, only to disappear before payment.

  • Even though Dan agreed to meet us, I still had no idea what to expect,

  • or how legitimate his operation would be.

  • Hi!

  • Hi.

  • The way other companies operate, everything is gonna be under the radar.

  • Some of the women that we've bought hair from, they have been scammed before.

  • We're trying to be different than everybody else.

  • Dan's mission is to make his company, Remy New York, one of the first ethical and totally

  • transparent companies on the market.

  • These are gonna to be our dyed hairs.

  • So we do have different varieties.

  • This is so exciting.

  • Different colors.

  • Yeah.

  • Really cool.

  • And you have short ones, too.

  • Sure.

  • So if a girl were to come to you, and want to cut her hair, but she had short hair you would still buy it.

  • Of course.

  • Okay.

  • Yeah, we try not to turn away anybody.

  • Just because everybody needs help.

  • So this one is gonna be one of our long ones.

  • This one is pure virgin remy.

  • You can feel the softness of it.

  • In my six years in the beauty industry, I had never seen hair like this.

  • Oh my gosh, this is so long.

  • This level of high quality hair isn't something you can fake.

  • And as soon as I saw Dan's hair, I knew he was doing something right.

  • But he invited us out to see for ourselves.

  • Dan travels across the region to buy hair in person, and at a fair rate.

  • Here in the countryside having long hair is still an important sign of femininity.

  • Hi.

  • How are you?

  • For Nguyen Thi Thuy, it's a promise of a better future.

  • Will you miss your long hair?

  • That's like actually criminal.

  • It hits home that the hair trade starts with women like Thuy.

  • Behind many of these wigs and extensions, is a woman making the tough choice to sell

  • her hair to better her life.

  • Dan zip ties Thuy's hair to avoid tangling and to keep it all in the same direction after it's been cut.

  • It looks beautiful.

  • I think it looks beautiful.

  • You look young and fresh and really pretty.

  • Will you tell her that?

  • You do.

  • Yeah.

  • How are you feeling?

  • Dan paid Thuy a little over a hundred dollars.

  • The money is more than a month's worth of living expenses for her entire family.

  • Enough to buy livestock that will bring in new income stream for years to come.

  • Dan's rates are not only unheard of,

  • they have the potential to change lives.

  • It's a mission Dan's taking across the country.

  • From a woman who wants to use the money to put her son through swim lessons for the first time,

  • to another who needs to pay for books and tuition at school next semester.

  • And even a woman who wants to advance herself through the trade.

  • You know there's no shortage of hair companies in the world.

  • But there's no companies that want to make a difference, that want to change lives.

  • The reason why I'm doing this is because I know that nobody else will, and nobody else has.

  • While it's still the early days for Dan's company, a lot of eyes are on him to see if

  • Remy New York can be a new standard within the industry.

  • What does an ethical supply chain for hair look like?

  • It's sort of looks like fair trade.

  • This guy in Vietnam he's transparent, and the girls are getting something in return

  • that's extremely valuable.

  • You have to make an effort to understand where the hair coming from.

  • Do your research.

  • Make sure that the women it's coming from are getting a wage.

  • I think that's how change happens.

  • Hair can be more empowering than we ever thought possible.

  • For the women who wear it, and those who use it to create businesses that enrich their communities.

  • But also for the women who sell it to better their lives, and the lives of their families.

  • A fair trade, transparent supply chain can leave everyone better off.

  • That is, if the industry allows it and the customers demand it.

  • Thanks for watching Refinery29.

  • For more videos like this click here and to subscribe click here.

This is the hackle.

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