Lizzy’s natural body always looks better than the over stretched version she posts on IG. I will never understand the fascination with making your legs look like you’ve just stepped out of a concentration camp.
Her top lip does not look good on those IG stories though, seriously lay off the filler Lizzy!
Also a reminder Warehouse is owned by Boohoo - had clothes produced in a sweatshop in Leicester, UK where the workers were paid less than half of the minimum wage so Boohoo could compete with more ethical brands. Lizzy really does see her followers as cash cows these days.
Going back to the followers chat I’m certain Lizzy has been buying followers. I’ve also never understood why Lizzy so often claims to be an OG blogger, she missed the whole Blogspot era and the by the time Lizzy was on the scene the OG bloggers were already releasing their books.
Lizzy isn’t one of these influencers who has slowly chipped away at gaining a following since the OG days. Lizzy had 10k followers in November 2014; she graduated, called herself a full time blogger and moved to Manchester by October 2015. A friend who works in PR said Lizzy approached the brand she used to work for several times, Lizzy had 128k followers in June 2017 - around the time she moved to London. 172k in January 2018 and 330k in January 2019. PR friend didn’t think the increase was legitimate.
Recently I think Lizzy’s following stagnates and when she starts to lose followers, or bots get deleted, she buys another 10k of followers at a time. Gone are the days where you could spot fake followers by spikes of 1/5/10k on a single day, if you want 10k followers a company will give you X amount a day until you’ve reached the required amount.
I think Lizzy most recently did this when she first started her grand voyage but now she’s back to either gaining or losing very few followers on a daily basis.
At the time I scrolled through her followers and noticed Lizzy was gaining a lot of East Asian followers, mainly Chinese and Korean, they have profile pictures but when you click on some of the profiles you can tell they’re not legit accounts. Chinese accounts where the only pictures posted were pro-Chinese communist party. Korean accounts where in the bio part of it is written in Hangul (Korean Alphabet) and then Hiragana (one of the Japanese alphabets). But you would never mix the two languages together and the Hiragana was just ‘んんんんんん’ which literally just means ‘nnnnnn’ in English. I asked manfriend who is bonafide Japanese and he said it doesn’t even mean anything in Japanese. Lizzy might be paying a premium for more realistic followers but a bot is a bot.
Anyway, that was a pointlessly long explanation as to why I think miss Hadfield has been buying followers. For reference I have half the amount of IG followers as Lizzy and manfriend has over 1.3M, he’s also 58 which makes it slightly amusing, neither of us have bought followers and neither of our accounts have the same follower patterns as Lizzy.
Everything on IG can be faked you can buy everything from followers to story views. Comments too, you can even choose what the comments say but they will be posted from the same type of bot accounts which would make it too obvious. That’s why I think their London friendship group all post the same inane comments on each other's IG posts to falsely inflate their engagement rate.