

I was licensed by the age of 20, but I had been doing hair since I was 13. How did your haircare products come about? you trying to get that Long and healthy💁🏽♀️ Add some inches to the top,🧑🏽🦲👉🏽💁🏽♀️ Get that Long and healthy 💁🏽♀️ It’s the miracle drops 💦 For that long and healthy 💁🏽♀️ #lah #longandhealthy #longandhealthyhair #khp #kaleidoscopehairproducts #miracledrops #darealmiracledrops #wapparody #anotherjudyproductionĪ post shared by Jesseca Dupart💁🏽♀️ on at 4:17pm PDT Get chu some #LAH “LONG and HEALTHY” hair …… just use one of our #miracledrops WE ARE FOUND in thousands of beauty store and. 🧨🧨🧨HOLD ON TO YOUR EDGES🧨🧨🧨 SO PROUD AND EXCITED TO FINALLY DROP… #LAH “LONG AND HEALTHY” by yours truly and feat and special BOSS guest 🙌🏽🙌🏽a parody of #WAP by and. Ultimately, getting put out made me the strong independent person that I am today, so I’m thankful she did that. When I got pregnant with the twins before I miscarried, my mom put me out because she felt like she couldn’t keep supporting me. I transferred from that school to the cosmetology school.

It was difficult because of the workload it required. I was going to a top-rated school at the time of my first pregnancy, and they had never had a pregnant student there. I had my kids at 15, 17 and 19, and I miscarried twins between 17 and 19. My father is deceased now, but my mother fully supports me. I wouldn’t say hair was frowned upon, but it wasn’t as lucrative as it is today. My mom found her when she went into the bathroom. One time, I had been doing a girl’s hair and, when my parents came home early, I hid her in the shower. I used to sneak people into the house to do hair. My parents were pushing me to be a doctor or a lawyer, but I always liked to do hair. One time, it got really tangled and stuck, so I was definitely not a professional. I started doing hair probably at 5 or 6, but it was like putting barrettes in dad’s hair. The last school I wound up in was in cosmetology to pursue cosmetology as a career. What was it like for you growing up, and how did you get into beauty? On social media, you can call yourself anything you want. When I first went on social media, I named myself for my physique, not knowing I would go into the hair industry. I actually answer to both, but I guess Jesseca.


Your name is Jesseca, but your Instagram handle is Da Real BB Judy, with the BB standing for “big booty.” Should we call you Jesseca or Judy? It’s hard to talk about because you never want to say the wrong thing around people that have been negatively affected, but a lot of beauty brands have been up.” We talked to Dupart about other hard topics, including how intertwined her persona and brand have become, whether she’d consider selling her company and her extensive wig collection. “People are at home, either doing stuff on themselves or they are making videos, so they want to have makeup, hair and clothes,” she says. A recent Wired article reported Kaleidoscope began generating $1 million in monthly sales at the end of March 2018 and, earlier this month, Dupart, who’s received media attention lately for being Da Brat’s girlfriend, told Beauty Independent its sales increased at least 33% during the pandemic. “LAH” is the latest in a string of zeitgiesty marketing moves-“Edge Patrol” spoofs of “Cops” came first, but there’s also been takes on “Judge Judy,” “The Jerry Springer Show” and more-that have helped Dupart, who previously ran New Orleans salon Kaleidoscope Hair Studio, gain 1.5 million Instagram followers and build a brand that’s rung up over $20 million in sales to date. In the five days since Jesseca Dupart, founder of Kaleidoscope Hair Products, dropped “LAH” or “Long and Healthy,” a parody of Cardi B’s and Megan Thee Stallion’s WAP video featuring YouTuber Lala Milan and reality television star Kandi Burruss-Tucker, it’s drawn close to 1.84 million views.
