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Jon & Kate Plus 8: Kate Wishes She was Korean

Jon & Kate Plus 8 follows the daily lives of Jon & Kate Gosselin, parents of eight kids: preschool sextuplets (three boys and three girls) and twin girls around 7 years of age at time of this article. What makes Jon & Kate Plus 8 uniquely popular is the fact that very pretty Kate is prone to attacking her husband with insults and criticism that he does not have coming. But what also makes Jon & Kate Plus 8 interesting is the natural beauty of the kids.

Jon Gosselin is one-half Korean, but he looks like he has more than one-half Asian blood in him. Kate appears to be 100 percent Caucasian. You’d think that out of eight children, at least half would look pretty much Caucasian, or, at least, have fair-colored hair. Instead, all eight Gosselin kids look Korean. “The Korean gene is very dominant,” Kate said in a recent episode, quoting (I believe) Jon’s mother.

In this particular episode of Jon & Kate Plus 8, Kate was reading e-mails from fans, and one of the fans asked how she felt about the fact that all the kids looked Korean. For people out there who flunked Genetics 101, Jon & Kate’s kids are three-fourths Caucasian and only one-fourth Asian (Korean). But anyone who has watched Jon & Kate Plus 8 knows that these kids look nearly 100 percent Asian.

Kate explained that she has always wanted her kids to “look like Jon.” She talked about having daughters who looked like “little China dolls.” She said she wished she herself were Korean. But what Kate doesn’t realize is that the children, at least some of them, have also inherited her looks as well. In a previous article of mine, I explain how Kate has a nearly flawless face.

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You may despise Kate for the way she often treats Jon, which includes yelling at him in public during one of her histrionic fits, and you may loathe Kate for blowing up at her kids when they make an innocent mistake. But the fact is, her face would probably fit the “beauty mask” that was developed by a facial surgeon, Stephen Marquardt, MD. This mask template is based upon the Golden Ratio, which is the ratio of 1 to 1.618. People whose facial components meet this ratio have so-called beautiful faces.

See: http://www.associatedcontent.com/article/654639/jon_kate_plus_8_golden_ratio_saves.html

Though the profile of Kate’s nose could be a little softer, her frontal view shows what could possibly be a fashion model’s face. If this is hard to imagine, then you must forget for a moment that she’s given birth to eight kids.

And those kids have a mixture of Jon’s Korean traits, and Kate’s facial structure. As they get older, especially the girls, it will become more evident that they have also inherited Kate’s looks. Asian genes indeed are dominant over “white” genes. What’s fascinating to wonder about is what the offspring of Jon & Kate’s kids will look like if they have babies with 100 percent Caucasian people.

Will the Korean gene still show at that point? One of my former personal training clients was a 74-year-old white man, whose wife was Japanese. He showed me a photo of a few of his great-grandkids. I could see the Asian traits in their eyes, but it was ever so subtle. The rest of them looked “white.” But because Kate’s kids still look so Asian despite being only one-fourth Korean, it’s a sure bet that most of their kids will have a definite Asian appearance, making them uniquely attractive.