Jenna Ortega’s appearance at Sundance has become a lightning rod for a much deeper unease: the sense that young women in Hollywood are being sculpted, drained, and sold as commodities before they’ve even fully grown up. Fans aren’t just gossiping about weight or makeup; they’re watching a 23-year-old who once seemed effortlessly youthful now resemble a curated, exhausted ideal that feels eerily familiar. Comparisons to Ariana Grande, Cynthia Erivo, and other actresses with suddenly hollow faces have fueled suspicions that this isn’t coincidence, but a system.
What cuts through the loudest is the grief in the reactions: people mourning the face she used to have, the future she might be sacrificing, and the possibility that no one around her is willing—or able—to say no. In an industry built on transformation, viewers are starting to question when “glamour” crosses the line into self-erasure, and who pays the price when it does.