Hi, I'm Robert Evans, owner of Evans Hairstyling College in St. George, Utah. Today, we are going to talk a little bit about hair care. Now, you see on this mannequin, my comb doesn't go through there very easily. It's tangled, it's snarled, it's got different kinds of colors in there, different kind of texture. What this mannequin needs, or what you might need, is some sort of hair conditioner. Now, in my opinion, there is only 4 hair conditioners that are important for your hair. Number one, you need a cream rinse. If I had a cream rinse on this hair, slide through this hair, easy. Number two, we need an oil conditioner, something for long hair. People with long hair, the natural oil just doesn't reach the ends. Third, if you live in St. George, Utah, it's hot here in the summertime. We go through a ton of moisturizers. Moisturizers are made by different companies. Everybody's got one because it's one of the Cadillacs of hair conditioning. But, you put a moisturizer on your hair, cook your hair with a dryer, I am talking about sitting under a dryer with a deep conditioning treatment so it penetrates into the cortex layer of the hair. Stays in there, rinses it out and your hair feels replenished, rehydrated, and brand new. And fourth, a protein conditioner. Now, a protein conditioner goes into the cortex layer of your hair also, makes it strong after a color. After a perm, after using a flatiron all day long, you need a protein conditioner. Also, to go with the conditioner is the type of shampoo you use. Every shampoo is different. Everybody has a shampoo that works for them. Oily hair, dry hair, brittle hair, flatiron hair. Blow dried hair, rained on hair, blown hair, everything needs a different kind of shampoo. The seasons of the year will help you decide on a shampoo you are going to use because your hair doesn't get used to the shampoo, the climate outside changes; and your hair changes. So, pick the kind of shampoo that is used for you and go see a professional. Let them tell you what to use. Don't buy it off the shelf; go see your local hairdressing professional and they'll recommend the conditioner and the shampoo for you. I'm Robert Evans, owner of Evans Hairstyling College in St. George. Take care of your hair.