Celebs Swear By This $13 Miracle Tube—Is It Lip Balm or Black Magic?!

Hollywood has finally found the Holy Grail.

No, it’s not eternal youth.

It’s not even the secret to getting invited to the Met Gala without selling your soul.

It’s… a lip balm.

Lanolips 101 Ointment is celebrities' favorite lip balm — and it's on sale

A $15 tube of glorified wax and oils that stars are swearing by like it’s some sort of mystical artifact that can cure heartbreak, fix bad hair days, and possibly negotiate peace treaties if applied generously.

Known as the “101 uses” miracle balm, this glossy little stick has become the It accessory of the year.

And according to the very serious Instagram stories of half the A-list, it’s basically skincare’s version of duct tape.

The hype began when an actress with skin so flawless it could trigger an existential crisis claimed she uses it not just for lips, but for cuticles, elbows, cheekbones, under-eye concealer blending, taming eyebrow flyaways, and—allegedly—shining her shoes.

Then a male pop star jumped on the bandwagon, saying it was the only thing that kept his “soul soft” during a grueling world tour.

Beauty editors, smelling a clicky headline and a brand sponsorship opportunity, began declaring it “life-changing” in tones usually reserved for finding the cure for a rare disease.

And the public? They lost their collective minds.

Social media exploded with #101UsesChallenge videos where influencers tried using the balm for increasingly deranged purposes: defogging sunglasses, greasing door hinges, highlighting collarbones, moisturizing pizza crusts “for shine,” and—God help us—conditioning the leather interior of a Lamborghini.

“I applied it to my resume,” one TikToker bragged.

“Got three interviews. ”

Of course, with every “miracle” product comes its cult-like devotion.

A self-proclaimed balm historian (read: beauty blogger with Wi-Fi) told us, “This isn’t just a cosmetic product.

This is a lifestyle.

A movement.

This is the skincare equivalent of discovering fire. ”

A celebrity dermatologist chimed in, adding, “It’s actually just petroleum jelly with a few botanical extracts, but we can’t stop them.

They’re already too deep. ”

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In the strangest twist yet, several stars have claimed they stockpile the balm like it’s apocalypse rations.

One Oscar-winning actor allegedly keeps a jar in every room of his mansion, plus one in his car, his golf bag, and—reportedly—inside a hollowed-out copy of War and Peace.

A reality star was spotted at LAX carrying a gallon-sized Ziploc filled entirely with the stuff, looking like she was about to trade it on the skincare black market.

Naturally, the brand behind this shiny miracle is leaning into the chaos.

They’ve launched limited-edition flavors like Champagne, Matcha Latte, and “Coastal Billionaire,” which allegedly smells like salt air and generational wealth.

Their latest campaign? A list of all “101 uses” printed on glossy billboards, including such classics as “heal chapped lips” alongside wildcards like “lubricate a stubborn zipper” and “create instant highlighter when paparazzi attack. ”

The backlash, however, has already begun.

Skeptics point out that for $15 a tube, you could buy a lifetime supply of plain Vaseline and still have enough left over for a latte.

“It’s just marketing,” one cynical makeup artist sighed.

“It’s a nice balm.

But no balm can fix the existential dread of being ghosted after three dates. ”

Others are questioning the need for 101 uses.

“Do I really need to polish my furniture and my forehead with the same product?” one horrified customer wrote in a review.

Still, the celebrity endorsements keep rolling in.

A singer with a history of questionable skincare advice posted, “This balm healed my broken heart faster than therapy. ”

A late-night host claimed it “saved” him during a snowstorm when he used it as an emergency fire starter.

And in a now-viral clip, a famous chef used it to “add gloss” to a roast chicken before serving it to a bewildered audience.

But the most chaotic moment came during an awards show red carpet when a Hollywood power couple stopped mid-interview to whip out a tube and apply it to each other’s lips.

Stars and editors swear by this lip balm with '101 uses' - NewsBreak

“It’s our secret to staying together,” they gushed, as reporters frantically jotted down the balm’s name.

Somewhere in a corporate office, a marketing intern popped champagne.

Whether this lip balm is truly a skincare savior or just another overpriced celebrity obsession remains to be seen.

But one thing’s certain: the cultural grip it has on the masses is terrifying.

People are out here treating it like it’s the last artifact left after society collapses.

“If my house was burning,” one influencer said with zero irony, “I’d grab my dog and my balm.

In that order. ”

And so the legend of the “101 uses” lip balm continues to grow, one wildly impractical application at a time.

It’s moisturizing, it’s meme-worthy, it’s making someone very, very rich.

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Does it deserve the hype? Probably not.

Will that stop you from buying it after reading this? Absolutely not.

Because deep down, we all want to believe in a magic tube that can fix everything—our lips, our lives, and maybe even the economy.

If this keeps up, don’t be surprised when we see it on the moon.

After all, with 101 uses, “spacesuit sealant” might just be number 102.