Today there was even more drama over Shiloh Jolie Pitt’s short hair and topless bathing suit style. Four-year-old Shiloh has been scrutinized in the media all year for her tomboy style and attitude. Afterall, she’s the love child of Brad Pitt and Angelina Jolie – shouldn’t she be the epitome of beauty?!
more Shiloh after the hop…
While many, many believe the controversy over Shiloh‘s tomboy attitude is much ado about nothing, Angelina was forced to defend her boy haircut once again.
“I have a very strong-willed four-year-old girl who tells me what she wants to wear and I let her be who she is…Shiloh cried one night and said, ‘Please cut my hair off. I don’t want to have long hair.’ I’m not going to leave it long just because somebody thinks I should.”
Another picture surfaced today from UsWeekly of Shiloh topless in boy shorts splashing around in a pool. Many commenters on the site said they thought it was despicable that Brangelina don’t dress her in a girl bathing suit and that she’s too old to be going around topless like a little boy.
What do you think? Are Brangelina in the wrong?
Photos: Fame
2 Responses to “More Drama Over Shiloh Pitt’s Hair/Style”
We'd love to hear your comment but please don't spam, we reserve the right to delete anything which is inappropriate



























Geez, sounds like a kid being a kid & a celebrity being a typical parent, and I really see nothing wrong with Angelina’s attitude towards Shiloh’s behavior.
I have two girls (2 & 4) that have run topless on the beach (try keeping clothing on a kid that does not want to wear it) and I have never heard anything negative about them.
Age 6? Yes, they should be covering up by then.
Both my girls like their hair short, they are athletic so it works for them
My feeling is that the people being critical are not typical parents, and their kids are more than likely being raised by nannies,
Okay I’m a girl and I wore boy bathing suit until I was around 8. I turned out to be a perfectly ‘normal’, well adjusted female. People seriously need to focus on their own lives and quit worrying about what a CHILD is doing.