I have no problem with it. A glamor photo is meant to be "perfect" as possible, that's the point of glamor.
The problem is with the equation of edited photos with "standard of beauty". It only creates a "standard of beauty" for people who are completely indulgent in it and lose track of reality.
Glamor photos create a false standard of beauty.
Porn creates a false standard of sex.
Super heroes create a false standard of strength and ability.
Fitness pros create a false standard of fitness.
Athletes create a false standard of physicality.
All of these things and many more are purposefully "over the average". They are the best rendition we have of reality, even if it's not the experience of 99.99% of people. That is why it's entertainment, because it's beyond reality for most people and we enjoy seeing the exceptional.
So when it comes to glamor images, why is this a "standard of beauty"? Who said it is? Who is telling anybody that it is? If young girls are being raised on these magazines and photos and actually thinking they need to look like Photoshopped versions of themselves, then it's more the fault of the parents I would think. It's like "here daughter, here is a magazine full of photos of what REAL girls are supposed to look like, enjoy!"
As a society who craves entertainment, we will always generate things to titillate the senses. If these pieces of entertainment are supposedly "becoming" a "standard" for average people, whose fault is that? Is it the fault of the creator? They don't tell people "hey, this is what totally average people do, what average people look like." They know they are producing entertainment.
So the fault must be with the consumers. They watch this entertainment, enjoy it, pay for it and thus stimulate it to continue, then turn around and think the real world should look the same? This is so childish, so naive. I have a hard time believing adults can be so juvenile to take their entertainment and actually think it must apply to the real world too, and hold each other up to these "standards".
So maybe the fault is with parents, who let their actual children consume this entertainment, without considering that their young minds might not be as able to differentiate between what is the real world and what is created for entertainment. Then these same kids grow up, always trying to "reach" for the "standards" they always thought were "out there" in the "real world" because their immature thinking was never properly directed by their parents. Now there are Youtube channels where little 14 year old girls do makeup tutorials to copy glamor photos of their favorite stars. Are there any parents in the background telling these kids they don't actually NEED to copy the makeup in glamor photos in magazines, and most people do not wear 100% cover makeup, or need to for any reason?
I looked through that slideshow, I'm fine with most of the fixes. Bad photos, lighting, glare, greasy skin. Sure, fix all that, add some fake makeup, fill in the hair, smooth the skin a little. That's why it's meant for, to be entertainment. The real fault is with whoever it is that allowed the consumer to grow up thinking that this entertainment was actually a picture of what the real world is supposed to be, and that we have to live up to it.