Habits and Hustle - Episode 307: Dr. Anthony Youn: The Top Anti-Aging Myths + How to Actually Look Younger
Episode Date: January 3, 2024What’s the real way to get younger looking skin? In this episode, we’re going to put all the myths and trends aside and look at what actually works – without needing surgery or any invasive trea...tments – with Dr. Anthony Youn. Dr. Youn dives deep into his commitment to a holistic practice for looking younger, debunking anti-aging myths, and exploring the ethical side of cosmetic surgery. You’ll get details on why 'mewing' and 'air sculpt' may not be the magical solutions they're hyped up to be and get real insights into the effectiveness of retinol, ozempic, peptides, and the controversial topic of stem cell therapy in cosmetics. Plus, Dr. Youn explains autophagy in skincare, the impacts of reality TV on societal beauty standards, a surgeon's take on the intricacies of rhinoplasty, and so much more. Dr. Anthony Youn is a Board Certified Plastic Surgeon, Award-Winning Author, and Anti-Aging Expert. As a successful plastic surgeon for twenty years who has performed tens of thousands of successful cosmetic procedures, you came to realize that the key to true beauty lies in a holistic approach to youth. Surgery should be a last resort. You can learn more in his newest book, Young for Life. What we discuss: (05:25)The Popularity of Pimple Popping Videos (19:35) The Power of One Viral Video (27:44) Face Volume, Fillers, and Pillow Wrinkles (39:56) Treatment for Sunspots and Age Spots (46:09) Skincare and the OS01 Peptide (53:59) Product Recommendations and Side Effects (58:32) Stem Cell Therapy Legality in US (01:03:40) Tips for Looking Younger (01:17:30) Discussion on Exercise and Age Perception (01:21:45) Considering Risks and Benefits of Surgery Thank you to our sponsor: Pendulum: Head over to www.pendulum.com and use code JENCOHEN for 20% off. OneSkin: Head over to oneskin.co and use code HUSTLE15 for 15% off. Find more from Jen: Website: https://www.jennifercohen.com/ Instagram: @therealjencohen Books: https://www.jennifercohen.com/books Speaking: https://www.jennifercohen.com/speaking-engagement Find more from Dr. Youn: Get Dr. Youn’s new book, Younger for Life: autojuvenation.com Website: https://www.dryoun.com/ Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/tonyyounmd/ TikTok: https://www.tiktok.com/@doctoryoun YouTube: https://www.youtube.com/user/tonyyounmd Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
Transcript
Discussion (0)
I got this Tony Robbins you're listening to Habits in Hustle, Crescent.
This is going to be this is a fun podcast.
I'm excited to have you on here because this is really something that I've been, you know,
what you do.
I have doctor, I should say who you are.
Dr. Anthony Yoon, I pronounced your name, right?
Correct.
You're a plastic surgeon and one of the most popular doctors on TikTok by far
and YouTube, you've got a crazy,
you even have like a crazy, like subscription
on YouTube, you're like five million people follow.
I like hit five million two days ago, I think.
My employees saw it before I did
and I didn't know until they've started messaging me. I'm like, what, I did hit five million. days ago, I think. My employees saw it before I did, and I didn't know until they've started messaging me,
and I'm like, what, I did hit five million?
No, it's unbelievable.
Your videos get so much traction,
and right before we started taping,
and I said, I don't wanna do this off of taping,
because I want everything I say to you to sound authentic.
Even though you are a doctor,
and a board certified plastic surgeon, everything,
you are an exceptional content creator.
You're welcome.
You've done a very good job at like, you know how to title things, you know to give how
to like give people the information in a way that's very user friendly and it's like,
it's shareable and it's everything like all the things like, you can go down.
You're the kind of person I hate when I'm trying to go to sleep at night
and I get on your page and I get down a crazy rabbit hole.
Yes, because one video turns into like 400 videos
because they're all so good.
Thank you, I appreciate it.
No, like how are you,
like how did you even know how to become,
like how did you become a content creator?
Do you see yourself as that even?
I do.
So I've always had a bit of a creative streak
and there's always been some type of outlets.
When I was in college, my creative streak was I was into art
and I painted.
I did a lot of oil painting.
And I did a lot of writing.
And honestly, I took a creative writing
and the people in college hated my writing
because I'd write things that were funny.
And back in college, it's all about trying
to express your emotions and all these people who are having hard times. things that were funny. And back in college, you know, it's all, you know, it's all about trying to
express your emotions and all these people who are having hard times. And here I try to put something to just make people laugh and I like people hated it. So after college, I went into
residency and I did a medical school, then residency. I did a complete plastic surgery,
residency, general surgery. So into Michigan State for medical school. Okay. And then I did three
years of general surgery, residency, two years of State for Medical School. And then I did three years of general surgery residency,
two years of plastic surgery residency.
And during my residency training years,
I was actually in a band in a Jimmy Buffett cover band.
And so we turned around kind of Michigan.
We did some shows in Wisconsin in Illinois,
and we were not very good,
but we were just played like cartoons
and Jimmy Buffett music and stuff.
Love it.
And then I start my practice,
and I start thinking my goal is to get busy.
And while I was early in practice, my practice exploded because I was on a show called
Dr. 90210.
You were?
In the first season, fourth episode, I was on it for literally like two minutes.
And they had me come in and then they had my going way party and I was gone.
And that was it.
But, that two minutes literally powered my practice as I just started in Detroit, Michigan,
for like two years,
where I had like literally the day before that show aired,
I had no patience,
I was living in a little apartment with my wife
and a little dog trying to find any way
to get anybody to come see me as a patient.
And then this show airs, I'm on for two minutes,
and the next day my practice exploded.
And so it taught me the power of media.
From there, I went blogs are really big.
I was one of the first surgeons,
class surgeons to create a blog.
And I made one actually about celebrity plastic surgery.
That became like the top red blog in plastic surgery
for many years.
I got sued by a paparazzi because of a photo,
a Cindy Loper that I put on my blog
that I didn't realize was copyrighted.
I had a reverse class action lawsuit against me for this one photo for $150,000. I scrub my blog of all
the pictures. My blog died after that. And then I parlayed it into actually doing TV.
Some people from Rachel Ray show saw me and I started getting on Rachel Ray show. I did
Dr. Oz, the doctors. and then from there, I realized
after doing that for many years
and being kind of like the go-to plastic surgeon for TV,
that they started giving these spots
to younger, better looking doctors.
And I felt like one of those actors
that has age passed their prime,
and I'm seeing all these spots going
to these younger, better looking people,
and I realized, okay, I need to transition again.
And so I shifted over to social media.
And that's what I've been really focused on since then.
Okay, what year was that that you started with social media?
So I started really transitioning to social media.
Probably it was like 2017 maybe, 2016.
Back when it was like Facebook and Twitter.
And I really focused on those.
Right.
And you know, a good friend of mine, Dr. Pimplepopper.
Yeah, very popular too.
Yes, so she told me, probably back in 2017,
she's like, Tony, stop spending all this time on Facebook.
You gotta go on YouTube.
And I'm like, no, no, I'm doing all these Facebook
a lives and all that stuff.
And here you could see she's got her own show.
It's like, I think Cindy, yeah.
And I should have gone to YouTube earlier.
Well, meanwhile, you have five million people following you you and like the funny thing, she's massive.
I mean, I cannot believe how many people want to watch people like popping pimples.
It is-
People find it relaxing.
How is that relaxing?
I don't, I have no idea, but people love watching this type of stuff.
Or isn't like a bad accident?
Like you can't help to look away.
I think it's actually satisfying for people.
I mean, sometimes I'll see things that I find are satisfying.
You know, I have, so for example,
and this is something that is 2TMI,
but I have what's called a dilated pour of viner
on my back, which essentially is a big hole in your back
where you can get stuff that kind of builds up
like sebum and oil and stuff like that.
And once every like four months, my wife or my daughter will pick the thing out and they
just find it so satisfying to clear it out.
And I think that's what it is.
Is people somehow find that type of these pimple popping things satisfying because they see
the before and they see the after and-
See, I get it on yourself, right?
Like, yeah, like if you have something,
like, and you get, you were able to pop it,
but watching other people's pimples,
it's so disgusting.
I don't get it either, but it's a big deal.
It's a matter of 12.
How many followers does that girl have?
The pimple followers?
So, yeah, Dr. Lee, I mean, I think like 14 million was last I saw
on like YouTube, and then on TikTok,
she's up at like 12 million or something, and yeah, it's, it's, I mean, and she's then on TikTok, she's up at like 12 million
or something and yeah, it's I mean, and she's got her national show that's in probably
like the sixth season or something like.
Well, that also helps a lot, right?
Like you were saying the power of media in general.
TV doesn't have as much as much weight or power as it used to.
Social media basically.
It's dropped a lot.
Yeah, it's dropped a lot, but it's a great but it's a great engine to even get you started, right?
And then momentum of social media.
And what I realized, you know, and I know you have a lot of people listen to you for business
advice and stuff. What I really realized very quickly doing so much TV was that the platform
was not mine. I was at the whim of the producer, so I've this my fourth book, Younger for Life,
my first three books. I really relied on producers to whether, whether my book was going to be successful or not.
Right. And it was whether they would allow me on their show of whether it would do well.
And I realized after I started losing these opportunities, that I got to create my own
platform, you know, I can't let other people dictate whether I'm going to be successful
or not. And that's when I pivoted to social media, and I put all my kind of creative juices into that.
Yeah, you basically took control of your own destiny.
Yes. Funnily enough, we had this very similar story, because, well, this podcast was supposed to be a TV show.
NBC actually did a deal with them, a development deal, and it was going nowhere fast.
It was staying, it wasn't called Habitson Hussle. It was called nowhere fast. It was staying. It wasn't called habits and hustles. It was called game changer.
It was supposed to be this whole idea of being like the cribs,
but for entrepreneurs.
Like remember that?
Yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah.
And it was like a bit, at the time, it was very,
it was very irreverent.
And, you know, I realized quite quickly that six months
turned into a year, year, year, and a half.
And like literally nothing was happening.
And I'm like, this is unbelievable.
I cannot be putting the my future and my destiny in the hands of other people
to make the decision. I'm just going to do some like little podcasts and kind of like
do it on my own, whatever happens happens. And yeah, is it not a, it's on a TV show, but
you know what? Then you have, then you at least take control and ownership of what is yours.
And the amount of opportunities and the people I've met and the fact that like I'm now my own boss in that way has
exponentially changed my life.
And so I'm a big proponent of that.
Like you cannot, if you're always going to be looking at someone else to kind of take, you know,
basically control and and and curate what happens for your own life,
you're going to be the CEO of your own life.
You've obviously done a good job.
Well, and then doing something like that, having your own platform,
there are other opportunities that will come.
Absolutely.
And you may get even a better TV show.
You know, there's this show right now on Netflix,
the Squid Game, the reality show.
Of course, I'm like, have you been watching that?
100%.
Even the reality show of the Squid Game.
So back when the first Squid Game came out,
people thought I was the lead actor
and people would go on my social media and ask me,
are you on Squid Game and I would answer, yes I am.
I said, yeah, I'm the lead actor.
And they're like, really?
How do you find some time to be a surgeon and an actor?
I'm like, oh, I have plenty of time.
I just do it.
And I tell you, Jennifer, my following grew
like a million and a half followers on TikTok
within like literally like two weeks or something, it was insane because people thought I was
this guy.
That's hilarious.
I still have people stop me on the street and ask me, most of the time people stop me,
they know who I am because I'm on social and everything.
But every once in a while, I get people and I'm like, wait a minute.
Do I know you?
And I'm like, oh, maybe.
Like, you're on Squid Game.
Like, I don't know.
That is amazing. And you wouldn't'm like, oh, maybe like you're on Squid Game like I know. That is amazing.
And you wouldn't work to your advantage, obviously.
Yes, and so this whole reality show now is out.
And I actually heard about it.
People were starting to, when they had casting call, people were tagging me on their posts
about it.
And so I went ahead and I applied for it.
And I was in the finals stages and they sent me the contract and I actually turned
it down because it's literally like you have a one and four hundred fifty six chance to
win the money, which I mean it's a lot of money, but you have one and it's like one and
almost five hundred like that's small. And I said, so what are you going to do with the
money? I go, I would give a million of it to charity. I would give, you know, maybe
a million to my parents and I don't know what we'll do the rest, but it really came down to as what they did
was they said the contract, you were locked into that contract
where you cannot do any other TV show.
And I have three shows that we're pitching right now.
And if you are in the first one,
you are contractually obligated to be held on,
the contract can repeat itself for season two.
Whether they choose you or not,
you are under their control.
And after seeing that, I'm like, yeah, forget it.
Are you serious?
Yeah, so I turned it down.
And I probably could have made.
They said, literally, there's like, basically,
they said, if you sign the contract,
basically you're gonna be on the show.
But I probably would have been kicked out
in the first thing when they kicked out
over half the people on red light green light.
That would have tripped right after the beginning line
and then gone and now, like, years of my life and I can't do
anything. You know it's so true. It's so funny that you said that because when I watch
that like it's very random right like how or when you're like the second or the second
one when you get put in the umbrella. I haven't seen all of it. Yeah. I've only seen
the first episode in a half. So don't give it all away. But my point is it's not it's one
of those things,
let's stick to the red, green light,
because that's what you saw.
It could be so random, like you just,
that one second, you didn't stop, or whatever it is.
You can't necessarily will yourself to win that game.
You can't.
And I thought, you know what, I've got pretty strong will,
but in the end, like, I mean, there are people on that show
who are like, destitute, who like need the money
a lot more than I do, and am I going to lie,
cheat, and steal my way through them? Like, I don't know that I could do that.
Are they really destitute? I mean, I didn't.
I'm assuming that's what you hear. I haven't seen it, but that's what I've heard.
Okay, I'm only on episode four of this one, but I will say that also, like, you can be randomly
eliminated, which is not in your control. Yeah, and that's so, yeah.
Yeah, and then your whole, again, and then you're, that is such a great story.
I didn't know, but you do look, I get a call.
I was at a BTS concert and we were on the main floor
and I had these people come with me,
Dr. Jim, can we get your,
or can we take a picture with you?
I'm like, yeah, sure.
And all of a sudden, there's this huge line
of people wanting to take pictures with me.
And I started realizing after a few of them
that they weren't saying my name anymore.
They were just taking pictures with me.
So I looked down on one, I'm like,
who do you think I am? And they go, you're that guy from Squid Game? And I'm
like, no, I'm not. And so I go to the, like, there's literally 40 people lined up on the floor of the
arena. It was in Las Vegas at the time. And I go, look, I'm not on Squid Game. I'm a doctor on
social media and the entire line dispersed. And my wife and kids are laughing at me.
They thought it was so funny.
That is hilarious.
Now, if there was moms with them that
want to ask you some like plastic surgery question,
I forgot to even say at the beginning of the podcast,
you consider yourself a holistic plastic surgeon,
not even a regular plastic surgeon
because contrary to every other plastic surgeon
and omnipotent entire planet, you try to persuade people not to have surgery to do everything you
can preventatively or not to have it at all. Which is like, no, maybe that's why
you had no business at the beginning. That could be it too, right?
Well, I started my practice as a traditional plastic surgeon and I thought I
had reached the pinnacle of success and you know we are taught in surgery the
saying to cut is to cure. The only way tonacle of success. And we are taught in surgery, the saying,
to cut is to cure.
The only way to heal is with cold steel.
And we're taught basically the goal of being a surgeon
is to bring people to surgery.
But the problem with that being a goal I realized
after many years of practice
and where I thought I'd reached the pinnacle
is that that goal is false, like it's not the right thing.
When you truly are doing things for the patient,
then your goal should be the opposite.
It should be, how do I keep people out of the operating room, yet still make them happy
with their appearance?
And it only happened, that only really hit me after I had a big tragedy in my practice,
and a patient had a terrible complication.
And I realized it wasn't her fault, it wasn't my fault, or sometimes bad things happen,
but it really got me into thinking really, really hard about what I was taught,
what I was doing, the dog might
in plastic surgery in general,
and it really got me into questioning everything.
And so that's what started kind of a path
of this holistic plastic surgery.
And the idea is using plastic surgery only as a last resort.
And so after this happened,
all my training was in surgery,
post-surgical complications.
It was really basically being a surgeon. We got very little training, almost none on
nutrition, on skincare. Like, we spent zero time with dermatologists in my residency, which you
think you should, you know, but there's turf wars between plastic surgeons and dermatologists,
so they didn't want us to meet with them. And so, I spent, after a certain period of time,
my practice, I spent a lot of time learning from alternative health practitioners, from nutritionists, from dietitians, from skincare
specialists, and figured out kind of this whole idea of auto-juvenation, but using your
body's own regenerative abilities to rejuvenate itself.
And that kind of became the basis of my book, Younger for Life.
Yeah, I mean, I was going to ask you about that.
I didn't get to my, any of my questions yet, because I'm actually, what I was, I was
very fast, and I'm actually what I was I was very
fascinating about how are you able to do both things as a like being on social media at
the level that you're on with content creation is a full time plus job.
That takes like what you're doing in terms of videos and editing.
You must have a team of what five, ten people working with you?
No, I have one person.
I have a video editor.
So like some of my fancier videos,
I have him do that. And I do have editors for my YouTube video. So I'll send them the raw footage
and then they'll edit that together. But basically I make three types of content. Everything else
is repurposed. So I make TikTok videos, which I repurposed to reels and shorts and stuff like that.
Then I make long form YouTube videos one or two a week, and then I'll make
occasionally, you know, kind of funny memes
and stuff for Instagram.
And that's basically it.
Everything else is basically repurposed
from those three types of content.
Okay, but how many hours a week are you spending
on doing social media yourself?
And then having a practice.
Like, are you practicing?
Yeah, I have a full-time plastic surgery practice.
Like, you're doing full-time, full-time stuff.
Yes, so I see patients every Monday and Wednesday all day, and then every Tuesday and Thursday operate I have a full-time plastic surgery practice. Like you're doing full-time, full-time.
So I see patients every Monday and Wednesday all day, and then every Tuesday and Thursday
I operate anywhere from five to eight hours.
And then Friday mornings I used to operate, but literally I'm stopping at the end of this
year because I'm restarting my podcast and interviews and stuff.
Oh, you are.
What kind of podcast are you going to have?
Well, I've had it actually for many years called the Holistic Classic Surgery Show.
And so I did a lot of interviews with healthcare practitioners
and things like that, a lot of solo stuff,
just about how to look younger naturally.
But honestly, I found that once my YouTube channel
really exploded and then the TikTok stuff,
I started losing a little bit of interest in it
because I think the other stuff was doing so, so well.
And so I started doing less episodes,
and I took six months off, and stuff.
Now I'm like, look, I really, after doing,
I'm doing these podcast tours,
I'm like, you know, I should really get back into it.
There's gonna be a lot of fun.
So I'm re-kind of getting back into it,
starting this new year.
Well, who's, so do you have someone who's,
because I'm under the impression that,
because YouTube for me's been a real,
like a dip, that was a, that's a difficult,
I think that's a very difficult platform to break into.
I find it very hard.
How did you make it work?
Did you not have someone different to kind of,
I've been told, oh, you have experts for YouTube,
you have experts for Instagram?
Or is it really more like one of these things
where if your content catches the algorithm
and then you have that momentum and it just starts to grow naturally, is it luck? What part would you
say is true?
No, it's all skill. It's all knowing what hits.
I mean, I have taken a lot of courses on YouTube content, creation and marketing of it.
I don't do any ads or any of that type of stuff. But really what it comes down to is if
you're starting a channel is you want to try to connect,
the simple way to do is connect the unknown with the known.
So if you have a channel on YouTube
and you don't have a lot of followers,
you're the quote unquote unknown.
So what is the known?
Well, celebrities are the known.
Current events are the known.
And so what you wanna do is have you combined
with something that, you know,
that is in the in the zeitgeist, I suppose. So what did well for me initially plastic surgery
of about celebrities, you know, so connecting the unknown, which would be me with the celebrity
Kim Kardashian, for example. Now I do things like reaction videos to different TV shows
and things like that. So what's known like the showbush, like Dr. Pimple Popper,
and doing things like that.
So you're now you're connecting the known with the unknown.
You need one video to pop off for your channel
to really start growing.
Yeah, that's what I'm saying.
Most channels really only have two or three videos
that are powering most of their views
and most of their subscriber base.
So it really comes out of being consistent,
doing the known with the unknown.
Those are kind of two big things.
That's really interesting.
And I agree with you, and I've seen that be the case for a lot of people, but it doesn't
always work.
Like for example, I would have on my podcasts, people who are really big on YouTube, like
who are like with big names.
That particular thing did quite well, but it didn't carry me through to get to the next
thing.
Like, yeah, I mean, did that video do well?
Yeah, and so maybe it kind of like got some traction
on a few other ones.
But by no means am I like getting millions
of subscribers on YouTube because of it.
I think you got to look at YouTube also differently
than let's say a podcast.
So YouTube is really getting into podcasting,
but if you look at the most successful people on YouTube,
like, watch Mr. Beast, and you see, like, the cuts are so quick.
So fast.
You know, and you don't want to have a lot of extra space
because people have such short attention spans.
You know, it's like there's TikTok
where you got to go super, super quick,
and like, don't make it five seconds long that it needs to be.
And YouTube is not quite that fast, but it is the same idea,
and the editing is absolutely key in those situations.
100%.
I, again, I cannot agree with you more.
I mean, we'll talk after this show,
maybe you could help me,
because I mean, I first was like,
I think it made me a free consultation on,
wow, how I can do this or what I need to do.
But I mean, who would have thought that I'd get,
what do you call it, like,
how to look younger consultation?
I mean, how to do social media better consultation.
All wrapped up in one desk.
There you go.
There you go.
That's very interesting.
Are you making money then from YouTube?
Because of all this?
YouTube I make the most money off of all the platforms.
By far.
By far.
By far, like not anywhere close with the other ones.
Like are you by just advertisers, right?
Like just by them?
Yes.
Well, so the, what I do is it's ad sense revenue.
So you get the ads that show up on your
videos.
But on top of that, I have my own product.
So I've got my skin care line, you beauty.
And so what I do is I'll have a video, and then I'll put a mid-roll ad of my products
in my video.
Just like you may, like, on a podcast episode, you put an ad, like on my podcast live
ad for my products in it.
Right.
And so it's the same.
So now I'll have mid-roll ads from advertisers,
and I'll have my own.
And yeah, two-thirds of people may skip through it,
but they're still at one-third, one-half of people
that will actually still watch it somehow.
100%.
And I can see as my YouTube videos go up,
my sales go up with that.
So if you don't mind me asking,
it is kind of a business podcast.
What would you make monthly from just YouTube alone?
With a five-sales revenue?
With a five-sales revenue subscriber. As since revenue? So my issue alone? With a 5 million subscribers. With a 5 million subscribers.
With a 5 million subscribers.
With a 5 million subscribers.
With a 5 million subscribers.
With a 5 million subscribers.
With a 5 million subscribers.
With a 5 million subscribers.
With a 5 million subscribers.
With a 5 million subscribers.
With a 5 million subscribers.
With a 5 million subscribers.
With a 5 million subscribers.
With a 5 million subscribers.
With a 5 million subscribers.
With a 5 million subscribers.
With a 5 million subscribers.
With a 5 million subscribers.
With a 5 million subscribers.
With a 5 million subscribers.
With a 5 million subscribers.
With a 5 million subscribers. With a 5 million subscribers. With a 5 million subscribers. With a 5 million subscribers. With say a million subscribers, which I think in my, of the five million, I'd say maybe 1.5 or long form subscribers for me
and the other what, 3.5?
Look at my math.
3.5 or a short form?
It's a single surgery, yeah.
So the 1.5, you know, you could make it
just for AdSense revenue anywhere from on the low side,
eight to 10,000 a month to the high side,
50,000 a month, depending on where your views are at.
And that's just for your ad.
That has nothing to do with product sales or anything like that.
Nothing.
Yeah.
And YouTube is a one platform.
I mean, Facebook is good with that too, where you can put as many links as you want.
Right.
Unlike Instagram and TikTok where they so limited and so frustrating.
It's, yeah, you don't make money off of it.
That's why everyone's trying to get off of Instagram to make.
You don't use that as a platform to make money. I don't make money off of it. And that's why everyone's trying to get off of Instagram to make you don't use that
as a platform to make money.
I don't make anything off of Instagram at all.
Like that's frustrating because I've got a lot of Instagram followers and I, and so for
me, I try to do more sponsored stuff and things like that.
And it's like, we have to make it with my while.
Right.
Exactly.
Do you do sponsored stuff a lot?
Like even though you have your own product, I guess you have to be very specific on your
life.
Yeah. One of the videos in your opinion that really kind of track the highest.
Is it with celebrities, is it with a particular body type?
Like what are the best?
Well for me, it just depends, I think, on your audience.
Like for me, the audience likes me explaining or reacting to like kind of crazy things.
So like I just had one pop off the other day.
Oh, and that's not my field, but it's when women
are having their period and they get pain in their rectum,
like severe pain in their rectum.
Some women get the severe pain in the rectum area
during periods and there was a video where a woman basically
was humming along and all of a sudden,
like, ah, and fell on the ground.
And so I kind of explained that this was due
to the prostate gland in release during menstruation
and this does happen to people.
You can get constriction and some people,
that's why they get period poops.
The same idea is that the prostate gland
and causes your intestines to kind of,
sometimes be a little irritable.
And that one like exploded.
I think it hit 10 million views or something like that.
Are you joking?
No, I'm serious.
Oh my, can you see?
But if you don't know about it, then good for you.
That's great.
I think that's going to be wrong.
Is there something wrong with me
that I've never heard of that before?
Well, it is something, you know,
I posted this because I found it interesting
and I mean, it's thousands and thousands of comments
of people like, I have that.
I have that.
Well, thank you so much for explaining it to me
because I thought something was wrong with me.
Interesting.
And so I try to do a lot of things like that
where either I will debunk things that are like,
come on, that's not true.
You know, like things like face yoga, you know.
Oh, if you make these movements with your face,
your wrinkles will go away.
Okay, yes, I was gonna ask you about that.
So can you do some debunking for me?
Yeah, I wanted to ask you.
So there's all of these things that,
oh, if you do all of these movements around your face,
it will help contour your face
and lift your face.
That's not true.
Is that not true?
It won't create a permanent effect.
So what you're talking about is using either rollers
or a guashah device.
A guashah.
And those are nice because what they'll do
is they will push out like lymphatic fluid.
So if you're puffy, like let's say,
you can eat Chinese food one night.
Next when you wake up, you're all puffy.
Yes, that's great to kind of push that fluid out.
But it's not gonna do anything permanent, you know?
It just won't.
Like there's nothing that you can do
to change the actual architecture of your face
by massaging it on the outside.
It just doesn't make sense when you really think about it.
So facial yoga is completely just...
Facial is a little bit different.
Cause facial yoga then is the act of making
these extreme facial expressions.
Like they'll pop out their cheeks really wide
and move their tongue all around their mouth
and then they'll elevate their brows
and then get real squinty and stuff.
And the belief is that if you exercise
and muscles of your face,
that that will cause your skin to be tighter.
Because like what you exercise other muscles that makes some stronger, they think, oh, well,
you're sagging because the muscles are stretched out in week.
If you strengthen them, then your face will be lifted.
The fact is, that just isn't true because these muscles, the muscles of facial expression
that you're using to make these movements, those are not the reason why things sag.
Those muscles don't sag.
They may get a thinner and atrophy a little bit as you get older, but what you're doing
though is you're doing the opposite of Botox when you think about it.
Botox is a neurotoxin that prevents the transmission of nerve impulses to muscle.
If you inject it into, let's say, the muscles of your frown lines like globale lab between
the eyebrows, it will prevent those muscles from contracting and the wrinkles smooth out. When, when you're doing all these extreme facial expressions, what you're doing is you are
making those wrinkles over and over and over again, and eventually it's like mom says, like,
if you keep making that face, it's going to stay that way. Those wrinkles will get set in.
It's like those people who always sleep on one side of the pillow and they don't have a satin
or cell pillow and they get sleep wrinkles and they do it year after year after year eventually they have lines on that side of
face because those pillow wrinkles, sleep wrinkles become permanent.
And so face yoga actually studies have been done on face yoga and what the one thing
face yoga does actually is it actually will like you think if you work those muscles out
what happens to muscles when you work them out they get bigger.
Yeah.
So in some people they actually will gain a little bit of volume in their face.
And some people say, well, it's an alternative to fillers.
And theoretically, that's probably true.
The problem is, is then you're going to trade it for deeper lines.
Oh my gosh.
I didn't even think of it that way.
That is 100%.
That sounds like it would make sense.
Yeah.
Well, before I get into the satin or the silk pillow, that is by far a great option for
people, right?
Because it does, does it limit the amount of wrinkles
and fine lines?
Yeah, because you're not having quite the friction, you know,
I mean, it's smoother and so the idea is that your face
is not gonna be kind of caught up in that, you know,
squished state for hours on end.
Absolutely.
Give us a couple other debunking.
Debunk some other.
Another big thing is muing.
Have you heard of muing?
No, it's that.
So muing is, you know, if you take a photograph and you elevate your tongue to the roof of your
mouth, it causes your neck to look tighter and to look higher.
And it really works.
So if you look at me, you see how my neck lifts.
So a lot of people will do this for photos.
And they'll say, hey, let's take a photo, then they'll put their tongue to the roof of
their mouth and their neckline looks better.
This is a trick of models for, I mean, you live in LA, you should know this.
I don't know any of this, yeah.
I don't, like living under a rock, apparently.
Yeah, so that's a trick for people
if you don't like how your chin looks
from the side from profile,
then just lift your tongue to roof of your mouth
when you smile and it will look tighter.
Like you look tighter when you do that.
Now, there is this belief,
it's called mewing,
that if you do that consistently,
that you will lift your actual,
and you can reshape your jawline,
and that just is not true.
And there are people who have videos that show,
oh look, if you do it over and over again,
then you will cause the jawline to look tighter.
And it's just, once again, not true at all.
Oh my God, give me another one.
Give me another one, type and trick like that.
Something that has gone viral that people believe.
So, I mean, I could say one of the things
that you see a lot of, you know,
actually one thing people have been asked me a lot
is there's this thing called air sculpt.
Have you heard of air sculpt?
No.
So, this is something that's real hot on in circles.
And actually the other one I can talk to you
is about implants in sonas.
So, I know you're a big son of fans.
We have about that.
I'm alright, so air sculpt, I've had people ask me on podcast,
what is air sculpt is at better than liposuction? And the answer is no. This is kind of a hot thing. A lot of people are saying, oh, I've had people ask me on podcast, what is AirSculpt is better than liposuction?
And the answer is no.
This is kind of a hot thing.
A lot of people are saying, oh, AirSculpt,
I've had AirSculpt and it's the no-stitch liposuction
and blah, blah, blah.
The problem that you see in plastic surgery
is there a lot of marketing gimmicks that come up.
People use it to make a lot of money
for a short period of time.
And then it goes by the wayside
and they're onto the next thing.
There was something called the lifestyle lift many years ago,
where they had these commercials on TV,
and it was like a lunchtime facelift.
It was all over the media, probably in the early 2000s.
Yeah, but I remember the lunchtime facelift.
What is that? I don't remember what it was, though.
Basically, they presented it as a facelift
under a local anesthetic that is revolutionary,
and people are like before, and then they'd be all frowning
and looking angry, then after.
And they'd be all smiling with this tight jawline. And it was actually devised by a
doctor actually from around Michigan State University where I graduated from in Michigan.
And in the end, this was just a gimmick. Eventually, they went bankrupt because a patient's
eventually figured out that it just was a freaking facelift under a local anesthetic. Nothing special
about it. How do you even get a facelift with no, with only local anesthetic. Nothing special about it. What do you mean? How do you even get a facelift with only local anesthetic?
You only inject it into a small area and you only lift a small area.
And so you don't get much of a result from it.
But they would promote this as this revolutionary thing.
The photographs would be completely ridiculous because before photograph,
no makeup, frowning, you know, they're looking down.
So everything looks really bad.
And the after, they've got down, so everything looks really bad.
And the after, they've got professional makeup.
They're smiling, their chin is lifted,
and it's like, come on, then there are enough people,
if you air it how many times on commercials,
infomercials, people will sign up for it,
and it was huge for a while,
and then very quickly died away,
and went bankrupt because people figured out
it was just a big scam.
And was it just like filler coming in here?
What was that? What did they say?
No, they actually did a facelift.
And they would make these incisions.
What?
They wouldn't hide them because they would hire these doctors
like kind of dock in the box, docks, plastic surgeons
who are either really, really young or really, really old,
who was just looking for hourly work.
And they would do these minimal facelifts
and get people in and not even see them afterwards.
It's the scam.
And you see this unfortunately around the country.
Yeah.
You know, there are in plastic surgery,
there are a lot of charlatans,
there are a lot of people who are honestly unethical,
and they do it just to make money.
Because it's the one field where you can go out there,
you can put a shingle up,
you can say you're the greatest doctrine town
by a bunch of ads, and people will believe it,
because hey, it's written there.
A hundred percent.
They have surgery, they get botched, and then what do they do?
It's all over the country.
So wait, what is AirSculpt then?
So AirSculpt is just another one of those new things.
I'm like, oh, it's the latest, greatest thing.
Now, this is something, this is my opinion.
Oh, yeah, legal reasons.
I completely my opinion.
I don't do it.
But just it's another one of these marketing gimmicks.
This is a less invasive, qu-unquote liposuction.
But how does it work?
It's just you, it's a local anesthetic and you perform liposuction.
Also, basically, it is liposuction, but like with a different name.
Yes, essentially.
I mean, and the, you know, people mark, you know, they kind of talk it up.
It's like, oh, it's minimally invasive.
No stitch, you know, all this stuff, but come on, it's still like a suction.
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There are some people that believe you have so many fat cells, and if you're moving
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There was one small study many, many years ago
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if you had lipodone in your calves,
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But that has since been debunked
by much, much larger studies.
The fact is, if you have liposuction done,
you're having fat removed from a part of your body.
There's still fat cells left there.
So if you gain weight, you're still gonna gain some fat.
But the idea behind lipos, you remove it from problem areas so you hopefully make yourself
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It doesn't always go to that kind of problem area.
Okay.
So I want to know this.
So how could someone without surgery, how can somebody tighten their face in a real way?
Like, not with fillers, not with eating salmon.
I'm talking about how can, is it even possible
to tighten someone's face
with how ever having certain guests it is?
Yes, yes.
So I would look at, there's two things I would do.
I mean, skincare can help,
but it's not gonna be this dramatic thing.
Okay, so if you're gonna go with skincare
then you wanna use a retinoid,
I do like a retinol, that's tried and true.
Most dermatologist plastic surgeons, you pick one antaging ingredient, they'll say use a retinoid, ideal like a retinol, that's tried and true. Most dermatologist plastered
and as you pick one antaging ingredient, they'll say use a retinol. But that's not going
to lift skin that's technically getting loose. So what can you do? The big thing right
now, the gold standard is Morpheus 8. Morpheus 8 is radio frequency micro needling.
Now the way it all this works is it's almost kind of like hormesis. It's the idea that
if you traumatize your body to a certain amount, you create an acute trauma, acute inflammation, the body
will heal that by making it stronger, by making it actually in our situation younger.
So 70, 80% of our skin is composed of collagen. Collagen is a large protein that is in these
kind of fibers. When I describe it, it's like the logs of a log cabin. And when you're
young, those logs are nice and new,
they're tough, they're shiny, they're smooth.
And as you get older, those logs start to fall apart a bit.
Now, anytime you do, whether it's a laser,
using laser light energy, a chemical peel,
use it which uses an acid, micronealing,
which creates an acute trauma by putting a needle
into the skin, you create a acute trauma to that collagen,
the collagen gets damaged, and when it heals, it heals in a tighter fashion.
Okay, it's kind of like the same idea of a cold plunge out there, where you put your body
into certain amount of controlled stress, and as long as you don't go too far and cause
real damage, you're going to cause your bite to rebound by actually being stronger, by
being more youthful afterwards.
So you're saying, because I tried more, ifpheus a, I had a friend of mine who's a doctor was just got the machine
and I go, I can try it on you.
First of all, I wasn't that red.
And I got it a couple of times.
I don't think he did anything.
Didn't do much.
No, like I think that-
So what happens with all of these treatments
is it really comes down to your body's reaction to it.
So I get Morpheus say every maybe four months in my neck area. Oh, that's a lot.. So I get morphia, say, every maybe four months
in my neck area.
Oh, that's a lot.
So maybe I've got to get, maybe it's something that you could,
how often would I have to get morphia?
So usually you recommend getting three to four treatments
to start out with, and I have seen some pretty impressive results
with three to four, but it really is patient-dependent.
Because what you're doing is you're once again,
you're damaging that collagen,
and you're seeing how that collagen tightens.
There's some people where it's really aggressive and that collagen really tightens up.
You see a really nice change. And then they're the unlucky folk where they just,
the collagen doesn't respond like you'd want it to.
Right, so it doesn't happen if it doesn't work forever.
And therein is the issue with any of these non-invasive treatments where you're not literally
cutting out a centimeter of skin in a facelift, where you're waiting for your bite to react and to create this process on its own,
it really can vary patient to patient, and it is very frustrating.
So then, would you say the more, maybe, like, I thought, well, maybe she wasn't aggressive enough,
like maybe it didn't go deep enough, the, maybe the, you know, the bite meals.
I mean, it could be that, but it could just be that your body is one that is just not as reactive to it.
It's the collagen is not gonna react as dramatically
as maybe a good friend of yours
who has the same thing done.
This is honestly a story of my life, right?
Like, of course with me, nothing works.
Nothing ever works.
I mean, I'm sorry.
It's always that way, but like,
and I'm not, I've never, I'm scared of like,
surgery, I'm scared of everything. But looking at me, what can I do for like, and I'm not, I've never, I'm scared of like surgery, I'm scared of everything.
But looking at me, what can I do for like, sunspots, not even me, like anybody, for sunspots,
for age spots, was the best way to get rid of these things?
Yeah, so the, the, with sunspots, it's very simple. It's an inside, outside approach. So,
the outside approach, essentially, you want, well, it's technically the inside approach,
you want to apply a good brightening cream. So you want one that contains cogeoc acid or niacinamide or liquid-shoot extract.
Yes, I gave you one.
It's right there.
Oh, good.
So how do I use this brightening cream?
Or how does it, so basically to get rid of a sun spot, you should use brightening
cream.
So these will basically, so what spots are essentially, they are clumps of melanin due to sun exposure.
Okay. So when you get too much UV exposure, your body, your skin will react by creating melanin
because melanin helps to absorb those rays and basically protect your skin from them.
If you get a lot, especially if you've got light colored skin, you can get these deposits
of melanin called sunspots, a spots, liver spots, all the same names for the same thing,
or different names for the same thing.
The only way to get rid of them is to actively remove them.
Okay, so if you don't do anything with your spots, they will stay there basically forever.
So the way you remove them is you suppress the melanin and you turn the skin over.
Okay, so a brightening cream will suppress the melanin, but if you combine that with
exfoliation, exfoliation will cause your cells to turn over your skin to turn over more quickly,
then you can bring those cells to the surface that contain that pigment and eventually they slough off.
Okay, so that's how you want to tackle it from a cream perspective.
Let's do a brightening cream and then add some type of an exfoliator, whether it's an alpha hydroxy acid or whether it's a retinal,
that turns your skin over more quickly, that will eventually cause those spots to go away.
But that takes a long time.
You're talking six to eight weeks minimum
to really see those results.
And then let's go back to the tightening for seconds.
I want people to, I mean, I didn't want to cut you off
because I bet you if someone's listening,
they'll be like, I want to know these things.
And then I might move on from morpheus.
So before, besides morpheus eight, which you say is that it can work
for tightening your skin, what else can
it take to enter skin?
Naturally, without going and getting a surgery.
Having surgery, yeah.
So I mean, skin tightening is always a challenge.
There are a lot of treatments that will create
a somewhat similar effect.
Prior to morpheus 8, there was a treatment
called Ultherapy that was probably
considered the gold standard.
And that's using ultrasound energy to heat up the deep skin.
I never used it, but I heard from my patients maybe two thirds of people had a reasonable
result from it just through the grapevine.
And so I was never a huge fan of that.
Sometimes even just like fractional laser treatments can help as well.
But the problem is, is all of them are going to act in the same manner of causing heat
to the collagen to cause it to tighten up.
And there's only so much tightening that you're going to get without going really invasive.
Okay.
And so the other thing, you said retinol, is that because retinol help tighten your skin
or is it just help make it?
Modestly, it's very modest.
Very.
So what is retinol really good for?
So retinol essentially, it's a derivative of vitamin A, and there's prescription strength
retinol, and there's over-the-counter strength retinol.
Most of us, we recommend retinol because it's over-the-counter.
Most people can get it, and most skin care lines, and expensive ones even have, a lot of
them, have a retinol in them.
So it's very available.
When you actually look at the studies, the studies are mainly done on retinol A, the prescription
strength version, and it has been shown in many studies to tighten the skin a bit, to exfoliate the skin, to
thicken the dermis, the deeper layer of the skin.
It's even been shown to reverse early-pre-skin cancers.
And so people who have a history of skin cancers, not a bad idea to get yourself on retin A,
because it may reverse some of the atypias, the kind of unusual and the malfunctioning cells
potentially in your skin.
What a great tip.
So to maybe prevent skin cancer,
being on retinol or retinol can actually help prevent.
There is a belief that that may help.
Yeah.
Now, I don't know of any studies on retinol
because that's the over-the-counter strength,
but they're definitely our studies on retinol.
And retinol essentially, it's over-the-counter strength
because when you apply it's inactive, but it undergoes two chemical reactions after
you apply it to your skin to become retinay. And that's when it starts working.
Interesting, because I know every single dermatologist will, or anybody who knows skin,
we'll say that is the number one key to younger skin is retinol or retinay. If I'm
really saying it's all about retinay,
the medical grade that people are really.
That's what most of the studies are on.
But it's hard to tolerate and that is the problem.
So a lot of people don't tolerate retinol or retinay at all.
If you've got real dry skin,
if you've got real sensitive skin,
then some people just can't tolerate.
And so if you can't,
then the thing I would recommend would be Bakucho.
Bakucho is a plant- based alternative to retinol.
It's made from the Bobchi plant.
This is something that's been around in Ayurveda
and Chinese medicine for centuries.
And there was a study that compared retinol
to Bakucho for its anti-aging effects
and found a very similar result from both of those.
The difference is, is that retinol
created more skin irritation than Bakucho.
So if you've got sensitive skin and you've tried retinol
and you're like, jeez, I can't tolerate,
it makes my skin dry, it makes it flaky,
it makes it red or itchy.
They can try Bakucho instead.
Bakucho.
Bakucho, yeah, because that will work itself,
that may work better for you
and it's very easy on the skin.
And I think I brought you one.
You have Bakucho, you have it?
Yeah, yeah, I brought you one.
Oh my god, okay, so you need to give me
like a whole recipe on how to use all the
other products.
Yeah, that's my bikuchu.
I forgot, I forgot I mailed you products and I brought you products that I could fit
on my, in my carry on.
This is amazing because you also have in here a peptide.
So peptides are like the hottest thing right now.
Yes.
And do you want to talk about that?
Yes, but in skincare, it's not quite the same, you know, I mean, I think peptides are
something, it's such a broad category, you know, I mean's not quite the same. I think peptides are something,
it's such a broad category, because semi-glutides are peptide.
Semi-glutides are peptide? Oh, yeah. So peptides are basically just protein.
Peptide essentially is a protein. And they will act as cellular messengers and telling
yourselves to do this or that. In skincare, we can apply it on our skin and it can cause
our skin to create more collagen.
It's a messenger, it's a protein
that acts as a messenger to create more collagen.
But there are peptides like somagglutides
that type of peptide that obviously causes
your GI tract to slow down and not to empty us quickly.
And then there are peptides that are being used
for anti-aging purposes as well
and a lapping use and kind of more experimental
and that type of thing.
Have you heard of one skincare with the OS01 peptide?
I have heard a little bit about that.
I've heard some podcasts, early stuff, but not a lot.
It's something that's a different company.
I'm always kind of wary when it's a company saying, hey, this is the newest thing and they're
the ones saying it.
I want to see it from let's say dermatologists and other practitioners first who aren't
maybe doing it as a sponsored type of it.
Right.
I understand what you're saying.
I mean, because they have this, I thought they had the proprietary, what you call it,
like a patent that people really, really liked it.
So I thought since-
There's a lot out there in skincare, but I think what people need to realize is that
you don't have to be real fancy
with it, you know, because it's like skin care, there's always kind of this shiny object
that's here or that's here. Like, oh, this is better than both. I'm going to use that. Oh,
then this is here. And really what it comes down to is that most people, you know, really,
I have something I recommend it's called the two minutes five year younger skin care
regimen. And so this is something that literally takes two minutes a day. And we tested
people on it. We had them people who just, you know, they weren't like,
they didn't come in with horrible skin,
but they also aren't people like you
where you've got really nice skin,
like people with kind of average skin.
And so we put them on it.
It literally takes two minutes a day.
And after two months of doing this,
we surveyed people on Instagram
of how much younger does their skin look.
And we got an average of about five years younger.
And it's super, super simple.
It's part of my book.
So in the morning, cleanse your skin
with a cleanser appropriate for your skin type.
So if you've got oily skin,
you wanna use a foaming cleanser.
If you've got drier or more sensitive skin
then use a hydrating or a milky cleanser.
After that, you wanna apply an antioxidant serum.
Vitamin C is the most common.
If you want to biohack a little bit
then combining vitamin C and vitamin E
will get actually a synergistic effect for antioxidant and will protect your skin even better.
So you apply an antioxidant serum, typically vitamin C and most skincare lines have a
vitamin C serum in them.
If you want to get it even better, then add the vitamin E with it too.
And then I do recommend using a sunscreen, especially if you're going to be out at least
SPF 30.
And that's all you have to do in the morning, okay?
Cleanser, vitamin C, sunscreen, you're done.
In the evening, gotta cleanse your skin.
Most important thing, if you only wash your face once a day,
make it at night, gotta get rid of the day's worth of
dust, grime, dirt, and stuff.
And then you wanna apply ideally a retinal.
If you've got real sense of skin, then go with Bakuchal.
And then if you wanna apply moisturizer on top of that,
feel free, but you don't have to.
If you've got oily skin, there's no reason to apply moisturizer.
You've got natural moisturizer.
So moisturizers are not truly anti-aging.
They are for comfort.
They're for hydration.
And that's all you have to do at night.
Now once a week, if you have sensitive skin to a three times a week, if you have got,
quote unquote, normal skin, then I do recommend that you exfoliate.
You can do it with a gentle scrub or you can do it with like an alphidroxy acid type of
like at home peel.
And that's it.
If you just do those steps, you're going to be way ahead of like 95% of people.
Wow.
That's okay.
So that's so simple because you're right.
I mean, it's a huge industry, the multi-billion dollar industry.
And everyone will, people will try anything to look better, look younger, all the things.
So, but you didn't say a couple of things that I've heard are very, very important, which
is hyaluronic acid. So hyaluronic acid is nice. And actually, I got you a probiotic and
hyaluronic acid serum as well. Okay. That is an add-on. Okay. So hyaluronic acid is a
naturally-curring moisturizer of the skin. If you've got real dry skin, if you live here in LA, if you're in Arizona, if you're in
Nevada, and you want to add some good moisture skin by all means, hyaluronic acid is great.
Okay, so you would put that on, and then the other thing that you didn't mention, well,
you actually kind of did mention that.
You said, oh, is there like a difference in terms of the types of night creams that you
should be using versus day creams?
And also, vitamin C at night is a no-no, right?
It's not necessary.
It's not necessary.
Yeah, because vitamin C is an antioxidant in general.
Now vitamin C is definitely important for the production of collagen.
But right, so you're not washing your...
I only wash my face, sorry, at night.
Okay.
And I use water in the morning.
Okay.
And that's... Yeah, not you getting the benefits of it.
Well, sometimes I do that too, because like if I shower at night, then I sometimes won't
cleanse my skin in the morning, I'll rinse it off essentially too.
Right, right, right.
So yeah, vitamin C essentially though is a protectant.
It's an antioxidant.
It protects your skin against free radicals.
And so you're, you know, throughout the day, you're exposed to free radicals from the
sun. The sun creates free radicals from
Pollution from cigarette smoking around you and from the food that you eat
Especially if you're eating ultra-process foods that actually it contains free radicals
And so the vitamin C will protect your skin from it
But while you're sleeping your skin's not being attacked by free radicals so much because you're lying in bed and you're asleep
And ideally that's when you want to apply the retinal.
Now retinal, you don't apply in the morning because it gets actually deactivated by the
sunlight.
So then you just waste your money on it.
What about red light therapy?
Like putting a mask and we're putting red light on you for fine lines and wrinkles.
Yeah.
So if you're listening to this podcast and you are on a strict budget and you want to do
something and let's say you live in an area where you don't have access to a med spa
or dermatologist and you want to do it yourself, red light therapies, number one, great bang
for your buck.
So just like you said, it can come in handheld devices where you treat a quadrature
of your face at a time, you can get those creepy looking, hand-of-electric masks that
allow you to work.
Yeah, oh yeah.
So there actually is studies to show that red light therapy will improve your skin. There was a split-face study where they actually took half the face, they didn't actually split some face.
But they treated half the face with a sham laser, one that didn't do anything,
and one with a red light laser or a light device, and found a significant improvement in wrinkles,
hydration, and elasticity of the skin, and an improvement in the collagen
content of the skin with red light therapy.
Wow. Do you know, I'm sure you do,
the difference in quality, like this is a shout out
for therisage and this is because it's actually true,
because they have this panel of like a red light panel
that I put on my face.
I use it everywhere. I use it when I have like a bad ankle.
Yeah. When I have an injury, I just wrap my,
whatever it is and it really does help after a while.
And so I do think there is a difference
in terms of the quality of a red light you're using,
because there's companies out there who have,
it doesn't, there's pharmaceutical grade,
and there's other ones.
Are you familiar with this whole idea
or you think they're all the same?
To an extent, yeah, I mean, I have some friends of mine
who are really, really into it and they have their own.
Like, there's one, the Loom box is one that I'm an affiliate for
that I think is really good, just a table top.
Well, fight about it.
I think they're off.
You try this one.
But I think that, yeah, there's so many different ones out there,
but yes, I agree.
I think that there are ones where you have companies
that are based overseas and they are mass producing these
and sending them into the US and then companies will put their label on it.
And then there are companies like the ones that you work with, the one that I work with,
where these companies, this is what they do.
You know, and they-
And they're the integrity of the company is so important to, I think, because I think
the problem is people see something that, you know, they talk about red light therapy
and then people are like, oh yeah, well I can just go buy this one here or that one there because it's whatever.
And there is something about the quality and the integrity of what you're using out there.
I would agree, yeah, because you can't just use like poor parts to create something and expect
that you're going to have the same result as a company that is very, you know, focused on the
creation of this product and the quality of and the results, you know, I mean, I think that there
definitely is a difference there.
So do you know, can you tell people what to look for when they're looking for a red light?
I can't specifically.
No, because I think that's something you'd have to look at the company.
You want to look at their studies, what they have, their intra company studies and see
what they get with it.
A lot of it, honestly, as people like you who've used a product and said, hey, you know what?
I think it's a great product.
I mean, because sometimes it's hard to do studies
with some of this stuff.
And it will overtake exactly.
I mean, even look at something like when it was them pick, right?
Like people are just everyone and everyone
and their dog is taking it.
I think I'm the only person in California
lost to Agilist who's not on this thing.
Cause you look around, everyone's like literally 10 pounds now.
Like, so thin.
Yeah. And people don't think there's any side effects.
And you don't find out about the side effects until many, many years later.
You know, the one thing I wonder with it, and I have patients of mine who are on Zepak,
and I think there are people who have type 2 diabetes, and who have issues where it can potentially
really help them.
The one thing that I wonder, and there are things I think in medicine where you can get an immediate
result, and you don't have an immediate complication and you assume that long term
It's going to be safe and then you find out long later that it may not and so when I try to think about is theoretically what could go wrong
So when I think about ozampic you know one thing is and I do a lot of surgery still
I operate two days a week sometimes three and we have I have patients mind for an ozampic and we take them off at least two weeks prior to the operation
But I start thinking you know when know, when you deal with colon cancer, okay, and let's say you
have somebody who's on a really poor diet, we know that our food, especially if you're
talking ultra-processed foods, are filled with free radicals, okay?
What happens when you take food that's filled with free radicals?
Somebody eats it, it goes into their intestines, and their intestines don't move that food very
quickly.
And they're exposed to these free radicals for twice the length of time that they normally would,
because normally you have perstalsis and a day after you eat something, it comes out the other end.
What happens if it takes a lot longer for it to come out the other end?
And your gut cells are exposed to this food for longer periods of time.
Right.
Could that potentially increase your risk of colon cancer in the future?
I don't know.
Is it possible?
I mean, theoretically, it does sound a little bit concerning when you think about it.
No, I'm not a gastroenterologist.
I'm not a gut health specialist.
I do know, generally, about gut health and about alternative medicine, but I haven't
heard anybody talk about that.
Is that a concern?
That's the same thing when we have, I have their plastic surgeons who will inject fat
into women's breasts. They go, oh, I have, their plastic surgeons who will inject fat into women's breasts.
They go, oh, this is safer than implants, who will inject fat.
Well, theoretically, what happens when you take a cancer-prone organ, one in nine women
will get breast cancer in their lifetime, and you inject fat which is chock-full of stem
cells into the kind of haphazardly into a woman's breast.
What if that woman has a cluster of dysplastic abnormal cells
that are only gonna turn into a cancer
when she turns 140 years old because her so slow growing?
But now you inject a bunch of stem cells around those cells.
Stem cells are basically cells that are so young
that they will turn into essentially the organ
that they're in.
Will that maybe cause a breast cancer to show up
when the woman turns 50 instead of 120? We don't know. And these are things that we need to keep in mind theoretically before
we just kind of jump in and do this intervention assuming that it's going to be fine.
You just said something that's very interesting, but why, like if that about stem cells to
me, because that can happen, like let's say you don't take the fat from, let's say, your
butt and put it into your boobs, which is, know, something like you just keep it where it is.
And then you inject stem cells somewhere in your body for like healing purposes.
Does that because it because stem cells go all over the place.
So you're saying that potentially when you're thinking you're doing something good for another
reason, that can actually be backfire. Potentially.
And increase your ability for, because it'll speed up the growth somewhere out.
That's my fear. No, no. If let's say you have a thousand abnormal cells in your breast,
it has to become a lump or anything yet. You don't even know that they're there.
But now you inject a bunch of stem cells in and around that area.
But why would I be putting stem cells in there, not just the rest?
In the breast? If you're doing fat injections into a breast to make the breast bigger, essentially.
Also, you use stem cells for that? Well, fat is filled with stem cells. That's one thing we've
learned. And one thing you don't hear a lot about is, you know, they don't hear a lot about
stem cell controversy of like, oh, you know, are you getting it from fetus, you know, fetuses,
and stuff like that? Because now what we can do is take our fat, which everybody's got a
little extra, and you can use that to actually harvest stem cells from it.
It's actually a great source of stem cells,
and this is something we've only learned
maybe the last 10 or 15 years.
So you're not safe, so what about just regular?
Like if you're getting stem cells or exosomes
for an injury, and can that cause,
can that backfire then or?
Right now you can't here in the United States.
It is.
It's only an FDA-approved study.
So a few years ago, they actually put a ban on the use of exosomes and stem cells
unless you're in an FDA-approved study.
Really?
I know a ton of people who are getting them all the time.
They're probably not getting them here in the US because you have to go.
And I was just doing a podcast yesterday where the podcast host was going to another country
to get stem cells, stem cell therapy.
Are you sure about this?
Unless they're doing an FDA approved study, yes.
Yes.
I know a bunch of people, I mean, I don't doctor
to Utah who's whole, they're whole bed
and Beverly Hills.
I mean, you can't technically, I mean,
if you want to get your office rated,
and I have a doctor friend of mine
who's an alternative medicine doctor
who used to do all this stem cell stuff
and it's gone now, like this person got, yeah.
Wow.
Yeah, so right now as of my knowledge
is that exosomes and stem cells,
you can be in a study and usually these are associated
with universities, but other than that,
you can't just open up a practice
but like, hey, I'm gonna do stem cells like that.
You would do it.
Not just that. You haven't heard open up a practice, but like, hey, I'm going to do stem cells like that. You would not do that.
You haven't heard of like all these doctors who are maybe they're not simply doing that.
But all these like telemet, like medspas and longevity doctors.
There are unhacking doctors.
And you can do things like IV infusions, peptides and proteins and things like that.
But you cannot technically do stem cells and excellence in the United States anymore.
It was allowed for a while.
Wouldn't it they stopped it that maybe that it was a few years ago?
Oh, that is, oh my God, that's interesting.
Well, thank you for telling me.
Yeah, yeah.
Like I said, there may be some people still doing it, but they're probably affiliated with
some university and like that.
But the kind of the wide scale like, you know, seeing ads like, oh, you've got knee problems
come on over, we'll do stem cells. You don't see those anymore, or at least I know in my area,
you don't, I don't, and that's my understanding is it's not legal. So my husband broke his neck
and his back. Oh, yeah. Like, maybe five months ago, four and a half months ago going, I know,
look at your face, I think it's crazy, right? No, no, he's, thank God, he's, uh, he's almost like
back to normal. Oh, good. But, but what I'm saying, why I was bringing that up, I was, I wasn't trying to get sympathy from you.
I'm gonna tell you that his ads, who's been great, he's like, honestly, like he hasn't missed a beat.
It's like, it's beyond.
He was working while they're in that, when he found out, like he broke his neck.
But anyway, why I'm saying this is because I've thought, like, oh, if you got stem cells,
it would speed up the recovery. He never got them
But you know some doctors were like a hundred percent you should be getting them and other
So it could be that you may be able to get it like I said if that surgeon or doctor is involved
No, the surgeon doctor doesn't think it's like a these things are
Or you would have to go overseas to have it done and that's my understanding and I may be wrong
Maybe there's some other like intricacies of the law.
I didn't look into it for.
I need to say to one thing I didn't tell you is we of spots.
IPL is the other thing to do for spots in tense pulse light.
Yes, I heard that.
Okay.
So I that's good bang for your buck.
But this is also what I heard talk about like shifting gears here, right?
About that which I would age spots now guys.
I heard that you should not be getting IPL
if you're out in the sun, because if you are,
it'll come right back and it'll get more.
Well, the problem with spots is yes.
If you keep getting sun, you're gonna keep getting spots.
But what do you do?
Do you just leave them and then just keep them?
Because they won't go away unless you get rid of them.
So it's kind of like, I don't know.
I mean, I guess it's like if you have a bad diet, but you're, well, you have a bad diet. So why bother just going to gain weight?
Like, no, like you've got to, let's let's fight this aging process, you know, and enjoy it,
but not necessarily beat ourselves up, you know, if we're not where we want to be essentially.
Okay. So you're basically telling me I should be getting IPL. So I'm thinking, so when I mentioned
inside outside approach, I talked about the inside, which are the creams.
And then the outside is the IPL good bang for your buck.
If I would give you two really good bang for your bucks
for overall antaging, red light therapy, IPL,
and then my queen healing would be the third one.
Okay, so that's good.
That's a great sound bite right there.
So now we have the three right there together.
Yeah.
Okay, where are the three top tips to look?
Is that, would you say this is it Where are the three top tips to look,
is that, would you say this is it then?
The three top tips to look 10 years younger.
I mean, I always start off,
for me I start out with diet and food and things like that
because when you're looking at anti-aging overall,
the key is gonna be starting with the basis.
It's like building a house
and like these invasive procedures
like the spire on top of the house
and the foundation of the house is the food that you eat.
So if I were to tell you, you know, the number one thing to overall improve your skin, I would say reduce the amount of sugar you eat.
Because that really is inflammatory to your body, it's inflammatory to your skin and it will show in your skin.
Now, reducing amount of sugar is going to make wrinkles go away? No, it's not going to make wrinkles go away.
But once again, it's kind of that basis that you have to do because it's constantly attacking the collagen of your skin if you're having too much sugar.
Now, if you're looking at, okay, I truly want to look 10 years younger, what should I do in like a short span of time?
Then yes, I would combine IPL treatments for a lot of people, probably with Morpheus 8,
and then if I had one other thing that I would combine that with probably more for a long term
And I would say add a retinal or a bacucho to that just to kind of keep those results
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Okay, so how about supplementation and what would you say with your belief on supplements?
What do you think work? Tell me what you would do. And what would you say, with your belief on supplements,
what do you think work?
Tell me what you would do.
So yeah, I mean, traditional medicine
is not fond of supplements.
I was not taught anything about supplementation
in my residency, and it really didn't come to,
it came down to a point when I had kind of this kind of
come to Jesus moment of like, oh my gosh, like,
what have I, what was I taught?
And I, there's, I realized in my career
that there is so much that I don't know that I didn't know.
Okay, because there's a lot of doctors out there
and the big, one of them, the big one is collagen.
So like, I will post about collagen supplements
and people will comment, my family doctor says
it doesn't work.
Well, I mean, the big question then is,
your family doctor may say it doesn't work,
but do they know what they don't know? And the answer is probably not, I mean, the big question then is, your family doctor may say it doesn't work,
but do they know what they don't know?
And the answer is probably not.
When I had patients come to see me early in my practice
and they're on a bunch of supplements,
they would ask me, Dr. Unum,
I'm gonna have surgery soon,
what should I do with my supplements?
And I'd say, oh, just go off all of them
because I didn't know anything about them.
Right.
And I had never taken the time to learn it.
And my mentors all in plastic surgery
with that's what they would say.
So then I would basically mimic them. And when I realized that, oh my gosh, there's so much I don't
know, I really started studying this. And I spent, I mean, probably thousands of hours
comparing the studies that were in our surgical literature on patients who were, let's say,
trauma patients who had pressure sores, burn patients, people with chronic wounds,
and how they gave them different nutrition,
arginine, glutamine, amino acids, and all that,
to help with the wound healing.
And I combined that with the teachings
of alternative health experts,
gut health experts, nutritionists.
And I created at that time a surgical supplement protocol
that I put my patients on both before and after surgery.
And I found that the patients did great with it,
that not only did I find that my complication rate reduced,
but I also found patients coming back and saying,
what did you put me on?
Because my hair's getting thicker,
or geez, my joints feel a lot better.
You know, or my bowels are moving much more regularly.
I mean, so many of these stories.
Now, I never marketed this surgical supplement system
because I was afraid that somebody a different
patient from a different doctor would take it.
They would get, let's see, a hematoma bleeding complication after surgery, and now I'm
their easy scapegoat.
Oh, you got that bleeding complication because they're his darn supplements, even though I
test them to be fine.
So, I never put them out there, but now there are companies who are creating their own pre-imposed
surgical supplement systems, and they're almost exactly the same stuff that I had in mind, even though I never actually put it out there,
the fact is, is that they're doing their own research and they're coming up with the
same conclusions, which makes me feel good.
So I do believe in supplements.
The big one that people talk about is collagen.
And so big questions do collagen supplements work.
And the answer is yes.
And if a doctor tells you they don't work,
they just have not looked at the literature. There are so many studies that show that
taking a hydrolyzed collagen peptide supplement can improve your skin, can
improve your nails. No studies I know of they'll say improve your hair, but it
does make sense that it should. There was a meta analysis in 2021. Over 1100
people, they took hydrolyzed collagen peptides
for 90 days and found a statistically
significant improvement in the hydration,
in wrinkle, skin hydration wrinkles,
and elasticity of their skin.
And there have been prospective placebo-controlled
randomized trials where they would put somebody
on collagen supplementation for a couple of months
and then actually biopsies their skin later
and find an increased amount of collagen in their skin.
So it works.
But the key is you got to get the right collagen supplement.
And you want to get hydrolyzed collagen peptides because the argument that people will make
who are naysayers is say, oh, the collagen is a large protein and your body is just going
to break it down.
How you know it's going to get to your skin?
Well, and how you even know it's going to actually get absorbed.
Well, that's why these companies will make hydrolyzed collagen peptides because you take that large protein
and you break it down into its individual amino acids or peptides, which are a combination
of a small number of amino acids, making it much smaller so that you can actually absorb
it. And that's where you want to look for is hydrolyzed collagen peptides. That's how
you know it's good. What's the brand that I should try?
So I mean, I have my own. So it's not convenient. brand that I should try? So I mean I have my own
Is it not convenience?
I mean, yeah, so I mean I have my own
But there are other ones out there that I think are very very good
You could try the vital proteins bullet proof is big with collagen. I would just encourage you like with anything
Try it for a couple months. I did not because I can't get that through a security
TSA well you get a collagen Try it for a couple months. Did you bring me some? I did not, because I can't get that through security.
TSA, well, you get a-
Collagen, uh,
You got a big tub of powder, white powder.
Well, that was the actual fact.
So, you said that, I was gonna ask you,
like, what about in the supplement form?
Is it okay to take it in a pill form?
Or are you just take it as like the-
So, the pills, the problem with the pills
is that there are capsules that have the powder inside of them.
Yeah.
It's much easier to just take the scoop, put it in a hot drink,
and typically it should be in general flavorless,
or you can mix into a smoothie.
Yeah, so you think,
because I know a lot of people do this,
I think you talk with this too,
like putting it in your coffee,
and you can't taste it.
You can't, a lot of them,
a lot of them you can, some of them you can.
That's one of our things is that you can't taste it.
I put in my coffee.
Now I put in my coffee for many years, and the last time I went to my dentist, she's like, are you drinking a lot of them you can, some of them you can. That's one of our things is you can't taste it. I put in my coffee. Now, I put in my coffee for many years,
and the last time I went to my dentist,
she's like, are you drinking a lot of coffee?
And I'm like, yeah, she goes,
you gotta stop that,
because your teeth are getting stained.
So I'm like, oh, so now I just mix in hot water,
and I can barely taste it.
What about, can you put in cold, like anything?
Oh, I can't, I can't.
It's smoothie, though.
It's like putting hot chocolate mix
into a cup of cold water.
It's not gonna to mix up.
It doesn't work, right?
Not as well.
No.
See, so you're a big, you're a big collagen person then.
Yeah, I do believe it works.
And like, I've looked at the studies and the studies are all very positive on collagen.
And okay, and you think fish oil is good too.
Yeah, so I'm a fan of fish oil collagen.
In my book, I do recommend certain basic supplements.
You know, I think it's good to take a multivitamin
every day just because there's so much nutritional
deficiencies.
I think it's good to take a probiotic every day
because-
I think you have all of these on your line.
We don't sell a probiotic.
We don't sell.
I'm not, so I don't have everything.
Supplements are a very minor part of what we do
for us as a customer.
I know, I'm just teasing you.
Yeah, I'm just teasing you.
But definitely a daily probiotic because, you know, as you because as you know, our diet is completely sterile now.
You don't have the fermented foods in so many other countries.
Yeah.
So I do recommend that as well.
Okay, so that's not a crazy list.
No, and then usually I do recommend some type of antioxidant mix, just because we don't
in general get enough antioxidants in our food.
Okay, now what do you believe, what do you think for,
in terms of like intermittent fasting,
for that type of, people say that like,
people, a lot of people say that fasting
has been really good for the aging process,
for longevity, for like, atophagy.
What is your take on all of that?
So I think that's huge, and that's a big part
of my book as well.
So when you look at auto-juvenation.
So teach me up there, doctor.
When you look at auto-juvenation, it's five things,
I think are the keys to turning back the clock naturally.
What you eat, when you eat, nutritional supplements,
skincare, and non-invasive treatments.
And so we've kind of touched on all of them,
but the when you eat.
And so exactly, the thing that happens basically is the fact that we're alive, our body creates
waste products.
And our cells can have waste products in the cells.
They're basically used in organelles and proteins and even kind of discarded mitochondria.
And so our cells can fill up with this intracellular waste, essentially, and that's one of the
main causes of aging of our skin.
So the way that we get rid of this intracellular waste is a process that you mentioned called autophagy.
Autophagy means self-eating,
or basically it's a intracellular recycling process
where your body, your cells will actually clean out
and use that intracellular waste for energy.
By doing that, it then cleans itself out of this intracellular
waste and it functions more efficiently afterwards,
essentially being younger. And so that's one of the ideas of this intracellular waste and it functions more efficiently afterwards, essentially being younger.
And so that's one of the ideas of fasting
as a way to increase longevity
because your cells will actually act younger
because of this process of autophagy.
But for autophagy to work,
you have to stop eating for a period of time.
That's how your body runs out of energy
and then it starts using up this autophagy process
to get rid of these intracellular organelles
using that as energy.
And so in general, you wanna look at stopping eating
for at least 12 hours for that process to work.
And in our society, as you have talked about
in the podcast before, like we're all just used
to eating all the time.
And so taking time off of eating is the key to do that.
And so what I did in the book is that we have
a 21 day jump start where we started people
kinda cleaning up their diet,
we started them on supplements and skincare products, and then we had them in weeks two and three,
we had them start intermittent fasting just two days a week, okay, because you want to make sure
that they get enough protein because protein, especially as you get older, is super, super important.
We started intermittent fasting weeks two and three, just two days a week, and we added one final
thing to it. We do know that there are certain foods that can promote the autophagy process
even while you're eating. Okay, so when they would intermittent fast, they would stop eating
at 8 p.m., all the way up until noon the next day, and then when they would break their fast
at noon the next day, we would keep them on a diet that promoted autophagy. And that is
healthy fats,
so it would be omega-3 fatty acid rich foods
like cold water fish,
and monolensaturated fatty acids
like olives, avocados, nuts and seeds,
and foods that are rich in polyphenols,
which essentially are bright
or dark colored foods and vegetables.
And so the idea then is even though you break your fast
and you're eating, you're eating foods
that will still promote the autophagy process that interests the renewal.
And after this 21 day, essentially, jumpstart, we had people getting just great results
in the quality of their skin.
And people would say, yeah, they'd be out to dinner with their friends and their friends
were like, wow, your skin looks great.
What are you doing?
Not knowing that they were doing this jumpstart.
We even had people who would get stopped by people on the street and say, hey, I just want
to ask you, like, what do you do for your skin?
Because your skin looks so nice, like crazy.
Now, it's not a facelift.
Yeah, okay.
It's not a facelift, but it's just seeing that quality
of your skin and then people lost if you unwanted pounds
and they felt better and their skin improved.
And yeah, it was pretty amazing.
What do you think about genetics, though?
How much of this of all of this?
20%.
You think genetics is only 20%. Yeah, that's's a study show with when you're looking at aging is
2080 you have 80% is this whole idea of api genetics where genes will determine 20% of
Your appearance of your health and the other 80% are how your genes are expressed based off of your lifestyle choices
And I truly believe that your body and this is a whole concept of auto-juvenation,
that your body has regenerative abilities.
You just need to give it the tools
and the environment in order to do that.
I mean, you see people who have these horrible injuries.
And I see that myself and my patients,
where we cut them open and we cut all the skin off of them
and stuff, and how quickly they heal.
I can do a tummy tuck on somebody
where I literally remove pounds of skin from their tummy. I lift their tummy off of them and stuff, and how quickly they heal. You know, I can do a tummy tuck on somebody where I literally remove pounds of skin from
their tummy.
I lift their tummy off of the muscles of their abdomen, pull everything down, I suture
it together, and within two weeks they're driving a car, running errands, like doing anything
but exercising.
Like, our bodies want to be healthy.
Our bodies want to heal itself.
We just need to give it the right tools and the environment to do that.
You're saying you can exercise after a tummy taut, after two weeks?
Three weeks, you can exercise after three.
I say they want to exercise, but they start at three weeks.
Crazy.
Yeah, you don't work the abs though for much longer than that.
But yeah, people, we get people on light exercise at three weeks.
That's pretty common.
Is it?
Oh yeah.
And so is this why you look so young, you look at you're like literally 12 years old.
Yeah, you know, I go and-
I'll do you. So I put on social media that I'm like, I'm 88 years old and so young? You look at you're like literally 12 years old. Yeah, you know, I go into you.
So I put on social media that I'm like,
I'm 88 years old and they're like, wow,
you're 88, you look like you're 40.
Or they're all put like, oh, people are like,
how old are you?
And I'll put, I'm 25 and they go, oh dang,
you should start using your own skincare.
Yeah.
So I'm 51 and.
You look freaking good.
Thank you, but I've had a ton of work done.
No, I'm not. a ton of work done.
No, I'm okay.
No, I'm okay.
I had my job broken and reset
between high school and college
because it used to stick out real far.
And I get Botox between my brows
and then I do skincare.
I get Morpheus under my chin.
I've had IPL.
I have people though, you know what's so funny?
I get people that comment on my post like,
he's had so much work done.
His face is frozen and it's all puffy.
And I'm like, I don't think I look that bad.
No, you know.
I had one person commented, he looks like a 60 year old Thai woman
who's had way too much work done.
Are you joking?
Yeah.
People are so nasty, aren't they?
It's, yeah, you know what I do.
It's a lot of holes on there.
But you know what I do though, as I have kids who are in high school.
And, you know, I don't put them on my social media on purpose
because I know that literally one comment
of your ugly or your stupid or something like that could,
I mean, be so hurtful.
So what I do now is I show them all these insults of dad.
Oh, look what this is, look what this person said about dad,
and I laugh about it,
because it doesn't hurt me anymore.
Like, I'm fine with it.
And my hope is that someday, when they're feeling bad
about themselves or some of this is something mean to them, they'll look back and go, oh, you know, that one person
said that dad looked like a 60 year old Thai woman who's had way too much plastic surgery
and he laughed it off. Exactly. Like, okay, you know, maybe I can do that too.
Well, I think that's a, that's great. And also the fact is like, you shouldn't be getting
your, all your self-esteem and self-confidence from a set like how you look. And the problem is a lot of people think that if they get
all this work done, it's going to make them more confident.
And a lot of times, it's really, I mean, you're a doctor.
You're the doctor, not me.
But what would you say to that?
Do you find that people's mental health and happiness
really does improve from surgery?
I mean, you can, but you can never, if all you do is compare yourself to somebody else,
there's always going to be somebody who's better looking, there's somebody who's smarter,
something who's more successful, who has more money.
I mean, you just can't do that.
You know, and I think in life, the way I look at it overall and as aging is it's like,
you know, I'm 51 and I look in the mirror and I don't look like I used to.
I got popping to center my eyes and stuff like that that I didn't have before.
But at the same time, I also think, what's the alternative?
I have friends, I have a friend of mine from high school who died a few months ago and it's
like, dang, you know what I mean?
This is happening.
And so for me, the way I look at it and the way I try to encourage my patients who sometimes
look in the mirror, they feel bad about themselves as look, you know, it is a blessing to get
older.
Now, the fact is, is that we're in a day and age where we have so many options to turn back the clock
and look younger from food,
from fasting, supplements, skincare,
non-invasive treatments,
that this is a great time to be getting older
because we have so much at our fingertips
that we can do to turn back the clock
and look the way we want to look.
Right.
It's, fight it every step of the way
and enjoy that whole process, you know,
because you've got one shot here.
Yeah, absolutely.
So why feel bad about it, but at the same time, why not fight it if you want to?
You know, why not zap that wrinkle?
Why not, you know, get rid of that line that you don't want to get rid of?
You know, you live once and if you have the opportunity to do that and you're not putting
yourself under a risk by going under the knife and stuff, why not do that?
No, absolutely.
So those kind of things don't bother me at all.
It's more, I'm just, I'm a scaredy cat
when it comes to going under and getting, like,
I think I said this to you, like, I've never,
I hate my nose, I've always hated it.
I'm in a scaredy cat, I've never touched it
because of that.
Like, what I like to have a nice her nose, a better nose.
Yeah, but I know that realistically
it's not going to change my life.
It won't make me happier.
It won't change my trajectory
in any real way. And so I've talked to myself out of it for like 30 years.
Well, in the end, yeah, with surgery, you've got to look at the risks and the benefits.
And what's the worst, you know, for me as a surgeon, I always look at what's the worst
thing that can happen. And knowing that is at worth going to surgery. So for you, if you're like,
hey, if I go to have my nose job, what's the worst thing that can happen? Well, you can die in
the operating room. That's very, very unlikely,
but technically that is more realistic things is you could have scar tissue and not maybe
not be happy with your result. You can potentially, if they break your nose in, you may find that
you can't breathe as well through one nostril. And will that bother you? Yeah. Well, there you go.
It can change your voice. You know, nose jobs can change your voice. Knows jobs can change your voice.
There's a reason why Barbara Streisand never had a nose job.
Yes, exactly.
So we have studies showing that it can change your voice.
And so you really want to put all that in together and say,
do I really want to have this done?
And if you are not 100%, gung-ho, yes, I want to do it,
then the answer is don't.
Because you never regret plastic surgery you don't do.
You only regret the stuff you did that you probably shouldn't have.
100%.
I have a question that's kind of, you said it earlier and I want to, and we can wrap it
out.
I have no idea how long we've been talking, but a long time.
The show botched.
Would you ever do a show like that?
Because someone like you has such a big following now.
Has that show, I mean, so is it your pitching shows without being a show that I'm thinking?
One of the things I really would like to do,
and we are pitching it for different production companies,
is a, and I'll give away my idea,
because it's not that, like it's not groundbreaking,
but it's a pro bono show.
It's where you have people who would really benefit
from surgery, but they just can't afford it.
And is there a...
Black Swan, do you remember that show
from a long time ago, Black Swan?
The Swan.
No, Black Swan is the Natalie Portman, yeah.
I'm sorry, I forgot that.
The Swan.
The Swan.
But the Swan was a bit of a horror show
because you take people and really you play
games with their emotions because really that show
was one where they undergo all these procedures
and they can't look in a mirror
until they're completely healed.
And they don't know how they,
and so there's this like horrifying finale where they finally,
they raise the veil and you can look in the mirror
and see if you're happy with your results.
And it's just, I thought it was quite exploitative myself.
Oh, okay, yeah.
I never watched a nepoto, but I remember this show.
So what did, yeah, so you have somebody who's really down
their luck feels really bad about themselves,
and they undergo a ton of plastic surgery,
they get their teeth done, all this stuff,
make them look like a completely different person.
And you put them on a 1200 calorie a day diet
and you make them work out every day to try to lose weight.
And they get tons of liposuction,
which when you think about it going on,
1200 calorie diet and having major surgery,
you're not getting enough protein to heal.
That's not the right situation for healing from surgery.
So anyways, they do all this stuff,
and then at the end, there's this huge reveal where all the different practitioners are standing in
a half circle, the person goes up to the big mirror and they go, voila, and they look in the mirror,
they go, oh my gosh, beautiful, stuff like that. It's like, you were beautiful before, you know?
And then they don't get necessarily the psychological help that they need.
I know, I mean, that's the whole other thing. But what's your show? So my idea would be, is if we took basically people
who maybe can't afford plastic surgery,
but there are people who really have helped
other people all their lives.
And is there a way we can nominate people, heroes
in the community that people may not know about,
who would benefit from something surgical?
And we vote and get them the surgery for free
and see their
transformation. It's a very simple idea, but it essentially would be helping people who
have always spent their lives helping other people. And now it's a little time to help them
in the future.
You know, I like the idea of the concept, but I think you're in a time right now where everything
is about body positivity and like that show would seem not to me, but people would like, people wouldn't want to put that show out
there because you're basically telling people that they need
to work on their outside, you know, they're not,
that they're not fine and okay,
they're not good enough the way they are.
I think that it depends on what operation you're doing.
It's different if you're saying, well, I, you know,
as a woman, I'm a bee cup and I want to be a double de-cup.
Yeah. Okay, that's one, versus let's say you have a woman who's had if you're saying, well, as a woman, I'm a bee cup and I want to be a double de-cup.
Okay, that's one.
Versus, let's say you have a woman who's had four children
has a single mom who's worked all her life to help her kids
get through school and everything.
And she's, after having these kids,
has all the skin hanging from her tummy,
she's got rashes, she can't fit into the pants very well
and stuff like that, can't exercise.
That's what I'm thinking.
There's somebody like that.
I thought you.
That's the way I would look at. Versus a guy who wants a facelift because he wants to pick
up girls or something.
Yeah.
Yeah.
Probably not the cut of show that will probably get many.
No, but the ones that I get offered shows all the time, but it's always kind of exploitative
type stuff and I just turn it all down.
And super cheesy, but that show boss has been on for how many years. And that's good.
Those are really good doctors.
I don't know them personally, but they do really good job.
And they turn people down.
People who are not good candidates, they'll say, no, this isn't the right thing for you.
We think it because it's not worth it.
I'm friends with one of their husband, I mean, one of the wives, Heather, Dubro's husband
is a happy botched doctor.
Well, he was also a swan doctor away.
He was. He was. Yeah. Yeah. They used to say doctor. He seemed be a botched doctor. Well, he was also a swan doctor away, and that was... He was.
Oh my God.
Yeah.
That's, they used the same doctor.
He seemed like a really good guy.
I have no idea if I've ever met him, actually.
I have never heard of him.
I just seen him on TV, and he seems like a straight up guy.
Oh, really?
I think that's good.
I like to hear that.
That makes me happy.
Okay, so your book.
So the book is called, Younger for Life.
Also, you can find, we're, tell everybody all your things,
and then we can, you know, get you out of here.
Yeah, so I know it's been like, what, five hours?
So yeah, I mean, um, the younger for life, you can buy wherever books are sold. I try to encourage people to go, if you're gonna buy online,
I try to encourage people to go to bookshop.org. A lot of people don't know that this is a website where you can order books online
and you can actually choose your local independent bookstore and when you buy the book, the profit will go to that independent bookstore.
So it's bookstores that don't have this big presence like some of the huge ones do and
they can still get the profit from the sale.
Now it's also on Amazon and Costco and all the Barnes and Abel on stuff too.
But once it's in bookshop.org is where we try to point people to if they're open to
that.
And then we have a website called autojuvenation.com.
And on that website, if you do order the book, we have a ton of free gifts, a companion recipe book, a $30
gift certificate to my online store. If you want to try in the skincare products in a
whole lot more as a thank you for getting the book.
That's amazing. Thank you so much. This is really fun. I appreciate you coming on.
Well, thank you so much for having me on. This was great. Appreciate it.
This was awesome. Everyone go go check out his book. It's it's great. Add his videos are
so good. Thank you Jennifer check out his book. It's great. And his videos are so good.
Thank you, Jennifer.
You're welcome.
Bye.