Sounds Like A Cult - Botox & Filler: Right or Wrong?
Episode Date: July 16, 2024Listen to Isa's new podcast: I'm Right You're Wrong! Isa is the co-creator and former host of Sounds Like A Cult<3 Click here to Subscribe/Listen on Spotify Podcasts Click here to Subscribe/Listen ...on Apple Podcasts Botox & Filler: Right or Wrong? Does getting botox and filler contribute to unjust beauty standards? Or are women literally not allowed to have anything anymore? This week, your perfect little hosts, Isa Medina and Lydia Keating, discuss whether it's right or wrong to get botox and filler. Are we making things worse by not aging naturally or are we just trying to survive the dang patriarchy? Can women even make mistakes? Factually speaking, no. But your hosts are here to look at both sides! In classic fash, they debate the extremes and chit chat about life as perfect beautiful women. xx love you!! Subscribe to the podcast wherever you get your podcasts and listen to other episodes covering topics like: Friendship Breakups, Tipping Culture, Nepo Babies, Stay at Home Moms and more😘 Follow Isa on Instagram: @isaamedinaa Follow Isa's new podcast on Instagram: @ethicalgirlies
Transcript
Discussion (0)
I don't think a 15 year old should be in a position where they're seeing content that's making them want to get Botox and fillers.
That's where I think like that's very deeply unethical.
But I'm like, what's right? The influencer or the celebrity being honest and transparent about the fact that they got Botox and fillers or not talking about it all.
This is I'm Right You're Wrong, a podcast about the everyday debates you have with your
friends at brunch.
I'm Issa Medina and I'm a comedian.
I'm Lydia Keating.
I'm a writer and content creator.
Every week we debate a different topic.
Right or wrong?
Dating in the friend group?
Right or wrong?
Should influencers post about politics?
Right or wrong?
Nepo babies?
To try and answer the question all of us think about constantly. What does it mean to be a good person in your 20s? Or your
30s? Or your 40s? Or literally hundreds? Everyone is so young and cute and hot
forever. So true. Every week our producer randomly assigns each of us a side to
debate. We prepare and come ready to argue with the most extreme take. Right
or wrong? We only have three minutes each to argue our side.
And then we get into a little discussion about our favorite word, nuance. And yeah, how it's
totally fine to agree to disagree. In this economy, it's actually the only thing we can afford to do.
Today's topic, right or wrong Botox and fillers.
Okay, so before we get into today's topic, Botox and fillers, did you do something right or wrong this week?
Well, I think maybe I did do something wrong.
So it actually happened this morning.
And what it was is every once you know, I am famously an influencer.
Yes, famously an influencer. Yes, famously. Famously. And every once in a while, I get an email
from a brand who doesn't necessarily
want to work together.
But it's just kind of a complimentary email of them
being like, I love your content.
And I work for this company.
And I would love to send you free product.
Yeah, my dream.
No, it's your dream until you start
to realize there's just so much stuff in this world.
Yeah, it's too much stuff.
Too much stuff.
But sometimes it is from a brand that is kind of fun and I'm excited about.
I'm just going to name the brand.
Yeah.
I don't know.
Maybe I'll get canceled.
Okay, so Warby Parker.
I'm wearing it.
Why would you get canceled?
Wait, did they do something wrong?
No, no, no.
Just like, because I'm about to shit on them.
Oh, okay.
Well, it's fair game because I'm wearing them and you're going to shit on them. Oh, okay. Well, it's fair game because I'm wearing them
and you're gonna shit on them.
Yes, exactly.
So it's like very even.
Yeah.
So I get an email from someone who works there,
a very sweet email, very personal.
She's like, love your content,
been following you for a long time.
I work for Warby Parker.
It comes from an email address that's like Warby Parker,
like an at Warby Parker.
And I would love to get you a free pair of glasses.
And I was like, well, coincidentally,
I live in Williamsburg where there's a store
and I love to like try on sunglasses before I go.
Like, is there a way I could actually try them on
in store and get them?
She's like, totally, here's your code.
It will get you a free pair of glasses, no price limit.
And I was like, amazing.
So this morning I get up, I have so much to do
on my to-do list, but I'm like,
you know what really needs to get done?
I need to go buy that free pair of glasses.
I mean, free is free, free 99.
Yeah, the code would never expire,
but I needed to do it this morning.
It was sunny.
Yeah, and that's literally the excuse I made.
I was like, I'm gonna walk there
and it'll be like my morning walk.
So I go there, of course I like walk into the store,
like bright and early 10 a.m.
I'm the first one there.
You know how it's like awkward when you're the only person
in the store, it's like open floor.
There's three employees, they're all just like watching me.
And eventually this one guy comes over
and he starts really helping me.
So it becomes an involved shopping experience.
Like he is, he's like having me try things on he's
like yes no like he's like do this one do that one again like he's like my
friend in the store. I eventually land on a pair after truly 30 minutes of this
kind of dance I'm doing and we go to check out and lo and behold the code does
not work. Oh and this is a is a $175 pair of glasses.
And I'm like, you know, I have a moment where I'm like,
do I just send it and buy them?
But I was like, no, no, no.
So I'm like, I'm so sorry, I'll email this girl.
Also, like whenever I have a code that doesn't work,
not that this happens that often,
but I'm like, they think I'm lying.
They think I'm making it up.
You know what I mean?
I'm like, they think I am a little thief. I don't think they think that. But like, I'm like, and I'm like, they think I'm lying. They think I'm making it up. You know what I mean? I'm like, they think I am a little thief.
I don't think they think that.
But like, I'm like, and I'm like.
But I see you thinking that they think that.
Yeah, yeah, yeah.
I'm like, they think I'm scum.
So I'm like, I'm really sorry.
And like, I'm embarrassed.
More than anything, I'm embarrassed and my ego's bruised.
And I'm like, I'm gonna email her and I'll come back.
So of course it's a Sunday.
This woman is like, I wouldn't expect her to be online,
but I sent her an email and remember that
in her initial email to me, she was like, I'm a fan.
So I respond to that email, I'm like, hey blank,
the code you gave me didn't work, period.
Okay, this is where I'm like, am I right or wrong?
Because I, with how kind of like sassy the email was.
But also it could, you could just be a woman
and not use an exclamation mark.
You're allowed to not use exclamation marks.
I know, and the email, like that's that.
But I did gasp when you read it.
You did.
But I was, I guess it's like not so much,
am I wrong for sending an email
that didn't have an exclamation mark, but more like am I wrong for even being peeved?
Because I was thinking about it and I'm like she was just trying to do a nice
thing for me and then it's like someone being like I'm gonna get you a gift and
then they didn't get you a gift and then you're like okay I have an answer for
you. Okay tell me. You're not wrong for feeling peeved.
Cause you're allowed to feel however you feel.
You were annoyed.
You like went out of your way to go get these glasses
in the morning, but you are wrong for taking it out on her.
But she was the one who gave me the code.
But she made a mistake.
Yeah, okay, can I clarify here?
I did not verbally assault this.
No, I know, I know.
That's also what I was gonna say is like,
but you're not actually wrong in the big scheme of things
because you didn't say, hey bitch,
the code you didn't give me didn't fucking work, whore.
It could have been worse.
It could have been, you said it,
hey, the code didn't work, period.
Yeah, period.
But that's like, this is such a funny thing
because it's like us as women.
Like I bet like that's, I don't actually,
I don't know this woman,
but like if someone had sent me that email,
I would have been like, hate crime.
Oh yeah, I would have been quick.
On Easter Sunday.
Oh yeah.
And get this, she responded 20 minutes later.
She was like, were you just trying,
she was trying to like problem solve with me. And she's like, were you trying to buy more than one pair of glasses? And she was like, were you just trying, she was trying to like problem solve with me and she's like, were you trying to buy more
than one pair of glasses?
And I was like, no.
Well, she said, were you trying to buy more than one pair
of frames?
And I was like, are frames different from glasses?
She's like, no, it's same thing.
She's like trying to work through this with me.
I'm like, girl, then I started to feel bad.
I'm like, it's Easter Sunday.
Yeah.
You're emailing me from your work email.
Yeah, get off your computer.
It's cool.
Yeah. So yeah, you're not wrong, I don't think.
Your feelings are valid.
But also, that email was, hi, y'all.
But I like, but you know what?
I'm like, you are crazy for that.
And you are allowed to be crazy sometimes.
I know.
Send an email without an exclamation mark.
We have to normalize it.
We're not a mystery podcast. Anyway, tell me about your week.
Did you do anything right or wrong?
Did I?
Did I do anything right or wrong?
No, but I almost DM'd that guy that I've been obsessed with
and pining over for no reason, which would have been wrong.
Yeah, okay.
Okay, I'm glad you didn't, because he's lame. He's so lame. He's so short. And it's
like, that is wrong. Yeah. Like for me to like reach out to a man who's not obsessed
with me is wrong. That is wrong. And more. Yeah. I also feel like you cannot lose sight
of how cool you are. Like you are so cool. I feel so uncool. Like why? Sometimes. And
a lot of the time. I know. I don't know why. No, I know. I'm not. I know. I cool. I feel so uncool like sometimes and a lot of the time.
I know.
I don't know why.
No, I know I'm not, I'm not really.
I know about you, but I know it.
I think we all can fall into that, but you are so cool.
Oh, thank you.
And in a lame boring guy who has like.
I've just been going through these like motions of like,
I feel like men like,
and it is the like classic bisexual dilemma
because I'm like, I feel like men don't like women
with a personality.
Totally.
And I'm honestly getting to the point where I'm like,
well, if I do want to attract a man,
I'm like, should I tone down my personality?
Or should I be more chill?
I'm like, should I start smoking weed?
I actually was thinking about that the other day.
Oh my God, no.
You shouldn't change anything about you.
And I have, okay, during like my brief periods
of singlehood, I have had this thought
because I've come across men where I'm like,
how do I change myself to make them like me?
The truth of the matter is,
not to get like all relationshipy advice,
but like if you are having those feelings at all,
they will never like you.
Yeah.
You will never be able to like meet them at
their like arbitrary standard of wherever it is.
But then the bisexual dilemma is that when I do have those feelings, instead of just
like being myself and letting guys like me for myself, I literally just pivot and I go
for women because I know they like me for myself. But then I'm confident with women
and I'm not that same confidence with men.
Wait, have you, you've never felt these feelings of like,
should I tone myself down for a woman?
I have, I actually have felt like,
should I tone myself up for a woman
in terms of like my queerness?
Like, do I need to be more like,
yeah, like chill in a different way,
like chill in a gay way.
That must be really hard.
I'm like thinking about it now that like there are
two identities you could kind of lean into.
Yeah, like it's like the way, I have a joke about it,
but I'm like the way that you attract a man is so different
than the way that you attract a woman.
The joke is like with a woman,
you have to like actively listen
and you have to like touch her hand and like put her hair behind her ear. And with a man, you have to like actively listen and you have to like touch her hand
and like put her hair behind her ear.
And with a man, you have to be like, no, yeah, no, yeah.
Yeah, I definitely came.
But it's like a stupid, but it's like true.
It's like dating both is so different.
So I'm just, I feel like it's like,
I just need to like ground myself in who I am
and not focus on the sexuality of the person
that I'm gonna date and just keep going.
It's exhausting.
Wait, can I ask you, is there one identity where you feel,
like, or when you lean into like being more queer
or lean away from that if you're like trying
to appeal to a man, Does one feel more like yourself,
like your true authentic self, whatever the fuck that is?
No, it pivots all the time.
I think that's just queerness.
Some days I wake up being like,
ooh, I wanna be a little thot today
and wear a tiny tank top and low-cut jeans and slay.
And then another day I'll wake up and also wanna slay,
but in a different way and be like, oh, I day I'll wake up and also wanna slay but in like a different way
and be like, oh, I wanna be like more like butch
and grunge and like what it literally like depends
how I feel that day.
But then that alternates the way that people treat me.
Like, you know how everyone talks about like pretty
privilege?
Oh, I mean, it's topical.
It's topical.
And it's like, I feel like I do sense the difference
in how people treat me depending on like,
if I dress like I do sense the difference in how people treat me depending on if I dress really,
makeup, showing skin, dress like a traditional hot girl,
or if I literally am wearing my glasses, no makeup,
it's basic, but if I dress more queer,
people kind of ignore my existence more.
And if I dress more traditional femme, people kind of like ignore my existence more. And if I dress more like
traditional femme, I get more attention. By people do you mean men or all people? Everyone. Yeah.
Yeah, I mean, I think it's absolutely true. When I've gone through periods where like I,
this might even be me being self-deprecating when I absolutely know I was objectively uglier.
I feel like I moved about the world differently in the world treated me differently
Yeah, and when I've gone through like exceptionally hot periods of life. Whoa
What that was like it's crazy and like it's really it's so different which does bring us to the topic
Yeah, it does. I mean it's kind of interesting that we organically were talking about like beauty standards and pretty privileged because
Very much related.
It is very related to today's topic, which is Botox and fillers.
Are Botox and fillers right or wrong?
I think when it comes to Botox and fillers, it's truly the extreme of your body, your
choice mantra.
If you want to look different and tweak your face and body a bit, go for it.
It's kind of similar to hitting the tanning bed.
Do it if you want to.
If you want to get a nose job, go ahead.
Botox and fillers, do it if that's what you want.
It's your body and you totally get to decide
how you want to treat it.
And if those changes make you feel more like yourself and boost your confidence, then why
not?
Well, did you want to define some things before we get into it?
Yeah, let's do a little bit of background because everybody, I feel like everybody knows
what Botox and fillers are.
But first and foremost, Botox like is the brand of neuromodulators, which are the things
that freeze the muscles in your face so that they don't move, so that you don't get wrinkles and
things like that. But there's other brands like Diport and Juvot, and Botox is just the most
popular brand. But they all get lumped together and they get called Botox. And then fillers are, it's kind of like this gel
that they put into your face in the,
what is it, the muscles?
I forgot what the word is.
It's a hyaluronic acid injectable that fills your face
just so that it kind of like looks a little more full.
I don't know.
Like it's really-
Yeah, like pillowy. Pillowy or like if you feel like you have
like really big bags under your eyes or like-
Does it help with that?
I think so.
Yeah, it helps with bags under your eyes.
It helps with, yeah.
Yeah, and so-
I thought it was just, I mean,
I knew people got it in their like-
Lips.
Lips and in their cheek, like I knew people got it
in their chin.
Yeah. But I did not know
it could treat under eye bags.
Yeah, it treats like a lot of things that,
cause like, okay, so you know,
the way that I think about it is,
you know when like little kids,
like their faces look so plump.
Yeah.
And like really just like little babies,
they're like fresh and plumpy.
Yeah. That's what like adults
are trying to get back to.
Yeah. By using those fillers is
to like make their skin and face look more full so that they look younger. So both Botox and
fillers were kind of like developed in the like 1970s like really for other reasons like in the
1970s they used it to treat like uncontrolled eyelid twitching or involuntary facial twitching
and then it was approved by the FDA in 2002 as like a cosmetic. And now since 2002 over
a hundred million vials have been sold and the market is now in 2021 it's a $3.4 billion market for Botox alone,
which is crazy.
And that's like a little bit about Botox,
which we know and we can talk a little bit more about,
but like has become so much more popular since 2020
because everyone had so much time to focus on themselves
and to focus on like their skincare routine
during the pandemic.
And then with the rise of TikTok, there was like all of that.
And so I feel like we all became so much more obsessed.
But what was the timeline of like fillers like?
Okay.
So in 1990, collagen're crying. I just was trying to be so calm.
It's all I wrote.
It's all I wrote.
That was my bad.
You still wrote this back.
I copied and pasted.
Okay, so I'm sorry.
I just wrote this back.
I'm sorry.
I just wrote this back.
I'm sorry.
I just wrote this back.
I'm sorry.
I just wrote this back.
I'm sorry.
I just wrote this back.
I'm sorry.
I just wrote this back.
I'm sorry.
I just wrote this back.
I'm sorry. I just wrote this back. I'm sorry. I just wrote this back be so calm. It's all I wrote. It's all I wrote.
That was my bad.
You still wrote this back?
I copied and pasted.
Okay.
Okay.
So before the fillers were fully developed, before they became what they are today, they
were deriving collagen from cows and inserting them in people's faces.
Okay.
Okay.
Sorry.
So at the very beginning of fillers,
it was actually collagen derived from cows.
Whoa. Yeah, in the 1990s.
Crazy. Yeah.
And then in 2003, fillers, as we know them now,
were born when Restylane,
I don't know if I'm saying that right,
the first non-animal hyaluronic acid injectable
got FDA approved.
Okay. So that was in 2003.
And then in 2011, a new FDA approved filler came out
that didn't clump.
Clumping would create like visible lumps on your face
instead of being more diffused like we see currently
when celebrities get fillers.
So, and then in 2015, Kylie Jenner famously owned up
to getting lip fillers, which I mean, how could like...
Yeah, but now what we're seeing a lot is like the effects
of her getting it, cause it's almost been 10 years.
And when you see pictures of her that don't have a filter
on them that aren't edited, like it's starting to lump.
I know, but sometimes I'm like,
is that like tabloids also editing those photos
to make her look really bad?
I would love to see Kylie Jenner in real life.
Yeah, I would too because I know they put filters
on their interviews on the Kardashians TV show.
So even when you see she's like not wearing makeup,
there's like a filter on her.
Yeah, that's wild.
I know you really truly cannot trust anything you see.
And then in 2018, the number of hyaluronic
acid fillers injected
Soared 85 percent since 2012 Wow, just kind of wild. Yeah, okay
So that's kind of when we got to the present-day culture, which is where we are now
Which is like how they are almost an everyday product for most people like where you read online
It's like most it's like it used to be this product that like only the rich and wealthy could use.
And now it's like, if you are a middle-class
and up American and you have a little bit of extra income,
like you might go get fillers.
Yeah. Yeah.
And especially in 2020,
that's when doctors started using it
for more subtle results.
Like it wasn't this extreme cosmetic procedure
that it used to be.
And that obviously
increased its popularity even more because I think a lot of people are scared to get these
things done and if you're told oh it's like gonna be barely noticeable change yeah and then that
begs the question okay it's like FDA approved it's become the norm but is it morally and ethically
right or wrong and it is such a fascinating question.
And I feel like whoever came up with that question is really smart.
So smart and naturally beautiful.
That's what we're going to debate today.
And we're going to take complete opposite stances.
We are. I think Botox and fillers are wrong because I believe that it is our responsibility, perhaps
even our moral imperative, to resist the suffocating beauty standards and societal expectations
that we need to look a certain way.
But when we do, we are giving the beauty
standards the power. Whereas if we choose to say no, I'm not
getting Botox and or filler. We are not only liberating
ourselves, but also everyone else to do the same.
Okay, so our producer, as always, has randomly assigned us sides of this argument. Sides
that might not align with what we really think. But I am going to argue that Botox and fillers
are absolutely ethically right.
Ooh, and I'm going to argue that they're absolutely ethically and morally wrong. Not good, not good.
And there's where you're wrong.
Oh.
Okay, in classic fashion, we need to time ourselves
because we only get three minutes to make this argument.
All right, Lydia, show me what you got.
Three, two, one, go.
Botox and fillers, often subject to polarizing opinions,
can be argued to offer significant
benefits to both the individual and society at large.
Whether we like it or not, appearance plays a crucial role in self-esteem and confidence.
We all know this.
We'd love to live in a world where this isn't true, but it is true.
And unfortunately, the burden of this reality falls disproportionately on women. Women have for a long time been
subject to unrealistic beauty standards and we think we're progressing in
society and then boom all of a sudden we're hit with low-rise jeans coming
back in style. These sort of things aren't going to change overnight that is
one thing that's very clear.
And boy, what a battle it is to fight beauty standards,
or really any social patriarchal pressure
that is used to oppress women.
If I literally spent all my time fighting the patriarchy,
I wouldn't have a job, okay?
I wouldn't sleep.
It would fully consume me.
Unfortunately, our subconscious mind
internalizes these sort of beliefs
as young as the age of four.
I was a cognitive science major famously,
and this is one study I really remember,
that we start internalizing sexism, other prejudices,
as young as the age of four.
So while the public battle is very hard,
even the private battle with ourselves
untangling
that internalized sexism and beauty standards, that is also a lifelong battle.
And these battles, I will admit, are very important to fight.
But it's also important to recognize that there's two different perspectives.
The broader social perspective of what you're doing when you're getting Botox and fillers,
and the individual perspective.
Countless psychological studies can show that when people feel more confident,
they tend to be more outgoing, more assertive,
engage in social interactions,
leading to improved mental health and wellbeing
and overall quality of life.
If you're trying to tell someone
that they can't get Botox and fillers,
you're stopping them potentially
from feeling confident in themselves, which in turn would make them
go out into the world and not do all the things that they're capable of doing.
It could be doing.
So think about how actually that inherently is a sexist thing.
When you're like women, you shouldn't get these things that will make you feel more
confident and that confidence could in fact lead them to becoming a CEO of a major conglomerate.
And it's all because you're telling them their botox and fillers are unethical.
That is unethical.
And it's kind of like someone being like, you should be vegan because it's better for the planet.
Meanwhile, the person's eating a yogurt
and they're just trying to recover from an eating disorder.
It's a very similar thing.
You're telling them they can't get Botox.
This person's just trying to help themselves
in the small ways we can help ourselves
so that they can go out there and they can conquer the world
in more impactful social ways.
Okay.
Not the dramatic ring. Yeah.
Sorry, I should change it.
You know, I always think that I'm just gonna like slay
with my arguments.
I know, it's so funny.
You always get to like, right when,
I think it's like always the same moment.
It's like a minute and 15 seconds.
You have this moment where you're like,
I'm running out of time.
Well, I'm like, I haven't even gotten to my point,
but I also haven't gotten my backstory
and I need to figure out a better way to do it.
But it really, yeah, I need to figure out a better way.
But I think you had a really good argument, Lydia.
Thank you. Honestly.
Issa, get ready.
Yes.
Three, two, one, you're on.
So you talked a lot about beauty standards and sexism and how
women should feel beautiful and we're just fighting every day to survive. I
agree with that which is why I want to start with why Botox and fillers are
actually ethically and morally wrong because beauty is actually in the eye of
the beholder and we are always trained as the beholder to want more. There's a study that came out of Princeton University in New Jersey, by the way, that
we as humans are constantly running after rewards and we tend to compare ourselves with
various standards when we become habituated.
What do they mean by habituated?
They mean that we normalize that next thing that we got.
And so sure, you want
some Botox, you want some fillers. When you get the first, you're going to love them.
You're going to look so good. You're going to be like, I am fighting the patriarchy.
I am winning. But then you're going to be habituated to those standards and you're going
to want more and you're going to become essentially addicted, which can also be backed by other things like social media. Now, as a society, we are so used to having access to a speedy reward system because of social media.
We are instant gratification girlies, you know?
We want something, we get it. Prime, two-day delivery. Instagram, immediate.
And so this is only going to feed our addictive nature even more to immediately be like,
oh, I see a fine to immediately be like, Oh,
I see a fine line Botox.
Oh, immediately I see a bag under my eyes filler.
And so this is like literally backed by Stanford psychologist Anna Lembke who said, yeah, easy
access and speedy ward system are two of the things that social media have made us addicted
to.
And the whole idea of like, kind of like drugs, Botox and fillers, needles.
They're needles, okay?
How much time do I have?
Okay, oh fuck, we're low.
Okay, second point.
Everything is a trend except your authentic self, right?
So we talked a little bit about Kylie Jenner in 2015.
She came out and was honest with the fact
that she got fillers.
Amazing, I'm like, that's what you want to do? Do it. But the same way that the Kardashians made
having a BBL a trend, they then immediately went on Ozempic and now
it's a trend to be anorexic again. Low-waisted jeans came back and that is
also a trend. So the same way that I think it's a trend to have Botox face, to
have filler face, I actually think it's gonna come back around and that's gonna be out of trend.
That's gonna be out of style.
And then everyone who got all those fillers
and all those chemicals,
which aren't inherent and natural to your body,
are gonna be stuck with those chemicals in their body
for the rest of their life.
Even though they are, they do go away.
They do, the chemicals are in your system
for the rest of your life.
And lastly, I think the long-term effects
aren't just physical, they are emotional.
Gen Z has more direct access to documenting
the evolution of their face than any other generation.
So the big issue here isn't actually like beauty standards,
it's the internet.
It's the internet.
It's the internet.
It's the internet.
Okay. Oh, I didn't get to make that last little point correctly. Okay.
I feel like whenever we do these, like the three minute debate, I don't get to like,
like I'm like, I could distill what I'm trying to say to you in 30 seconds.
Yeah, me too.
After I chat and talk and talk, I'm like, they're just wrong.
Yeah.
Just kidding. But how do you really feel about this topic?
Okay. So I feel like, I hope this will make sense, but basically I don't feel that getting
Botox and fillers is completely ethically wrong. I don't think that. I don't think
that the act of getting Botox and fillers
is like morally right either.
What I do think is amoral is when people attack others
for getting Botox and fillers.
So I think the act of disagreeing with someone else
getting Botox and fillers is what's wrong.
And that kind of gets to like-
So my entire stance, this episode, no I'm just kidding.
No, no, it's not yours, is it?
No, no, fake stance.
Oh.
What I just did for fun.
Yeah, yeah, yeah, you're like fun exercise.
Yeah.
I just think like it is a personal choice of an individual
But yeah, I just think it is a personal choice of an individual that doesn't need to be made political
because so many of women's choices are politicized.
So true, actually.
I didn't even think about it that way.
It kind of goes back to the basics of my body, my choice.
You can do whatever you want to your body,
even something as simple as a tattoo.
Why is everyone at the age of 18
allowed to literally alter their body
for the rest of their life and it's not political?
Probably with tattoos, it's because men
historically wanted them always.
And so everyone's allowed to get a fucking tattoo.
But the second that you want to make my chain.
No, but with Botox and fillers,
I do feel like they are critiqued a lot more
because they are like primarily a female thing.
Yeah, you just made me think of how I kind of regret
like 90% of my tattoos.
Oh.
That I all got within the past two years.
But I also feel like you only regret them
because you were allowed to get them.
You wouldn't be able to even feel regret.
Like I have one temporary tattoo that never went away.
Had it for three years now.
It was supposed to last a year and I want more tattoos.
But every time I talk to people are like,
oh, I regret it.
I'm like, yeah.
People say that.
Yeah, like people regret tattoos,
but I also feel like you're not,
you're entitled to regretting them because you were allowed to get them to begin with.
Yeah. Also, I do think this is like separate, but it is a practice of like, I don't know, kind of like spiritual spiritualism with the self of being like I was once that person who really wanted this tattoo on my arm and like I love her. Like I'm gonna love that past self.
I'm different now.
I don't know.
It's like a weird, I feel like it can be,
it lead to helpful like inner thought about yourself.
And that's also why I think like that off,
like just getting Botox and fillers inherently does not,
like it's not right, it's not wrong.
But I do think that there's a right and wrong way
of going about it.
And what I will say is that like any like big decision,
do treat it like maybe I do think that it's,
sorry, I'm like, when I, I'm gonna say something
that I think could be perceived as controversial,
I start stuttering.
Let me explain.
I do think that it's wrong how casual they have become.
I don't think that it should be something taken so lightly.
I think everyone should be totally entitled
to getting Botox and fillers if they want to
and if that's how they feel,
but it is something that you need to sit down.
It's a big decision that you're making.
It's not only physical, like I mentioned in my argument,
but it's like, I think it's a
mental health decision.
And I think that's how it should be treated as like, oh, I want to get these Botox.
I want to get these fillers right now.
And I know that whatever the outcome is, I need to pursue like self-love in other ways
as well.
Totally.
It's kind of honestly, I think of it a little bit like, like anti-depressants a little bit.
Like I'm so for like medication if you need it.
But I also think that in conjunction with medication,
you should also be doing other things
that like help your mental health.
Like going on walks or getting the right amount of sleep,
hydrating, so it's like, you should treat Botox
and fillers kind of like that.
Yeah, I totally agree with that.
And that kind of like, the argument I ended up making,
which like, sometimes I sit down
and I start writing my arguments.
I'm like, I guess this is the direction I'm going.
But like was basically like confidence
and high self-esteem is so important.
And it's like undeniable, we live in a visual world.
People judge you on your appearance immediately.
Like that's why fashion is even a thing.
If we didn't care what people looked like,
the fashion industry wouldn't exist.
So I feel like the term body neutrality is used a lot.
Yeah.
And I think that's a wonderful thing to aspire towards.
And this might be controversial,
but I just don't know if it will ever be achieved.
Yeah.
I guess we could try on a personal level
to have body neutrality with the self.
Which is kind of like the point that you made of like, right now, what kind of world are
we living in right now?
Like are you going to sacrifice the way other people perceive you right now for the future
of it?
Right.
I do think everyone has a different role in society, but it's like, if you feel like you
need to do something.
Yeah. Yeah, I get like frustrated with like people who are just like,
I hate the system, the patriarchal capitalist system we live in.
So I'm just going to opt out and I'm just going to like step out of it.
And I'm not in it at all because I'm like,
that's really not a pragmatic solution for yourself or for like the progression of
things at large. And I know that's like a very broad statement,
but to like bring it to Botox and fillers,
it's like to just be like, well,
beauty standards are ridiculous and sexist and patriarchal.
So I'm just like kind of completely reject them altogether.
Like, I don't know how helpful that is for the individual
if you want to like actually wield real power on society.
Yeah, I think that's a really good point
in terms of like the individual.
Yeah.
I don't know how powerful that is for the individual,
but I do think for society, it's super powerful
because every culture needs risk takers
to change the culture.
And so I think that like, there are some people
who are like, I don't know who it was,
but someone went on the red carpet the other day
with actually no makeup.
They did like a no makeup.
Oh, it's Pamela Anderson. Yeah, Pamela someone went on the red carpet the other day with actually no makeup. They did like a no makeup. Oh, it's Pamela Anderson.
Yeah, Pamela Anderson went on the red carpet
with no makeup.
And I think people were like, oh, she doesn't look good.
Or some people were like, who cares?
And it's like, she clearly is now at the point
where she doesn't give a fuck.
And so that's awesome that she's doing that
and is pushing the conversation towards the direction
of diminishing beauty standards.
I've seen these photos of Pamela Anderson.
And I do think, yes, very brave, very bold,
but also again, there's nuance here
because she's still a very attractive older woman.
Yeah, she's traditionally beautiful.
She has been praised for her beauty her entire young life.
I saw the pictures of her and I was like,
she looks stunning.
And I feel like, not to be the bro who's like I love natural beauty
But I do tend to think like people look better without makeup
Yeah, and so I saw that and I was like she looks great. Like what's the fuss about?
Like yeah and like Alex our producer was reminding us. It's like there was this conversation around
Because like Kylie Jenner is getting all this slack about like her botox and fillers and having LA face
is like Kylie Jenner is getting all this slack about like her botox and fillers and having LA face,
the beauty standard is gonna switch to like people
who can age and people who do age,
it's gonna be more of like something beautiful.
But I think that's gonna take a while.
Like we were talking, like you were saying,
it's like there are individuals who can do that
and there are individuals who can't do that.
And so yeah, for me, I think it goes back
to like the internal self of like asking yourself
the question is like, what can I deal?
What can I deal with from society right now?
What can I put up with in this fucking shitty
patriarchal world that we live in today?
And what battle can I fight?
Exactly.
Yeah.
And if you want to fight the battle of beauty standards, go off kind of like in today. What battle can I fight? Exactly. And if you wanna fight the battle of beauty standards,
go off, kind of like me today.
You know what?
Next time I don't wear makeup,
I'm just gonna be like,
I'm battling the standards today.
Well, actually it's funny you bring this up
because I was, as I was getting dressed today,
I was like, I always feel like Issa slays on our pods
and I'm like a little bit frumpy, but also, well,
I did wanna say this when we were talking about like outfits.
I, about like a year and a half ago,
had like a conversation with myself where I was like,
I feel my best when I am like unaware of my body
existing in the room.
And when do I feel like that?
When I'm wearing baggy, loose fitting clothes,
which can be like really fashionable and slight. Like there's so many cool, like very loose baggy, loose fitting clothes, which can be really fashionable and slight.
There's so many cool, very loose, baggy outfits,
but I just don't really wear tight fitting clothes
ever anymore, I just don't.
And it's because whenever I feel fabric on my body,
I'm like, it reminds me that my body's there,
and when I'm talking to you and trying to have
a good conversation with you,
I don't wanna be thinking about my body
and readjusting my shirt, or being as like, oh, trying to have a good conversation with you, I don't wanna be thinking about my body and readjusting my shirt or being as like,
oh, do I have a fat role there?
And it's like kind of me just reckoning with like,
I don't know if I'll ever fully be able
to get those voices out of my head.
So here's a way I can learn to live with them.
I think it all goes back to like acceptance,
which is like so much easier said than done
of like, to bring it back to like Botox and fillers,
it's like kind of similarly to like the body.
The face is the one thing that like shows aging.
And I think like the big issue here is that we as a society are like so scared to age.
Like people are literally scared of the one thing that you cannot control.
I know it's wild.
And I think it also has that like larger existential issue of like aging equals death.
Oh yeah.
Yeah, and so it's like, we need to accept
that we're all gonna die.
Yeah.
And we're all gonna get old
and we're all gonna have body roles.
But again, easier said than done.
Yeah, I think like a really important part
of this discussion that has to be brought up
is 85% of the people
getting Botox are women and 15% of them are men. I think like young women specifically are so so
vulnerable on the internet and I think this has been studied again and again and again. There was
this really interesting New York Times opinion piece that I read a couple months ago
about the dissonance between the actual lived experience
of being a girl and the celebration of girlhood.
We just had the summer of Barbie Mania and the Aras Tour
and this very commercialized celebration of girlhood
when all psychological studies on young women show
that young women are more depressed, more anxious than they've ever been.
And I don't know, maybe this is because like I exist on the internet and I'm very aware that I have young women who are following me
and I feel like a desire to protect them in some way. But I do think they are the vulnerable people in this discussion where like, I don't
think a 15 year old should be in a position where they're seeing content that's making
them want to get Botox and fillers. That's where I think like, that's very deeply unethical.
But I'm like, what's right? The influencer or the celebrity being honest and transparent
about the fact that they got Botox and fillers or not talking about it at all?
So I think that's like a really good question
of being like, what's right?
How should an influencer do it
depending on who they follow them?
I think it goes back to my original answer
of just being like, it's just not a light conversation.
My thing is everyone just put a little bit more
of a serious tone on it.
You can still have fun.
You can be like, get ready with me to go get Botox.
Which by the way are a serious kind of like,
not that casual and a decision that I sat with
and I decided to make.
And then, okay, keep doing the makeup
and moving on to the content.
But it's like, of like just the casualness of the internet,
of like everyone making everything seem so casual
and like not a decision.
Yeah.
That would kind of be my solution, but there's no right.
I don't think there's like a right or wrong way.
I think the casualness and like almost like the casualness
that you're talking about on the internet,
especially with like TikTokers and influencers being like,
get ready with me to get Botox or like,
here are all the procedures I've done. Like I feel like I've and influencers being like, get ready with me to get Botox or like, here are all the procedures I've done.
Like I feel like I've seen influencers be like,
I'm not natural, here's what I've gotten done.
It's always done in this sort of like blase way,
which I actually think is very much a response
to people being like, be transparent,
like this demand for transparency.
So in response to that, they're like, okay, here it is.
And I guess it's true, like, I don't. And I guess it's true, I don't know.
I mean, I guess I agree with you
that they do kind of owe a longer
to their impressionable audience,
maybe a longer spiel of how they arrived to this choice.
But I remember, I feel like I've seen content creators
get not just Botox and fillers,
but full on under the knife surgeries
and been like, hee hee, like in their literal,
like whatever it gauze wraps.
Well, literally people like getting BBLs
and like that's like one of the most dangerous surgeries
in the world.
And then like the consequences of like not being able
to like sit on your ass for like a couple of months.
No one talks about like those sides of it.
They just talk about like how it was fun and casual.
Or they do talk about it and they make jokes,
which like BBL is like inherently funny.
Yeah.
And we have to talk about that.
And we have to talk about how funny it is.
But yeah, I think it's like,
just like everyone be a little more,
yeah, like transparency is leading to casual.
Your thesis, and I agree with you, is that transparency is leading to casual. Your thesis, and I agree with you,
is that transparency is leading to casualness,
which is leading to like an increased
everyone getting these procedures,
which aren't always casual.
Yeah, like were we better off
when like celebrities were like faking and hiding?
Yeah, when they were lying to us.
Yeah, because now 14 year olds need like Botox
and that's sad, or think they need Botox.
Okay, but I have
gotten Botox as I've told you in the past and I've gotten it probably five times and
in a very similar way to my actually I'll start with this little anecdote. I have such
distinct memories being in sixth grade and my mom driving me to school. I like literally
have like a core memory.
I know exactly what part of the road we were on.
And she was like going like this to her eye.
And she's like, what didn't I look so much better
if I did this?
And I was like, and I remember my brother and I
were in the car and we were like,
no mom, never do anything to your face.
And my mom never has.
That's so cute.
Yeah, she's never done anything to her face.
She's also a very wrinkly woman.
Oh, okay.
Like she has not age well.
I mean, whoa, for other reasons.
That's so interesting because I've never gotten botox
or fillers, but my mom has had a facelift, an eye lift.
Has she really?
And she's never gotten botox,
but she's gotten plastic surgery.
Look at us like dragging our butts. Yeah. But my mom looks really good. She does.
And she also doesn't look like fake. And that,
I did want to say this on this episode that I saw this really great tick talk
about this girl basically being like,
people get these things to try and look younger,
but a lot of the times they don't end up looking younger.
They just look like othered. Yes.
They look like they belong to like a different kind of like.
It's LA face is what I call it.
It's neither young nor old.
It's just like a third kind of space that like,
personally I don't find very attractive,
but it is weird that like, yeah, that LA face,
more and more people in these like elite kind of usually
richer groups are starting to all look the same.
And it's kind of like what I saw once
it's all modeled off of Emrata's face.
Oh really?
Yeah, but it's like fake Emrata.
But now that it's like, is that what we think is beautiful?
And I don't think it is because if you look at like TV
and film casted with like a casted like cast,
I'm just being sorry,
but like Zendaya doesn't look like she has an LA face.
Like actresses.
But she's also 12.
Yeah, no, she's like, she's our age.
Yeah.
Shit.
She literally is our exact age.
Damn, that actually makes me feel better.
Yeah, it makes me feel good and bad.
Yeah.
I was like looking at pictures of her the other day
and I was like, she's so beautiful.
And I'm like, she's 21.
She's so beautiful, but she's naturally beautiful
and she hasn't done anything to her face.
And fortunately or unfortunately,
some people just are born with a more symmetrical face
or age better.
Or age better.
And that's what I think,
I mean, not that I fully agree with the side
that I was arguing with, but that was my conclusion.
I was like, people need to be accepting
that like of their own bodies, of their own faces.
And like, because at the end of the day, like you said,
they end up looking like this third option,
which is the same option.
Which is, if that's what you wanna look like,
by the way, some people wanna look like that.
So it's like, if that's what you want, go for it.
Yeah, that is a specific look
that some people wanna achieve. Like, I is a specific look that some people want to achieve.
Like, I don't know that very much like that person
obviously has filler's look.
Whereas if I were to, when I go and get Botox,
I'm always like, subtle as possible.
I don't want anyone to know.
Maybe I'm like the worst kind of person about it.
But like, I always am like the natural look.
Yeah.
But I do want to say that personally on my own personal
ethical level, I do always have a dilemma
with the fact that I get Botox.
And I...
It's that constant dilemma of you want to love yourself,
but you also know that there are tools out there
to help you stay looking young or look good or
whatever like it's like I haven't gotten Botox but I bought I bought like a
Botox like amount and I all I have to do is like go call but I've had it I've had
that like what do you call it not subscription but gift card yeah
voucher voucher yeah I essentially bought Voucher. Voucher.
Yeah, I essentially bought like a Botox voucher for a certain amount of Botox three years
ago and I've just been scared to get it.
Yeah.
Well, I will say, I don't know if you've had this experience when you see an older woman.
In fact, I am thinking of a specific day the like three weeks ago where this woman walked
into Blue Bottle and she was an older woman in her 60s
and she looked so naturally aged.
Like she was wrinkly, but she was like funky and cool
and had like a cool jacket on with like orange fur trim
and like rounds, like funky glasses, but she looked old.
But she also looked so fucking cool.
And I kind of had a pit in my stomach when I saw her
because I'm like, honestly, I don't think I've gotten enough Botox for it to like affect my
aging long, long term. And I think if I like stopped now and never got any Botox in my life again,
I would just like age pretty normally. But I did go through a little brief moment this past summer
where I was like, oh, should I get fillers under my eyes or like fillers in my lips?
And thank God I never did that because like, I want to look like a cool old woman.
Yeah.
And I don't, I think if you are getting a bunch of Botox and fillers.
I do too, but not yet.
You're opting out of that. Yeah.
Sorry.
No, but it's like, goes back to, um.
Not yet. I want to look like 25 for 10 more years.
In conclusion, I do want to say that if Botox and fillers make you feel like you can be
more or any cosmetic procedure make you feel like you can be more powerful and you will
be more powerful in your life, go forth.
Unless you're a 14 year old person and you only think that way because someone you follow
on the internet got it done,
then I think pause and think about it more.
But like what for you is the age limit?
Like,
well, I think 18 should be like the youngest
anyone should ever pursue anything obviously,
cause they're like then adult.
But I think like,
I actually don't even think that just applies to tweens.
Like I think like anyone who wants any procedure done,
like I got my boobs done.
I'm very open and honest about that.
And I wanted to get them done since I was a teenager.
And I got them done when I was 24, 25.
And I waited a really long time
because by the time I like went to get them,
there wasn't a doubt in my mind that I wanted them. And sometimes I'm like, damn, I wish I'd gotten them sooner.
But other times I'm like, damn, maybe I shouldn't have gotten them at all. So it's like, I think
always just make it if it's you're going to put anything in your body, always just like
sit down with that decision and journal a little bit. Yeah. Journaling is so powerful. Journal, for sure, journal.
Okay, well, that was our Botox and Fillers episode. What do you guys think about Botox and Fillers?
Are they right?
Are they wrong?
Ethically and morally.
Yeah, yeah, please.
And have you had any horror stories?
Yeah.
That's one thing we didn't talk about
but like droop face and stuff like that.
Like things can go wrong.
Yeah.
And if it's happened to you,
you are in my thoughts and prayers for real. Yeah. Yeah. Yeah, actually. Okay. That's
our episode. We'll be back next week with another writer wrong, but like and subscribe,
baby. Please do.
I'm right. Your wrong podcast was created, hosted and produced by Issa Medina and Lydia
Keating.
This episode was edited and produced by Alexandra Trigvedottir.