If you had the ceiling falling down in your living room, would you not go and have a repair?
She said in Timothy Greenfield-Sanders's forthcoming HBO documentary, 'About Face: The Supermodels, Then and Now'.
If you had the ceiling falling down in your living room, would you not go and have a repair?
She said in Timothy Greenfield-Sanders's forthcoming HBO documentary, 'About Face: The Supermodels, Then and Now'.
I think that promoting insecurity in the form of plastic surgery is infinitely more harmful than an artistic expression related to body modification.
She told Harper's Bazaar US
Before I didn't care about it. And I still refuse to use silicone, Botox or other of those gimmicks out of pure vanity. But a breast correction after breast feeding — why not? There's actually nothing else to restore the original condition, isn't there?"
She told OK! Germany
I haven't had anything done and I don't think I will. But if it makes somebody happy then that's up to them. I'm not in somebody else's skin to know what makes them feel better about themselves. But I don't plan to do it myself.
She told Us Weekly
Let me state once and for all that I am not against plastic surgery. In many cases, it is something that can so vastly improve the quality of life it actually saves it. And even in the more frivolous cases, I do not have a problem with a woman who chooses a teensy bit of this or that to make herself feel better, as long as she admits to it. Nothing galls me as much as age-defying celebrities who achieve their looks by 'healthy food and yoga.' I know this is bullshit. You may not. But I can guarantee we will both feel bad about the way we look, the way we have let ourselves go, when Michelle Pfeiffer and Demi Moore look not a day over 30.
She told the Huffington Post
It’s unfortunate that we live in such a panicked, dysmorphic society where women don’t even give themselves a chance to see what they’ll look like as older persons. I want to have some idea of what I’ll look like before I start cleaning the slates. I want my kids to know when I’m pissed, when I’m happy, and when I’m confounded. Your face tells a story … and it shouldn’t be a story about your drive to the doctor’s office.
She told US ELLE

Lady Gaga wears a 30-foot dress for tonight's 'Gossip Girl' [The Cut]
The Luella crunch hits Liberty? [Fashionista]
Natalia Vodianova is ready for the holidays [WWD]
Scarlett Johansson vamps up for Dolce & Gabbana [Stylewatch]
Would you exchange frequent-flyer miles for plastic surgery? [Allure]

Need to drop a few pounds? Why not have a surgeon implant a steel mesh patch on your tongue! (To state the obvious, we are kidding.)
A southern-California doctor is promoting this as a new slim-down tactic. Funnily enough, when you have metal in your mouth, it hurts to eat - and therefore you're more likely to adopt a liquid diet. According to the surgeon's website (via Allure), the 10 patients who've installed the piece lost up to 30 pounds a month.
Excuse the Hannibal Lecter out of us if we don't rush out and alter our tongues. And as Mark Fast proved this week, you don't have to be a certain weight to look good.

Meet Rev. William Blasingame. Notice his unlined brow. He probably would like to tell you that's from the peace of God, baby, but the $85,000 he allegedly stole from a Staten Island parish to get Botox and plastic surgery would say otherwise.
The funds in question were meant for the 'maintenance and beautification' of St Paul's Memorial Episcopal Church, but instead were used for needles and scalpels and the ones who use them. This, and a hefty load of designer clothes. If 66-year-old Blasingame is convicted, he could get 15 years in the clink.