Episode Transcript
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Speaker 1 (00:00):
The following is a paid podcast. iHeartRadio's hosting of this
podcast constitutes neither an endorsement of the products offered or
the ideas expressed.
Speaker 2 (00:09):
Well, Doctor Arthur Perry, he's one of the top plastic surgeons.
He's got offices in Manhattan, New Jersey, you know, and
he's been doing the show here on w R for
years and years and years. Very popular show and a
great plastic surgeon. Everybody has questions on this subject, so
he's the guy to ask.
Speaker 3 (00:26):
Doctor Arthur Perry, and the public wants to know that
public doesn't get a damn.
Speaker 4 (00:30):
And I went to his office and I said, I said,
look at my face. And he goes, yeah, look at
your face. We're going to do with your fan. What
can you do with his face? I go like that,
I s what I got. I go and look at this.
I'm getting old. I said, I want to maybe he
can fix it up a little bit.
Speaker 5 (00:41):
Doctor Oz, are you there, I'm here arking.
Speaker 6 (00:42):
I want to get a plauged you. Having worked with
you on a book and numerous other activity, you want
to talk to.
Speaker 5 (00:47):
Arthur Perry, the best in plastic.
Speaker 6 (00:49):
Surgery and workable knowledge, but also your grace at delivering content,
which is why it's been a blessing to have you
on my show so many times.
Speaker 3 (00:54):
When I was a resident at the University of Chicago,
we had a.
Speaker 6 (00:57):
Mean you're smart, as I really really gift his position.
I want to pay you the highest trut I can
give to a surgeon, which is when people come to you,
they don't come for an operation, they come for the opinion.
And that's why I trust you with my friends and relatives.
I didn't realize we were going to get the Michael
Jordan of Plastic Surgeons nine two to zero.
Speaker 3 (01:13):
Bows to this guide and welcome. This is words certified
plastic surgeon, doctor Arthur Perry, and you are listening to
What's Your Wrinkle right here on wo R. I hope
you all having a great weekend. It is a beautiful
summer weekend here in the Northeast. If you're listening from
all over the country, we are having a wonderful weekend.
Speaker 5 (01:36):
Today.
Speaker 3 (01:37):
I am broadcasting live from the Hampton's from sag Harbor,
New York. And where the UV index today, what was it?
It was nine today. We'll talk about that in the show.
But this is a call in show. It's a call
in show about plastic surgery. That's what we do here.
I talk about wrinkles and jowls and small breasts and
(01:59):
large noses and protruding ears and all those things, and
of course botox and filler and things of that nature.
Speaker 5 (02:05):
So that's what we do.
Speaker 3 (02:06):
The phone number here at WOOR is eight hundred three
two one zero seven ten. That's eight hundred three two
one zero seven ten. Give me a call. We'll send
you a bottle of what do you think? Noah, let's
go ahead. It's the summer. Let's do daytime. Daytime is
that all important skin protector. It's not just the sunscreen,
(02:27):
but it is a good sunscreen and SPF twenty three sunscreen.
Speaker 5 (02:31):
It's also just a really good skin protector.
Speaker 3 (02:34):
It's got niacinamide in it and that means vitamin B three.
It's also got vitamin B five in it. These are
skin protectors. They actually strengthen the barrier function of the skin,
which is a complex concept. You don't have to know
really what it is. Just have to know that when
you put daytime on your skin, your skin will be
(02:56):
less susceptible to the toxins in the air. Less susceptible
to the things that your skin is subjected to, and
of course ultraviolet light. All right, so we are going
to talk about the three cosmetic procedures that actually have
medical benefits in addition to cosmetical cosmetic benefits.
Speaker 5 (03:18):
Everything.
Speaker 3 (03:19):
Everyone knows that cosmetic surgery benefits you cosmetically, right, and
as such, you feel better about yourself, you have higher
self esteem. But there are procedures that help you look
better that also improve your health. So we're going to
talk about that today and we're going to play the
Mark Simone interview. I was on Mark Simone yesterday. Many
(03:41):
of you probably heard that, but if you did not,
you can hear it right here today and so stay tuned.
We're also going to talk about let's start in with
the UV index. It's such a simple concept, but it's
very misunderstood. The UV index is a number that the
federal government has come up with that helps you decide
(04:04):
whether or not you need sunscreen and whether or not
you should how long you should stay in the sun. So,
for instance, today was a nine, and the scale goes
all the way up to eleven and anything under three.
So if you have a one or two, you don't
need sunscreen. It's that simple. More than that, you need
a sunscreen, and how what kind of a sunscreen should
you be using. Well, I think that it's unnecessary to
(04:28):
use much more than an SPF fifteen, and the reason
for that is SPF fifteen blocks ninety three percent of
ultraviolet B rays. Now, when you choose a sunscreen, it's
important to choose one that uses the words broad spectrum
because that tells you that it also covers you for
(04:51):
ultraviolet A light. There's ultraviolet B in ultra violet A.
You don't have to know the difference. Both of them
age the skin, both of them cause skin cancers. If
you have an SPF fifteen broad spectrum sunscreen, which is
what mine. Mine has more than that, it's better to
go more, not good to go less, but certainly that
will protect you. It'll block ninety three percent of the
(05:15):
UVB rays. If you go up to an SPF thirty.
By the way, you go from ninety three to ninety
seven percent, you go up to SPF fifty becomes a
ridiculous concept, but that doesn't stop the companies from making
these things and charging you more. An SPF fifty goes
up to ninety eight percent of ultraviolet raise block, so
(05:37):
you gain one percent going from SPF thirty to SPF fifty. Now,
practically you can be in the sun for twenty minutes.
Speaker 5 (05:46):
That's okay.
Speaker 3 (05:46):
Almost everybody can be in the sun for twenty minutes
without hurting themselves. But at about twenty minutes, the average
light skinned person begins to get a little bit red.
So you want to either get out of the sun
or put sunscreen on. An SPF fifteen the way the
numbers derived, it extends the amount of time that you
can stay in the sun by fifteen times.
Speaker 5 (06:09):
That's what that number is.
Speaker 3 (06:10):
A SPF fifteen means you can be in fifteen times
twenty and what is that three hundred minutes or five hours?
And that just tells you if you can be in
the sun for five hours without getting red. I mean,
who really is going to be in the sun more
than that unless you're one of these people that goes
to the Hampton's or the Jersey Shore and parks yourself
(06:32):
on the beach nine thirty in the morning and plans
to spend you know, eight hours in the sun. Well,
of course, then you might need a stronger sunscreen. But
the average human being doesn't do that, and I don't
recommend doing that either. All right on, Board certified plastic surgeon,
doctor Arthur Perry, host of What's Your Wrinkle? Right here
on WOR eight hundred three two one zero seven ten.
(06:54):
Is the phone number here at WOR eight hundred three
two one zero seven ten. We're broadcasting live from the Hamptons.
We've got my sidekick, Winston the Scottish Terrier. He's ready
to answer your questions. Also, when we come back from
our break, we're gonna hear from We're gonna hear the
interview that I recorded yesterday with Mark Simon. No, let's
(07:17):
take our first break eight hundred three two one zero
seven ten.
Speaker 5 (07:19):
We'll be back after these words.
Speaker 3 (07:26):
Did you know that your skincare may be hurting you
more than helping you. I'm Board certified Plastic surgeon, doctor
Arthur Perry. The foundation for looking good is clean, healthy skin.
So I've created a program that is so simple that
everyone can stay on it long enough to see real results.
It starts with an incredible skin cleaner called clean Time.
(07:47):
It's actually good for your skin. Protect your skin with
my Daytime SPF twenty cream in the evening. Feed your
skin with my powerhouse Nighttime Serum. Nighttime has vitamin CNA,
antioxidants and skin brighteners. And if you like moisturizers, well
I've created soft Time with seramides and vitamin D. Throw
away the bags of useless products and try doctor Perry's Skincare.
(08:11):
Join the thousands of people whose skin is healthier. That's
doctor Perry's Skincare on Amazon dot com. And don't forget
to listen to my radio show right here on wo
R every Saturday evening at six pm.
Speaker 7 (08:23):
You're listening to What's Your Wrinkle with doctor Arthur Perry.
Speaker 5 (08:26):
What's Your Wrinkle?
Speaker 3 (08:28):
And we are back. This is fort certified plastic surgeon,
doctor Arthur Perry, host What's Your Wrinkle? And if you
are listening to this as a podcast or streaming it
on your computer, well it's called straight talk about Cosmetic.
Speaker 5 (08:42):
Surgery, because that's exactly what we do.
Speaker 3 (08:44):
We speak straight talk about cosmetic surgery. I try and
get rid of the hype and I give it to
you straight. You know, there's a a very over hyped
field cosmetic surgery.
Speaker 5 (08:55):
You know, you only have to.
Speaker 3 (08:56):
Look on the internet to see all the ridiculousness and
the funny names of procedures which are designed only for
marketing reasons. I try and give it to you straight,
so give me a call eight hundred three two one
zero seven ten. And those of you who have been
listening for a while. No, I've been on the radio
for twenty years on WOR and I have a practice
(09:18):
in Manhattan on eighty fifth in Park Avenue. And I've
got another practice I joined well by Messer, which is
on sixtieth Street between Park and Lexington. And of course
still in New Jersey in Somerset, New Jersey.
Speaker 5 (09:31):
I'm happy to see you.
Speaker 3 (09:34):
And I do all the things that plastics chers and do.
I love doing facelifts and rhinoplasty and islid lifts, and
I do botox and fillers and lippos suction and tummy
tucks and those are all the things that I do
during the week. But on Saturdays, this is what I
love to do. I love to do radio, all right.
So yesterday I was on the Mark Simone show. I've
(09:55):
been on a number of times over the years. We
had a nice interview, So no, let's go ahead and
play the interview.
Speaker 2 (10:01):
Doctor Arthur Perry on the great plastic surgeons in the world.
His website is Perry plastic Surgery dot com. You know,
he also does a great radio show here on w
o ARTS every Saturday night at six o'clock. And he's
with us now, doctor Arthur Perry. How you doing.
Speaker 5 (10:17):
I'm great, Mark, How are you today?
Speaker 2 (10:19):
Very good? Uh? Take a look. What do you think
My neck's a little Uh, tighten that up a little.
I got these bags under my ear Mark.
Speaker 3 (10:27):
Last time we're in the studio, you almost let me
do the Bowtox. Mark, No, I didn't. I got to
get there. Okay, so almost you were close. I know
you were close. I cry at a flu shot. I can't.
Speaker 2 (10:42):
I don't know how anybody but that Boatox said, you
did show me that needle. It was really tiny, that needle.
Speaker 3 (10:47):
It's tiny. Mark, you can do it. You know you're
all over TV now. You could be an anchor if
I had a couple hours with you in the operating
What do you say, Mark.
Speaker 2 (10:57):
I don't want to be an anchor. I like being
the you do five minus. But also they got makeup.
Speaker 3 (11:02):
Yeah, Well that's that's right, that's what it's for. You know,
this is this is I hope you're using your sunscreen.
By the way, this is a UV index ten day mark.
That's high.
Speaker 5 (11:14):
Are you doing sunscreen?
Speaker 2 (11:15):
Well, you know people that don't use it to explain
to what it does to the skin and why they
need to start using it more.
Speaker 3 (11:20):
First of all, Mark, everybody's got an iPhone now, right,
so you can look up the the UV index and
you don't have to even think about whether or not
you need sunscreen. Just go to the app, the weather app, right,
and you scroll down and you look at it and yep,
sure enough, it's gonna be a ten to anything over three.
Speaker 5 (11:39):
You need sunscreen.
Speaker 3 (11:39):
If you're in the sun more than twenty minutes, you're
gonna get damage to your skin. You're gonna get premature wrinkles,
you're gonna get brown, splotchy pigmentation, and worse mark you
can get skin cancers. It's a cumulative effect, and that
means every day you're out there, it gets worse and worse.
And it's such a simple fix. Zinc oxide containing sunscreen.
That's all you need is an SPF fifteen by the way, Really,
(12:02):
the SPF thirty, SPF fifty, it's ridiculous.
Speaker 2 (12:05):
Really, Oh, that's good to know. Hey, when I see people,
I don't want to measure your names. Famous people. They
look like their face is like pulled tight. They looks
over plastic surgery. How do you avoid that? What's what
is it that people?
Speaker 5 (12:19):
Should you choose a good plastic surgeon?
Speaker 3 (12:21):
You know, there's just because you're a celebrity doesn't mean
you know how to choose a good plastic surgeon. And
now the plastic surgeons, right, they're out there on Instagram
or they're seating the internet with maybe one celebrity that happened,
no names here, and then everybody goes to that one doctor,
whether they're good or bad. You only have to look
(12:42):
on TV to see what I'm talking about. The duck
lips mark, the like you said, the over stretched face.
You know, cosmetic surgery is an art form, it really is,
and the medium is your body, your skin. And the
plastic surgeon needs to be not just a good doctor,
not just a good technician, but has to be an artist.
(13:03):
And if the plastic surgeon is not an artist, you're
gonna look funny. And you can't even put your hand
on the hand on it, right, you can't put your
finger on you look at these people and they.
Speaker 5 (13:12):
Look like muppets.
Speaker 3 (13:13):
Right, yeah, that's not normal. You have to choose a
good artistic plastic surgeon.
Speaker 2 (13:19):
Now, people that wanted to a facelift or something, if
you get a facelift, you're gonna look bad for two weeks, right,
You can't go to work for a week or two.
Speaker 3 (13:26):
Oh yeah, yeah, I mean, you know, there's no question
you'll feel okay. It's not a particularly painful operation. Within
a day, you know, you feel okay, but you look
in the mirror. You look like, oh my god, some
fruit or vegetable. It's not pretty. So you stay in
and you really aren't going to go out for about
two weeks. After a facelift or an eyelid lift, pretty
(13:49):
much any facial procedure, a rhino plastic which is a
nose job, it takes two weeks for the most of
the bruising to go away and the swelling to get
to the point where you're what we call social acceptable.
Speaker 5 (14:01):
Right.
Speaker 3 (14:02):
You know, if you have your body operated on, like
liposuction or a breast augmentation or something like that, you
go out in two days because you can cover with
the cloth.
Speaker 2 (14:11):
Hey, all that ozempic and all those things, you know,
that kind of stuff everybody's taking there to lose a
lot of weight. What does that do plastic surgery wise,
your skins, you can they call it ozempic face. Your
skin starts looking bad on your face.
Speaker 3 (14:21):
Yeah, it's because of rapid weight loss. And it'll happen
with any rapid weight loss, whether it's a lap band
or you simply stop eating. If you have rapid weight loss,
your skin can't contract fast enough and so it kind
of hangs and you look gone. And you know something, Mark,
there are so many people on those drugs now that
(14:44):
you know. One of my pet peeves is that plastic
surgeons are starting to prescribe those and I think that's wrong.
It should be an endochronologist or an internist, not a
plastic surgeon. I'm a plastic surgeon. I will not prescribe
those drugs. You need to go to an internist. But
if it's done properly, you'll lose a a lot of weight,
you'll be a lot healthier. They're really good for you.
And the dessert at the end of the weight loss
(15:05):
is to come see me and I'll trim that extra
skin from your neck or your belly or your breasts.
And make you look better, and they're really great drugs.
Speaker 5 (15:15):
Yeah.
Speaker 2 (15:15):
Now, doctor Arthur Perry, botox. Obviously you're a top plastic surgeon.
You know exactly how to use. But you go anywhere
now and they're doing botox. The dentist does it, the
beauty shop does it sometimes, the nail place gives both tie.
You shouldn't be doing that, right, You've got to have
a real good hand to do that.
Speaker 3 (15:33):
Yeah, it's really scary, Mark. I mean, there's everybody wants
to get into the act. It's like the Willy Sutton thing.
Speaker 5 (15:39):
Remember that.
Speaker 3 (15:39):
Why did Willy Sutton rob banks? That's where the money is.
Why are all these doctors and dentists and even estheticians
in some states, and nurses and physicians, assistants and everybody
wants to do these things and some Mark some of
the courses they're taking are as short as two hours.
I've seen a two hour course with a lunch break.
(16:03):
It's true, it's it's pathetic. You know, you get what
you pay for. And you know, there's a rash right
now all over the world of fake botox. There are
people that have no business doing it. And filler, you know,
is even worse. I mean that's why all these people
are walking around looking bizarre. So you know, choose your
doctor carefully. Just like you wouldn't go to a cardiac
(16:24):
surgeon at a you know, a storefront place, and you
shouldn't do that with a plastic surgeon either.
Speaker 2 (16:29):
Yeah, and we don't get a minute left. What is
right now? What's the most popular procedure?
Speaker 5 (16:33):
Oh?
Speaker 3 (16:33):
Right now, we're still in LiPo suction season. It's the summer.
Everybody they put on their bathing suit, they see that
fat on their thighs. If I suction fat today, you
can be back on the beach in two weeks and
you know, in a bathing suit that you want to
get into. Yes, even you mark, you can do it.
Suction is a great procedure. It's very very safe as
(16:56):
long as a board certified plastic surgeon is doing it.
And yeah, I can remove five pounds, six seven, eight
pounds of fat, not a methadweight loss like those drugs.
It's a method of body contouring. This is you think
it's baseball season, it's liposuction season.
Speaker 2 (17:11):
Oh, interesting, well, and anybody's interested. Doctor Arthur Perry, one
of the great plastic surgeons in the world, it's Perry
Plastic Surgery dot com. P e r r Y Perry
Plastic Surgery dot com, Doctor Arthur Perry, thanks for being
with us.
Speaker 3 (17:26):
Thank you Mark. I always like speaking with Mark simone,
great interviewer. He's on every morning right ten o clock
on wo R. When we come back from our break,
we're gonna talk about the three cosmetic procedures that have
true medical benefits. Let's take our break now, Noah, we'll
be right back. They say that sixty is the new fifty,
(17:53):
but while you may feel and act fifty, the mirror
doesn't lie. But that's where plastic surgery comes in. I'm
board certified plastic surgeon, doctor Arthur Perry, and I love
helping patients look younger and better. If you've got sagging cheeks, jowls,
and that dreaded turkey gobbler, it might be time for
a little nip and a tuck. You look more rested
and yes, younger. With my short scar facelift and the
(18:16):
artistic injection of wrinkle filler or a laser peel, well,
that might be just what it takes to get you
looking as good as you feel. Let's sit down for
an hour consultation in my new Park Avenue office. Together,
we'll come up with a plan to help you look
your best. Give me a call at eight three three
Perry MD. That's a three three p e r R
Y M D. Check me out on the web at
(18:37):
Periplastic Surgery dot com and don't forget to listen to me,
doctor Arthur Perry, every Saturday evening at six pm right
here on wo R.
Speaker 7 (18:46):
You're listening to What's Your Wrinkle with doctor Arthur Perry.
What's your Wrinkle?
Speaker 5 (18:52):
And we are back. I'm board certified plastic surgeon, Doctor
Arthur Perry. And if you're.
Speaker 3 (18:56):
Interested, by the way, in the products we talk about
the show, go to Amazon dot com. Amazon has all
the products and they're all in stock and you can
take advantage of all the benefits of being a prime
member if you are.
Speaker 5 (19:10):
Hopefully you are.
Speaker 3 (19:11):
And by the way, if you do listen to this
as a podcast or want to listen, the way you
do it is you go to iHeartRadio, or you go
to Apple Podcasts and search my name, doctor Arthur Perry,
or search the words cosmetic Surgery, find the podcast and
then hit subscribe.
Speaker 5 (19:28):
It's absolutely free.
Speaker 3 (19:29):
It'll be delivered to your email box whenever we do
a new show and post it. All right, we've got
Sondra on the Lon Sondra, what can I do for you?
What's your wrinkle? Oh?
Speaker 7 (19:39):
Hi, doctor Perry Well sell the high act of very
Beautiful Actress loves al Sarah. So I understand that you
have done thousands of those, and actually you started doing
it in twenty ten in New Jersey. So I think
you said that results vary, and you did say also
(19:59):
that there's no downtime, you go to work the next day.
All these things sound so great. So when you say
the results ary, I would think it means that someone
has it worse than somebody else. We will explain it
to me how results vary.
Speaker 3 (20:13):
Okay, so let's first define what el thera al. THEARRA
is high energy focused ultrasound, So what does that mean.
You know, we know that aiming a laser at your
skin will make some changes. We'll get rid of wrinkles
and brown splotches and things like that. But lasers have
disadvantages because lasers require a healing period. Now, we can
(20:34):
take the energy of sound, just like we take the
energy of light. For a laser, we take the energy
of sound and intensify it and make it ultrasound, which
is above what we can hear, and aim it. We
can actually aim it just like you know you can
aim light with a magnifying glass. You can take light
during a hot day like today and take a magnifying
(20:55):
glass and burn leaves. All these little kids like to
do that, right, You probably did not soundra when you
were a kid.
Speaker 5 (21:01):
So we can take the same almost like.
Speaker 3 (21:03):
A magnifying glass, and we can aim sound energy underneath
the skin at different levels one and a half, three,
four and a half millimeters. And when we do that,
we heat up the skin. We actually are ready for this.
We actually burn it just a little bit underneath the skin.
And you say, why why do you want to burn me,
doctor Perry, Because when we do, we stimulate an age
(21:26):
old process that our body has to shrink tissue and
then generate collagen. And so that's what Al Farah does.
It causes you to shrink tissue and generate new collagen.
Both are good in terms of making you helping you
look better. So Al Thearah, as you said, very good.
By the way you remembered what I had told you
(21:46):
twenty ten. It was FDA approved, and I jumped on
the new technology, now not so new, but still just
as effective after fifteen years. It it will lift your
brows about two to three millimeters, or it will smooth
out creepy skin of the neck, or it will lift
(22:07):
your jowls. And if I really aim it in a
specific way, I can destroy a little fat. If I
want to destroy fat, we don't have to if I
don't want to destroy so alf there is very useful.
But it's not a facelift. It's not an eyelid lift.
It's not a brow lift. It's more subtle in most people.
And I am honest with my patients, and I'm honest
with the radio audience, and I've done a lot of all.
Speaker 5 (22:31):
Over the years.
Speaker 3 (22:32):
I have a pretty big experience, and I think my
statistics are that about ten to twenty percent of people
say wow. Afterwards you look and say, oh, that's that's impressive,
really good, And about seventy percent of people, maybe eighty
percent of people.
Speaker 5 (22:48):
Say yeah, it's better. It's better. It's not incredible, but
it's better. And about ten.
Speaker 3 (22:53):
Percent of people say, okay, which was the before and
which was the after? And we don't like that? But
usually when we repeat heat the procedure and those people,
they'll then say, oh, yeah, it's better. So it works.
Speaker 5 (23:05):
We have to do it in the right people.
Speaker 3 (23:08):
The right people are younger people and people who don't
have a ton of extra skin of their neck, for instance,
because al thera improves a certain amount, not a percentage.
I don't want to get too technical, but it's not
going to take someone who's eighty years old and has
tons of extra skin and fat of the neck and
make them look like they're forty. It just won't do it.
(23:31):
But it is a good procedure. It's oh, it's very good.
By the way, for the upper chest, they call that
the day called a tage area. You know, you get
those lines, women get lines, the vertical one in the middle,
and then the oblique.
Speaker 5 (23:44):
Lines and the sides.
Speaker 3 (23:46):
That combined with injecting filler can really help those for
a year or two years. So altherra is sort of
almost like ironing out the tissue, ironing out the skin.
It applies that heat and we see some of the
effect right way, but most of the effect occurs over
the next two to three months, and it lasts anywhere
from one to two years. So that's your primer on
(24:08):
all thera. I do like it. If you're going to
have a facelift, you don't have all thera. If you say, well,
I'm not going to have a facelift, what else do
you have to offer? Al thera has no downtime. You
could be on TV the same day Sondra And it's
a really nice procedure. I've had it four times myself.
Speaker 7 (24:26):
Wow, Okay, is it expensive?
Speaker 3 (24:29):
Well, like anything in plastic surgery, it's not cheap. You know,
it's technology, and the machine itself costs like one hundred
thousand dollars, and the the each pulse we do costs
a dollar to the doctor, you know, the company charges
that way. So sometimes we'll do five hundred pulses. So
just the cost alone for the pulses could be five
hundred dollars. So for your cheeks it's around a couple
(24:52):
thousand dollars. For your neck, it's around a couple thousand
dollars something like that. So that's the story. I am
big on all thera. I like it, but it's not
for everybody. That's what we discussed in a consultation. We
decide what is right for you Okay, Sondra, thank you
very much. Okay, thanks so much for the phone call.
But you know what, I took your call and now
we can't get to our topic. We'll have to do
(25:14):
that next week. It's the three procedures. I'm not going
to tell you which ones they are. You're gonna have
to come back next week at six o'clock. Three procedures
with medical benefit as well as cosmetic benefit procedures that
can actually help your health and make you look better.
Speaker 5 (25:30):
Also, we'll do that next week.
Speaker 3 (25:32):
Check me out on the web during the week at
periplastic surgery dot com. You can get my office a
call two one two seven five three eighteen twenty and
make an appointment two one two seven five three eighteen twenty.
You can call that number for the New Jersey office
or the New York office. And of course, if you're
interested in the products, like I said earlier, we're selling
(25:53):
on Amazon now Amazon dot com. But by the way,
we've got we've still got that that special.
Speaker 5 (25:59):
Now in the office.
Speaker 3 (26:00):
It's I think it's twenty five percent off filler for
the UH. You have to have it done by Labor Day,
so call the office two one two seven five three,
eighteen twenty Noah, thanks so much for great engineering.
Speaker 5 (26:12):
Why this show goes so quickly? An hour and a
half an hour. We'll see everybody next week at six o'clock.
Speaker 3 (26:18):
Have a good one and don't forget your sunscreen.
Speaker 5 (26:21):
It's hot out there. Bye bye now.
Speaker 1 (26:23):
The proceeding was a paid podcast. iHeartRadio's hosting of this
podcast constitutes neither an endorsement of the products offered or
the ideas expressed.