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December 6, 2025 • 26 mins
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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 what,
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.

Speaker 2 (00:28):
The public doesn't give 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 set I go and look at this. I'm getting old.
I said, I want to maybe he get fix it
up a little bit.

Speaker 3 (00:40):
Doctor Oz, are you there?

Speaker 5 (00:42):
I'm here, Ark, and I want to get to plugged you.
Having worked with you on a book and numerous other activities,
you want to talk.

Speaker 4 (00:46):
To Arthur Perry, the best in plastic surgery.

Speaker 5 (00:49):
Remarkable knowledge, but also your grace at delivery content which
is why it's been a blessing to have you on
my show so many times.

Speaker 6 (00:54):
When I was a resident at the University of Chicago,
we had a me.

Speaker 5 (00:58):
You smart as I really really gift this position. I
want to pay you the highest true that I can
give to a surgeon, which is when people come to you,
they don't come for an operation, they come for an opinion.
And that's why I trust you with my friends and relatives.

Speaker 7 (01:09):
I didn't realize we were going to get the Michael
Jordan of Plastic Surgeons nine O two and zero.

Speaker 3 (01:13):
Bows to this guy, and welcome.

Speaker 6 (01:16):
This is word certified plastic surgeon, doctor Arthur Perry. You're
listening to the twenty first, twenty first season of What's
Your Wrinkle right here on WOR and I'm so happy
to be back for another year. If you're listening to
the podcast, then well it's straight talk about cosmetic surgery.

Speaker 3 (01:34):
It doesn't have to be confusing. It's just got a.

Speaker 6 (01:36):
Different name on the podcast, and you should be listening.
You should be subscribing. Please subscribe. It's very helpful to
me if you subscribe, and hopefully you'll listen, and you know,
if you're in the car you listen to this podcast.
Listen to the radio show live from six to six
thirty every Saturday evening right here on WOIR. So this

(01:59):
past week was an interesting week. Now, before we get
into that, I'm gonna just tell you that, Yeah, I'm
a board certified plastic surgeon. I do things like facelifts
and eyelid lifts and LiPo suction that's fat removal. I
do lasers and boatox and fillers and breast augmentations and
reductions and breastlifts. And last week it was very eventful week.

(02:22):
I gave a lecture at Cornell and Columbia, where I
am an adjunct associate professor, and my topic was fillers
and boatox, which is just a generic word now, and
lasers and very very interesting. And then we went through
the week a normal work week, and yesterday I was

(02:44):
on the air with Larry Mente, the Morning Guy MENTI
in the Morning, and I actually injected botox live on
the air into Larry Minty. And we're gonna play that
because it's really a fun, fun time that we had
with Larry. You know, I've been threatening Mark Simone for
a couple of years. Now, Mark gets some boatox on there.

(03:05):
Mark's been a chicken, but not Larry, So we're gonna
play that in a little while.

Speaker 3 (03:10):
But before we get to that, we.

Speaker 6 (03:12):
Have doctor Caroline Messer. Now, Doctor Messer is an endocrinologist.
She has been on the show before. She is kind
of a world class endochronologist, and she's an expert in
the GLP one drugs and what's that o zepic and
zep bound. So let's get right to doctor Messer.

Speaker 8 (03:33):
Doctor Messer, are you there, I'm here.

Speaker 6 (03:35):
Hi. I am so glad that you have been able
to take time on your Saturday evening to join us again.
Now you're my go to person for GLP all things
ender chronology. That's you, your board certified endochronologist, your board
certified internal medicine, and most importantly, we're partners.

Speaker 3 (03:58):
You know.

Speaker 6 (03:58):
I'm in your practice on well By Messer over there
on sixtieth Street and happy to be working with you
in the mutual care of patients. But I wanted to
talk to you tonight about the GLP drugs.

Speaker 3 (04:12):
Do you know anything about that, Caroline?

Speaker 8 (04:14):
I might have heard of them now, to be honest,
these medications has been around since two thousand and six,
so I've been using them for the past nineteen years.
Back when nobody had heard of them, it was a
lot easier to get them covered by insurance. All you
had to say to insurance is that the patient had
insulin resistance or polycystic overy syndrome, and some magical process
occurred and the medications were covered. And then thanks to

(04:37):
the Kardashians, they kind of blew up a few years
ago and now it's almost impossible to get them covered.
But yes, I have a long history with GLP.

Speaker 3 (04:44):
One and these drugs.

Speaker 6 (04:46):
Listeners know those as o zepic, that's one of the
more common ones, and zip bound and they are massive,
massively in I guess, massive in use, and incredibly useful
to help you lose weight. Right, How do they help
you lose weight, Carol?

Speaker 8 (05:05):
There's so many different mechanisms of action. So everybody knows
that it decreases appetite, but that's just the beginning. We
have plenty of older medications on the market that also
decrease appetite and didn't lead to the same kind of
weight loss. Though some of you may remember ventromine back
from the fen Fen days. That's an appetite suppressant, but
people lose about ten to fifteen pounds. So what's special
that these medications is they not only work in one

(05:27):
area of the brain that controls appetite. They work in
a different area of the brain, specifically the area called
the hypothalamus. There's a center of the hypothalamus that controls
a sense of well being and what we call in
medicine satiety, a feeling of well being you just don't
need anymore. It's different from hunger, and it's actually controlled
in a different part of the brain. And there are

(05:48):
many ways that it works, but one of the ways
is by increasing dopamine, you kind of feel good you're
not using food for a dopamine hit, so it helps
with addictive eating tendencies, emotional eating, and then actually causes
not just the feeling in your brain of being less
hunger I'm grief, but also a feeling in your stomach.
So it actually flows down the passage of food, which

(06:08):
leads to additional stretch as the food is going through
your stomach, so you feel physically ful. They combine all
of these different mechanisms and you end up with a
lot of weight off. For the older generations like ozepic
and weekozi, which are magltide and clinical trials, we see
about fifteen percent of your body weight. But for the
newer medications, which are zeb founder munjaro, depending on what

(06:30):
you're using as farther the same medication, we can see
almost thirty percent of your weight, so much more powerful,
and hopefully soon we'll have even more powerful medications.

Speaker 6 (06:39):
Nord, I'm speaking with doctor Caroline Messer. She went to
Yale Undergraduate, she went to Mount Sinai School of Medicine,
and she has been perennially on all the lists of
the best Doctors Castle Connelly, Top Doctors, Superdoctors, on New
York Times magazine lists, all all the lists she's on,

(07:01):
And but I find the most interesting thing about your background.
Are you still the endo chronologist for the Knicks and
the Rangers.

Speaker 8 (07:08):
I am, although they told me that I'm legally not
allowed to use the word official endochronologists, even though I
am the endo chronologist for them.

Speaker 6 (07:16):
But yes, for their for their endochronological emergencies when they're
on the ice.

Speaker 8 (07:22):
Okay, well you know it's Rangers. There's somebody he's not
there anymore, but he has type one diabetes sometimes blows
my foster, and that I have to treat the family members.

Speaker 6 (07:31):
Okay, wait, we don't want to talk about the rangers
having low testosterone.

Speaker 3 (07:34):
Let's get back to drugs. I fix it, all right.

Speaker 6 (07:40):
So I get involved with these drugs because you are
so good at what you do that you get the
patience to lose a tremendous amount of weight. But you
know there's it's a double edged sword, right, you know,
double edged coin. Rather, they lose so much weight, they
look so much better, there's so much healthier. But what
happens They get what they can call ozembic face, and

(08:02):
they lose weight and their breasts and their belly and
even caroline their vulva. Yeah, yeah, I have to come
in and make people look better. Right when do we
get to that point? By the way, so.

Speaker 8 (08:19):
I like weight to stabilize. So you know, usually i'll
meet with a patient, I'll ask them what is your
target weight? And pretty much I can get a patient
to whatever their target weight is. It might be more
aggressive than just injectibles, but once they've reached that weight
and they've stabilized, that's when I bring in the brilliant
doctor Perry. You know there's going to be hanging skin,

(08:40):
but there's also a loss of what we call subcutaneous fat,
which is the fat just under the skin. The whole
term ozentic face, you know, is coined by a publicist.
There are no receptors under the skin per se for
these injectibles, so it's not like they're actually attacking the
fat under the skin. But any type of weight loss
that's successful is going lead to a loss of that set.

Speaker 6 (09:02):
And when we're talking about the face, we might do
things like just inject filler to kind of plump things
out again. Or you know, if someone's sixty and they've
lost fifty pounds, they're gonna have hanging skin in the neck,
so we'll do a.

Speaker 3 (09:16):
Neck or a facelift, right.

Speaker 6 (09:18):
And certainly most women actually have droopy breasts as they
get older, and that's from pregnancy. And certainly if they've
gained weight and they then lose the weight, their breasts
are going to droop. And we do a procedure called
a breast lift or a mast top hexy on those patients.
And so there's all these different procedures to help you

(09:39):
look as good as possible. I look at it as
the dessert at the end of the weight loss. You know,
when we do these different procedures, and when we do
operate on patients or do procedures after what you've done
for them, they're healthier.

Speaker 3 (09:54):
Right.

Speaker 8 (09:56):
Absolutely, I mean just they're happier because of the medication.
To be fair, and abdominoplasty is not tackling the visceral fat.
So the visceral fat, which is a fat around the organs,
is being tackled by the medications. But one thing I
see frequently is with all that hanging skin, we see
yeast infections now and those can be use infections that
are pretty resistant to treatment. I'm sure you've seen that,

(10:19):
doctor Carey. So that is extra hanging skin under the breast.
Patients they're getting not just itchy, sometimes even bloody infections
under what we call the panis, which is the overhanging
skin in the erry. So beyond just the cosmetics of it,
there are definitely medical reasons to take.

Speaker 6 (10:34):
Care of this all right, So you know we're going
to have to continue this discussion another day. My guest
has been doctor Caroline Messer, and give us a number
over there if listeners want to make an appointment with
you or any of your well by Messer team members,
thank you so much.

Speaker 8 (10:52):
The number is six four six seven six zero thirty
two fifty six three two five six and we have
lots of bendochronologists, internists, psychologists, bitician, the amazing doctor Perry
and others, urologists, et cetera.

Speaker 6 (11:06):
Great and it's well by Messer over on sixtieth three
between Lexington and Park Avenue. Doctor Carolyn Messer, thank you
so much for taking your Saturday evening. Go back to
what you were doing and we'll talk during the week.

Speaker 3 (11:17):
Thanks so much.

Speaker 6 (11:19):
All right, there's more of the show. Stay tuned. I'm
doctor Arthur Perry will be right back. Everyone should have
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colonoscopy or a mammogram. It's tough to find a dermatologist
that does a thorough check, but there is a breakthrough
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(11:41):
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(12:03):
six four six three six two forty five forty two.
That's six four six three six two forty five forty two.
Or go to www. Dot eleitrahealth dot com slash dermatology.
There's only a few of these machines in the country,
but Eleitra can schedule you right away. And if you
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(12:23):
ten percent off of your fee. That's Eleitra Health six
four six three six two forty five forty two. 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

(12:44):
can stay on it long enough to see real results.
It starts with an incredible skin cleaner called clean Time.
It's actually good for your skin. Protect your skin with
my Daytime SPF twenty cream in the evening, feed your
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(13:07):
I've created soft Time with seramides and vitamin D. Throw
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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 WOR
every Saturday evening at six pm.

Speaker 8 (13:27):
You're listening to What's Your Wrinkle with Doctor Arthur Perry.

Speaker 3 (13:30):
What's Your Wrinkle?

Speaker 6 (13:32):
And we are back on board. Certified plastic surgeon, Doctor
Arthur Perry. And one of the things that I do
a lot of. I figure ten thousand botox injections in
the last twenty five or so years. I did another
one yesterday. Let's listen in as I botoxed Larry Mente.

Speaker 7 (13:48):
Now we want to go right to doctor Arthur Perry,
renowned plastic surgeon, host of What's Your Wrinkle? Six pm
Saturdays on wr He is celebrating his twentieth anniversary of
the show.

Speaker 6 (14:01):
Congratulations, thanks sare, thanks for having me on twenty years.

Speaker 3 (14:05):
They thought it would last a week.

Speaker 7 (14:07):
Yeah, now look at you and you're still you're still
going I You've been setting up here as if I'm
going to go through with this botox. You've been setting
up like a surgeon while I've been talking.

Speaker 6 (14:18):
Well, you know, I've been threatening Mark Simone for years
to you know, let's get some botox Mark, and he
won't do it. But I looked at you a few
months ago, Larry, and I said, Larry could use something.

Speaker 1 (14:32):
What is that?

Speaker 6 (14:32):
Sorry?

Speaker 3 (14:33):
Is that? Yeah?

Speaker 7 (14:34):
So right off the batty insults me. Did you hear that?

Speaker 6 (14:36):
It's not an insult. This is what we do. You know,
we all get a little older, and you're forty now.

Speaker 7 (14:42):
You know, right, well, okay, now you're doing better.

Speaker 3 (14:46):
It might be time for a little botox. Do you know?

Speaker 6 (14:48):
Botox is the most popular cosmetic procedure in the world.
Over ten million people in the United States had botox
last year. And it's not just Botox. Fair time for
the five other company. I want to mention all of them.
But we kind of talk about botox like we talk
about Kleenex. It's a generic term, so there's six different
companies now, but it's a wonder drug. It really, It's

(15:10):
smooths wrinkles, right it. You know, if you've got those
massive or muscles, the jaw muscles that are too big,
it will make them smaller. Really, it stops, it stops
sweating in the underarm. Era did one of those last week?

Speaker 7 (15:24):
I had no idea.

Speaker 6 (15:25):
Oh yeah, So boatox is really a very versatile and
there's a lot of medical uses, not just cosmetic uses,
migraine headaches and things like that, bladder spasms, all sorts
of things. It's a wonder drug, and it's here for
you today, Larry.

Speaker 7 (15:39):
When I was telling people that I was going to
go through this, every especially woman because guys don't admit it,
but every woman said, oh my god, you're so lucky
that you are so lucky to be able to get that.

Speaker 6 (15:49):
And there it is, and who comes to you. Usually
I have to go to my office on Park Avenue.
Not today, we're here in the studio.

Speaker 7 (15:55):
Oh that's wonderful. By the way, Let's talk about ozepic
real quickly too, because you said a moment ago, I
didn't know that botox was not the official name, not
the medical name, until you just mentioned.

Speaker 3 (16:04):
That batcha line toxin.

Speaker 7 (16:06):
You know, that's the reason nobody says it Ozempi's not
the name either, is GLP one.

Speaker 6 (16:11):
LP one drugs like zep bound, ozempic. That's even more
popular than botox. You know, something like fifteen percent of
adult Americans have used the GLP one drugs, ozempic, zet
bound and other drugs in the last couple of years.

Speaker 3 (16:27):
They're incredible.

Speaker 6 (16:28):
Oprah went public. She lost I think seventy pounds. She
looks wonderful, you know, battling you know, being overweight for decades.

Speaker 7 (16:36):
My daughter uses it. She had two kids, gained a
lot of weight, she's lost.

Speaker 3 (16:41):
Thirty two violated her confidential.

Speaker 7 (16:43):
Oh, no, I can do that. You can't do that.
I can do it. No, it's it's it's an amazing drug.
And I think that it is the wonder drug of
our time because it helps in heart disease, it helps
with Alzheimer's, it helps with so many other things they're studying.
Because you lose weight, you're healthier.

Speaker 6 (17:01):
Absolutely of course diabetes and and so many people. But
you know, there's a lot of controversy because when someone's
ten pounds overweight, should they really be using it?

Speaker 3 (17:10):
But yeah, that's a whole different story.

Speaker 6 (17:12):
But where I get involved is people have lost ten
twenty thirty fifty pounds amazing, and now they're sagging. So
the fifty year old will come in with extra skin
in the neck because the skin can shrink but not
that rapid.

Speaker 3 (17:25):
Yes, so it hangs and so.

Speaker 7 (17:26):
It's a win for you.

Speaker 6 (17:28):
Oh well, that's it's it's it's actually enormous in plastic
surgery view. We're doing breastlips and tummy tucks and you're
ready for this? Can I say this on the air
ozembic vulva? Seriously, the vulva, the laby deep. Okay, wait,
this is a family show.

Speaker 7 (17:46):
This conversation. Okay, right, enough about the box. I think
Larry was trying to change topics.

Speaker 3 (17:54):
So Larry I brought the smallest time.

Speaker 7 (17:57):
That's not funny.

Speaker 3 (17:58):
No, okay, we won't use that one.

Speaker 7 (18:01):
But look, can I describe that needle?

Speaker 3 (18:03):
Look how small you mayn't even see it.

Speaker 7 (18:06):
Can we describe the needle that use? How long is
that needle?

Speaker 6 (18:09):
This is a four inch long spinal needle. I would
never use.

Speaker 7 (18:12):
That on if you've used it on people.

Speaker 6 (18:15):
So if this is what spinal injections are given with
and also in faceless sorry to say this will inject
the face with this needle. But you're sedated, and you
know that's a big need This is the tiniest needle,
nose commandated. Yeah, this little needle that I would like
to use on you. This little needle is it's called

(18:35):
a thirty four games needle. Means nothing to you, but
it's the same size as an acupuncture needle or an
electrolysis needle, and it will not hurt lar.

Speaker 7 (18:44):
So if I do this, I am going to be
braver than Mark Simon. That's correct, Then I'm doing it.
I got it. Yeah.

Speaker 6 (18:50):
I mean now, I've done about ten thousand people since
nineteen ninety seven, so I've been counting. You're ten thousand
and one. So but we're going to do this the
right way. I'm going to clean off your forehead okay.
All right, We're going to clean your farhad off with
a little alcohol. Okay, and then now we're ready.

Speaker 3 (19:08):
You sure you want to do this?

Speaker 7 (19:09):
Yeah, go ahead, you're absolutely Does it even look like
a really, it's not anything.

Speaker 3 (19:14):
Okay, listen, if he does faint the okay, now that
warn't Are you ready? Okay? Did that hurt nothing?

Speaker 6 (19:25):
I am not.

Speaker 1 (19:27):
Look at this.

Speaker 3 (19:28):
He's getting botox right.

Speaker 7 (19:30):
In the studio.

Speaker 6 (19:31):
Let's hope it's botox amusing.

Speaker 7 (19:35):
You don't do this with your with your.

Speaker 3 (19:37):
Actual I keep my patients.

Speaker 7 (19:40):
So this is the crazy thing.

Speaker 3 (19:42):
He's doing multiple injections very quickly.

Speaker 6 (19:45):
I do this a little differently than a lot of people.
I do many, many injections because I want to give
you the most natural result possible. And you know, if
you do just five injections, you might look like spot.

Speaker 7 (19:58):
How long will it take to actually see results?

Speaker 3 (20:01):
Well, it takes.

Speaker 6 (20:02):
It doesn't work for about two days, okay, three days,
so you're not going to see it immediately, but then
it's going to work for about three months or so.

Speaker 7 (20:09):
Three months.

Speaker 3 (20:10):
Really look irresistible. Your wife will not be able to
keep her hands off of A quarterly appointment is all
you need.

Speaker 6 (20:18):
That's it, you know, And you come in. I've got
an office on Park Avenue. Maybe we'll do this again
on the air, you know, good radio once. I don't
know about every four months, you know.

Speaker 7 (20:29):
So wait a second. If we do this every three months,
I get botox free for a year.

Speaker 3 (20:33):
Isn't that incredible?

Speaker 7 (20:34):
All right, let's book them.

Speaker 3 (20:37):
The perks of being a radio host.

Speaker 7 (20:40):
That is amazing though, that you're a blood. I mean,
there's a little paint. It's just a total.

Speaker 3 (20:44):
Little let's clean you up now. I got it so
full service. I don't have to do anything. So at
this point done.

Speaker 6 (20:53):
He could go about his business today and you know,
any restrictions anything, Well, you know, I'm just gonna put
a little bit more because you have a bigger needed.
No same needle, just a little more.

Speaker 3 (21:03):
Yeah. So you know, we say, don't exercise for a
couple hours.

Speaker 7 (21:06):
You know we used to learn.

Speaker 3 (21:09):
Yeah, sorry, don't get on that treadmill to give it.

Speaker 6 (21:13):
A little time.

Speaker 7 (21:14):
Have to skip my lift.

Speaker 6 (21:15):
We've got some deep lines here. I want to make
darn sure, because you know you're in the public eye.
We have to make it look perfect.

Speaker 3 (21:24):
And a little more. Here.

Speaker 6 (21:25):
This is so that you can't scowl at your wife.
This one right here. These are the eleven lines in
you there, one hundred eleven.

Speaker 7 (21:32):
But geez, would you stop any All right, We're all done.
That's the whole thing.

Speaker 3 (21:38):
Was that terrible? No, not at all, Mark simone, are
you listening?

Speaker 7 (21:41):
That was kind of amazing.

Speaker 3 (21:43):
Okay, there you go that.

Speaker 7 (21:46):
That really wasn't bed at all.

Speaker 3 (21:48):
Yeah, Now, you're gonna have little, no bruising, little spots.

Speaker 6 (21:51):
You're gonna clean it off before the end of the show,
but you will be able to be on television tonight.

Speaker 7 (21:58):
And so I'm not gonna be frozen now. I'm not
going to feel anything for a while. Nothing.

Speaker 6 (22:04):
By the way I do it, I want to leave
a little bit of motion. I don't want you to
be completely, you know, paralyzed. That doesn't look good in anybody, right,
So we're going to We're gonna just have a nice
less wrinkles and a natural result with this. And I
used a substance called zmn x c O M I N.
It's just like botox, just like disport, all these different ones.

Speaker 7 (22:27):
You know, my wife uses botox. She she does. And
I say that because she has no problem. She talks
about it on the air. She does a talk show
in Philadelphia, and she talks about it all the time.
She told me, she said, the one thing that's going
to happen to you that people don't realize what's going
to happen. One of the reasons you could look younger
is all of a sudden, your eyebrows, your eyes are
going to lift a little bit. Is that true. Maybe, Oh,

(22:48):
it doesn't always happen.

Speaker 6 (22:49):
Probably not probably, Oh yeah, No, we don't want you
to get that surprised look, Larry. We want you to
just look natural.

Speaker 7 (22:56):
But a little bit it goes up right.

Speaker 3 (22:58):
It depends on how I do it.

Speaker 6 (22:59):
So when I do the crows feed, I might do
your upper eye lit a little bit and that will
raise the outer part of the eyebrow.

Speaker 7 (23:06):
You just made my day because I get to go
home and say, you know, actually done that thing you
said about the eyebrows. Not true at all, not true.
Oh I love winning these arguments. Thanks so much, it's
great to have You've been wonderful. On Saturdays on WR
celebrating his twentieth anniversary. Other show on WR, Congratulations.

Speaker 3 (23:28):
Thank you.

Speaker 6 (23:30):
They say that sixty is the new fifty, 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

(23:51):
and yes, younger. With my short scar facelift and the
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 eight three three p e r R

(24:14):
Y m D. Check me out on the web at
Perry Plastic Surgery dot com. And don't forget to listen
to me doctor Arthur Perry every Saturday evening at six
pm right here on wo.

Speaker 7 (24:25):
R you're listening to What's your Wrinkle?

Speaker 8 (24:27):
With Doctor Arthur Perry.

Speaker 7 (24:28):
What's your Wrinkle?

Speaker 3 (24:30):
And we are back?

Speaker 6 (24:31):
And wasn't that an interesting interview with Larry MENTI he's
so much fun And yeah, he survived. I called him
this morning. He did great with the bowtox. No issues,
no bruising, no swelling. So he's gonna look great and
you could too. Just give me a call. My office
is right there on Park Avenue in eighty fifth Street,

(24:52):
and the phone numbers two one two seven five three
eighteen twenty. That's two one two seven five three eighteen twenty.
I've got an office also in Somerset, New Jersey. Just
call the same number. It goes to wherever we are.
And of course we are also at Well by mess
Or with doctor Caroline Messer on sixtieth Street in Manhattan.
So give me a call. I'm happy to see you

(25:13):
and do the boat talks or the fillers or facelifts, breastlests,
all those things, liposuction, the things that I like to
do during the week when I'm not on the radio.
I want to thank Noah for twenty years of great engineering.
If you are interested in the products that we talk
about on the show Nighttime, Daytime, Clean Time, the best
soap you've ever had, then you can go to Amazon

(25:35):
dot com. Amazon dot com is where everybody should buy
these products.

Speaker 2 (25:40):
Now.

Speaker 6 (25:40):
You can take advantage of free shipping if you're a
Prime member, and subscriptions that give you discounts. That's how
you do it now. People used to call the office,
but yeah, you go ahead, call Amazon. Don't call them,
go to Amazon dot com once again. My website is
Perry Plastic Surgery dot com. All one word Perry Plastic
Surgery dot dot com. That's where you can learn more

(26:01):
about me and give us a call. Monday two one, two, seven,
five three, eighteen twenty Noah, thanks so much for great
engineering today and for twenty years. Have a great one.
We'll see everyone next week.

Speaker 3 (26:12):
Bye bye now.

Speaker 1 (26:14):
The proceeding was a paid podcast. iHeartRadio's hosting of this
podcast constitutes neither an endorsement of the products offered or
the ideas expressed.
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