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October 3, 2025 33 mins
Taylor Swift is a marketing master when she releases a new album. $500,000 is the average sales number for her merchandise when she drops a new collection. Mark takes your calls! Mark interviews plastic surgeon Dr. Arthur Perry. Mark and Dr. Perry discuss the procedures that are very popular during the cooler months ahead. In addition, he warns possible customers to beware of hack providers and products.

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Episode Transcript

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Speaker 1 (00:01):
He's more marks So Mark Simone show on seven tenor Wow,
Hey loves to get too. If you're interested in plastic surgery,
be listening. Later this hour, we'll get to the mayorll Race.
We'll get back to that and a whole lot more.
You know. The sombrero videos are the best part of

(00:23):
the shutdown. Don't worry about a shutdown. We have a
government shutdown every couple of years. Happens all the time.
You've been through a dozen of them. You don't even
remember any of them. Remember twenty eighteen, No, that was
the longest one ever, thirty five days. That was during
Trump's first term. So you'll get through this just fine.
But the best part was the It started with Hakeem Jeffries,

(00:46):
who's this pompous, way too serious, humorless guy who stands
up there and says everybody's gonna die. Well, they made
a video with him with a sombrero on and a
Mexican looking mustache and this great music. I love this music.
But you gotta go watch them. They're hysterical to look at.
They're very very Wait a minute, how do I stop

(01:09):
this thing? I'm playing it on my phone. I can't
stop it, but go watch them. They're up on my Twitter.
The sombrero videos of Hakim Jeffreys, of Schumer, there's one
of every Democrat. They're hysterical. Now then these pompous, humorless
democrats are all over MSNBC and everywhere going it's this bigoted,

(01:30):
the bigotry of these videos. It's racist, it's bigotry. It's this,
it's a he copied it from you, guys. You guys
did it to him. He copied it from you. Do
you remember there was a they tried this for two seconds,
Taco Trump. What did taco stand for? Trump? Always chickens out,
But they kept calling him Taco Trump. And they put
out millions of videos of him with a sombrero, him

(01:52):
with the mustache, him with the Mexican music, and him
on a taco truck. It was Taco Trump. There were
millions and millions of videos. That's where he got the idea.
He's using your technique. So if it's just disgusting and bigoted,
you guys are the ones that invented it, so blame yourselves.

(02:13):
In Chicago right now, there's big protesting at an ICE facility.
Crazy left wing democrats protesting ICE It's pretty funny if
you think about it, these left wing, these Democrats yelling
at the ice Curt, what are you doing enforcing the law?
Cut that out, Stop enforcing the law. It's just getting

(02:35):
more and more ridiculous, which is great. As you head
to the midterm elections, Democrats will wipe themselves out. Traditionally,
a new president loses the Congress in a midterm two
years in. There are exceptions. This will probably be one.
Democrats going so far to the left they'll never find
their way back to the middle and sanity. You know,

(02:57):
we're talking about the mayoral race last hour. Here's the
problem with Cuomo. Here's this big problem besides the fact
everybody hates him. He's creepy, besides the fact that he's
made so many enemies. You know, you notice he's got
these endorsements the union, electrical workers Union, the plumbers union.
What the hell do I care what the plumbers union thinks.

(03:17):
I mean, if I need my sink fixed, I care
what they think. But the political situation, I don't go
to the plumbers union anytime I'm trying to decide a
political issue. I don't call my electrician, I don't call
the plumber and ask him about so who cares what
these unions do. The big endorsements would come from big leaders,
especially in All Beany and all that, but they all

(03:39):
hated him. Cuomo threatened everybody who was the biggest bully there.
So the problem is he's running against this very left
wing socialist Kami mam Dami or is Al Sharpton called it,
Mam Dammy Mamdanni. And Cuomo is now running as the centrist,
old fashioned, middle of the road Democrat, which is a
total lie. He's putting on the act and it's killing

(04:02):
him with Democrats. Is the problem is he looks old.
He's got that same shirt that Fredo wore in The
Godfather in Cuba, and he just looks old and tired,
like an old dinosaur. And if he just ran as himself,
he's more to the left than Mam Donnie. Nobody's done
more left wing crazy things in office than Cuomo. Cuomo's

(04:24):
the guy that gave us no bail, no jail. Culoma
was the guy that literally just closed the prisons and
let the prisoners out. If he would just do that stuff,
he could capture these young Mamdanmi voters. You know that
would be the campaign that would win if he actually
tried that, if he just went to them and said,
you know he's talking about it, I've actually done it.

(04:45):
I can get it done. I'm the only one that's
actually let prisoners out. I'm the only one that's defund
I've actually defunded the cops. It'd be a campaign that
would win these crazy left wing and he's afraid to
do that for all kinds of reasons. But listen, this
is actual Cuomo video from back then when he was
the most radical governor ever. Listened to this video. If

(05:05):
he ran this in a campaign ad, he could win
those young social assistant to Cuomo as governor. The crazy
things he did. Wait a minute, Wait a minute, where
it's the sound here?

Speaker 2 (05:18):
It is this bail system once and for all.

Speaker 1 (05:21):
Wait, hang on, hang on, I'll get it.

Speaker 2 (05:24):
That's whether you're rich or poor. We're gonna end the
cash bail system once in for all. We're going to
do it in New York, and we're gonna do it
this year. We have to have moral alternatives to incarceration,
strength timelines on court dates, and we have to eliminate

(05:45):
the racial bias that is pervasive in our criminal justice system.
As governor of the State.

Speaker 3 (05:52):
Of New York.

Speaker 2 (05:53):
I can't tell you how proud I am to have
closed more prisons than any governor.

Speaker 1 (06:00):
In the history of the state.

Speaker 2 (06:03):
And I'm not done yet.

Speaker 1 (06:04):
Now, this is a radical, radical, left wing, far left guy.
If he would just go back to being himself, run
that video, run it as your campaign had, you'll steal
votes from Mom Donnie. That's how you could really stop
Mom Donnie. If Cuomo ran as himself, that very very

(06:25):
very radical left wing governor that he was, he and
Mom Donnie would split up that radical vote and then
be easy for Curtis to walk right in. Curtis is
finally running a lot of ads, and he's finally hitting
Cuomo with the nursing home stuff, and it's all leading
up to the debate. October sixteenth is the big debate.

(06:46):
October sixteenth, it'll be on Channel four. There's a second
debate six days later that's on New York one. Nobody
really sees New York One, and it's not that anybody
watches Channel four. It's not a big audience. But it
goes all over the internet. It goes viral. So if
something big happens in that debate October sixteenth. That's where
the race could change. That could be the turning point

(07:09):
if there's going to be a turning point. And again
I keep repeating this. The other thing is turnout. If
we get what we'll be getting the last three or
four elections, no turnout eighteen percent, turnout twenty percent. That's
where the radical left wing can win because they'll always
turn out. If you go back to the old days
of seventy five eighty five percent turnout, that's where mom

(07:29):
Donnie loses because all the normal people come out. It's
all about turnout. Taylor Swift album dropped last night at midnight.
Now you know it's tough nowadays you don't make You know,
in the old days of phonograph albums, what did they cost?
I don't even remember. But you know, people buy the
album or the CD. You know, they go buy your CD.

(07:51):
It's twenty dollars. So there's twenty dollars every sale. You know.
Now it's downloading. You're lucky if you get thirty cents.
It's all download or streaming. It's mostly streaming, so you
don't get the money anyway. Now you've got to make
all your money now by doing a concert tour. Taylor
Swift is the king of concert tours. I don't think
anybody's ever made more money on tour. She's become a

(08:14):
billionaire doing that. But very smart marketing, very smart business person.
So what she's done. As soon as the album drops,
the merchandising drops with it. So yeah, you can just
stream the songs and pay three cents or whatever. But
everything is being sold right now, and we don't have
any numbers yet, but she's been selling shirts, sweaters, gloves, hats, everything,

(08:37):
Taylor Swift, everything with the new album logo on it.
Very very smart. You know, when you're somebody like Taylor
Swift and you play Madison Square Garden. Actually she's too
big now. She plays stadiums, but a lot of big.
Let's say you're playing Madison Square Garden, big, big, big superstity.
You get to two and a half million, three million

(08:58):
for the concert, But the merchandising, you know, she'll actually
make five or six hundred thousand dollars in the lobby
before anybody even walks in, five or six hundred thousand
just on merchandise, just on just on the T shirt sales,
all that kind of stuff. It's become an amazing, amazing business.

(09:18):
So what else the Yankees Tomorrow night, that's gonna be Uh,
that's going to be the big, big, first game of
the series tomorrow night. It's actually it's four o'clock tomorrow afternoon,
four o'clock. Hey, we were talking last hour about TikTok.
Will it become safe? Will your data no longer be
in the hands of the communist Chinese? Well, it will
now be controlled by a US led group. And exactly

(09:42):
who is that? It's Oracle, So that's Larry Ellison. I'm
gonna sneeze in a bit. Wait a minute, Oracle company
called silver Lake and then Dreasen Horowitz and Dreason Horrowitz.
What a name. But they'll control it Under the TikTok
divestment law passed by Congress, Chinese ownership cannot exceed twenty percent,

(10:06):
so will be in the hands of American tech companies KKR.
That's Henry Cravison Company General Atlantic. This is a tough choice.
Who would you trust with all your data? Communist Chinese
or Silicon Valley. I don't know, so I gotta have

(10:26):
to think about that one for a while. Hey, it's autumn.
It's officially fall now. Of course you're all the jokes
about this pumpkin spice coffee and pumpkin spice, this and that,
but it's worse than that. For instance, Trader Joe's has
this is a big thing with them every autumn, the
Trader Joe's Autumn menu. People go crazy for this stuff.

(10:49):
The biggest winner this season Trader Joe's butternut squash mac
and cheese. I don't know, but these are these Traders.
It's like a cult. This Trader Joe's very proud of that.
The canvas Trader Joe's bag very very cultish. The other
one is a butternut squashed loasagna that doesn't sound good either.

(11:11):
Another big cellar that cocoa truffles with maple syrup sounds
even worse. Autumn harvest pasta sauce. Again. You got to
be a cult member there in the Trader Joe's cult.
Maple ice cream sandwiches, eh, salted maple cold foam creamer. Again,
none of this sounds good. Maple spice nut mix, maple

(11:32):
and sea salt, cattle corn. But this is very, very
very big with the Trader. Trader Joe's crowd. Costco, same thing.
They all go crazy about certain things there, but they're
bringing back some of the fan favorites. Costco. You know,
their store brand is Kirkland. Kirkland is the town they

(11:52):
come from. Costco the signature butter cinnamon sugar loaf, which
comes in ghost But apparently people go crazy for this.
It's the most addictive thing in the world, butter cinnamon
sugar loaf, and whenever it shows up on the shelves,
people just line up for it. It's only nine to
ninety nine, it's they point out, it's not the healthiest

(12:17):
thing in the world. Nearly a full stick of butter
is baked into each loaf. In fact, another woman on
Instagram showed the loaf rolled around in melted buttered that's
how you get the coating to stick. One serving is
four hundred and ten calories, thirty three grams of sugar.
That's a lot. That's a lot. It's not the healthiest
thing for you, but nobody has. They do have great food.

(12:39):
You got to give it to a Trader Joe, not
Trader Joe's, but Costco Trader Joe's. I gotta live one out, hey, Harvard,
Now this is an interesting story. President Trump has been
all over Harvard and he's now got them caving in
left and right. Harvard has agreed to pay five hundred million.
And what they're going to do they're going to operate

(13:00):
a network, a nationwide network of trade schools. Now, you know,
one of our great sponsors is Lincoln Tech. When it
comes to these trade schools, they're a great thing for many,
many kids. This is the answer trade school. Nobody better
than Lincoln Tech. But Harvard is now being forced to
get into the game. And President Trump has said over

(13:22):
and over this, it's so important to have these trade schools.
There's a lot of kids that they don't need to
be lawyers or doctors. They want to be plumbers, they
want to be a h fact, they want to be
in various industries. You go to this tech school, you know,
you immediately got a career. You graduate Harvard with your
degree in liberal arts, you end up living in your parents'
house for ten years. But President Trump said, we used

(13:45):
to have a lot of trade schools in this country.
We don't anymore, and we need them back. So part
of the settlement with Harvard, they're going to spend five
hundred million open a network of trade schools focus on
artificial intelligence and engineering and other technical skills. Well, see,
there you go, Harvard trying to catch up with Lincoln Tech.

(14:07):
Pretty good. Hey, we'll take some calls in a moment.
Eight hundred three two one zero seven ten is the number.
Eight hundred three two one zero seven ten. Now back
to the.

Speaker 4 (14:19):
Mark Zimo Show on wor.

Speaker 1 (14:24):
Hey, let's take some calls. Eight hundred three two one
zero seven ten is the number. Let's go to Aaron
in Indianapolis erin how you doing?

Speaker 3 (14:34):
Good morning, Mark spreaking of Andrew Pomo. Would it be
possible to replace him with Perry Como?

Speaker 1 (14:43):
Well, that'd be great if if those of you under
eighty five. Perry Como was one of the greatest television
stars ever. He was a great singer, but the biggest,
biggest variety show in the late fifties early see, was
a big, very nice guy, lived at Long Island Sand's Point.
And uh, you remember Perry Como? Are you a fan

(15:05):
of his?

Speaker 5 (15:08):
I was from walking him on TV.

Speaker 1 (15:10):
With my dad. Oh, okay, so that while you're you're uh,
from back then? Actually remember I'm trying to remember. Yeah,
it was was at a party. I'm standing there with
Joe Namath and Matilda Cuomo comes over, wife of Mario,
and says hello to me, and I introduced her. I said,

(15:30):
Joe Namath, this is Matilda Cuomo. I swear to God.
And he says, your husband was the greatest singer ever.
I said, no, no, Cuomo Quoma, not como. But she laughed.
She said, I get that a lot. Let's go to
uh Rich in Myrtle Beach. Rich. How you doing pretty good?

Speaker 3 (15:48):
You're sitting around the pool. Finally got to sleep at
the windows open last night. We got a nice little
cool snap down here. We finally got a trade of
Joe's opened up this past Tuesday as well, So everybody
was excited. It wasn't it.

Speaker 1 (15:59):
Uh point out it's Myrtle Beach. It's like also in
any suburb if anything opens, they line up for one
hundred miles. They get all excited about anything. If you
opened something, you could open a trader Joe's right here,
fifty sixth Street, everybody go, what the away? But in
the suburbs they'll line.

Speaker 3 (16:16):
Up lined up around the block. And the pour and
rain on Tuesday morning, it was hysterical. It wasn't it
the Channel four that screwed Curtis last year in the debate.
Did he make any preps to have certain rules that
he's allowed to speak more than thirty seconds this time?

Speaker 1 (16:30):
Ad Yeah, that's a good point. Channel four rigged the
mayoral debate last time. Early allowed a thirty second answer,
which of course is not enough time to give a
full answer. And they were trying to protect Eric Adams.
They thought he wouldn't be too articulate, and then the
whole second section yes or no answer only, which is idiotic.
It's just preposterous to have yes or no answers in
the debate, and.

Speaker 3 (16:51):
Hous Curtis made any kind of points or any kind
of you demands on how the debate's supposed to be run.

Speaker 1 (16:56):
Well, if you'll recall, he was on the show a
couple weeks so I said all this to him. He said, yeah,
I'll be taking care of it. So I'm sure he will.
I'm sure he will. Actually, I think they're always trying
to help, knowing Channel four, they always trying to help
the Democrats. So, Mom, Donnie's a very articulate guy. He
has no problem in debate, so I'm sure they'll loosen
up the rules. Let people actually talk this time. And

(17:17):
Cuomo is terrible in a debate. You know, Mom, Donney's
a fast talker. He talks like this and he sounds
like he knows what he's talking about. And Curtis is
a professional debate for thirty years. Cuomo talks so slow
that compared to these two guys, he's gonna look ridiculous
in this debate. Let's go to Jay in New Jersey. Jay,
how you doing?

Speaker 6 (17:38):
Yeah, Mark, you know about the sombreros. I just think
that you know what's great about that, you know, is
that is that the Democrats, just like you know, when
Kamala Harris and Hillary Quinton put on fake accidents, if
Keem Jefferies were to court the Hispanic vote, he would
probably put on a sombrero the same way they chose

(17:59):
Tim Walt appeal to men. So this joke has a
lot of truth to it, and I don't think they
realize you that it does.

Speaker 1 (18:06):
Yeah, well, the whole fight is over paying for illegal
aliens health care. That's why the Mexican stuff. But again,
the Democrats invented this sombrero stuff. They did it to Trump.
They called it Taco Trump. They started these memes all this,
but Trump does you know, you can start trolling Trump,
but he's better at trolling than you are. Now, the
argument is, it's a president of the United States. He

(18:26):
should not be making silly jokes like this with memes.
And I don't know, I don't know. We're in a
different world now. I mean it is kind of wwe
kind of a presidency, but it's twenty twenty five. You're
in a different world.

Speaker 5 (18:40):
Now.

Speaker 1 (18:40):
He's not Eisenhower, he's not Harry Truman. He's a modern
day guy. Let's go to Jim in New Jersey. Jim,
how you doing, Mark?

Speaker 5 (18:49):
Speaking of the Yankees, you don't have they got the
name the New York Yankees. No, well, they were the
turn of the last century. They were the New York
Islanders because they played way up in Manhattan. Yeah, and
circa nineteen twelve nineteen thirteen, in the offseason they would
go down south and play exhibition games. Now we're still

(19:09):
very raw. This is less than fifty years after the
Civil War. So the residents would down they would say, oh,
here come those Yankees from the North, and they changed
the names of the Yankees.

Speaker 1 (19:19):
That's actually a very good story. Very good. Oh thanks Mark,
have a good weekend. Thanks a lot, thanks for calling. Yeah,
well yeah, they still they all go south for obviously
spring training and Florida and Arizona and all those places.
So playoffs begin, first game Yankees, Toronto tomorrow afternoon, four o'clock. Now,

(19:41):
remember it used to be when did the season end?
It was like October second, the season would end always
that was it final, and then the World Series to
start like October fourth for one week and that was
the World Series. Now you got a division playoff, section
playoff of this playoff. That playoff. The they used to
call Reggie mister October because he had really hit in

(20:03):
the World Series. Mister October. That doesn't mean anything anymore,
you know, it's mister November. Now they have to actually
change the name. So and it's hard to believe we're
already in the postseason. But hey, when we come back,
doctor Arthur Perry will be with us, the great plastic surgeon.

(20:23):
I think is he coming in person? We love the
guy and it's always good. Yeah, he's coming in person. Yeah.
I don't like when they come in person.

Speaker 3 (20:33):
You know.

Speaker 1 (20:33):
For first of all, I mean I love the guy.
He's a great plastic surgeon. But when he's looking at you,
you can tell he's looking at you going, huh, I
could fix that. Oh, look at that. I need to
fix that. They just look at the wader. It's like
the contractor when he looks at your house. He wants
to fix everything in there. So we'll talk to him next.
If you got any plastic surgery questions or things you
always wanted to know but didn't want to be seen asking,

(20:56):
we'll do it next on seven to ten w R.

Speaker 4 (20:59):
Let's part similar.

Speaker 1 (21:03):
Well, everybody since he's in plastic surgery, everybody now Doctor
Arthur Perry one of the best plastic surgeons on earth.
You can hear him. He's got a radio show here
every Saturday at six o'clock, Doctor Arthur Perry. But he's
really good. And his website is Perry Plasticsurgery dot com
Perry Plastic Surgery dot com, and he's with us. Actually,

(21:25):
I hate when you're in the studio. I mean I
love seeing you, but thanks, mar I can tell you
looking at me, going oh I can fix that. Oh
that needs fixing.

Speaker 4 (21:32):
Just just a few hours in the operating room and
we're all set Mark and oh look look, Mark, look
what I brought for you.

Speaker 1 (21:39):
Oh no, what is that? That's botox?

Speaker 4 (21:41):
It's botox. I've been threatening one day you're going to
break down. We're actually going to do it in the studio.
I cry at a flu shot. So I just don't
like this stuff. It's such a small needle. It's okay, Mark.

Speaker 1 (21:53):
It is tiny. The needle he showed me is tiny. Now,
and I know a million people that get botox read
two seconds. It doesn't bother them at all.

Speaker 4 (22:02):
Ten million people last year in the United States. That's
a lot of people. It is so popular. He's looking
at me. I don't know.

Speaker 1 (22:11):
I will do it someday. Well, you know, we'll get
them there. Now, let me ask you a question. There's
a couple of these hotshot plastic surgeons. I don't know
that they're great. I see them in the newspaper all
the time. They're in the gossip comms, which is usually
a bad sign. But one of them, somebody calls it's
like two hundred three hundred thousand for a Facebook. That's crazy.
That's crazy. That is absolutely crazy. And you know, I mean,
the truth is, how do people get in the magazines

(22:33):
and on TV they get pr agents and it doesn't
necessarily mean they're the best. Some of the best plastic
surgeons I know no one's ever heard of because they're
full time faculty members. They are the best. You've never
heard of them. And yet you know the one thousand,
two hundred thousand dollars faceoff crazy Mark. Yeah, so you
don't have to spend that time. No, you do not.

Speaker 4 (22:53):
That is a true anomaly in the world. And there
are only a few people that could either get away
with that or find people should I say, stupid enough
to pay that kind of money that's crazy?

Speaker 1 (23:04):
Well yeah, and that's those it's those people that go
I saw him in the pay very must be good
and then they pay that kind of money. But yeah,
doctor Arthur Perry, you can you can trust him. You
want to go to him. Now, speaking of facelift, that
look at that, Mark? If I lift my face like
that looks better?

Speaker 4 (23:19):
All right? Yes, yep, we gotta do it. Mark, come on,
come on, I don't have the nerve. But four hours
and you're a changed man. But four hours, well, that's
how a facelift is. Three or four hours. But honestly, Mark,
there are much simpler ways to look better. Here it
is the fall, right, we're in October. We've gone through
the summer. Everyone was out having parties and on the beach.

(23:42):
Now we're getting ready for Thanksgiving and and the Christmas season. Right,
everyone wants to look good, but there are some really
simple things that you can do to look good. And
people just forget the little growth on the face. Everybody's
got kind of a zoo growing on their face mark,
you know, moles and sebary character season and the simple
simple thing that you can do doesn't cost a lot

(24:04):
of money. You go in for a session with a
plastic surgeon and look better. You know, I looked at
some statistics. Forty percent of adults are single.

Speaker 1 (24:12):
Did you know that? Wow?

Speaker 4 (24:13):
Forty percent, and it goes to like forty six percent
over the age of sixty. That's a lot of single people.
Everybody's a lot of happy people too. Yeah, but everybody
wants to look better, right, yeah, you do. You know,
we we see people on TV and and in the
movies and they're not they're not unattractive, right, there's so

(24:34):
you know, you can make whatever judgments you want, but
the truth is we'd like to look at prettier and
better looking people. Right, So it's so simple to just
clean up the things on your skin. That's number one,
and a good skincare program that will take you a
long way to looking better.

Speaker 1 (24:48):
Yeah, we all know somebody with a big mole or
something's sticking out a little and that's not surgery, that's
just well.

Speaker 4 (24:55):
It's it's surgery. It's minor surgery. But it's in the
office and you know, forty five minutes later it's gone
and you look so much better. The psychologists use this
term called cognitive dissonance. You know, that's where you look
at someone and there's something wrong and you can't quite
put your finger on it. But it's the asymmetry that
a mole creates, or maybe a big brown mole with hair.

(25:15):
You know, no one likes that. Get rid of those things.
They're so easy, and some of those could be cancer.
So you know, it's a good idea. You get two benefits.
You have a medical benefit and a cosmetic benefit when
you do those things.

Speaker 1 (25:26):
Now, I could look at them here, I could see
three things I could fix you. Look at me, you
see like forty two things. Right, it's a project mark.

Speaker 4 (25:35):
Now, But everybody as you get older. Look, we all age, right.

Speaker 1 (25:38):
All right. So if I got a facelift like that,
it's four hours now, then what happens? How long before
I look normal and go to work.

Speaker 4 (25:44):
Well, you're out of work for about two weeks, that's it,
you know, And that with masks. Yeah, maybe you get
in a little sooner now, about two weeks really, and
it's a pretty easy recovery. No pain medicine other than
til bad word now, but til and all not a
painful thing. No, it doesn't hurt afterwards. Honestly, in a
scale of one to ten of facelifts, is somewhere between

(26:06):
one and three.

Speaker 1 (26:06):
Wow. Yeah, okay, Now these bags under my eyes, if
I want to get rid of those.

Speaker 4 (26:11):
Even easier, mar Yeah, So there's some extra I'm looking at.
You've got some extra skin of your lower islands. You've
got some fat in the lower islands, your upper island,
look at your upper islands. Mark, there's extra skin. It's
almost an emergency. That's about two and a half three hours.
These procedures, by the way, under local antesesia. We don't

(26:33):
need to use general antesesia. It's nice, smooth intravenous sedation
like with your colonoscopy, except no tubes in the other side.

Speaker 1 (26:42):
There.

Speaker 4 (26:43):
It's a nice RESTful thing and it doesn't hurt, and
then you come out. You look terrible though for about
two weeks because you're bruised and swollen, and then you
look great, and.

Speaker 1 (26:52):
For two weeks you got to put ice on it
and all that kind of stuff. Now the ice.

Speaker 4 (26:55):
Actually, interestingly, we don't use ice anymore. You shouldn't use
ice because some people gets bite injuries and there's no
benefit to it.

Speaker 1 (27:01):
So you just recovering. Yeah, yeah, okay, what else? Okay,
if you're a woman breasts, now, what's the trend now?
Is it bigger, smaller?

Speaker 4 (27:11):
Well, certainly smaller than it used to be. You know,
it's always funny, Mark, you know when you see women
that have these enormous implants, like I saw one of
their Kardashians, and these implants are up by her clavigals,
by her collar bone.

Speaker 1 (27:26):
That's crazy.

Speaker 4 (27:27):
That would be considered a complication in cosmetic surgery. And
yet I've had people ask me to put implants that way.
I say, I can't do that, that's that's wrong, And they say, well,
the celebrities have it that way, it's like.

Speaker 1 (27:39):
Oh my goodness.

Speaker 4 (27:40):
You know, so now we're redefining what beauty is based on.
You know, this group of people from California who who
had bad cosmetic surgery. But you know, everybody sees it.
It's crazy. Yeah that we're talking with doctor Arthur Perry.
He's a great plastic surgeon. But there are bad ones.
So I see people I know they had a facelift
and they look phenomenal, They looked so natural. Then you

(28:00):
see the other one who looks tight and plastic and
like muppets, like Boca ratan face of well, how do
you avoid that? How do you know you're not going
to get that? You know, there's artistry in this. You know,
we can teach plastic surgeons how to operate, we can
teach you how to be good doctors, but the artistry,
the artistry is very difficult to teach. You know, either
you're an artist or you're not. And it doesn't take

(28:22):
much to pull a little bit too tight and you
look funny, and yeah, that's the hardest part to teach.
I teach over at the Columbia and Cornell at the
Plastic Surgery Residency Program, And you know that it's like ethics.
How can you teach ethics? Very difficult? Your mother has
to teach that. And artistry that's almost innate.

Speaker 1 (28:40):
You can learn it.

Speaker 4 (28:41):
But and that's where, you know, defining the plastic surgeon
a good or a great one, it's the ability to
create art with you as the media.

Speaker 1 (28:51):
You got to have the hands. Guys. Hey, that's another thing.
If you get in botox, everybody does it now. Do
not go to the hairdresser or the dentist for botox, right,
make sure it's a plastic surgeon who knows what he's doing.

Speaker 4 (29:01):
And beware of the really inexpensive botox because there's fake
stuff out there. There's there is you know, gray market
that means it comes from other countries. You have no
idea what it really is. You have to be careful.
You know, if botox costs six hundred dollars a vile,
how is it that these storefront places are charging two
or three hundred. You know, something's wrong.

Speaker 1 (29:22):
And it's easier now to do plastic search right than
like thirty years ago. The equipment's better, the techniques are better.

Speaker 4 (29:30):
Right, Well, there's absolutely there's refined techniques. You know, we
you know surgical techniques are are certainly better now. For instance,
the facelift that you want so much before. You know,
ten fifteen years ago, we had to make incisions way
up into the hairline. Now we don't have to do
that anymore. We figured out ways. It's a little harder
for the plastic surgeon, but better for you.

Speaker 1 (29:50):
Facelift. It's not for me, it's for a friend oz oh, okay,
but take a look. That would be now what I
do my next a little saggy.

Speaker 4 (29:57):
All right, So for men it's different. So for you,
I could suction out that fat. Okay, let me turn
to the sidemark. You know your chin is good, so
we don't need that. So we suction it out and
we bring those muscles together. Remember Catherine Hepburn, you know
those bands in the neck, Yeah, bring those together, and
the tighter we bring those, then you know your neck

(30:17):
looks slimmer and better. So that's what you put a
hole in. It puts a small incision under the chin mark.
There's no although although there is a method for men
where we actually do just excize that skin. That's a
simpler way I might have that myself. You know, it's
one of these just take out that skin right there
and place an incision in the middle. Not good for women,

(30:39):
but it works in men, particularly if you don't want
a bigger procedure, it's a smaller perce.

Speaker 1 (30:43):
How long does that take.

Speaker 4 (30:45):
It's a little under two hours, and now you don't
want the surgeon to rush. Two weeks of recovery. Everything
is about two weeks. Although if you're just doing the
neck with turtlenecks, maybe a scarf as it's getting warmer,
older out there rather Yeah, you could probably hide earlier.
You could probably pull it off in about a week.
And you know what, Mark w. R. Will set up
the studio in your home. You know, you just there,

(31:06):
you go, the little comrades you broadcast three days later.
What do you say, listeners, tell me tell We'll get Mark.

Speaker 1 (31:15):
To do it. Oh, but uh, you know they just
banned uh. North Korea has banned cosmetic surgery.

Speaker 4 (31:21):
Yeah, yeah, it's not something, it's it's a It must
be good if they banned oh my goodness. Yeah, breast augmentations.
Facelifts can't do it because it it goes against the
socialist agenda. That's what what's his name, Kim John.

Speaker 1 (31:35):
Kim Jong Moon.

Speaker 4 (31:35):
Yeah, yeah, so uh, I guess if you want cosmetic surgery,
don't do it in North Korea, although South Korea very popular.

Speaker 3 (31:42):
Mark.

Speaker 1 (31:42):
Oh well, Now, if you need anything anything, we do
recommend doctor Arthur Perry. It's go to your website.

Speaker 4 (31:49):
Yep, Perry Plastic Surgery dot com.

Speaker 1 (31:51):
He's very good. Perry Plastic Surgery dot com. Go to
the website and he does an excellent radio show if
you want to keep learning about this, Saturday nights six.

Speaker 4 (32:00):
O'clock twenty years.

Speaker 1 (32:01):
Mark.

Speaker 4 (32:02):
By the way, wr the big Gala coming twenty years
on the radio in December.

Speaker 1 (32:06):
WRH. He's been doing it for twenty years.

Speaker 4 (32:09):
You're suggesting that party, So.

Speaker 1 (32:11):
Saturday nights you can listen Saturday nights six o'clock doctor
Arthur Perry. But dad go if you want to consultation
or anything you need, just go to his website Perryplasticsurgery
dot com. Perry Plastic Surgery dot com. Well, thanks for
being with us. Put the needles away. Thank you. Mark.

Speaker 4 (32:27):
I'm gonna keep bringing it and you're gonna break down
one day. We're actually going to do it.

Speaker 1 (32:31):
And he makes good skincare products too. You can go
go to Perry Plasticsurgery dot Com. Doctor Arthur Perry, thanks
for being with us. We'll be back at seven to
ten wor.

Speaker 4 (32:42):
Let's get back to the Mark Simone Show on WR.

Speaker 1 (32:47):
Well, Diddy was supposed to be sentenced this morning. Apparently
it's teken forever. We don't know what's gonna happen yet.
Prosecutors want eleven years. He wants time served fourteen months now.
Apparently that stuff being said at the trial. The judge
has been pretty clear that he thinks this guy did

(33:10):
horrible things, and the prosecutor pointing out Diddy has speaking
events booked for next week, the prosecutor telling the judge,
you're honor, this is the height of arrogance. You're sentencing
him the day he booked events for next week. So yeah,
this does look pretty bad. So it'll happen at some

(33:30):
point today they'll announce the sentencing. Hey, we're out of time.
I'll be back Monday. You can listen to me ten
to noon or the podcast. You can listen anytime on
the podcast, and if you listen this weekend there's a
bonus segment. But I'll see you Monday. Right here on
seven ten WR
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