Alicia Keys Before And After Nose Job
Alicia Keys had a bulbous nose before her nose job. The plastic surgery made it smaller, thinner, and more up turned. Most people are actually shocked by the fact that Alicia Keys had a rhinoplasty; or any plastic surgery at all. But, this is the only known cosmetic surgery that the singer has had. Here's Alicia Keys before and after the nose job. Everything about her nose is smaller in the after photo. Apart from the width, the biggest difference is the tip. It's much smaller, refined, and up turned.
It was a busy weekend for weddings, first Chelsea Clinton and it turned out that also singer Alicia Keys was getting married.There are still not many pictures out there about that one, but she was stunning for sure.
Alicia Keys, known for her beautiful voice and talent, is also a very beautiful woman, but the difference with pictures of her when she was younger, makes many people wonder if she got some plastic surgery done to enhance her look or it was just the result of natural development.
We found this pictures of her when she was a girl and the biggest difference that we see is on her nose, but these pictures are so separate from each other in time, and taken when she was so young, that it would be hard to tell if she got a rhinoplasty at some point (if she did in fact, probably at the beginning of her career) or if her nose just changed while she was growing up, gaining more definition.
Looking at pictures in different angles, lights and make up, we see that her nose changes, suggesting that she could be using the help of a make up artist to add that extra definition or projection when she thinks she needs it. In case that she in fact had a nose job, it was well done, since her nose keeps the proportions with the rest of her face and it doesn't look excessively thin.
Vocaliser and instrumentalist Alicia Keys is a famous producer who relic in tidings all the instance. She has lots of reasons to edict in mainstream. At few measure, she appears in program for smashing reasons similar at the second of her new concert or when she releases her new medium
Fin case Grammy-award success singer Alicia Keys is rumored to change had a rhinoplasty. Scuttlebutt fancy bodies discovered a reference ikon of Keys, and detected many transparent changes to her smell. The difference in her look could be blamed on the ripening treat, but that fair ain't so. One plastic dr. told the writers of this website that it definitely looks similar she had a rhytidectomy. The tip of her look is not as pudgy, the sides of her look are narrower, and the construction of her nose is squarer. Whatsoever bang advisable that Keys' surgery is an initiate to distance herself from her human filiation. Despite her reasons to human a facelift, African Indweller listeners somebody embraced the sou
earned the mark "homewrecker" in 2009 when she hooked up with and got meaningful by a united man, book shaper Swizz Beatz.
Monday, February 11, 2013
Monday, February 4, 2013
Alicia Douvall Plastic Surgery Before and After Lips and Cosmetic Surgery
Alicia Douvall: Addicted to cosmetic surgery
She's obsessed with plastic surgery and has undergone more than 100 operations - Alicia Douvall has an addiction but can a controversial rehab clinic cure her? Guy Adams reports
umped so full of silicone that, if chucked into the nearby swimming pool, she might bob to the surface, Alicia Douvall purses her trouty lips, takes a deep breath, and begins explaining why she's just checked into an exclusive Malibu rehab clinic. The pneumatic glamour model, a famous purveyor of "kiss-and-tell" stories, is suffering from a potentially-deadly addiction. It has ravaged her body, alienated friends and family, and cost every penny of the fortune she accumulated telling red-tops about the peccadilloes of former boyfriends such as Mickey Rourke, Calum Best and Mick Hucknall. "Imagine playing Russian roulette with your life," she says. "That's what I'm doing. It's out of control, and has cost me more than £1m. Before I decided to come to Malibu, I'd accepted that I was going to carry on with it until I was either bankrupt or dead."
Alicia Douvall isn't dependent on cocaine, alcohol, painkillers, or any of the other substances that traditionally lead to a celebrity's downfall. Instead, she suffers an unlikely obsession: she is addicted to cosmetic surgery. "I've had so many operations that I can't feel my stomach, my left breast, or anything under my right arm," says Douvall, who first went under the knife as a teenager. Now aged 29, she has clocked up more cosmetic procedures than she can count, saying only that the exact figure is more than a hundred.
"I've had 15 boob jobs. I've changed my eyes and nose, had facelifts. My philosophy is 'if it can be changed, it will be'. It's got to the stage where doctors in Britain refuse to treat me any more, so I've been flying to the US for surgery and lying about my medical history."
Alicia Douvall's addiction is related to a psychiatric problem called body dysmorphic disorder (BDD), which she was diagnosed with several years ago. It is a condition on the obsessive compulsive disorder spectrum which causes victims to become preoccupied with their physical appearance, fretting over small or non-existent defects.
A cynic might say that in the old days BDD was known as vanity. But actually, it's the reverse: sufferers believe they are hideous, rather than attractive. They avoid mirrors, and spend hours each day worrying about being ugly. In extreme cases, they become deeply depressed, and reclusive. The suicide rate for victims in the US is 45 times the national average.
Alicia Douvall is a textbook case. Though outwardly attractive (she is, after all, a professional model) and intelligent, her adult life has been consumed by concerns that she is unspeakably hideous. She takes anti-depressants and sleeping pills, and has repeatedly submitted herself to the cosmetic surgeon's knife. "I'm on a quest for change," she says. "Every two weeks, I'll go see another doctor. Often I'll walk in, not even knowing what I want doing, and say something like 'what do you think might be wrong?' or 'what do you think of my eyes?' I keep hoping I might wake up one day feeling happy with myself."
Alicia Douvall recently discovered that submitting herself to the medical version of cut-and-pasting isn't the only way to deal with BDD. She was speaking at the exclusive Passages Addiction Centre in Malibu, near Los Angeles, where she spent four weeks being treated and filmed for a reality TV show, called Rehab. This sometimes compelling, if slightly tasteless series, which begins this week on the satellite channel Living, follows seven "fallen celebrities" who have agreed to undergo intensive courses of therapy in an attempt to find a potential cure for addictions that have ruined both their lives and careers.
It will show former Bay City Roller Les McKeown, Happy Mondays backing singer Rowetta, and Robin Le Mesurier, the musician son of actor John and Hattie Jacques, attempting to cure alcoholism. Model Cassie Sumner is treated for bulimia, Victoria Sellers attempts to kick drugs, and Karate Kid star Sean Kanan tries to wean himself off prescription painkillers. Tacky though it sounds, it also provides a priceless insight into the rehab industry. Passages, on a hillside overlooking the Pacific ocean, is one of the world's most exclusive clinics. It resembles a boutique luxury hotel, and charges well-heeled clients, who have included the fashion designer Marc Jacobs, an eye-watering $78,000 a month for their pains.
Unlike almost every clinic, Passages does not treat patients with a version of the traditional "12-step programme". Instead, its founder, Chris Prentiss, has pioneered a regime that rejects the notion that alcoholism and drug addictions are incurable diseases, and instead views them as symptoms of deeper psychological problems. Prentiss, who founded the clinic after helping wean his son Pax off heroin and alcohol, believes that most addictions stem from a person's failure to come to terms with a traumatic past event. Through intensive therapy sessions, his team work to identify this event, before forcing patients to look at it in a positive light – trying to convince them that, as Voltaire said, everything is for the best in this best of all possible worlds.
"If someone has been abused as a child, or says 'I was raped when I was six', we help them reframe it, by showing them that it was actually a perfect event in their lives, because it made them who they are," says Prentiss. "We show them, for example, that wisdom and strength and information didn't come from their ho-hum days, it came from these power points."
Prentiss claims, perhaps in a bid to justify his exorbitant fees, to have an 85 per cent success rate at "curing" addiction. This is three times higher than rival clinics such as the Betty Ford Centre, but has been widely questioned. Some critics have dubbed him a snake-oil salesman. Yet Douvall's experience frames him in at least a moderately positive light. The model, who was born plain Sarah House, and had a comfortable upbringing in Sussex, was originally sceptical about her chances of being treated, and planned to celebrate her release from the clinic by having a "toe facelift" – an highly-complex operation to straighten her feet.
"You couldn't have got a bigger cynic than me," she says. "I didn't believe in counselling or rehab, or in a person being able to change." But after intensive therapy sessions at Passages, many of them filmed, Douvall reveals the cause of her BDD: she was abused as a child (details are not broadcast, apparently for legal reasons) and was also assaulted by an ex boyfriend, destroying her self confidence. She became a teenage mother – her daughter is now 13 – effectively cutting short her adolescence.
During the treatment, Alicia Douvall says she was reduced to tears three or four times a day by the the acupuncturists, hypnotherapists and assorted counsellors. After the cameras stopped rolling, she stayed at Passages for an additional fortnight to continue treatment. Today, though she doesn't claim to be "cured" of her cosmetic surgery addiction, Douvall's condition has at least improved. Shortly before leaving Passages, she cancelled her planned "toe facelift".
"It was one of the toughest things I ever had to do," she says. "They break you down to build you up, and keep chipping away until they find a crack. But they do it because it helps, and I now think everyone should go into rehab at least once in their lives. After all, who can say they're perfect?"
She's obsessed with plastic surgery and has undergone more than 100 operations - Alicia Douvall has an addiction but can a controversial rehab clinic cure her? Guy Adams reports
umped so full of silicone that, if chucked into the nearby swimming pool, she might bob to the surface, Alicia Douvall purses her trouty lips, takes a deep breath, and begins explaining why she's just checked into an exclusive Malibu rehab clinic. The pneumatic glamour model, a famous purveyor of "kiss-and-tell" stories, is suffering from a potentially-deadly addiction. It has ravaged her body, alienated friends and family, and cost every penny of the fortune she accumulated telling red-tops about the peccadilloes of former boyfriends such as Mickey Rourke, Calum Best and Mick Hucknall. "Imagine playing Russian roulette with your life," she says. "That's what I'm doing. It's out of control, and has cost me more than £1m. Before I decided to come to Malibu, I'd accepted that I was going to carry on with it until I was either bankrupt or dead."
Alicia Douvall isn't dependent on cocaine, alcohol, painkillers, or any of the other substances that traditionally lead to a celebrity's downfall. Instead, she suffers an unlikely obsession: she is addicted to cosmetic surgery. "I've had so many operations that I can't feel my stomach, my left breast, or anything under my right arm," says Douvall, who first went under the knife as a teenager. Now aged 29, she has clocked up more cosmetic procedures than she can count, saying only that the exact figure is more than a hundred.
"I've had 15 boob jobs. I've changed my eyes and nose, had facelifts. My philosophy is 'if it can be changed, it will be'. It's got to the stage where doctors in Britain refuse to treat me any more, so I've been flying to the US for surgery and lying about my medical history."
Alicia Douvall's addiction is related to a psychiatric problem called body dysmorphic disorder (BDD), which she was diagnosed with several years ago. It is a condition on the obsessive compulsive disorder spectrum which causes victims to become preoccupied with their physical appearance, fretting over small or non-existent defects.
A cynic might say that in the old days BDD was known as vanity. But actually, it's the reverse: sufferers believe they are hideous, rather than attractive. They avoid mirrors, and spend hours each day worrying about being ugly. In extreme cases, they become deeply depressed, and reclusive. The suicide rate for victims in the US is 45 times the national average.
Alicia Douvall is a textbook case. Though outwardly attractive (she is, after all, a professional model) and intelligent, her adult life has been consumed by concerns that she is unspeakably hideous. She takes anti-depressants and sleeping pills, and has repeatedly submitted herself to the cosmetic surgeon's knife. "I'm on a quest for change," she says. "Every two weeks, I'll go see another doctor. Often I'll walk in, not even knowing what I want doing, and say something like 'what do you think might be wrong?' or 'what do you think of my eyes?' I keep hoping I might wake up one day feeling happy with myself."
Alicia Douvall recently discovered that submitting herself to the medical version of cut-and-pasting isn't the only way to deal with BDD. She was speaking at the exclusive Passages Addiction Centre in Malibu, near Los Angeles, where she spent four weeks being treated and filmed for a reality TV show, called Rehab. This sometimes compelling, if slightly tasteless series, which begins this week on the satellite channel Living, follows seven "fallen celebrities" who have agreed to undergo intensive courses of therapy in an attempt to find a potential cure for addictions that have ruined both their lives and careers.
It will show former Bay City Roller Les McKeown, Happy Mondays backing singer Rowetta, and Robin Le Mesurier, the musician son of actor John and Hattie Jacques, attempting to cure alcoholism. Model Cassie Sumner is treated for bulimia, Victoria Sellers attempts to kick drugs, and Karate Kid star Sean Kanan tries to wean himself off prescription painkillers. Tacky though it sounds, it also provides a priceless insight into the rehab industry. Passages, on a hillside overlooking the Pacific ocean, is one of the world's most exclusive clinics. It resembles a boutique luxury hotel, and charges well-heeled clients, who have included the fashion designer Marc Jacobs, an eye-watering $78,000 a month for their pains.
Unlike almost every clinic, Passages does not treat patients with a version of the traditional "12-step programme". Instead, its founder, Chris Prentiss, has pioneered a regime that rejects the notion that alcoholism and drug addictions are incurable diseases, and instead views them as symptoms of deeper psychological problems. Prentiss, who founded the clinic after helping wean his son Pax off heroin and alcohol, believes that most addictions stem from a person's failure to come to terms with a traumatic past event. Through intensive therapy sessions, his team work to identify this event, before forcing patients to look at it in a positive light – trying to convince them that, as Voltaire said, everything is for the best in this best of all possible worlds.
"If someone has been abused as a child, or says 'I was raped when I was six', we help them reframe it, by showing them that it was actually a perfect event in their lives, because it made them who they are," says Prentiss. "We show them, for example, that wisdom and strength and information didn't come from their ho-hum days, it came from these power points."
Prentiss claims, perhaps in a bid to justify his exorbitant fees, to have an 85 per cent success rate at "curing" addiction. This is three times higher than rival clinics such as the Betty Ford Centre, but has been widely questioned. Some critics have dubbed him a snake-oil salesman. Yet Douvall's experience frames him in at least a moderately positive light. The model, who was born plain Sarah House, and had a comfortable upbringing in Sussex, was originally sceptical about her chances of being treated, and planned to celebrate her release from the clinic by having a "toe facelift" – an highly-complex operation to straighten her feet.
"You couldn't have got a bigger cynic than me," she says. "I didn't believe in counselling or rehab, or in a person being able to change." But after intensive therapy sessions at Passages, many of them filmed, Douvall reveals the cause of her BDD: she was abused as a child (details are not broadcast, apparently for legal reasons) and was also assaulted by an ex boyfriend, destroying her self confidence. She became a teenage mother – her daughter is now 13 – effectively cutting short her adolescence.
During the treatment, Alicia Douvall says she was reduced to tears three or four times a day by the the acupuncturists, hypnotherapists and assorted counsellors. After the cameras stopped rolling, she stayed at Passages for an additional fortnight to continue treatment. Today, though she doesn't claim to be "cured" of her cosmetic surgery addiction, Douvall's condition has at least improved. Shortly before leaving Passages, she cancelled her planned "toe facelift".
"It was one of the toughest things I ever had to do," she says. "They break you down to build you up, and keep chipping away until they find a crack. But they do it because it helps, and I now think everyone should go into rehab at least once in their lives. After all, who can say they're perfect?"
Sunday, February 3, 2013
Ali Wentworth Plastic Surgery Before and After Facelift Photos
Ali Wentworth jokes about her plastic surgery
Comedian Ali Wentworth’s cosmetic surgery is chronicled on her blog, twitter and YouTube videos. Some viewers have felt free to suggest additional procedures.
Before, left, and after surgery to remove hoods and bags around her eyes (4 weeks later)
From left: Ali Wentworth in 2011, with husband George Stephanopoulos, and post-op
Have you noticed that comedians tend to be very open about discussing their plastic surgery? Ali Wentworth, comedian, actress, author and wife of ”Good Morning America” host George Stephanopoulos, went public about going under the knife before she even did it.
Wentworth, 47, shared her thoughts about getting her eyes done via her video blog, Ali in Wonderland, then went through with the surgery and chronicled the outcome at various stages.
It’s all pretty informative and entertaining, but some people apparently want to see more; They’ve helpfully made suggestions about other procedures she could have.
They’ll say stuff like, “Your eyes look great, now you just need a little Restylane in your lower mouth,” she relays on one of the videos.
She says even Stephanopoulos got carried away. Instead of just complimenting her, he said: ”Just blonder and a better haircut, and you’re good to go!”
“I’m not asking for what else to do,” she says. “My feeling is I’m done. The bags under my eyes — it was my Moby Dick, and I’ve killed the whale.”
Ali Wentworth, comedian, actress, author and wife of ”Good Morning America” host George Stephanopoulos, recently blogged about her plastic surgery to remove hoods and bags around her eyes.
Here is Ali – three weeks after under eye surgery…
Watch the video she made about her blepharoplasty.
Ali Wentworth is the newest comedian to open up about plastic surgery, posting pictures of herself left, right and sideways and before and after her procedures.
47-year old Ali Wentworth, comedian, actress, author and wife of ”Good Morning America” host George Stephanopoulos reportedly began talking about her plastic surgery before she even went under the knife for a blepharoplasty to help with her baggy eyelids, according to the OCRegister.
Ali does look much more refreshed, indicating a good result. Despite getting suggestions for new procedures from everyone from fans to her hubby, Ali says she is done with cosmetic surgery for now.
“I’m not asking for what else to do,” she says. “My feeling is I’m done. The bags under my eyes it was my Moby Dick, and I’ve killed the whale.”
Whether or not she decides to have a little Restylane injected into her lips or not, Ali looks great and that’s no joke.
Comedian Ali Wentworth’s cosmetic surgery is chronicled on her blog, twitter and YouTube videos. Some viewers have felt free to suggest additional procedures.
Before, left, and after surgery to remove hoods and bags around her eyes (4 weeks later)
From left: Ali Wentworth in 2011, with husband George Stephanopoulos, and post-op
Have you noticed that comedians tend to be very open about discussing their plastic surgery? Ali Wentworth, comedian, actress, author and wife of ”Good Morning America” host George Stephanopoulos, went public about going under the knife before she even did it.
Wentworth, 47, shared her thoughts about getting her eyes done via her video blog, Ali in Wonderland, then went through with the surgery and chronicled the outcome at various stages.
It’s all pretty informative and entertaining, but some people apparently want to see more; They’ve helpfully made suggestions about other procedures she could have.
They’ll say stuff like, “Your eyes look great, now you just need a little Restylane in your lower mouth,” she relays on one of the videos.
She says even Stephanopoulos got carried away. Instead of just complimenting her, he said: ”Just blonder and a better haircut, and you’re good to go!”
“I’m not asking for what else to do,” she says. “My feeling is I’m done. The bags under my eyes — it was my Moby Dick, and I’ve killed the whale.”
Ali Wentworth, comedian, actress, author and wife of ”Good Morning America” host George Stephanopoulos, recently blogged about her plastic surgery to remove hoods and bags around her eyes.
Here is Ali – three weeks after under eye surgery…
Watch the video she made about her blepharoplasty.
47-year old Ali Wentworth, comedian, actress, author and wife of ”Good Morning America” host George Stephanopoulos reportedly began talking about her plastic surgery before she even went under the knife for a blepharoplasty to help with her baggy eyelids, according to the OCRegister.
Ali does look much more refreshed, indicating a good result. Despite getting suggestions for new procedures from everyone from fans to her hubby, Ali says she is done with cosmetic surgery for now.
“I’m not asking for what else to do,” she says. “My feeling is I’m done. The bags under my eyes it was my Moby Dick, and I’ve killed the whale.”
Whether or not she decides to have a little Restylane injected into her lips or not, Ali looks great and that’s no joke.
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