The Livy Method Podcast - Crepey Skin, GLP-1s, and What Your Doctor Isn't Telling You
Episode Date: June 30, 2026Dr. Sean Rice is back, and this time he's talking skin. As a plastic surgeon and one of Canada's leading voices in cosmetic medicine, Dr. Sean breaks down what's actually happening to your skin when y...ou lose weight and why waiting until after you hit your goal could mean playing catch-up on damage that was totally preventable. He gets into the GLP-1 and crepey skin connection most doctors aren't talking about, the real difference between fillers and biostimulants (and why it matters for Ozempic face), what Korean skincare is actually worth buying, and the emerging treatments that could change everything. From exosomes for hair growth to enzymes that are rewriting the cellulite conversation, this one has it all. Plus: red light therapy, snail mucin, salmon sperm cream, and an honest breakdown of what's worth your money and what isn't.Where to Find Dr. Sean Rice:Website: https://www.doctorseanrice.com/Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/doctorseanrice/This episode aligns with Day 72 of our Spring 2026 weight loss program. You can find the full video hosted at: www.facebook.com/groups/livymethodspring2026To learn more about The Livy Method, visit livymethod.com. Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.
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I'm going to be honest with you, this podcast is unapologetically a hot mess because that is what midlife feels like sometimes.
Why, though? And how do we make it better? Do we all just need facelifts and g-lp-1s? I mean, let's talk about it.
No bullshit, no wellness wankery here because we're trying to make real change and change is hard. But we're in this together.
Welcome to the Living Method podcast.
I talk a lot about living lighter and I'm not just talking weight loss. I'm talking about
the weight that we carry, that has nothing to do with the size of our bodies. And so many women,
I know, especially in midlife, are looking to pivot. They are looking to design the life that they
know they are meant to live. And so I went and wrote a book about it. It's called LiveLiter.
And starting on June 28th to July 5th, Indigo is going to add it to its most anticipated Canadian
titles. And you can pick it up for 30% off. It doesn't actually hit the shelves until September 8th.
then when it does look out.
Because I want this book to not only be a gift to you
or a book that you gift to someone else in your life,
I want it to be a whole movement
because I don't know about you, but I'm ready to change.
And everything in this book is everything that I've learned
from helping hundreds of thousands of women make change, including myself.
So if you want to pick up your copy and pre-order it today,
go to indigo.com.
Dr. Sean Rice is back and we are talking skin.
It's that time in the program.
You always come on at the end.
Of course, this is where we have the comment.
conversation, people are losing weight, they're worried about their skin. What can we do about it? Hi, how are you?
Good, and you? Good. I'm in like, I'm in P-E-I. Nice. Yeah. Yeah, and I haven't washed my hair for days and I
slept in, but I'm here for you. Hi. Oh, that's okay. I'm starting to have no hair, so it doesn't
really matter if I wash it or not. Hey, is there anything we can do for our hair that's related to
our skin? Yes, I just gave a big webinar on that recently.
And the quite interesting thing is, you know, my brother is pretty well bald.
And I've got a half decent set of hair.
And last summer, you know, like, I'm always doing stupid things.
It's playing with my German Shepherd and I was out at the cottage and trying to light my
burr barrel.
And, you know, I'm not paying attention.
Anyways, I threw a match on the burn barrel and took off half my head and took a big chunk of hair out like that.
So I've been putting exosomes on it.
And I've been.
using a couple of new products, a carano factor we have for hair growth.
And it literally grew everything back.
It's crazy how well it actually worked.
The exosomes kind of took my hair back to the original color.
And like I was when I was 20 again.
And then I had a patch of black sitting here and gray everywhere else.
But they really work.
So there are lots of things on the market now for hair loss, men and women.
Okay.
What are exosomes?
I getting that in a bottle? Am I dropping it on? Am I like, how did you use that? Yeah, exosomes are kind of
all the rage for a while now. So I'm one of the Canadian KOLs. I'm the guy that teaches all the
other doctors in Canada about the exosomes. So exosomes are really are really the signaler of stem
cells, right? So you think of something, you get an injury, you cut yourself, doesn't matter
whatever happens. You know, you got to think, how does the body know to get, you know, that cell from
way over there to come way over here and help me repair everything.
And the exosomes are what do it.
They're like a signaler.
So the stem cell shoots out these exosomes.
So we use a company called ExcoBio.
They're the biggest company in the world for exosomes.
They're based out of Korea.
And they have a group of people.
They liposuction them every so often because that's where you get all the exosones from
your fat.
And then they take the exosomes out of the fat and then basically get rid of all the
the DNA stuff that makes it you.
and just makes it a generic exosome, and then we apply them topically, and they work amazing.
Huh, because you would never think of going to, like, a plastic surgeon for hair growth.
You would just think, oh, I got to go to, like, my, I don't know, a dermatologist or something.
Right.
Or my doctor is going to give me a monoxidil or whatever it's called.
Yeah, exactly.
So I think with hair, you know, hair is one of those things where you need so many variables to it.
You can't just do one thing and forget about it.
But we certainly do a lot of a microneedling and stuff around the hair.
Just the micrneedling gets down to the level of the hair follicle helps to stimulate it.
It's quite a quite an interesting thing, hair growth.
What do you think about those red light therapies?
We're just talking to Dr. Paul about this because like vitamin D obviously is the OG red light therapy.
But like what do you think about people putting the red light therapy on their hair, on their face?
Are you a big believer in that or no?
You know, I'll tell you, and all honestly, I thought they were a crock, right?
I'm like, red light, like, really?
So I was given a talk in, I don't know, someplace in the States.
And I have a very good friend of mine.
He's actually Canadian moved down to the States.
He's a naturopath.
And we were talking about red lights.
And I'm like, oh, they're crock.
And he's like, no, seriously.
And he's like much smarter intelligent than I am.
And he's like, seriously, read the papers.
And so I'm like, okay, I read the papers.
Now, and I totally, I don't have one.
I'm totally convinced that they work if they're on the right wave leg and you've got a half decent light.
I actually talked to a patient the other day who sleeps in a red light blanket.
I'm like, how the hell do you sleep?
Like red lights just glowing everywhere.
Yeah.
Well, I put a mask over my face and I don't see anything.
So I don't know.
I don't know about sleeping in a red light, but certainly for other things, it seems to work quite well.
What's one thing that you're hearing about people talk about that's just not worth anyone's money or time?
Oh, God.
You know, I think people, I think people get caught up in a lot of these little nuances now.
Like me as a plastic surgeon, the latest thing has been the deep plane facelift.
You know, you hear everywhere, oh my God, deep plane, deep plane, deep plane, deep plane, deep plane's been around 100 years.
There's nothing new to them, right?
but you know i think you before you start doing very complicated things like deep playing facelifts
make sure you know exactly who's doing it somebody has been doing it a long period of time because
you're you're really going you're really pushing the envelope of a lot of things including safety
and you could run you could run into some serious problems yeah because that i mean the the the
kardashians or whatever like all of a sudden it was like
facelifts were trending.
And so I asked, I asked Dr. Sean about it.
And he's like, oh, we've been doing, I'm like, can you do this kind of face?
He's like, oh, we've been doing that for 25 years.
What do you think it had this?
Is it just like, do, do like procedures trend?
Yes, 100% they trend.
The cat eye, you remember when the cat eye was really big.
I can't remember some movie star or whatever.
I star this cat eye.
And so many young girls, like in their 20s,
coming to me with cat eyes and and you know I've got two daughters you know my daughters and I'm thinking geez
do I want my daughters to have cat eyes in their 20s and when they're 30 they're going to go oh my god I look
like an idiot now right yeah like I don't get the whole trend where people like I get the whole trend of
trying to stay you know I'm in my 60s now and I try to stay you know look half decent you know I understand
that but this thing about wanting to look you know I want to look like my neighbor as opposed
of looking like me, I don't get that.
Honestly, that blows my mind.
Yeah, that's not your thing.
You mentioned Korea.
What do you think about all the Korean skincare products?
Yes.
Why are we hearing of these?
And are they any different than what we can get here?
Yeah, I think the interesting thing of, and don't take this the wrong way, we, you know,
in our country, we can't bring stuff in.
We can't, you know, somebody has to regulate everything, right?
Korea is kind of a Korea is very much a well the whole orient is kind of it's very much like you're an
adult you make your own decision you you know if you make a bad decision you make a bad decision
you have to and a lot of places like where one of the very only countries in the world where
they allow nurses to inject and like nurse injectors doing your lips your cheeks and stuff
most places in the world is only the physician and only a physician that's actually been
trained on how to inject is allowed to inject.
right? So therefore, I think they can also push the limit a little bit farther of what they can do for research and stuff.
You know, the big thing that I bought a whole bunch of these when I was in Korea was snail serum.
Yeah, the masks.
Yes, yes. And so it's funny. I was walking through, I can't remember the name in the market, the big market they had there.
And half the stores are all skincare. And so I walked inside there. And of course, I was given a talk or a thing.
and I'm in my stupid suit with my name and everything on it.
And a whole bunch of us were walking through the market to get back to the hotel.
So anyways, I stopped in, this lady put the stuff in its serum, serum excrement, or from a snail, right?
Snail musin or something.
Yeah.
So they put it all on your eye.
It actually really worked.
It went away in 20, 30 minutes.
But it totally worked.
And that was kind of all the big rage while I was there.
Yeah, the snail skin mask.
So those are worth our money?
Yeah, I don't, you know, they were, I don't think they're going to make you look, you know, younger.
They're not regenerative, let's call it.
But certainly, hey, listen, if you're, if you're hungover and you're going out tonight and you want to get some, you know, some moisture to your face, let's call.
I think they're perfect.
I don't see why not.
What about, I got this, I got this Korean salmon sperm cream.
What about salmon sperm?
Yeah.
Yeah.
So, so the big Canadian manufacturer here is pretty.
Linium and they make a product called Vamp, right?
And that's basically it's, it's, it's a PDRN.
It's based on, it's based on salmon sperm, basically, right?
So basically it's a very complicated thing, but salmon sperm very much mimics human DNA.
So really they call it vamp.
I'm going to get it completely wrong, but it's vitamins, a whole bunch of things, the acronym
comes down to VAMP.
And what you do is you're not, you can't inject it in Canada.
It has to be topically.
So you have a micro needle or something and then put it on over top.
But it really works.
It's a really interesting product, a really good product.
It's not going to give you like big lips, big cheeks, but it's going to give you a real
revitalization to your skin.
Oh, okay.
What about what about creepy skin?
Because all the questions today, most of them are on creepy skin.
Yes.
Why are we starting?
Because, you know, sometimes I look down in my arms and I'm like, oh my gosh, what is that?
Like, what is that?
Why do we get creepy skin?
and can we put salmon sperm on it or snail mucin?
What can we do to fix it?
Yeah, so creepy skin is, you know, creepy skin is completely multifactorial.
There's a thousand different products for creepy skin.
But basically, creepy, I'm starting to see lots and lots of creepy skin on younger people
that are taking gLP ones because they are, they,
GLP ones can affect what's called the DWAT, the dermal white adipose tissue.
So if you think of your hair follicle, here's your air follicle sitting at mid-level
of your skin. It's got a big bulb sitting up about here on the bottom of it and then everything
kind of grows up out. So what happens is the dewater, the deep white adipose tissue sits around
that hair bulb and kind of protects it and supplies it with a bit of energy. And it helps to,
so your hair follicle releases a sebum that sort of keeps your skin moist and stuff. So what happens
with the gLP ones is you're losing that white adipose tissue. Your hair follicle doesn't have
enough protection around it. It's not putting out enough sebum and therefore you're not getting the
natural moisturizer to your skin and your skin starts to dry out and get creepy. And that's also
why you start losing your hair as GLP1 patients, right? So there's lots of things you can put on.
The vamp works amazing for that, right? The PRN, the salmon sperm works really well for that.
Okay. Some half decent moisturizers work really well. The brand new one, we just, we just, we just,
just did the launch here in my office about two weeks ago for a PB serum. So that's really,
that's just come to Canada. It's sort of redone, it's relaunch in the states. I think that's
going to be the wave of the future, you know, five years down the road. It's a PB serum is enzymes.
So they take some bacteria and they're able to grow enzymes and the bacteria and their human
recombinant enzymes, identical to the enzymes that you have in your huge.
human body and then you can apply them topically. So we've used them for rejuvenating the skin.
We've used it for. I had a whole bunch of people that were liposuctioned overseas.
You know, everybody wants to go to Columbia. Everybody wants to go to Turkey. It's a quarter of the
price. And they get all screwed up and then they come home and they want O'HIP and Health Canada and
everybody to cover it, right? And so I get so many of these people that their skin is literally
stuck to their muscle because they've liposuction every dropout. And these.
enzymes you can apply on top of the skin. And what the enzyme does is reverses the action of what caused
it to create. So let's say you've got a bunch of fat floating in your system and these your enzymes
pull all the fat together and that's what creates, you know, your love handles and everything, right?
Yeah. So by using these reverse enzymes, it breaks the fat back into free fatty acids and your body
just use it as an energy source, right? And for your skin, it just gets rid of all the dead
collagen underneath your skin and allows you, brings you back like a baby's bottom and allows
your skin to regenerate itself. It's a, it's a completely fascinating. There's only like four or five
of us now that are that are using them in Canada. I use it cellulite. Oh my God. It's like the
be all and end all for cellulite these days. I've been a trainer for cellulite products for 25, 30 years.
This is the be-all and end-all, I think, for cellulate treatments.
Okay, wait.
Are we injecting this?
Are we drinking it?
Now, in Canada, you're not allowed to inject it, right?
I can inject it as an off-label service.
Only physicians can actually inject it, but it's a very complicated thing.
But it's topical.
So I have a new machine from Korea.
It's called the Synergette.
They sent it to me to try out.
to see if they want to sell it here in North America.
It's high-pressured water system that works with a plasma machine.
It's quite fascinating.
And what it does is it sends an electrical current through your skin,
causes the channels to, like an MRI machine,
causes everything to line up.
So it shows up on your MRI.
It causes your skin all the channels to line up.
So the product can actually go through your skin.
These are for cancer delivery and stuff for people that can't take pills.
So the, so the product goes.
goes to your skin down to where you want to utilize it.
Do you think that's ever going to be mainstream
or we're going to be able to get creams,
like I don't know,
at shopers, drugmiter, wherever that's going to actually help
with our creepy skin?
And how far away are we from that?
And to be affordable and accessible for everybody.
Yeah, I think a lot of times, I mean,
affordable is kind of like the question of the day, right?
What is affordable and what is affordable?
But honestly, what I've found is we use the two best skin,
skincare. Well, we use three skin
lines here. We use for our
general purpose stuff is skin better.
I think that's an excellent
skincare line that gets a very interesting
products. The ones that we use for the body,
like that really work well for creepiness
are Alastin and Epicutus. I use
a lot of Epicutus. They're not
cheap. You know, they're a physician only
brand, but they are
really have
technology with inside them. A lot of
those other ones are just, you know,
everybody buys from Alibaba manufacturing and make up your cream and sell it, right?
But the other ones are actually very good medical grade sort of stuff.
Yeah, I'm going to need to get a list from you of like what is worth like buying.
Because I get that question all the time.
There's so many products out there and there's so many claims that people can make about their products.
And we're spending money.
We're not afraid to spend the money on good stuff.
But if we don't know what the good stuff is and it's whoever has the good stuff,
it's not, no, it's not necessarily about the fancy marketing because you can have a product and
amazing marketing. It doesn't mean that it's working for you. Right. And in general, in Canada,
you can't make a claim about a product unless you have applied for that to Health Canada. You've applied for
that claim, right? So you can't say my product does X without proving to Health Canada that it does X.
So a lot of them are what they call it cosmaceuticals and they're non-regulated.
So you can basically, you know, you and I can make our own cosmaceutical and sell it and it'd be fine.
Okay, let's do that. Let's make our own.
Perfect.
Right.
Yeah, let's make our own.
Someone's asking about vulva, vulvline, sederma.
Volvoid.
Volvoid.
V-O-L-U-F-I-N-E.
Suderma, have you heard of that?
No. No, it doesn't ring a bell off the top of my head, no.
Okay. Let's talk now about, okay, so that is creepy skin.
But I want to go back to talk about, you're talking about younger people who are taking
GLP1's weight loss medications. What about people in general taking weight loss
medications? Because we have quite a few doing the program. The Libby Method is a great
compliment to taking them. Lifestyle changes. They're drinking their water. They're getting
their protein in. They're being healthy.
They're going, they're not just starving and depriving themselves.
They're going about losing weight in the healthiest of ways.
What do they need to know about their skin?
Is there something that they can do while they're losing weight?
And is this just people on GLP 1 or is this everyone listening right now?
Like what do they, what do people on GLP 1s need to know?
Let's start with that.
I think GLP 1s people need to know, oh my God, there's so many things.
And it's interesting.
The more I read about it, the more you start to learn and the more you, I think what people, people on GLP 1 is what they should do,
is they should take a preventative action and realize that I think we do in the medical field,
we certainly realize that GLP-1s can have a direct effect on your skin,
and either a direct or an indirect effect on your skin.
And I think the general population doesn't know that, right?
So I think what you need to do is if you're going to start GLP-1s,
you should take a proactive steps in order to protect your skin.
So let's say your face, like, you know, we hear about OZepic face or you hear about OZemic
butt, let's call it, right?
Yeah.
So I think if you're going to start GLP-1s, you should seriously take into consideration
something to protect your skin.
So get some very good moisturizer.
You know, we talked about Alastan, the Epicutus, the skin betters.
And you should seriously consider biostimulants.
And I really do believe that that calcium mitroxy amitone, or otherwise known as radius,
is really an excellent protective mechanism you can use on your skin.
So when you put a filler in your skin, you see people, they put juviderm or whatever,
hyluronic acid, right?
Hylaronic acid is a filler.
So it's like putting a golf ball underneath your skin.
It's just pushing it out, right?
And that's how that works.
Whereas the biostimulants actually like radiance in particular actually attaches to your skin
and causes what we call the extracellular matrix are the building blocks of your skin
to reorganize itself.
Okay, so I get filler, say, up here, and it kind of puffs it out, so it pulls my jowls up.
That's what it's doing.
It's pulling my jails up.
If I get the radius, it's going under my skin as like some of you're pregnant with a needle.
Yeah, it's going under your skin.
So your skin has all these little layers to it, right?
What we call the extra cellular matrix.
Think of an apartment building with a billion little apartments inside of it.
And what happens is, as we age, some of the walls of the apartments of the apartment.
apartment start to fall apart and everything starts to kind of crumble, right? Yeah. So what you're doing
with something like radius, which is calcium mitochondriotite, it's going directly and think of it as
repairing that wall. So when you repair the wall to the apartment, it rebuilds the apartment and you get a
nice sound structure, right? Whereas fillers, the apartment's still falling apart, but you're just propping it up.
If that makes sense, right? And then when the filler goes, the apartment's still falling apart. Whereas
bio-stimulates are rebuilding the apartment.
Okay, so that's like something going under my skin that's helping to rebuild whatever I got going out there.
So because I think a lot of people when they're thinking about JLP ones, because we hear Ozempic phase,
but we assume it's because they've just lost too much weight.
And then maybe when they gain the weight back, that'll puff them back up again.
Or people think about, I'll worry about that later when in reality it's something that they should be worrying about, not worrying about, but doing something about now.
Yes, I think you should definitely, there's a, there's a few sort of famous studies that have come out over the years.
You know, there's an old Botox study where two, I believe there were two twins or two sisters,
one taking neurotoxin, one not taking, and then 10 years down the road, they kind of look like mother or daughter as opposed to sisters, right?
And I think that the GLP ones, you need something to, using something like Radius is a very protective.
So there's a kind of a sideline to the study of a group of people that were taking GLP ones.
And they started looking at their skin and everything incidentally after the study.
And there was a couple of in there that were sisters.
And one sister was taking using Radies as a like the biostimulants to presently.
protect their skin. And again, they kind of look like mother-daughter five years down the road.
So you really need something to really protect that skin. What would be the cost of a radius treatment?
You're looking at about, I mean, I think I'm, and I know people are going to say I call bullshit on that,
but I really don't know the cost of half the stuff I have here, but I think it's, I think it's
about a thousand bucks a syringe. Okay. And how long would it, like, how often am I
doing the radius. So radius, so the two really big bodice statements on the market are radius and
sculpture, right? So sculpture is polyallactic acid. Radius is calcium hydroxy appetite. I'm the only
Canadian on the international advisory board for sculpture. I helped them design their sculptor buttock
protocol. So I've got 20 years of training 20,000 people across the world on sculpture. And now I do a lot
to work with Radies, so I'm one of their international trainers for Radies as well.
But basically, if you start those ahead of time, you're kind of creating the building blocks
and you don't see that degradation as time goes by.
So do I need a couple times a year or once a year?
Yeah, sculpture, you generally need about three times, three treatments, and then you kind of get
to the spot that you're at and you do one treatment every six months or so.
Radius is like one treatment a year.
year, maybe two treatments a year. We use it a lot in combination with the energy devices now,
like softwave or microneedling, because when you put those biosimilance together with an energy
device that creates the heat, the heat helps that contract the skin, they actually complement
each other and they work really well. Okay. I mean, yeah, I mean, it sounds expensive,
but also if you're being preventative and the money that you're going to spend later on on
your skin, and some people are buying skincare that definitely isn't cheap.
end of the day. I want to talk about when people lose weight, belly, skin, you know, because people
are losing, they're being really successful in reaching their weight loss goals. And that's amazing.
They're doing it a healthy way, except they are left with this loose skin, probably from other diets
they've done in the past because when you lose and you gain and you lose the gain, I'm assuming it affects
elasticity. What can be done there?
So I think if you're going to start losing weight, you should start looking at moisturizers for your
skin, like some hapte, some moisturizer. You want to lose weight. You know, we talked about this
lots of times. You want to lose it gradually as opposed to losing it like, oh my God, I just lost 30 pounds
or 40 pounds over night, can I think? Because once you get those stretch marks, you know,
from putting on a lot of weight, losing some weight, the stretch marks are very, very hard to
correct. These new PB enzymes, the PB serum enzymes are actually quite fascinating about stretch marks
and stuff like that.
So I think you should, you need to take care of yourself, make sure that you're healthy,
lose weight at a slow rate, use some good moisturizer.
I have used a lot of radius in combination with energy devices around the abdomen or
soft wave to really help with the wrinkly skin around the abdomen.
And even after people have lost weight, and that seems to work quite well as well.
okay well i'm just for the sake of time i know we got to get going soon but i'm just going to get people a heads up so
sean and i are going to do a podcast we're going to like a series where we're going to talk more in depth about
all of these things we're going to air it throughout our summer program and then the fall we're going to
look much more in depth into these things so we're going to be giving you much more information on
the things that you can actually do to be proactive or help after the fact what's something sean
that is like really cool um that's
up and coming.
Really cool up and coming.
Well, I think the,
definitely the PB enzymes,
I think are going to completely revolutionize a lot of stuff we do.
I think regenerative medicine has become a very big topic these days,
kind of like on the verge of replacing fillers.
I think those are the two,
regenerative medicine in itself is quite fascinating,
but a very, very, very complicated topics, right?
It's not easy to, you know, come up with these enzymes and reverse stuff and create this and that.
But I think those are going to be kind of the wave of the future.
It's funny because everything goes through these waves, right?
You know, the cat eye, the deep plane facelift now, right?
So I think that to me, the enzymes are quite interesting.
Well, because I was fascinated because for years, having four kids, right?
Like, my boobs are just, like, down to my knees.
And I was like, I'm going to get a boob lift or I'm going to, like, get implants or something.
I decided not on implants.
And I'm at a place now.
I don't know that I even care anymore.
But then you came up with the liquid butt lift and the liquid boobloft.
Yes, the liquid breast list.
Yeah.
Which I think is really interesting because that's come a long way.
It's taken off crazy.
Like, I've been doing it about maybe six or seven years now.
And I, maybe 15 years ago, I'll tell you just very quickly how I got started into it.
Maybe about 15 years ago, I did a group of women that came from China for breast augmentation surgery.
And they had hytheronic acid.
I'm not the first one to use hytheronic acid in the breast, but I think I'm one of the very first to use it in a surgical way.
Right.
So, and they had hytheronic acid and I thought this is quite interesting.
And now that there was a very good product, I used irrevenom.
and eggs of the product.
I put it underneath,
just like you're doing a breast implant.
I just had a couple of people came in yesterday to have their breast done.
So,
you know,
it's 20 minutes.
You get a breast augmentation last year,
one to two years.
And you go about life.
And then you come back in an ear and you put a couple of extra syringes of filler in there.
And you go,
I do a lot of,
I do a lot of,
I do a lot of,
I do a lot of vagina.
I do a lot of buttock,
obviously.
I do a lot of breasts.
a lot of face, hands, like, you name it.
Yeah, well, hands, hands too, right?
We want our hands to look in.
What's the right age?
Is it an age thing?
Like, should I just keep putting all this off because something better is coming down the pipeline?
No.
It's better to do something earlier rather than later?
Yeah, I think if you're going to do something early, you should look at the biostimulants
because they really, like, think of the biostimulants is if I can start, if I start a biostimulant
in my 20s.
Just pick a number, it doesn't matter, or 30.
If I can thicken my skin by 10% by the time I'm 60,
then I'm going to look much better than I would at 60.
You know what I mean?
So it's that typical I need to sort of bank my good looks for later on down the road.
Okay.
I have a couple questions for you.
Someone asked about they've been on a GLP1 for a year.
Is it too late to start Radies?
No.
Okay.
No.
Start radius or sculpture.
but I would start it sooner than later.
Okay.
What would you consider a half decent moisturizer?
A half decent moisture?
I would, you know, honestly, skin better skin suiticles are very, very good lines that you can buy that are fairly reasonably priced.
Okay.
What about bat wings?
I know that's a whole other conversation, but.
Yeah.
We've been, I've been using the enzymes actually on some bat wings.
that have been working very, very well.
Liposuction, we do lots of liposuction on the bat wings.
If you have really big back wings, then you need surgery to cut them out.
It's called a brachoplasty.
Okay.
What about like your whole body skin?
Like you can't be, like, are we putting this moisturizers all over our bodies?
What are we doing there?
Yeah.
Yeah.
Yeah.
Yeah.
And we just moisturize it for sure.
Okay.
Amazing.
So if people want to reach out to you, where do they find you?
So I'm just in the middle of redoing the website.
So I would say ricecosmeticsurgery.com is probably the easiest one.
Hopefully that'll be done in the next few weeks.
Okay.
Well, we'll let people know where to find you.
Given that it's summer, Sean, of course we have to have the sunscreen conversation.
Do you have a favorite, like, that you're like, go by this one because you want to save your skin.
This is the ultimate?
Yeah.
I have very pale, very sort of sensitive Irish skin.
You know, I turn varying shades of red.
I don't think I've ever had a tan in my life, right?
I go from pink to like apple be red, right?
Even when I was a pilot years ago, the guys I fly with, they come up to my cottage.
You know, 40 years later, we still get together every summer, like the 10 of us.
And they still call me Pink Boy from, you know, 40 years ago.
So, yeah, you need.
My skin's very sensitive, so there's a lot of the sprays I can't use.
I tend to, and I'm not, I'm not a fan on the tinted sunscreens personally.
I like, what's the one I use all time?
Oh my God, it was designed by a Calgary High School Chemistry teacher.
Probably made billions of dollars out of it now.
Oh my God, it'll come to me in the middle of the night.
Well, then said, just text me.
or something.
Well, it's like a mainstream one, though.
Yeah, yeah, it's a mainstream one.
And everybody can get it.
And I use it all time.
It works great.
Okay, do you care?
It doesn't matter.
Is there any that we shouldn't get?
Any that we shouldn't get?
You have to remember that your skin is the biggest organ in your body.
Right?
And to me, like, I just had this discussion to somebody on the weekend.
We were sitting by the campfire.
And the mosquitoes were coming out.
And they're like, hey, just take that, you know, that spray and spray it all over.
I'm like, I don't know if I want to spray chemicals all over my body, right?
Everything's going to seek through my skin.
So to me, you just got to get a half decent one that's not full of a bunch of chemicals.
That's not going to cause your skin to react to it.
Okay.
And the same thing I guess with skincare.
Like if you're using a skincare product and you feel like it's working for you,
then there's probably no harm in.
Go for it.
Yeah.
Okay.
I can talk to you forever.
Someone's like, Dr.
Rice is so knowledgeable and this is so interesting.
Oh, this is like.
like so surface level. Some of our best
conversations happen after we go
off live and we go in the back
and we talk about some really fun stuff. So we're going to put together
a series for you, a podcast series
for you that we're going to roll out throughout this summer. So if there's
anything in particular, you want to talk more about,
added in the comments below. Thanks for everyone joining us
live or if you're listening or watching after the fact
we appreciate you. You can follow
Dr. Sean Rice over on
Instagram at Dr. Sean
Rice. You can also head
over to his website once it's done and ready
go.
Dr.
Sean Race.com.
You can also call,
reach out.
He's got a beautiful space
where you can go and meet him
and talk to him
if you're interested
in any of the procedures.
But he's going back.
Sean,
thank you.
I love you.
No problem.
Happy Canada day tomorrow.
Are you going to the cottage
tomorrow?
You must be, eh?
No, I got a couple
of surgeries to do.
I'm going to head up on
Thursday or something, I think.
Okay.
Well, happy Canada day.
Anyway, thank you so much.
Love you.
All the best.
Have a great time, P-E-I.
Yeah, it's gorgeous.
I can't wait.
Bring me all some muscles.
I will bring muscles because oysters, I can't, I'm trying to open them.
I got to figure that out.
Oh, no.
Muscles, that's the route to go.
I did, actually.
We're having some today.
I heard the muscles are amazing.
Everyone talks about the oysters, but they're like, no, the muscles.
We're actually having muscles today later today.
Apparently they're incredible, yeah.
Okay, bye.
Thanks, everyone.
Have a great day.
Take it easy.
