The Livy Method Podcast - Guest Expert Live with Dr. Sean Rice - Winter 2026, Day 73
Episode Date: March 18, 2026In this episode, Gina sits down with renowned plastic and cosmetic surgeon Dr. Sean Rice to unpack the growing conversation around weight loss, skin changes, and the rise of GLP-1 medications, bringin...g real clarity to what people are experiencing and why. From loose skin and cosmetic procedures to the pressure of trending aesthetics, the conversation keeps it honest, grounded, and focused on making informed choices that support long-term health. It’s a refreshing reminder that quick fixes and chasing perfection often miss the bigger picture, and that understanding your body, your goals, and your options is where real confidence starts.If you are in the Winter 2026 group, you can check out the full video here:www.facebook.com/groups/livymethodwinter2026Find Dr. Rice:Instagram: @doctorseanriceTo 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 Gina Livy and welcome to the Livy Method podcast.
This is where you'll have access to all of the live streams for my 91 day weight loss program.
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We build and build and build.
Loose skin, crepey skin, cellulite, stress marks, thinning, aging skin, dark spots,
skin tags, facelifts, neck lifts.
This is what we're going to discuss today with my...
All in two minutes.
My good friend and renowned plastic and cosmetic surgeon, Dr. Sean Rice, hello.
How are you? How are you doing?
Good. We got 30 minutes.
Perfect. Lots of time. We can go through everything.
You know, there's so I do want to talk, you know, last time we talked,
we talked about what's happening with GLP ones and weight loss and skin and all of that.
Are you saying more people walk into your office now?
Yes. Yes. Yes. Lots.
more. Lots of people trying GLP1s really, a lot of people really not understanding how they work or
why they work or why they're even using them. They're just using them for kind of weight loss.
Yeah. So I see it all the time now. Yeah. And how does it affect, let's go right there.
How does it affect skin? Because this is something I think, you know, maybe the regular GP or doctor
who's prescribing may not be aware of how, I mean, obviously you lose weight. It's going to affect
your skin. But it's a bit of a different thing with GLP ones. Yeah? Totally. Yeah. You know,
just gave a webinar for one of the companies that make fillers to help for GLP1s.
And the interesting thing was there were a lot of questions.
It was a doctor webinar.
There were a lot of questions from the doctors that what do I do for my patients that come
in for a say like a tummy tuck, a breastlift or something unrelated that are on GLP1s.
And we see it all the time now.
You know, you get a tummy tuck done and you look awesome.
And then you continue on with your GLP ones.
And six months later, it looks like you never had a.
tummy tuck, your skin's all dragging again. Same thing with facelifts. So there's a lot of effects
of GLP ones on the skin these days. Speaking of facelifts, are more people getting them? Or is it just
that we're seeing it because we have social media? Great question. I think it's a bit of a combination
of the two. I think people are getting this, you know, we won't mention the family that seems
to get everything done, but a lot of people are sort of following that.
trend? I don't know. I don't necessarily
personally agree with that trend. I saw,
you know, we talk about these deep playing faces.
We talk about this face with that face. None of these are
really new. They've all been around for a longer time.
But they're getting super, super aggressive.
And the complication rate is getting very high from them too.
Because, you know, you're playing in Tiger Lane with some of these big,
deep down sort of facelifts.
Yeah, that ponytail one, you were saying.
That's been around.
Yeah.
Yeah.
And the cat eye look too is becoming quite popular, right?
Everybody wants this fox eye or a cat eye look or, you know, I don't know.
My personal opinion, I know it's kind of not, but the topic.
But I saw this one recently, a friend of mine, I'm on this chat group with a bunch of surgeons,
plastic surgeons, all around the world.
And somebody sent me this one from Turkey.
And I sort of looked like a completely different person.
It was like, you know, back in the 60s when you took some criminal and changed their
face to, you know, so they weren't going to get caught. And I'm like, to me, that's, I don't know.
I don't know if I necessarily personally agree with that or not. I think if you're going to
have something done, you need to look like you. Younger refreshed, but I don't think you want to
look like the neighbor down the road kind of thing. For a while there, women were getting all the
Botox and the injectables. Everyone looked the same. Yes. It's like everyone had the same look.
Yeah, that deer in the headlight, like, I don't move kind of thing. You know, I know, I
do a lot of people like in your position on TV and stuff.
And I use a technique for my Botox.
There was a guy, Waf,
I believe it was Wafel's movies in Thailand who designed this technique where rather
than putting Botox into the muscle,
you put it directly into the skin,
like little little tiny bits into the skin.
So you can still move your eyebrows,
but you don't get the wrinkling.
So for people that are on,
you know, TV and stuff all the time,
that's a common sort of technique I use for that.
You don't get that deer in the headlight look.
Yes, yes, where it's like this and then your lips are all.
Right, nothing moves.
Right.
Like that.
Are you doing LIPO anymore or is everyone just doing TIPOs?
Yeah, no, do lots of liposuction.
Liposuction has had a big comeback, I think, recently.
You know, I work for a company across the street from my office, AirSculpt,
and we do a lot of, that's all we do there is liposuction.
I help them set up their Canadian office here.
So very, very popular.
A lot of people getting liposuction on their different body parts now.
Like we do tons and tons of chins.
I do a lot of calves and ankles and knees and women that can't, you know,
they have a hard time getting those big high boots on that come up to your knees.
Can't get it over thick calves.
So that's become an extremely popular area for liposuction these days.
You know, I've never asked you this before in the last 10, 20 years.
What's changed the most?
Because I know you've been around.
Yeah, I know an old man now.
I'm in my 60s now.
for heaven sakes. I know. What's changed? Like in terms of like maybe people's view on it or like what's
like technology? What's like the biggest change? I think um the biggest change that I see are a lot of
the energy based devices. You know, these devices that supply heat to the skin. The heat causes
the skin to tighten. You know, softwave, all thorough thermoids. There's so many of them out there.
I think that's another one. I think social media has had a big play on plastic
surgery over the last, you know, 20 years.
It's, you know, I'm not, I'm pretty poor at myself of doing social media and it's just
become such a huge part of influencing people, I think. And people, you know, people are more
influenced now by the influencer as by their surgeon, right? You know, people coming in now going,
I saw this thing and I go, yeah, but in four months, nobody's going to want that anymore.
And you don't want something permanent. And then four months go, oh, my God, what did I do?
You know, how do I get rid of that now?
Like I look like a crazy cat and now nobody wants to look like a cat.
People want to look like a dog.
How do I fix that?
So it's crazy.
Okay, I want to talk about obviously we're in the business of weight loss and people are losing
a significant amount of weight with without weight loss medications.
Let's talk about Lou, like maybe let's talk about the difference between, no, let's talk
about loose skin first because, you know, I know we talk about how liposection is not a weight loss thing.
But let's talk about loose skin because that really is an issue for people.
people. Is there something that they can do? Maybe there's a person here who's lost 20, 30 pounds,
but they want to lose a couple hundred. Is there anything that they can do now or should be doing
to help with their skin? Yeah, I think it depends on the mechanism of how you're losing the
weight as well. Everybody seems to be losing it on these GLP ones now. Yeah. And GLP ones have a,
I mean, there's some awesome great results from GLP ones in regards to cardiac health and all this other stuff.
Yeah. But a lot of people are using it strictly.
for weight loss and they don't know sort of the body consequences, let's call that.
So in regards to the skin, there's a lot of effects of GOP ones on the skin.
From dryness of the skin, you know, the skin is such a complex mechanism.
But if you think about like your hair follicles sit in the mid dermis of your skin, around your
skin, around your hair follicles, there's these little sort of cells called de wads, the dermal
white adipose tissue. And that's what keeps your hair follicles moist, which keeps your skin
moist, all the sebum kind of come out there. GLP ones are even affecting that now. So you're getting
dry skin. In the drier, your skin, you lose a little bit of elasticity and you're getting this sort of
sagging of the skin. So the last webinar I did in regards to what can you do to sort of, you know,
prevent this. It seems to be that, you know, a lot of people are using hydroronic acid fillers
and they're kind of like plumping up your skin, you know, underneath your face or whatever.
But they don't really give you any benefit to GLP1s.
So the biostimulants, particularly Radius, seems to be the most common one that really kind of
counter-effects what the effects of the GLP1 on the skin are.
Okay, so that's like a radius.
That's like an injectable.
What is that?
Yeah, Radius has been around for a long time.
The sort of trade name is called Radius, but it's,
It's calcium hydroxy appetite.
And calcium hydroxyaptide.
Think of that dentists have used calcium nitroxy appetite forever.
When you get a dental implant, they use calcium hydroxy appetite to sort of stick your bone implant into there.
And what calcium hydroxy appetite does is it directly affects the skin.
So your skin, think of your skin as a thing called the extracellular matrix.
It's that building blocks that hold everything in place.
Yeah.
Well, the two most common ones on the market for,
rejuvenating your skin or sculptor or polyalactic acid.
Radius is calcium hydroxyapitite.
They work in totally different ways.
Radius causes an inflammatory response.
So underneath your skin creates an inflammatory response.
The body goes, oh my God, there's an injury there and sends in all these cells to repair it.
And then what happens is while they're repairing the injury, it thickens your skin, right?
And that's how sculpture works.
calcium hydroxyapatite, excuse me, works the opposite way.
It directly affects your extra cellar matrix, creates no inflammatory response.
So it directly affects the skin, and then the skin thickens itself by redoing the building blocks that hold it all together.
So if you're thinking GLP1s, there's no research on it right now, but it makes complete sort of sense that you should do something to your skin before you even start GLP1.
So it may be a good idea to even start doing sculpture, you know, so you don't end up with
OZempic face or OZemic butt or all these sort of body parts where the skin starts to fall.
You want to kind of protect your skin, maybe even before you even start the GLP ones.
Can you get that back after you have OZMPIC face?
Can you like get that back just naturally?
Like is that just fat loss in the face or is that that's also muscle loss in the face?
Yeah.
it's fat loss, but not necessarily, you know, we all think of, sorry, we all think of fat underneath the skin,
but you're also losing the little tiny microscopic fat within the skin. So, you know, and then that's just a
compounding effect. You lose the fat around the hair cells. The hair cells don't put out the sebum,
that sort of glands to keep your skin moist. The skin gets dry. The skin gets older. So it's kind of a
never-ending kind of crescendo afterwards. What about losing? What about losing?
skin. And like at what point do we need like a skin, like a skin removal surgery? Like at what point
would someone be a candidate for that? Yeah, kind of the batwing, the brachyoplasty is what we call
that from a surgical point of view. Yeah. Yeah. So I would say if you're, if you're, so we do a lot of
creepy arms, right? A lot of people come in when women and men come in with creepy arms,
creepy sort of jowls. So what we've been doing a lot is we've been using a lot of that
calcium metroxy appetite or the scultra, or sorry, the radius underneath the skin to sort of
thicken the skin. And then we, we have a couple of energy devices. The one that I use a lot is
called softwave. It's a high frequency ultrasound. And so what you're doing is you're kind
of repairing the skin from underneath. And then all those devices, all those energy devices work
on heat. It's the heat at a certain temperature that causes the skin to contract. So by combining the
two, we seem to get the best results of kind of, let's call it, repairing or keeping your skin.
Yeah. So what was it that you showed me when I was at Sean's? My daughter had a piercing. He had to
remove. But I was at Sean's place. Not that I would be opposed to getting stuff down.
Don't get me wrong. But you were showing me photos of crepey skin on the arms, on the legs.
And there's actually something you can do about that. Yeah. So that's what we've been doing.
we start with, you really need to start with a really good
moisturizer on your skin.
That's like the crucial thing, right?
So we use a couple of very good sort of body brands.
We use a lot of Alastin.
We use a lot of Epicutus are the two kind of ones that we use here.
So that on top to help kind of keep the barrier,
moisturizing your skin.
And then we use that combination of radius.
It's an injectable that goes just underneath the skin.
And then that soft wave on top.
And we do that at the same time.
So, you know, you need to do that a couple of times a year.
And that seems to be the best at kind of keeping your skin up and sort of repairing your skin.
Yeah, I just, I want to talk to Celine.
She's like, you're freaking me out about JLP 1.
Now I'm on sex end.
I mean, skin was always an issue with weight loss.
This is why at the living method, you're losing weight in a healthy way.
You're not just starving yourself, right?
You're still eating healthy nutrient rich foods.
You're getting sleep.
You're drinking water.
You're moving your body.
You're doing all of those things.
right? I just want to like not freak anyone out about that.
Okay. So is it covered here in Canada, loose skin?
No. It's not.
No. No, not covered. There's a thing for if you have a loose skin on your abdomen, like a really big, huge amount of loose skin.
You can potentially get what's called a peniculectomy. It's kind of like a, you just sort of cut the strip of skin off.
But the problem with that is like I've literally in the past have had patients come in and they use a walker just to put their abdomen, like the extra skin on the walker and they push the walker.
Even those people didn't get it covered under OHIP.
It's kind of like, well, that's Ontario, let's call it.
But it's kind of sometimes it is sometimes it isn't.
But in generally, removing skin is not covered.
Okay.
I want to talk to those people asking about those creamies that you're talking about.
So they're not cheap.
I know that they run it.
Can Vaseline do the same?
What about Korean skincare products?
Is there anything like, obviously we can go to you, buy these products that can help.
But what do you think about anything?
Yeah, there's, I mean, there's a billion sort of things on the market for skin.
You know, Vaseline, the problem with using something like Vaseline is it works great for some people, but not so great for others.
Because it's very occlusive.
If you got an oily skin, you put Vaseline on, you're going to break out an acne and all that sort of other stuff.
So you need something that is.
And the reason I choose, like, honestly, the reason I use some of the products is I've tried
them on myself.
Like I got pale white Irishman and I got sort of very dry skin in the wintertime.
So and if it works for me, it's going to work for most people.
And really, that's kind of how I do it.
And then the ones that we use are kind of medical grades.
So there's a lot of science behind how they work.
Yeah.
What about beef tallow?
People are using like beef towel.
Oh, you know, it's funny you mention that.
And my wife, I swear, just is like put an order or something in for beef tallow the other day.
I go, we got out of thousands of dollars worth of skincare and you go buy beef tallow.
I don't, I have absolutely zero experience.
But if you give me a couple of months, literally it takes about three months.
If you're going to try something, it doesn't matter, your hair, your skin, all that stuff regrows itself about every three months.
So you've got to give it a good three months.
You can't just put it on once ago that worked or it didn't work.
Yeah, so you're helping the skin, repair, rebuild, regenerate, regiven it.
It does take about three months.
So I noticed this with weight loss clients where they will lose their weight.
And then about three months later, everyone starts saying, oh, my God, you've lost so much more weight.
And they're like, I actually haven't.
It's just that your skin does have an opportunity to regenerate around your frame.
This is why when you lose weight too quickly, you lose a lot in certain areas where you're, it just can't keep up.
Where if you're losing it more in layers in a healthier way, it's much better for your skin.
What about like liver spots, age spots?
What about those bleaching creams?
Is there anything we have we can put on for that?
Yeah, I don't use.
My philosophy is this, and we've known each other forever.
And I've heard my philosophy, I'm not your priest.
I'm just your surgeon.
I don't make moral judgments, but I will make medical judgments.
I'm not big on bleaching creams personally.
My philosophy is this, if I wouldn't tell my kids to do it,
I wouldn't tell you to do it.
If I wouldn't, if I wouldn't do it, I really just don't have a lot of experience with that.
The problem is, how do you control the bleaching?
Like I've seen where you've just destroyed all the pigment and now it looks like you have
Vidaligo and that's very hard to fix kind of a thing, right?
So we use a lot, I do a lot of brown spots and things like that.
We use the newest laser on the market.
We're on sort of the Canadian trainer for the ultra clear laser.
It's the new cold fiber laser.
It's kind of the latest, greatest state of the art lasers.
And we use that a lot for facial resurfacing.
I had my face done for the Health Canada trial a couple of years ago.
And we do a lot of brown pigmentation and stuff like that using that laser in combination
with a few other things as well.
Okay.
What about retinal?
Is that still as big as people like?
Yeah, retinol is very, very good.
There's some really new interesting products.
on the market for in regards to retinal. And I gave my, one of my daughters has some acne on her
face and retinol works pretty good for that. I used her new skin better has a new one out and I'll call it
retinae. It's a sort of a new formulation with it's a combination of retinol along with
hyluronic acid. So the problem with retinol is it's very, very drying on your skin. And for most
people can be really irritating, really drying.
And so what they've done is they've combined retinol along with hylronic acid to keep the
moisture in your skin.
So that's a great product for, we use that for a lot of people.
And you don't get that drying effect on your skin.
Okay.
What about, we should probably talk about cellulite.
Is there anything we can do?
You always tell us how it's, it's the bands, it's just your structure.
It's all of that.
You can do rolling and stuff and it helps, you know, if you have a night out, but it's not permanent.
Is there anything new happening in cellulite that can help us?
Yeah, not too much new in Cellulite.
Cilululid is really a structural issue of the skin, right?
So it's thin skin.
And what happens is there's these bands that hold your skin together, right?
So if you try to move the top part of your hand, it moves freely.
If you move the palm of your hand, it doesn't move, right?
So the palm's got a million of these little bands that hold the skin in place to prevent it from moving.
and the top doesn't.
So what happens is those bands kind of sort of shorten and they trap fat between the band
and the thin skin and that gives you that sort of bumpy appearance and that's what gives you
cellulite.
Men generally don't tend to get cellulate because anatomically their bands generally tend to go on an
angle so they don't pull straight down and give you that sort of celluline.
So we've using a lot of different techniques.
I've been using a lot of the iranias injectables, the calcium,
of my hydroxy appetite with our energy device at the same time, that sort of thickens the skin,
replenishes the skin. It'll help with the cellulite. But really, you know, if you think of cellulites
great on a scale of one to four, four being really bad, one being not so bad. If you're a four,
I say save your money because a four, you're going to go to a three, like you're going to go
one level down with a treatment. A three still looks not so great. A one will never go to a zero.
So if you're a one or a four, see, your cash.
If you're a two or a three, then you get a really good result because a three or two looks much better than a three, let's say.
So those kind of treatments work really well.
Okay.
What about what about stretch marks?
Stretch, yeah.
If I could figure out thing for structs marks, I'd be a billionaire.
Again, we've been using a lot.
There's a ton of things on the market for stretch marks.
None of them work overly well.
I've been trying a lot with the new laser, the new ultra-clear laser,
because it's the only laser in the world that does coring.
So coring is kind of like you may see mechanical coring,
where somebody takes like a little needle,
just pokes a thousand holes into your skin.
And what happens is you turn the skin into,
let's call it Swiss cheese,
and then it tightens itself like that around it.
And that's how you get the tightening.
So the new ultra-clear laser can do it with a laser.
So it just pokes a billion little holes in it.
I even tried it on my, the scar on my arm when I had a plate put in there.
And so the pokes all these little tiny holes, turns the skin into squish cheese,
and then pulls it together.
And that sort of shortens or narrows the stretch mark, but we'll never get rid of it.
Okay.
What about the microneedling thing people are doing at home, poking little holes in their face with their own thing?
Does that help?
Yeah, microneedling, particularly if you're going to put a serum or something on,
you're going to do it home-wise, like a small microneedalase.
So you got a .5 millimeter.
So a .5 millimeter roller you can buy off the shelf somewhere, roll it all over your face,
put your certain syrens on.
That works actually fairly well.
We use Silfirm, which is an energy-based micrannetaling.
So our micromanetal can go down much, much farther, and it's an energy-based.
So not only you're creating the holes, you're also putting energy down deep,
and that's causing the skin to tighten itself.
Okay.
What's worth your money?
Okay, so, all right.
One thing to do for loose skin.
What would it be?
I know everyone's different,
but if you could just pick one thing to do for like loose body skin,
loose body skin.
Yeah, I would say try the stimulants first.
Maybe radius would be the first round.
Okay.
I would say,
and honestly,
I would tell you to do the combo of what we're doing,
the radius and the energy device at the same time.
You need to do that about two to three times a year.
and that will help to keep your skin nice and tight.
There's nothing really permanent other than like a...
No, zero, zero permanent on keeping your face lift.
Doesn't matter.
You get your facelift done.
And eventually it's going to start to sag again.
So nothing's going to keep your skin looking like it was when you're 20.
Okay.
I want to look younger, though.
I go to you.
I know everyone's different.
If you could pick like two things for me to do for my face skin to look younger, what would that be?
Yeah.
So we do a.
a lot of what we call 3D miracle with our ultra-clear laser.
That is a fantastic thing.
You do it about three times a year.
It's not like deep.
There's no downtime.
It's like a facial.
So let's say you're getting a facial done,
but it's a laser facial.
So it's actually getting some really good results from it.
You can do that three times a year.
At zero downtime, you can get it.
I've had it done one scene,
patient.
See a little bit red.
But that's a great thing to do.
And then the other one we're doing a lot of is, again,
that combination of the of the um um energy device device the soft wave with the radius underneath it you do
that twice a year and that's really really good for jowls we're seeing a lot of men come in now like
i i just turned 61 so you're getting a lot of guys in their 60s 50s they still want to work
but they but they're you know they're starting to compete now against the you know the handsome 20 year old
but they don't necessarily want a facelift or something you can get the soft wave done with the radius the
are, I think I showed you some of the results.
Yes.
When you're here, stunning results.
And that works really great.
No downtime. You go back to the gym.
You go to work, you go play hockey.
Nobody would ever know.
Sorry, you had anything done.
Oh, my gosh.
What about red light masks?
I bought one.
Did I waste my money?
You know, I've been,
personally, I've been sitting on the fence about red light forever.
And then I have a very good, sorry,
I have a very good friend of mine in the States.
He's in, he's actually a Canadian moved to Arizona.
he's a physician down there and he's an expert on red light and I sat down and had a long discussion
with him about red light. I'm extremely intrigued about red light now because I really do believe
that there are some benefits to it. I'm just trying to play with do the ones you buy off the shelf
work just as good as the you know the $5,000 ones you get in the medical office. I'm playing with
that right now and I'll let you know when I get an answer from that for sure. Okay. What about
necklifts, can you just do a necklift or do you have to do the whole facelift?
You can. You can do a necklift, but let's say you're doing a full necklace, like you have a big
sort of neck down here. What you need to do is you need to start your incision kind of up here above the
ear and then kind of come around the back of the ear and then the hair line and that allows you to
pull everything up like that. But if you're up here anyways, if you extend it a little bit farther,
you can also pull up the mid face.
So that's become very,
very common now.
And everybody's talking about the deep playing,
you know, the deep plain faceless.
They'll give you a great result,
but they are frot with complications
because you're going way down into Tigerland,
let's call it.
Like you're really,
you have to dissect all the arteries and the nerves
and everything out of the way.
And you're really kind of playing deep down in the face.
What's one thing that we used to do that?
You suggest that we don't do anymore.
That's a great one.
Can't think of anything really off the top of my face or out the top of my head, I should say.
Yeah, I can't think of anything right off the top of my head.
Okay.
Well, there's a bit about conversation having my skincare about how it's so much worth it to get the, like, like I use the ordinary, there's an ordinary brand.
I use their retinol.
I find it works really well for me. It's like 16 bucks.
You know, is it, is it, is there a huge, like, there's such a wide range of products.
Are there affordable ones that are actually good? And how do, how do we find those?
God, we're being bombarded by all these products.
Do I, if I go to you, would you like, here's a $300 cream or you can use whatever?
Yeah. You know, the creams that we have here are really kind of the medical grade creams with some science back behind them.
I mean, I honestly, I couldn't tell you what the price range on them are, but they're not cheap, right?
Some of the ones, like, I think the Epicutus that we use a lot for body, it's probably about 300 bucks, I think, the retail on it.
But it's a, you know, last year, a couple of months.
It's a big, it's a big sort of thing for it.
The problem with using, let's call it cheap off the shelf sort of retinoles is that a lot of people will react to those.
And then with the, you know, the skin better one is really, you know, I have no financial interest in any of those sort of companies.
But the skin better one, their retinae is, I think, really good.
I've tried it.
My skin's very reactive to a lot of things.
And it worked great for me.
And so I think if you're willing to pay a little bit more, I think the results are a little bit more.
But hard to tell you.
Sometimes the cheaper ones work just as well for certain people.
Okay, before we go, I want to talk about the liquid butt lift or boob lift because, listen, y'all, I've been wanting to get four kids, I've been wanting to get my breast boobs, whatever you want to call them, lifted, not lifting because there would be nothing left if I got them lifted.
But I didn't want to do implants.
But now there's like a liquid, like a much better alternative liquid boobs and liquid butt lifts where you can actually just go and get something put in there, yeah?
Yes.
So I designed a couple of techniques.
I designed the, I have the patent for the liquid breast lift and the liquid butt lift.
I designed both of those techniques.
So the liquid breastlift, I've been doing it now for about four or five years.
So what that is, there's, I have a lot.
I've done breast implants for 25 years.
I've done thousands of thousands of breast implants.
But there are a lot of women that just don't want a foreign body, let's say,
are a lot of women that want their breast implants taken out
because they feel they have breast implant illness or something like that.
But they still really want their breast, right?
So I come out with a technique using hyluronic acid.
So the same thing you put in your cheek or your lips, the fillers.
But I worked with the only manufacturer in North America that makes them.
They're based out of here in Canada.
They spent about five years with them designing, helping them design the product and the technique of how to do it.
So I do it.
I'm not the first to do it, but I'm the first to do it as a surgeon would do it, let's say.
So in Europe, they used to just take a needle and stick it all around your breast and fill in your breasts with high the ronic acid.
but that looked terrible and created a lot of problems, right?
Because your breast is not sterile in the inside,
like your milk ducts are open.
So that's why women get mastitis because the breasts are not sterile inside, right?
Yeah.
So I use a small cannula right underneath the breast and I put the product, sorry,
under the breast tissue, just like a breast implant.
So it looks exactly like a breast implant.
You can alter the size.
It takes like 20 minutes.
You're awake.
You go back to the gym.
You go back to work.
and it all settles within about two weeks.
And if you want it a little bit bigger, you just come back a week later, but a little bit more.
And then same thing with the buttock.
So I, you know, I'm the only Canadian on the International Advisory Board for Gelderma for sculpture.
I helped them with their sculpture buttock protocol.
And I've been teaching sculpture injections for 20 years around the world.
And I help them with their sculpture buttock protocol.
But the problem with that is it didn't work well for some people.
and they wanted more volume.
So again, I worked with the other company,
designed the product for the hyderonic acid,
and then we came up with the liquid butt left.
So you can get your ozempic butt.
You can get it all lifted up in a 20-minute session,
and away you go.
I can't.
I love your passion.
I love your passion for this.
He's me off the street.
I got nothing else to think about it at night.
My wife's like, what do you do all night?
Think of boobs and butts all night.
John and I are actually working on a podcast series
because there's so much more to talk about it.
It's actually really quite fascinating.
I can't wait until I go in the machine and I'm just like,
yes, yes, yeah.
I tried one of those, about maybe 10 years ago.
It never really came to the market.
There was a machine that came and the company was like,
hey, we wanted to try it.
And I tried it.
And my anesthetist tried it.
You're really 160 years old.
Yeah, yeah.
you lie in this tube and the tube comes down on top of you.
And then I lost about an inch and a half on my love handles in about two sessions.
But then I thought really what it is, you know, for a lack of a better word,
it sends these like microwaves, right?
And it goes in your body and out the other side.
And I thought, you know, what I tell my 20-year-old daughter to lie there and have her,
you know, ovaries zap with a microwave oven to lose her love handles on that?
Nah, I wouldn't do that.
So I wouldn't tell you to do it either.
But it didn't actually work.
But I can tell you, raise your blood pressure.
It looked like I ran a marathon.
My face was all sweating and everything.
It's crazy.
You look good for 160.
Yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah, you know, totally.
Yeah, exactly.
I'm really an alien.
Listen, if you are even remotely considering any procedures,
Dr. Sean is your right.
Dr. Sean is your man.
But if you can't do it, he'll refer you to someone great.
He'll give it to you straight.
That's why I love you.
and I've always adored you.
You can reach out or follow Sean.
It's Dr. Sean now, just so you know.
No problem.
Dr. Sean Rice.
It's better than what other people call me.
Dr. Sean Rice on Instagram at Dr.
Sean Rice.
Is that it?
Is that all we got, Joanie?
Yeah, that's it.
Okay, reach out to him there.
Thanks, everyone, for joining us.
Are they watching your listing after the fact of joining us live?
Thank you for all your questions.
Again, this is just a high overview.
You could just go down the, what do you call it, the Tiger Den?
Tiger.
Yeah, yeah, Tiger Land.
You can go down a big rabbit hole.
It never ends.
Rabbit hole to Tiger Land.
More to come.
Stay tuned.
Dr. Sean Rice,
thank you so much.
Appreciate you.
My pleasure.
Bye, everyone.
Thanks.
See you.
