Politicians lead more than government: they also inspire cosmetic procedures.
The Board -certified plastic surgeon, Dr. Norman Rowe, who practices in Manhattan, the Hamptons and Palm Beach, opened his office in Florida after pandemic, but for about six months he really “saw the big difference,” he told the Daily Mail.
“It was when he exploded.”
Dr. Mark Epstein, a double -board certified surgeon in New York City, said he experienced a sudden in business at the end of the summer last year, a time that would normally be his “slow season”, when Trump support was inflated after his failed attempt at his life.
“I realized that things were beginning to pick up … And what made sense is that there was a sudden change in consumers’ confidence, I have no other way to explain,” said Epstein, who owns the aesthetics and well -being of Oceane Medical in Happauge, he said in The Post before.
Although consumers’ confidence has shaken with the conversations of a possible recession, the trends of the cosmetic procedure have not been successful. The procedures have been increasing for years, but experts indicate a specific change from customers who idealize celebrities to refer to politicians.
Take a walk through the luxury enclaves of Palm Beach or leave in a soirée in Mar-Aago, and one thing is clearly clear: some people begin to look significantly similar.
“Go to Everglades Club de Palm Beach, go to switches, you will find that group of people who are together. They care for themselves. They want to look good,” Rowe said.
“It is a very outdoor-oriented lifestyle and is always warm, so it cannot be placed and covered with a neck sweater.”
Forget about “Instagram face”: everyone now has “Mar-a-Lago face”, a cured mix of full lips, chiseled cheekbones, wide eyes and soft and excessive fronts that never wrinkle.
Rowe said his Palm Beach office now sees up to 15 people a day, especially chasing the same aspect: Ivanka Trump’s face.
But it must manage expectations.
“If they say,” I like lips, “I can give your lips or nose, but you have to have something to work with,” Rowe explained. “If someone comes in and is 4 feet-11, 200 pounds, obviously does not happen.”
The Secretary of the United States of National Security, Kristi Noem, is another popular request, according to Rowe, who said that his older customers believe he seems “wonderful”.
But even among the ultra-olo-lago ultra -ontorn elite, there are levels.
Kimberly Guilfoyle, Greek ambassador and Donald Trump Jr.’s former Núvia, is quoted as one of the most aggressive examples, with superfilled lips and incredibly sharp characteristics. But Rowe does not think he has passed under the knife, just an avalanche of filling.
Cosmetic procedures can range from botox and loads to jaw implants and chin, as well as increasingly popular elevators, a less invasive alternative to a traditional face wash that offers a attenuated appearance with a minimum inactivity time.
Although they constitute around 75% of their appointments, they are not just women sitting in Rowe’s waiting room.
Men also enter the aesthetic field, especially as political campaigns heat up.
The ex -representing Matt Gaetz, for example, caused speculation last year after presenting to the Republican National Convention with a dramatically narrower “whoville” face and the arched leaves perpetually.
Rowe said he has seen an increase in male customers, many of them politicians or aspiring public figures, looking for quick and effective treatments for refreshing -for television appearances and events.
“I had people who came to make laser and things like that,” he said. “As we approached January 20, people wanted less and less, but they wanted to look excellent for the inauguration; all parts were at that time.”
He reminded people would say, “I want to look better. I’m going to be on the television. I’m going to be on the side of Trump in the oval office.”
Rowe noticed that, although people would be next to Trump’s face, no one has requested to replicate it.
And, although customers can search the raven’s feet, they do not go back to the bills.
A facial elevator can cost up to six figures. A botox round at Rowe’s office ranges from $ 500 to $ 3,000, and $ 5,000 to $ 5,000, depending on how much you are injected.
And these are not unique procedures.
Botox usually lasts about three to four months, while the lip filling should be touched every six to 12 months. Some older and older beauty queens even again give him a face wash.
“I am seeing many patients in the late 50’s and early 60’s that came for the second wash,” the post -UPPER EAST SIDE SIDE plastic surgeon told The Post. “I would say this has increased by 30% for a year.”
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