
Sex, Drugs and Skincare
Comedian and esthetician, Nicky Davis, along with side kick/boyfriend/assistant Sandro Iocolano, interviews comedians, actors and other practitioners as we learn about the latest, as well as the oldest techniques for staying young. We get weird but educational.
Sex, Drugs and Skincare
Party Skin: The Morning After
Ever wondered why your face tells the story of last night's adventures? The latest episode of Sex, Drugs and Skincare dives deep into "party skin" with comedian Tania Estrada, who shares her journey from crystal meth recovery to skincare expertise.
Tania reveals how our bodies' relationship with late nights changes dramatically as we age. While our twenties and thirties allow us to bounce back from celebrations with minimal evidence, our forties bring a reckoning as interrupted sleep cycles catch up with us. She explains the science behind why alcohol wakes you during crucial regeneration hours and how this accumulates into visible skin issues over time.
The conversation takes fascinating turns through Tania’s elaborate nighttime ritual – from immediate makeup removal to strategic hydration timing, mouth taping for better breathing, and homemade "prison earplugs." These practices highlight how seriously skincare professionals take sleep quality, recognizing it as the foundation of skin health that no product can replace.
Beyond sleep, we explore practical solutions for party recovery: niacinamide and hyaluronic acid for under-eye concerns, cucumber-celery juice for internal hydration, and even castor oil for softening lip lines. Tanya candidly shares her experiences with substances, sobriety, and finding balance between nightlife and restoration.
Whether you're a night owl looking to minimize morning-after evidence or simply seeking to understand the connection between lifestyle and skin health, this episode offers authentic insights from someone who's lived both extremes. Join us for this honest, sometimes hilarious exploration of how our choices show up on our faces – and what we can do about it.
Don’t forget to look for TANIA’S TREATS on YouTube
You are listening to, watching, hearing, smelling, tasting and feeling sex, drugs and skincare. Like and subscribe, hi. Welcome back to sex, drugs and skincare. I am Nikki Davis Jr, licensed comedian, stand-up esthetician.
Speaker 2:Nice.
Speaker 1:Yep Skin care person, for I've been doing skin care for about 25 plus years, specializing in facial massage and blah blah blah health. This is a podcast where this is the only one I know of where we do. We have comedians and we talk about skin care or drugs or sometimes sex, and that's all of it at the same time.
Speaker 2:Yeah sometimes we talk about vaccines which are drugs.
Speaker 2:Yeah, yeah, it's true could be I'm glad that you said I've been doing this, for you say about 25 years. I think 25 plus years, 25 plus years. Okay, I don't think you said I've been doing this, for you say about 25 years. I said 25 plus years, 25 plus years. Okay. I don't think you said plus you, I think you're at 25. Because when people say like, oh, people go, I've done this for over 25 years and it's like, well, don't leave us in suspense. What's the number like? Why over 25? Is it 26?
Speaker 1:is it 105 000 like? What number is it you?
Speaker 2:can't leave me, because now I'm like what? You know, yeah, so I'm glad you said I've done this for 25, I think maybe you said 25 plus years, which just means you don't know the number. That's really truly the thing, but it could be 26 and a half years.
Speaker 1:I started in 1999.
Speaker 2:Okay, well, like the Prince song.
Speaker 1:Yes, that's it Very much like the Start a career.
Speaker 2:Like it's 1999. I think it was Prince's song.
Speaker 1:Go to state board like it's 1999.
Speaker 2:Yeah, go to school like it's 1999.
Speaker 1:Okay, so we're going to bring out our guest. She's one of our favorites. Is this two or this is three or four, it's like four.
Speaker 2:Four.
Speaker 1:Wow, four timer. I might even feel like it might even be five, four or five.
Speaker 2:It's, four or five it's the kind of thing where you're just like but she's been on the podcast more than anyone else, and deservedly so, but when we see her every time it's just like what's up, because it's always too much time in between. But that's just how life works, so you pay attention to it. And now they've also reminded me that this guest, who you know repeat guest uh was one of the first people to steal the vaccine for COVID.
Speaker 1:So she'll explain with a referral from fluffy it was, I think, all right.
Speaker 2:Please give it up for the one and only.
Speaker 1:Tanya Estrada. Yay, thanks for coming today. Oh, my God, thank you for having me. I almost felt like you might not.
Speaker 3:I almost didn't make it. I almost didn't make it. What happened? I went out for sushi a few nights ago and I woke up. My whole face was like blown up, like a blowfish, and my adrenal glands, I know, were down like just, you know so many, you know stress, right, sure. And then it just like all caught up to me. I woke up and I was so swollen I had to cancel the laugh factory. I had to cancel um, I'm a celebrity judge at that gong show, karaoke at ollie's pub. I had to cancel that. The day of like, I was just like you were that.
Speaker 1:you were that puffy, that puffy, and then I wish you had taken a photo.
Speaker 3:Oh it was bad. It looks so bad dude. It looked like I aged like five years.
Speaker 1:Was it like? Was it allergy, or it was just like water retention?
Speaker 3:I'm allergic, apparently like to eel sauce, but I'm also allergic to soy sauce, and then like I don't like you know, you know like how bad is the allergy? You know what I mean. Like when you're going to take a chance like you know, you're like am.
Speaker 2:I going to die, you know?
Speaker 3:and if the answer is no, then I'm going to go for it. Is this bite worth anaphylactic shock, you know what, as long as my throat doesn't close up up we were just I'll take it.
Speaker 2:Yeah, we were just talking about because I have. I was just telling her like I, when I eat sushi or sashimi, whatever it is, maybe it's the raw, but I get a tingling in my jaw right over here, like a little bit over here, but I never think about it because I'm like eating it and that's all it really does. But apparently that's an allergy that could like change it.
Speaker 2:It could like, one day it could just go into anaphylactic shock. So that's scary. What was that like when you woke up? Did you feel? Did you? You felt like? You felt like the pressure of it, or did you like? Do you wake up and just see the mirror and go? What the fuck I?
Speaker 3:just felt like the pressure all through my body, like you know, like, and I could tell it was very low energy and I was very brain foggy and and I could tell that my feet were swollen, my face was swollen, even your feet were swollen.
Speaker 2:Yeah, wow.
Speaker 3:Like the veins were like oops. The veins were like blue on my legs.
Speaker 2:I was like I don't want to have a heart attack.
Speaker 3:Your body was working hard, yeah, so I ended up just drinking water and, I think, just eating clean throughout the day, and then it wasn't until yesterday that it was like. You know, I think it's an allergy. So I took a Benadryl and that knocked me out for like the day. Remember Benadryl when you were in school?
Speaker 1:Hopefully we're taking it in school.
Speaker 2:I'm allergic to going to school.
Speaker 3:Remember when you would take it in first grade school. You would take it in first grade or no.
Speaker 3:You take it in first period, right and then you'd wake up in fourth period yeah right that was every day for me yeah, that was my senior year, so funny, so it it just so. Today, when I woke up, I was still swollen and I was just like, and it was so hot outside and I was like, oh man, and that's when I texted you. I was like I don't know, but I ended up doing a Pilates session which like work really good, like regular Pilates, just regular Pilates, and it just got my blood flowing so I felt like my face started going down and then by the time like it was like almost three o'clock, I said I better get ready because I need to make it out to Hollywood.
Speaker 3:And then the traffic like at that hour.
Speaker 1:Yeah.
Speaker 3:And I didn't want to be late, you know.
Speaker 1:I'm so sorry. Yeah, I'm going to take that into consideration next time. I forget that you're coming from a little bit farther and the traffic is right at the time.
Speaker 3:Oh, no, no, worries, no, no, it's, it's all good. And then um, but yeah, that's why I almost didn't come. My face was swollen.
Speaker 1:You got your. The lymph was just like it needed to move and the Pilates probably got it moving.
Speaker 2:Yeah, it got it moving.
Speaker 1:I thought you were going to say, because you asked me for a link to my class, that I did that and that's why I look as beautiful as I do.
Speaker 3:But and it was a Pilates, though, after Pilates, after Pilates I was going to do your your link because I was like that'll knock it out right away. But by the time, like I showered, made coffee ate something, it just kind of all just started. I was like, oh.
Speaker 3:But I looked and I was like I don't have time to do 50 minutes, I'll be late yeah I won't leave the house until like 5 50 and I need to be there at 5 50 so so, but I packed my gua sha right and I'm like and that's what I'm planning to do tonight, like friday night um, I'm watching my friend's house right and has a pool, so I'm gonna yeah, so I'm gonna like go and zen out, you know, and like gua sha, and do your session, like with all my makeup off. So I just came and did my hollywood duty and showed it to your show.
Speaker 3:Thank, you, thank you it's cracking down on sunset boulevard. Is it all kinds of cops? Yeah, oh really, yeah, looks good, it looks good. This place is usually dead around here.
Speaker 1:Never hear anything weird around here. Make it look exciting, all right, so I'm gonna go through some topics and um well, let me just put it on here and you Never hear anything weird around here.
Speaker 1:Make it look exciting, all right, so I'm going to go through some topics and well, let me just put it on here and you can pick one. We just did weirdest beauty ingredients and we did meth face. So the next, there's three I know, and I kind of wanted that one for you, but the last guest chose it. So there's skincare myths that are busted, skincare for guys, made simple, and party skin.
Speaker 3:How nights out show on your face, okay so there's the first one, which is skincare myths that are busted the second one, uh.
Speaker 1:Skincare for guys made simple, uh-huh. And the third one is party skin, like how your nights show up on your when you go out, how it shows up on your skin party skin okay, I knew you were gonna pick that one. I knew it. Okay, good, all right, so let's see, get my notes out from yeah, because that's like some of you.
Speaker 2:Like you feel good, you feel good. The next day you might not feel good because you're hung over. Like does that translate over to your face?
Speaker 3:oh god dude, I got stories do it yeah yeah, okay.
Speaker 3:So party face, so well, party skin. I think when you're in your 20s like you get away with that like a lot more 30s most definitely. You still wake up all dewy collagen, you know, plump like. But by the time you start getting in your 40s and you like seriously partying, uh, especially not really hydrating, not sleeping well, because one thing about when you drink, it always wakes you up like at the third or fourth hour and if you don't sleep, like at least past the four hours, because each hour you're regenerating, uh, a different um organ, okay, right and so if you wake up like three or four, it's usually because that's when your liver starts detoxifying but it's full of liquor, so you'll wake up at that hour.
Speaker 3:And when you wake up, the regeneration process stops and you have to start all over again and fall asleep for another four hours but most people don't because they got to get up. So you start adding that and that accumulates, accumulates, accumulates over the years, and you're constantly drinking.
Speaker 3:You end up with party skin that's because it's gonna eventually it's gonna start giving you like bad eye circles yeah, you know, that's what that's where it starts. You can see it in the bad eye circles if someone, someone's not sleeping good the darkness underneath their eyes is just so prevalent. That's like one thing I can tell you about me. I ain't got no motherfucking raccoon circles.
Speaker 1:You know, you never do.
Speaker 3:And you know why? Because I don't got no motherfucking kids waking me up. Fuck them kids Waking me up, not letting me get my beauty sleep.
Speaker 2:Shit, fuck them. Kids waking me up not letting me get my beauty sleep. She got cats waking us up.
Speaker 1:We got cats waking us up. It's true, we do actually have cats waking us up, that's that's another reason why I didn't get an animal.
Speaker 3:Yeah again.
Speaker 1:Yeah, because they wake, they do, they will wake you up um, producer mark was saying that most comics have dark circles under their eyes. That does actually track.
Speaker 2:I do notice that for sure, absolutely but staying up late is also like something you have to do and, plus, staying up late is fun. So if you stay up late and you're like, well, I have to, because of comedy, because of work, that's when things get done did you just say, staying up late is fun?
Speaker 1:yeah, oh my god, with other comics doing stuff yeah, but it's just losing its appeal over time with. Well, I just I want to be 9.30.
Speaker 2:Staying up late now for me is fun, because I like it, because there's no one else around usually when I'm doing it.
Speaker 1:That's late then.
Speaker 2:That's nice. I like that part of it, but I also really enjoy during early mornings now. And I really enjoy sleeping more. I never thought I was like there should be time. I didn't want to go to sleep.
Speaker 3:But I was like. I was like, oh, I don't want, there should be time. I didn't want to go to sleep, but it's just beneficial. I heard it's good you're in sleep. It is no, you're right. For creatives. Our creativity is most at peak when people are going to sleep. Because us creatives, we run on energy, an unseen force, and these forces during the day are taken over by so many people running around here and there, all the stresses, right. So when they start going to sleep, that's when you get pumped up with energy. I'll get pumped up with energy. A lot of people watching this know that feeling. Well, all of a sudden, now you're working throughout the night.
Speaker 3:It's because the static lowers down at that hour, during those hours, so you'll take advantage of the hours and be creative. But you know it. And and look, I agree with you too. I love being in bed by 9, 30, 10 o'clock. It's the best. But there has to be a balance where you can't be out every night every night, every night, every night you know you can't be awake every night, every night, every night.
Speaker 3:You know, trying to get it in it's like I try to balance everything, like maybe once, once to four times a week. So I'll go do comedy, which I know I'm going to be out past nine, ten o'clock. I allot myself that right, but I'll also allot myself that by the time I get home I'll let myself sleep and go through the sleep and get the sleep in and try not to get woken up.
Speaker 3:And then the other part is the staying up, staying up late, late at night and going through that. I'll do that, maybe, if I can, once a week. You know, Tuesdays or Thursday, if I can get through and do coffee.
Speaker 2:I'll do it.
Speaker 3:Yeah, but most of the time I like to be asleep early and it's good that you go to sleep early, because then he can stay up.
Speaker 1:Well, here's the thing, though Sometimes I don't go to sleep and he'll fall asleep, but I want to wake him up. But now we have this thing where he has boundaries and I'm not allowed to wake him up anymore. So then I just end up writing a bunch of jokes or like, or just thoughts. I'm just laying in bed going siri new note. Uh, you know, I don't remember any of them. They do sometimes make sense.
Speaker 3:Yeah, they do no and um, that's funny that you note it that way.
Speaker 1:I never thought that I could note it by calling her name yeah, oh, okay, yeah, don't get up out of bed if you don't have to.
Speaker 2:Yeah, I don't hear. I don't hear you doing at all. I'm out cold.
Speaker 1:I usually take it to my face and I'm like. Siri new note oh okay, Sandro has boundaries now and.
Speaker 2:I can't wake him up. This is horrible. I know Well, you're trying to stand up for myself.
Speaker 1:How many times have I done that in the last few days? I'm just like Now. Maybe it's because I can't.
Speaker 2:Yeah, yeah, maybe I don't know. It's like you have a molly mouth, I'm so true. Where you're just like so anyways, I'm like, can we go to sleep?
Speaker 3:And you're like, yeah, and so it was like the funniest thing yeah.
Speaker 2:Yeah, you're excited I get it. Yeah, I used to like to. I would like do Gardening at night, middle of the night, dig holes.
Speaker 1:Yeah, the desert Plant trees. I'd go in the desert.
Speaker 2:Sometimes it'd be moonlight, sometimes not, and I'd have like a little headlamp, like somehow. I just I enjoyed doing that, and then I'd get tired enough to go to sleep. So it was kind of you know.
Speaker 1:Some physical activity helped you.
Speaker 2:There's something about being up and getting expending that energy, no matter what ever?
Speaker 3:just you know, uh, bushes, yeah, you're creating, yeah, for sure planting trees in the middle of the night, in the middle of the desert.
Speaker 2:Yeah, no crystal meth activities if I'm, if I'm out there sweeping then, and then I'm doing crystal meth do you have like a reg, like a, like a?
Speaker 1:do you have a process, a regimen, something that you do every night, like um, you know to I can't think of the word right now but like you go home and you have a series of things that you do before you sleep, a ritual, ritual thank you.
Speaker 3:A ritual? Yes, I do, I have a ritual what is that ritual?
Speaker 3:well, it's taking off my makeup for sure. Like that's the number one thing. Like the sooner I can get my makeup off, the sooner I can start really relaxing. And then I usually like to drink. If I've made a juice, like drink a beet juice or a cucumber juice, like you know, before I go to sleep. I try to cut off water like a couple hours before I go to bed, because I know that it's going to wake me up later. So I try to like finish drinking water by like eight, you know nine, if I have to, but then I'll do that juice and by the time I stay up I'll pee that out and go to sleep and not wake up. And then, like my number one thing I fell off for a few months but I'm like I got to do it again because I can tell the difference is taping my mouth shut.
Speaker 1:It's like cutting the tape that I know that'll be the last thing you know before I that's what Sandra wants me to do too.
Speaker 2:Yeah, tapping my mouth shut. Yeah, yeah, for different reasons. She's like I don't think you do it this way.
Speaker 3:And I sit around your head and I noticed what really helps is if I put um ear plugs in my ear too how do you get them to? Stay.
Speaker 3:Well, I do prison ear plugs what is that you get like a little piece of toilet paper and then you like like cut it diagonally, just rip it, you know, and you just have enough, and you just kind of roll it like gradually like into kind of a sphere, and then you take it and then you stuff it in your ear gradually like into kind of a sphere, and then you take it and then you stuff it in your ear and then you do the other one and then you stuff it in your ear, you do it dry, you don't like wet it or anything because then it'll get stuck.
Speaker 1:But it just stays.
Speaker 3:It just stays in there, like I'm gonna have to try that yeah prison earplugs don't hurt it before you try it, save your marriage very much yeah, so that. So that's my routine, and then I like to have a binaural beat playing or some kind of a frequency playing, yeah, in in the background, but I've also been enjoying just sleeping like like no noise at all whatsoever no tv, though as well nothing good, just straight, you know, and I cover up.
Speaker 3:Oh, another thing I do is I cover up the blue light on my wi-fi, like like I always make sure I put something in front of it so it doesn't bleed into the room. Oh, interesting, okay, yeah, yeah, um, I wish that into my practice at night.
Speaker 3:I would love to add, like a wind down yoga session you know that does something to my body like I think I would love and and a cool little meditation and some journaling. You could sneak that in like 15 minutes, right yeah, but you see how my routine is like a whole thing I knew it was going to be.
Speaker 1:that's why I asked.
Speaker 3:It's a, it's a whole thing. And that's not even going into the time to take off my makeup and and scrubbing down and putting on a mask or whatever it is. That's a whole half hour, 45 minute whole thing. So, yeah, it's like a couple hours till I wind down.
Speaker 1:Well, I have a lot of respect for that, that you take such good care of you. Oh, thank you. A lot of people don't. They don't you know what I mean. They don't take the time to take care of themselves and then it bleeds out to everybody else to take care of them. Sometimes it feels like I don't have time to do this right exactly, yeah, but it's for you, though.
Speaker 3:What else? Yeah, yeah, yeah, what my new, my new practice added into the? My ending practice is I picked up the guitar again, which I haven't played in like forever I can't believe you didn't bring it which next time, you can't take it with you everywhere not a six pack of beer.
Speaker 3:Yeah, well, it could be. It could be a six pack of beer. Um, yeah, no, I started. I started playing it and I forgot like how long I've been playing and I hate to. I don't mean to toot my own horn, but like how fucking a badass guitar player I am really I I forgot this, this part of myself.
Speaker 3:I forgot this part of myself, and there's something so healing about finding that part that's been missing. Like I haven't played guitar like that since 2019, like I've messed around with it, or played it here and there, but not like picking it up in the morning, picking it up at night, like really sitting there and playing with it like that has been a really like. I mean, I've been playing for over 30 something years wow so to stop from like 2019 to 2025? What is that? Six, six years.
Speaker 1:Yeah, yeah, I do the same. I wait, like you know, 15 years in between times that I pick it up, force myself to learn a song from the seventies, and then I'm done. You play too, yeah.
Speaker 3:Oh my God, when was the?
Speaker 1:last time you played Um, maybe a few months before we moved, I think. I was learning some song I don't know, it was by bread or something like that'm really into yacht rock lately, yacht rock and I hook my. I have a keyboard that, uh, in my room, the new place and I just turn it on and I try to play the piano. I'm not good at the, I mean, I I'm not good at the piano and but I'm just trying to play along with it because it's just so fun to me.
Speaker 1:And mcdonald, michael mcdonald, just you know, chilling we should play, though, yeah, we should jam, like we should jam absolutely that would be cool, but yeah, I go long periods of time, yeah, but I'm sure you pick it up very quickly though, oh yeah like I, I, I can't even believe this like time around, like to pick it up after like so long like, and really just put my, my soul into it you know, good for it. The vibration is good.
Speaker 3:Yeah, I think even it's, it's so, it's so weird, like it's just, I'm all watch, feel my, feel, my my calluses.
Speaker 1:Oh wow, yeah, they're starting to form again, huh, uh-huh.
Speaker 3:Yep, I know that feeling, and it just, it just feels so, like they even blistered a little bit.
Speaker 1:They went down Nice, yeah.
Speaker 3:I'm all and I all within like a week's worth of time. It's going to be a week tomorrow. You must be playing a lot then. I'm playing a lot. Yeah, like a lot, a lot. So that's going to be part of my new, like nighttime, morning routine.
Speaker 1:I love that.
Speaker 3:And it feels really good I love that. So yeah.
Speaker 1:You should do this for other people and plan their nighttime routines. I think.
Speaker 3:Well, no.
Speaker 2:Well, they call that something else.
Speaker 3:They charge a lot assisted suicide. We were talking about something like that yeah, what's?
Speaker 1:what's the worst hangover you've ever had, like um the worst hangover I've ever had.
Speaker 3:Um, you don't really drink, do you? No, I don't, I don't drink anymore. Yeah, yeah, I don't, I don't. I've. It's been 280 something days, wow, um, I yeah, no alcohol so yeah, um, but the worst hangover I ever had was so many like was every one of them.
Speaker 3:I can't even count and I just know that I could tell from my face how bad it is. But my hangovers wouldn't necessarily be hangovers because I really enjoyed day drinking, so the hangover was my cue for, like you, gotta get up and go get breakfast, oh my god which consisted of corona and a shot, you know, of mezcal or jameson, before I even thought about food.
Speaker 1:So yeah, you got to keep your blood level, alcohol level yeah, you know, gotta make sure I'm safe.
Speaker 3:So that's why I don't drink anymore, like. And then, like a few weeks ago, I was really like I really wanted to drink, like I, I wanted to drink so bad that I was crying, like like I and I, and it was like I had to talk myself out of it because, like I could already hear my mind like going and it was like, okay, you know, you just start off real simple. You know you're gonna have a corona, right, and then after that you could be classy and have a glass of wine right, and then after that you mean, you have another corona and then you'll have a mezcal to wash that down with, you know, and then you'll have a whiskey, sour, because those are bomb, right.
Speaker 3:Then you have another corona, then you have a jägermeister shot, then another corona, oh my god. And then you could wash corona. Then you have a jägermeister shot, then another corona, oh my god. And then you could wash it down with a gin and tonic and it was like, yeah, and maybe I shouldn't drink, trying to cut back a little bit maybe. I just know like it's a, it's a hard pass yeah, have you ever done?
Speaker 1:do you do cocaine not? Do you know not?
Speaker 3:not, not cocaine. Well, I haven't done cocaine in years. I mean, I come from being a crystal meth head like way back in the la puente days and um, for me coke was like 20 minutes. What do you mean? I gotta do a bump in 20 minutes you know, that crystal meth had me going strong for six hours. You know this is boring, this shit. Get this child's play out of my face. Yeah, coke wasn't for me. Um, I have tried LSD. That's been very interesting. Tried it a few times Accidentally.
Speaker 1:Really.
Speaker 3:Uh-huh.
Speaker 1:Yeah.
Speaker 3:Like long, long time ago Long time ago Years Like out of a statute of limitation years I went up to Humboldt with some friends. When you get there it's like they have everything you could possibly imagine, like right when we got picked up and this guy um had this vial of acid and he sold it to me for like a hundred bucks and I was like, fuck, yeah, you know, I'm gonna be an entrepreneur, so so I got a bunch of um sugar cubes and then I went to go put like a drop on each one, you know, and like wrap them and stuff, and so I had them going and then I accidentally touched the liquid oh, and it does it.
Speaker 1:It goes into your skin, right?
Speaker 3:yeah, so like have you ever seen those movies where dudes accidentally like take all the lsd? Yeah, that's kind of what it felt like. So I had and that's 12 hours yeah, I had to trip balls like the rest of the fucking night. I was like, well, I guess you know I'm done with the shirt cues.
Speaker 2:Here the shirt cues for tonight.
Speaker 3:So, yeah, so that was um, that was back then, so I never did lSD ever again. And then I discovered shrooms. Those were really cool.
Speaker 1:I don't think shrooms have any bad effects on your skin that I'm aware of.
Speaker 3:No, no, I mean, I don't know what they do. I know they repair so much. I wonder if shrooms you know could repair skin.
Speaker 1:I would think so.
Speaker 3:That would be interesting. You know one thing I wanted to touch on, like just because, um, I see it's the time, oh, 27 minutes. Um, so you know how they're having like a lot of lasers and laser facials and like having do you know how bad those can fuck someone's face up if they do it wrong.
Speaker 1:I've never seen the bad results. Why do you have you seen some?
Speaker 3:Yeah, I was going to go in and do one of those lasers. Yeah, you, oh dude. I thought, yeah, tell me, I was gonna go in and do one of those lasers. Yeah, but this girl got something done to her face and she literally looks like she has linda blair cuts on her face that are open. I'll have to find it like and send it to you. But I was just like, oh, hell, no, and they were saying that never use anything that has heat and I'm like I know who doesn't use anything with heat face.
Speaker 1:God, it's nikki just the heat from my fingers, yeah, just the heat from her fingers, yeah yeah, so, um, wow so, but you said, I'm glad you saw that beforehand.
Speaker 3:You, yeah, yeah yeah, I'm good, um, uh, so quick fixes for under the eyes yeah, let's go to that yeah. Yeah, you know what Niacinamide?
Speaker 2:Yeah that's really good stuff.
Speaker 3:That's B vitamins, right, uh-huh.
Speaker 1:And hyaluronic acid.
Speaker 3:That's really really good. I'm still on hyaluronic acid. That's to put on your skin, yeah, yeah, oh, there's a new thing I'm doing on the acid and then vitamin e and then castor oil, and then I cover my mouth to go to sleep and what does it do? It's been softening the lines in my, in my lips oh, I'll try that yeah, try that. The castor oil seals everything in. Okay scroll, so what else?
Speaker 2:okay, yeah, oil is really the. Uh, yeah, sleep is the possible skin repairs, most overnight?
Speaker 3:yep, uh, okay um.
Speaker 1:What about hydration? Like, what is your main hydration?
Speaker 3:um my main hydration. I my cucumber celery juice oh, the cucumber, yeah, that's so natural top of the morning, but I also do uh water with um creatine and collagen really yeah, marine collagen, I've been doing that in the morning, but I mean I I don't see anything yet on my face. It's you know, it's too hard to tell. I still need time. But you look really good. Oh, thank you so much. You know what it is. I probably look puffy because of the allergy. It looks like I got Botox right in the filler.
Speaker 1:Well, whatever it is, keep doing it All right. Well, whatever it is, keep doing it all right. I guess all sushi at eight. We'll meet you across the street all right, all right.
Speaker 3:Oh, by the way, I forgot to mention about the little water bottle. Yeah, it's been sitting right there. It's like an austin powers moment. Is it going in?
Speaker 1:why is?
Speaker 2:it. She's looking at herself in the computer. Oh, because you're sitting right at your thing.
Speaker 1:Oh, that's right, oh my god, that's so funny.
Speaker 3:I didn't even notice that I don't know.
Speaker 1:That's probably I should probably have a couple of water bottles oh yeah, what you sounded there, I know nobody would tell me no in this studio, nobody would would tell me. Well, thank you so much for coming. I know you went through so much to get here oh, thank you, thank you for calming your body down and everything but true hollywood pro out be like no got to come out for the camera Got to come out.
Speaker 2:You did it right. I appreciate you, thank you.
Speaker 3:Thank you, I made it. I made it. Where can we follow you? You can follow me at Tanya Estrada 334. T-a-n-i-a-e-s-t-r-a-d-a 334. On my youtube, go to tanya's treats cooking show. That's t-a-n-i-a-s treats, t-r-e-a-t-s cooking show. Uh, add me on that channel and watch my episodes there, and then catch me on tiktok and instagram. That's where I'm mostly at oh and at the laugh factory and that's a laugh factory, yeah wednesday nights uh, the long beach laugh factory. I can I plug two shows.
Speaker 3:Yeah, yeah, okay but not three, okay, only two all right on thursday, september 11th, I'm going to be with my girl, monique flores, at beso in downey celebrating her birthday show. Uh, I'm going to be hosting uh tickets on on her link or my link uh shows at 8 pm. And then Wednesday, september 24th, I'm going to be at the Hollywood Laugh Factory for Mario Lopez's Way Out Laughs Wednesdays hosted by Concrete. I'm going to be performing that night. Sal Trujillo is going to be there, so get your tickets. That shows at 7.30 and it sells out pretty fast.
Speaker 1:So it was it's an eight o'clock show. You said I think it's a 7.30, 8 o'clock show Will you remind me, because that's early enough that I could head over there if I'm around.
Speaker 2:You know what, Nikki? We'll put it in the comments.
Speaker 1:Okay, yeah.
Speaker 3:Yeah, on that show everyone has to buy a ticket, because it's a whole thing. Oh okay, yeah, it's not like yeah it's like yeah, it's a big event it's a big event and all the seats are pretty much taken, so they they like put out a limited amount of tickets. Okay, for that it's not like um, so yeah, so those are my two big plugs all right, well, you heard it.
Speaker 1:Please check out tanya. She's amazing. Uh, tanya's treats are really amazing as well. Thank, you yeah, thank you, yeah, I love that yes, I love it. Oh, my god, yeah, oh, thank you thank you, you're adorable.
Speaker 3:I put a lot of work into that it shows for sure, thank you I appreciate it all right.
Speaker 1:Well, you guys will see you next week, and uh, take care, yeah peace all right love, peace and chicken grease.