
Realer Than Most Podcast
Here at Realer Than Most Podcast, we believe that hip-hop/rap is more than just music its a cultured lifestyle, and a way of expressing oneself. we are based out of Philadelphia tri-state area that's why we focus on artist who are not only skilled in their craft but also have a unique perspective and voice. our goal is to provide a platform for these rising stars to share their stories and connect with their fans on a deeper level.
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Realer Than Most Podcast
| TRANSFORMING YOUR BODY | | FEAT. DR. AARAON | | RTM PODCAST | SZN 3 | EP 19 |
Ever wondered what really happens behind the scenes of cosmetic procedures? Dr. Aaron Fletcher pulls back the curtain on plastic surgery in the Black community with a candid conversation that goes far beyond before-and-after photos.
What makes this discussion unique is Dr. Fletcher's unexpected journey—from an English major at Morehouse College with dreams of becoming the next Spike Lee to receiving what he describes as a spiritual calling to become a surgeon. His perspective bridges medical expertise with cultural understanding, offering insights rarely shared in mainstream discussions about body modification.
The conversation tackles psychological aspects of cosmetic surgery head-on, with Dr. Fletcher revealing why he turns down more patients than he accepts. "If you just came out of a bad relationship or domestic abuse situation and you're looking for revenge surgery, that's not the time to make a life-altering decision," he explains. This ethical approach stands in stark contrast to surgeons who prioritize profit over patient wellbeing.
Perhaps most importantly, Dr. Fletcher addresses the dangerous trend of pursuing body modifications without basic health screenings. Many patients lack primary care physicians, attempting major surgeries while managing undiagnosed conditions like high blood pressure or diabetes. He describes the recovery process rarely shown on social media—the bleeding, the painful healing, and the months spent unable to sit normally after procedures like BBLs.
Cultural influences receive thoughtful analysis too, from the Kardashian effect on beauty standards to how Michael Jackson's surgeries created lasting misconceptions about rhinoplasty results for Black patients. Dr. Fletcher emphasizes his commitment to natural-looking results that enhance rather than fundamentally alter appearance, especially for clients who may have been historically underserved by conventional plastic surgery approaches.
Whether you're considering a cosmetic procedure, concerned about a loved one's choices, or simply interested in the complex relationship between beauty standards and self-image, this episode offers valuable perspective from someone who understands both the scalpel and the soul behind the transformation decision.
Real Ones Motion Picture Association of America Inc. The show advertised has been rated R. The content discussed may cover sensitive topics. Listener discretion is advised If you feel that any content may be triggering or distressing. Please take care of your well-being first. It's.
Speaker 2:White Boy D2A. I'm Roland and we just wrapped up the craziest, craziest interview. Sam, hold me down for the light skin niggas. Yeah, yeah.
Speaker 3:I got my fucking boys here. I I'm not even brother than Moe, I'm really a white boy. D2a. This the Rilla the Most Podcast. I'm Rilla, I'm WhiteboyD2A and you already know. We about to get into it. Man, we got Doc in the building.
Speaker 2:Very prestigious today, y'all. Yes, you know what I'm saying.
Speaker 1:We climbing the ranks, bro Come on man, I ain't going front bro. This is different.
Speaker 2:This is like this is different for us and it's dope because it's a part of the culture and it needs to be talked about.
Speaker 2:Yes, like for real, you feel me, because we living in a world today where it's a lot of plastic surgery going on, a lot of fillers going on. It's just a lot fillers going on, it's just a lot. And I think that, like, I think that we should get that lifestyle from a doctor's perspective and like full insight on just like transforming your body, because that's a big thing to do. That's not, that's just not nothing like, yeah, you know, I mean, and and I think that like um, people, that's in our culture they do it based on um, on like on a device and like wanting to look a certain way for a certain person because of the device. And I just think that, like, when you make a decision like that with your body, I think you should be aware of the health issues, that that you can get from it and have from it Also mental health, also mental health issues, that, that, that, that, that that it brings to you and it builds. When you um do things like that, you know, I'm saying transform your body in a major way, we're gonna get into it yes, sir, how you doing today, doc, I'm doing great man appreciate you guys for having me, thank you for coming
Speaker 2:here, man appreciate you um how you doing. I'm doing well. I'm doing very well. Yes, I appreciate the walk now yeah man, we, you know, we gotta, you know we gotta do it right. It's doc, you know I'm saying, and I, I respect what he do, my man, I respect what he do, I respect everything that's going on and I just think that it's important for us to cover this because how consistent the bbl is in our community today, for real, though not just the truth, though not just bb it's not just the bbl, it's not, it's not, it's a lot, it's a lot, it's a lot, and that's that's why we got doc here.
Speaker 2:That's exactly why we got doc here. Yeah, yeah, yeah, yep, yep. So you know, you know um, you know growing up and you know you're not in the water. Your mom, you know, go be a doctor, go be a lawyer. You say and we don't really get to meet them, especially that our our, not man, our skin color. So what is? It's an honor to have you sitting across from me. I'm honored to be talking to you about these things and and making people aware, because it's like I don't think they I don't think they take it as serious as it is. Transforming your body um, open scars, wounds and things like that. That you just have to. You gotta be up on when you, when you touch, when you do stuff like that to yourself.
Speaker 3:Yeah, yeah and your time when you could probably remember you first getting into like healing and and medicine um, yeah, so I actually got my.
Speaker 1:I would consider my calling in the surgery was here in atlanta.
Speaker 1:Um, I was actually a student at morehouse college back in back in the day myself, but pre-2000, I'll put it that way and um, my undergraduate major was english, so I thought I was going to be. My goal was to become a film director. I wanted to be the next Spike Lee and make movies. Fire, yeah, wow. When I got to Morehouse they didn't have a film program. As many of you are aware, spike Lee did a lot of his filming, especially school days at Clark, because they didn't have a program but Clark did.
Speaker 1:So I majored in English as my next closest option option because I thought I was going to do a lot of writing and I still do a lot of writing. But somewhere in my junior year I felt like I got a calling to go into surgery, like a spiritual calling. I was on my way to Bible study, coming off the College Park MARTA train and I just felt like a voice in my spirit say go be a surgeon. You know what I mean. So crazy. Like it sounds crazy, but that's literally stopping on a dime, stopping English doing pre-med and the rest is history, you know.
Speaker 1:God made the steps ordered and a lot of things fell into place. That happened to fall into place, but it wasn't like I grew up with the Fisher-Price stethoscope around my neck or, like you know, planning to be a doctor from a young child I price stethoscope around my neck or, like you know, planning to be a doctor from a young child. I just kind of I like science and when the opportunity and the calling came, I just went for it.
Speaker 2:I think I think that's more dope. I'm gonna tell you why because normally, like, like you said, I ain't grow up with the stethoscope around my neck but that also show, like the young black kids and like even like our age people, that, like you can do it. Yeah, you put your mind to something, you lock in on it, you'll be able to accomplish it. Execute it. Yeah, it don't matter if it's a doctor, lawyer, school teacher, whatever it is.
Speaker 1:Sometimes we feel like we can't accomplish and being in these forms, yeah, yeah and I think too, the other thing I would tell somebody is like if you just take the first step at something, I don't care how many steps are ahead of you if you take that first step and eventually it's amazing how things line up from that point. You know, I didn't have um, I didn't have a mentor in medicine, I didn't have the money to take the courses that I needed to take the exam, the entrance exam for medical school. I didn't have any of that. But once I took that first step and decided this is what I'm doing, yeah, and I dropped english, or I didn't drop it, but I just pursued medicine primarily. Everything just started coming together like voltron. You know what I mean.
Speaker 3:After that, so you say you didn't grow up with the stethoscope around the neck? Yeah, so like growing up, it wasn't in atlanta, it was actually dC, right.
Speaker 1:I grew up in DC, yeah, so how?
Speaker 3:was it growing up in DC?
Speaker 1:I love DC man, that's still home. I mean, you know, I'm a go-go head, I'm a hip-hop head.
Speaker 3:Oh, okay, I love go-go. Okay, I carry the DC swag.
Speaker 1:I still wear the New Balance. When I came to atlanta it was like a whole different world. They were listening to different music. I remember master p ice cream man had just dropped and we were listening to at aliens that just dropped. So I was kind of like what's going on with this? And, um, you know dc had a small representation down here there's like a small group at morehouse and throughout the city.
Speaker 1:But atlanta was like a. It was like a whole different world. You know what I mean. So, um, I definitely had to change things around a little bit when I got down here, I think that's dope.
Speaker 2:I think that's dope because, um dc being like chocolate city, and then coming to atlanta, where it's just like the land of black millionaires and black professionals, it's like, yeah, yep, I understand, yep, yeah, yeah. So so you know getting into to to medicine and and you know being able to execute it and and you know being able to be one of those people to, to be our color and be in that that medicine field, do you like, do you deal with, like being people? Therapy there, it's like therapist to you know, you see what I say yeah like in them.
Speaker 2:Be in them picking the decision to transform a body. Are you a therapist as well?
Speaker 1:oh yeah, I think any plastic surgeon worth their salt as a therapist, and the reason is because I turned down a lot more people than I take, because sometimes their motivations aren't right. You know, like if you just came out of a bad relationship or you were in a domestic abuse situation and you're looking for some kind of snapback or some kind of revenge surgery, that's not the time to make a life-altering decision so a lot of times you just have to screen what their motivation is and sometimes they'll open up and tell you like look, I just broke up with my boyfriend.
Speaker 1:He was making fun of my nose all my life.
Speaker 1:Or my parents used to talk about, or I got teased as a child and you know I never liked my nose and so you have to make sure you could just go ahead and do you yeah, I mean, some doctors work that way, but the good ones, you know, if you, if you realize their motivation isn't right, that sets up for a lifetime. What would be the? Motivation to get a bigger ass uh, yeah, I don't know, I don't. I've never been down that road, but um it's usually the same stuff.
Speaker 1:You know people don't like the way they look in the mirrors. People are ashamed of certain things. They they're competitive with what's out here. There's a certain standard of beauty that you see on the internet that's being forced by television and social media and you feel like everybody looks like that is that okay for a doctor like, oh well, all right, that's okay.
Speaker 3:Come on, I got you, get on my table there's.
Speaker 1:There's plenty of people that do that. I don't do that because you can't mess around in the face, you know like your lower body. You can cover that. You can put a baggy hoodie on or some sweatpants, but when it's your face, especially the nose, you only get one crack at that all right.
Speaker 3:So now, all right, speaking on that, I'm glad you said that. So, uh, you got a artistry with your work, yeah, so, um, tell me about the the time when somebody first looked in the mirror, like after you worked, did your work yeah, I've had.
Speaker 1:I've had people cry before. I've had people, you know, really happy the first time first time. Um, I'll tell you what knows is, there's usually a lot of swelling right after, so they're usually kind of like taken more by the swelling it's not like an immediate result right but over time, over maybe two, three weeks, I've had some people really be like man this is like exactly what I wanted.
Speaker 1:Or sometimes they'll say, man, I wish you had done more. You know what I mean. And I rather them say I I would, they wish I had done more, because I could always take more, but I can't put none of it back once I take it. So I always tell people with the face like we got a nail at the first time. So I spend my time really writing down, start studying yeah, studying what they, what they want, seeing if I can actually pull it off reading articles about the different techniques that are required for each patient, and then by the time I get to the table, I've done it maybe four or five times in my head already and that's what it takes to really be like precise you know, yeah, yeah, I like, I like that.
Speaker 2:I like that you explained it that way, because a person that might not like they knows that will want to get something done. You explained it in a way where it's like it kind of it's kind of easy to understand if, if they will want to do that, you know right right yes, because, because it's like.
Speaker 2:that's why I was saying like it's transmission. It's something you're making a decision to change something on your body that God gave you for the rest of your life. Yeah, so it's a decision that you are making that you're going to have to deal with for the rest of your life. It's like having a kid or something. Yeah, so it's not like you just yo, I want a new nose. Call a doctor. No, oh, you really gotta live with that, like you know what I mean. Yeah, so, and one of the things we're seeing is filters.
Speaker 1:You know, people are coming in with their filters like, oh man, I look like this on my filter. I want to look like this in real life and I'm like that filter is temporary. You might not like that same filter in two weeks, you might not like that filter next year, you know right filters will go out completely in another year. So then you stuck with a nose that you're not happy with because of something temporary, so it's got to be something.
Speaker 1:I usually prefer patients that are like me. I've been wanting to do this my whole life. Yeah, if they're like, not like that, I'm more likely to not not actually take them on as a client.
Speaker 2:Yeah, yeah, I think that's very mature, you, and like no one like you know, I mean like, yeah, somebody's going to make a decision. I want to at least like be like on my side, on my end now I mean responsibility. Yes, yes, yes, I. I.
Speaker 3:I like that about you because, like I said, like people would just do it off the impulse or off of a a post yeah, speaking on that, what you think like is something like that destroys some people like self-esteem when it comes to like surgery before they like um, a bad result, a botched result that'll kill it right there, like um, especially if people are looking at it like man.
Speaker 1:What'd you do, man, I liked your nose or I liked your face? What'd you do that? For you know that's, that'll kill your self-esteem, especially if you can't fix it. You know what I mean, and and um and that's why yes, you got a screen for that. You got to. You can tell someone with low self-esteem on a 15-minute conversation. You can tell what their steam is is appropriate for surgery now in your world like all right, the tattoo world.
Speaker 3:They don't go over, nobody work. So your world right. If someone come to you, hey doc, done. I want you to fix. How do you feel about going over somebody else's?
Speaker 1:work yeah, I do, maybe, uh, I think like rhinoplasty or nose jobs have like a 25 revision rate. So I do a good number of revisions some of them are my own work, where they're like man, I want to do this more drastic or I want to do do more. You know, but if you're in this business, you're going to revise somebody else's work, somebody and it may not be botched. It may just be like, oh I, I want a little bit more done, or you know something like that, but it's just part of the game, you know, yeah it's part of the game for people to normally like come back and get sometimes.
Speaker 1:Yeah there's a good revision rate. Some surgeries um, like for instance on the lower body, like um implants can be removed and replaced, or downsized or upsized, or you know certain things like you can have lipo multiple times, you can have uh, really any procedure can be revised where you have to go back in, or you might choose a different surgeon that you like better, and so that's part of the everybody that's in this field has done some work from somebody else that came in first, especially from overseas. I see a lot of stuff from overseas all right, and I got one more thing.
Speaker 3:That's. That's around the net. Now, when people come back right, let's say they came back once, twice, three times, it's the fourth time it's like bro, what are we doing? Is it a point where you, like yo, I think you're getting addicted to this.
Speaker 1:Yeah, yeah, yeah. There's a percentage of patients that love they just love going under the knife. I've turned patients down when they said you know, or if you know, here's what I really will say. A lot of people will be like, doc, you don't see, you don't see how this is crooked, or and it'll be like maybe not visible you know what I mean, you're kind of like I don't really see it like what are you talking about?
Speaker 1:yeah, but there's a lot of people who are, like it's called dysmorphia, where you feel like you got this or things are out of proportion, but everybody else sees it as normal. Those are patients that you really want to stay away from, because they're addicted and they're going to keep going until and they're never satisfied.
Speaker 3:They're going to just keep going until they could get that's you know what you know get something, that's somebody probably that would built up insecurities and yeah you? What do you suggest for those type of patients that come to? You uh psychotherapy counseling yeah straight up, because it's usually something deep-rooted, you'll be having like numbers for them to call and people for them to um, I I don't offhand, but if you watching and you do that kind, of work please hit me up because I got plenty of patients.
Speaker 1:Hey, you hear what he's saying.
Speaker 3:He got business for you guys. Yeah, I mean I.
Speaker 2:I mean people like a lot of the women going overseas to get the, to get the work done, as things like that. Like how you feel about the people doing the work overseas, like, do you think they like are they qualified to do the work or do they be like just like people that are just trying or doing things?
Speaker 1:Yeah, there's some great surgeons overseas. I mean a a lot of these procedures. Some of these procedures, like bbl, started in brazil.
Speaker 3:Yeah, so I mean, they started the craze.
Speaker 1:So there's some great surgeons over there, um, and then you got other people that are just going on price, you know it's a race to the bottom, the lowest price.
Speaker 1:So you don't want price to be the main factor, because if you go overseas and you have a complication, you won't be able to get back to your surgeon right away. If you have a bleed or a hematoma or a complication, you got to hop back on a plane and go back over there, even if it's months later. You don't have that continuity, so it's better, and then you're going to end up with a surgeon in america. That's like why you go over there in the first place. I can't fix this, or you know this looks terrible like I wouldn't. I'm not even going behind this, you know.
Speaker 2:So you want to have access to your surgeon for the long haul, and that's something that going overseas doesn't afford you yeah, so so like having the um, so like being a being a doctor and then having like the um, the rich clients, but they shallow in the brain. It's like, it's like you gotta be. It's crazy Cause I'm like how I'm thinking of it is like I know how shallow a black woman could be sometimes about like the appearance.
Speaker 3:That's a black woman. Any woman, yeah, any woman.
Speaker 2:Or men too, cause there's men out here that's shallow as well, yep. And then I know, like you probably get like a bunch of things that just it's just outlandish for real, for real, like how do you deal with those type of phone calls, just like you just asked me to, like put a dump truck on your bed, but it's wrong with you?
Speaker 1:yeah, yeah well, it's like that, saying like all money's not good money, yeah you know what I? Mean, like I'm trying to be in this for the long haul, it only takes you to botch one person Like whoever did Michael Jackson's nose or whoever did Lil' Kim's first nose. You know, you don't want to be that guy. You don't want to be the person that's like man, he operated on such and such. That's going to kill your whole career. You won't. Not a long career.
Speaker 3:You're gonna have a bunch of botched work running around out here in the street, and that you know so I heard, I heard him just say uh, men, right, so the men doing plastic surgery, right, the numbers are rising, right, yeah, but it seemed like, when it come to plastic surgery is like hitting more than the females. Getting it done like the females they let you know, they even show they weighed a surgery, yeah, but it's like the guys is like getting it done also, but they hide it more. What you think about that? Like, yeah, um, what's the what's? What's going on behind closed doors, when that I think it's.
Speaker 1:It's like, depending on what you get done, like, I think, a man, if he gets something done on his face, there's no way to really hide it. There's a lot of men getting lipo suction, I think, like funk master flex got lipo or something. They said uh, drake got a bb. I don't know if that's true or not, but there's more and more people coming out now and saying like I got work done, but when it's your body, most people assume that's going to be a woman.
Speaker 2:Like.
Speaker 1:I've done lipo on men before. Usually it's like under here or something like small. But if you're getting, like you know, bbls and stuff like that, it just it hasn't really caught on in the male side of things. You just had there's a stigma attached to it. But I think that's going to go away because there's more people. It's becoming more accepted because men are in the public eye, they want to look their best, just like women do. They have the same motivation, basically to get work done. But it's just still taboo among men. You know, I don't think a woman well, I don't know how a woman would look at it. I have to ask.
Speaker 2:I think it's still.
Speaker 1:I think it was a bit corny yeah, I mean, there's people who look at it like oh you know, I'm five, four, I'm sure.
Speaker 2:So for me to get money and then be six feet is kind of crazy yeah, oh, I look at that crazy. That's a whole, nother the whole lengthening, leg lengthening that's like kind of crazy to me yeah yeah, I don't know about that you don't know about it I mean, I wouldn't do that.
Speaker 3:That's like what you say you five, four, yeah, damn doc, you can't make them more.
Speaker 1:Five, nine, come on it's a controversial thing, man but they're doing it.
Speaker 3:They're doing it in korea.
Speaker 1:A little bit of crib I don't know if it's really caught on here. There's a few people doing it here, but yeah, you know it's a very early procedure. I wouldn't jump into it right now.
Speaker 2:I'll give it some time I see, um, that's a scary procedure.
Speaker 3:Yeah, it's like would y'all take the legs off and add poles in the legs?
Speaker 2:from these environments right, where people hear things, yeah, or maybe even see things, and I'll just be like I will. I will want them to be fully aware of changing they sell for the rest of their life that's why I think this interview was important. It's very informative for us to have it on our platform because of our audience. You feel me. And then we be having like that demographic where it might be a little younger and the younger kids are doing fully off of this device and impulse, and I don't think that's right.
Speaker 1:Yeah.
Speaker 2:I just don't think, I don't agree with that. Yup, I don't even care if it's a BBL. You feel me? Yeah, god made you perfect how I look at life. Yeah, I'm saying if you want to, if you want to, you know, do something to yourself, for you, for yourself. I'm cool with that too. You know what I mean, because I ain't you know, I mean I ain't god, but I just look at it like don't um overly harm yourself or keep doing it, doing it, doing it, doing it and because it get accessible.
Speaker 2:But like I know a girl, a friend of mine, she probably like on her third BBL. Wow.
Speaker 3:Yeah, I'm saying, that's what. That's what they say. They get three rounds.
Speaker 2:She might be on her third.
Speaker 3:I need my third round.
Speaker 2:Yeah, she not 30.
Speaker 3:They be waiting for the third round.
Speaker 1:She still on her 20s.
Speaker 3:Yeah, I know about that you know they wait for them. Third round yeah, it's crazy.
Speaker 1:I mean, like the person who they claim had the most impact on the bbl culture is kim kardashian, right wow her impact with her television show, and then just showing a bit behind the scenes and I don't know if you consider her to be part of our, our culture, right, but she's influenced so many women in our culture to have bbls, right.
Speaker 1:I mean. I mean that's not appropriate, that's not right in my mind. And so we got to watch where our influences are coming from and you know, some of the people are really positive about their image, but you don't want to be influenced by the Kardashians. You don't want that to be the reason you decided to have something done.
Speaker 3:But they have a big impact, especially on BBL and I think that people don't know what they began into because, like our sister of mine's, actually got work done and the healing process was hell for, like I seen the videos that I'm coming home or leaving the surgery. Um, they released them from surgery and it's blood all in the back seat, like do y'all know about that part?
Speaker 2:They got the wrestling suit on.
Speaker 3:Yep, Do y'all know about the part where you got laying in a car and you can't even function the right way?
Speaker 1:Yeah there's a period of time you can't even lay on your backside. You can't sit on your backside.
Speaker 3:You can't sit on your backside, you can't sit on your backside To die.
Speaker 1:So you got to lay on your stomach, you know, and that's like a serious recovery for anybody that's used to sleeping a certain way.
Speaker 3:Yeah, and especially what you think about the healing process, like with tissue having to heal back up in the right, and like what you taking care of it and being able to heal up the right way. What do you think about that? Like with people being so much in a rush when they get surgery done?
Speaker 1:Yeah. So in order for you to heal properly, you got to have good nutrition. You got to have good health going into it. A lot of people don't get any health care until they go to get these procedures. In some cases they'll be like well'm, I don't really have any conditions. But you got to get tuned up for surgery because you lose a lot of blood. In a lot of cases you lose fluid, your electrolytes can get thrown out of whack and and you're you know you're going to bleed, in some cases for a prolonged period of time. So if you're not, if you're anemic or if your nutrition isn't on point, your healing processes could be compromised. And so I think that's probably more important than the surgery is just to make sure you can. You can heal appropriately, because the surgeon can do everything they can to do a perfect surgery, and if you're not watching your diet, taking your, your vitamins, you know that type of thing.
Speaker 3:Afterward you can really have a bad result, even if the surgeon did everything perfectly now say you got that bad result, what that leads to uh, emotional stress, uh other issues where you probably start having body issues or body issues, health issues yeah, both both emotional surgery really serious.
Speaker 1:Yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah. A lot of people, um, they have like a buyer's remorse right after, like they may be like, oh man, what did I just do? You know, they see the swelling, they see the fluid coming out and they're like a lot of people are depressed that first, maybe few months after, because you've already made an altering decision. But you can't go back and now you're dealing with all this pain and it doesn't look like you thought it was going to look at that period of time. You may have months before you get to the final result. Like with a nose job it can take a year for all the swelling to go. So you know you may do a perfect surgery and it's just so swollen and you can't really even see the change and you might be upset or depressed about that. Or you might have people saying like I don't really see what he did or it just looks swollen, or you know. And then you're like even more self-conscious.
Speaker 1:So you got to have a good support system and that support system is really just your. You know people you trust with what you're doing and yourself. You know loving yourself and being like. You know I know I did this for the right reason. I'm gonna wait it out. I'm gonna be patient. A lot of people don't have enough support within themselves, even if you have family members, so I think that's part of the screening process. Is this person gonna be able to handle all of the aftercare, all of the swelling, all of the? You know this. That may be the doubt that it might not turn out right. All of that is part of what you screen for in a Prospective patient.
Speaker 2:If you're, if you're really on your game, you know what I mean. How you, how you think, um, how you think it would turn out if we? Uh, how you think it would turn out. Or, or you think the ratio of getting plastic surgery is on a higher scale now than it was 10 years ago oh, yeah, yeah, because you can pull up instagram and see plastic right, you can see somebody flaunting their results.
Speaker 1:I mean, when I was coming up, there was a show called dr 90210 ah, remember that network and one of those networks, and that was like when I first started seeing plastic surgery on TV, where they were like going behind the scenes and like showing the surgeon in the OR, and so from that period of time till now, like you can find that you can find plastic surgery anywhere, everywhere.
Speaker 1:Back then it was like one network and there was one place where you could see the actual transformations and that's what got a lot of people being like oh, this is, this is demystified. Now, like I feel comfortable going to do this.
Speaker 2:And then you had the kardashian wave. Now you got social media and it's, it's out of here now. Yeah see, I just don't want it to be like a thing right, are you like? Because I asked that, because I it's more in our face than it was 10 years ago and I don't want 10 years from now for it to be more if than what it is now. Yeah, you know, I mean because it's like I don't, I don't know, I don't really look at it as like a super good thing all the time. I mean because it can be very, very emotional for people. It could be very, very, uh, harmful, like them getting their bodies back together. And I'll be looking at it like if you ain't, if you ain't have a primary doctor before you went and got some type of surgery done to yourself. You just got to get your life together, you ain't an adult, you feel me.
Speaker 2:That's so common nowadays and people going into it like that, they won't even have a primary doctor. They won't have an annual.
Speaker 1:Blood pressure will be out of control. Blood sugar will be out of control. They nutrition, they eating.
Speaker 2:Whatever all blood sugar be out of control nutrition. They eating whatever. No, I mean they diet is whatever. Yeah and all of that plays into absolutely the plastic surgery I need them to understand and notice yeah, they don't be knowing this. They go into a high blood pressure eating cheese curls I'm still old enough to remember kanye's mom.
Speaker 3:Remember what happened with her right not to say anything bad about the surgeon yeah, yeah you know she had some chronic health conditions.
Speaker 1:You know what I mean, and and um was it her? Healing or um she had a complication of one of her chronic health conditions as I understand it. So there's a lot of people who just walk right in.
Speaker 1:They think they can get on the table, not check into, especially above 40, you know where you got all these stuff you know accumulating so there's a lot of women who don't have primary care and they just walk right in there and stuff flies below the radar and then people can end up, you know, with an unfortunate event that's a bad idea, man.
Speaker 2:Yeah, I will. I want so. If you are looking to make changes on your body, plastic surgery of any type of way, make sure, a year before you do it, you get you a primary doctor and go to all your checkups within that year up until you going to make the decision to make the changes to your body.
Speaker 2:I'm just saying that in care of my black people out there, because we are going more into doing things like that without having a knowledge of the things that I just said. Yeah, and I think that we should talk about that and like put that, push that more to the forefront than us. Like, yeah, get your ass done, girl yeah, I'm saying get your titties done, pick your titties up. I'm saying all girl, go get your health right.
Speaker 1:Yeah, make sure you don't got diabetes yeah before you go lay on somebody's table yeah, now, I mean, most clinics will do what they call a health screening, where they'll actually before you do it, they'll check your basic labs, your electrolyte panel, your blood, uh, blood count meaning like are you anemic? Um, and sometimes a lot of times, to do a heart tracing, a ekg as well as an x-ray and and if you pass those things, in most cases you can get the surgery done. But you know there's a lot of other stuff that could be missed.
Speaker 3:So I would recommend.
Speaker 1:You know, a lot of times your primary is the one who does the health. Who's going?
Speaker 2:to do everything on your body up until that point. So I would go to somebody.
Speaker 1:You know we all trying to make our money. So if you come in there and you got $10,000 and you like, I want surgery, tomorrow. I don't know a lot of people that I know people who will just take it and they'll skirt you through the medical clearance and that's when you end up with problems, because it's just hard to turn down cash, you know, for some people. So you got to do your own homework.
Speaker 1:Because, a lot of times the surgeons you can't I mean a good surgeon will check it, but a lot of people, when faced with that dollar, they're going to be like, all right, let's just, you know, let's get by this and get this done, you know, Wow.
Speaker 3:So like that's crazy, because that's like in anything that's out here.
Speaker 1:Yeah.
Speaker 3:It's people that'll take a quick, but that's the like get something done, but that's crazy for people to do that in a surgery world where it's real serious. Yeah, you know what I mean. You do a lot of like Restoring Emotional and restoring people Looks and the things that they want, right when it come to your problems. Do you have that refreshment Like are you, do you have something to go to? So it's like, how do you deal?
Speaker 2:With you being a doctor and dealing with everything you got to deal with with everybody else, how you deal with chores.
Speaker 3:Yeah, but you got some you go to like to release your. Oh yeah, I'm the things you think about.
Speaker 1:I work out a lot I'm. I watch a lot of sports, I hang out with my kid.
Speaker 3:Hanging out with my kid is like the instant pick me up. You know family and uh, family and um, you get time for that though. Yeah, well, I make.
Speaker 1:That's basically what I'm getting at yeah, I make time because, um you know, I see a lot of patients every day. They bring their problems, they put their problems on my, on my lap pause, and, um you know, I gotta kind of help them navigate and then I gotta go home and figure out my life now your emotions are gonna navigate my own problems and then I gotta re-up that the next day you carry the emotions home sometimes yeah, I think I do I every patient interaction leaves a little residue, sometimes good, sometimes bad.
Speaker 1:If I really help somebody, I'm like man. I feel good about that. Somebody was complaining. I'm like man. Should I be doing this? I start to doubt. So you know, now that I've been in it over 10 years, I just built up my uh, my repertoire. Sometimes I'll just go for a walk, I'll put my headphones in and just go for a walk. Let the days, let the day pass me that way.
Speaker 1:But um yes, it's impossible not to take stuff home, especially if you really care. You know what I mean. Like I'm gonna I study. The other thing is I got surgery in the morning on a nose and I gotta go home and read and look at her pictures and try to figure out like how I'm gonna approach it. So when I go in there I'm not like yeah, that take a long.
Speaker 3:That's all the time, All the time, yeah, so but that's what makes you great.
Speaker 1:You know what I mean. That's how you become great. You know shooting jump shots after the game is over, right, some people stay in the gym and they keep working, and other people they hang them up and go home. You know what I mean.
Speaker 2:So I just, I just think that this, this is a conversation that we should have more in front of the camera, like with more hip-hop docs for sure, I'm saying yeah, you gotta, you gotta understand it from from your perspective of being a black man doing a lot of surgery on black women and the emotional intelligence you have to be to deal with.
Speaker 1:Yeah, yeah, trust me, especially the face.
Speaker 3:Yes, Imagine you working on a black lady nose and you met like one little dot, yeah.
Speaker 1:And you know the other thing about our people that I think is like important Imagine you working on a black lady nose and you met like one little, like a dot, like anything, yeah. And you know, the other thing about our people that I think is like important to mention is I grew up, I'm a, I'm a. I was born in 78. I'm an 80s baby. I watched Michael Jackson change in front of me, right, that's all I knew about nose jobs was Michael Jackson. So if I had a nickel for every time a patient came into office and was like OK, doc, I want my nose done, but I don't want to look like Michael Jackson.
Speaker 1:I mean, I could probably retire tomorrow, because that's, that's seared in everybody's brain.
Speaker 3:They think every nose job looks like Michael Jackson so.
Speaker 1:I have to introduce them to the nuance of the specialty, the subtlety, like, ok, I don't do the Michael Jackson, I don't do the little Kim, you come to me. I'm gonna make it look better, but you're gonna look like you were born that way you're not gonna look out of proportion and crazy, right?
Speaker 1:so a lot of people are still getting over that idea that not everybody looks like Michael Jackson on the other side of a nose job. So you know, maybe in about 20 years we won't see that because we'll have more normal examples yeah, so when I was, coming up.
Speaker 2:That's all we had that's what it's all more natural versus extreme right. Yeah, I'm saying that's not all we had it was one, yeah, well there's some other person um no east coast yeah yeah, like another one man. Why'd she do it that? Picture in court before she got that shit done the cover of the Hardcore album.
Speaker 1:I was, I mean bad, right, like I just I remember having this. My event is when it come to Kim bro. Yeah, listen, man, I'm telling you, man, like once you go, once you mess it up nose, how to do a middle, middle Eastern nose, all the articles taught you one way to do it. It's like going to barbershop and you only know one fade, right. So, everybody was making a nose, look European. That's why Michael Jackson happened, that's why little Kim happened, because you just didn't have enough people.
Speaker 1:And they call it ethnic rhinoplasty or nose job but it's really just somebody knowing what to do with what's in front of you, having like multiple tools in your toolbox where you're not going to. You know everybody gets in your chair, gets a bowl, fade right Like you got some. You know I do white people, I do Asian, I I do every race, I don't just do black. And they come to me because they can look on my page and see oh, this dude's responsible with this craft like he ain't out here botching.
Speaker 1:I don't see nobody looking like another race after he gets the hold of him. So that's like a part of why I feel like every client matters for me. I gotta pick them really carefully dope, dope.
Speaker 2:Yeah, I think that's dope. I think you should keep it that way because, like you said, you can see the care. You look on your page, you see the care, you feel what I'm saying and then everything that go into it so far as the emotional part that you help them through is is great as well.
Speaker 1:So, yeah, I like that about you doc yeah, I like that and turning people down like look, I don't think I'm the surgeon for you.
Speaker 2:That's even more doing yeah.
Speaker 3:Like, look, I see what you want to do, but I'm not going to do that because I don't want my name on that Let me ask you a question, Since we in 2025, right now, right, what you think about AI like in the future helping surgery?
Speaker 1:Yeah, so I actually, maybe about a year ago, maybe almost two years ago, I did a course in AI, just because I was hearing all this stuff about how I was going to replace doctors and replace surgeons and I think it could help.
Speaker 3:I don't think it'll help.
Speaker 1:I think you know you'll be able to feed it information. It might give you a plan on something. But surgery, I think, is a little more technique. Yeah, it's more technique driven, natural, and you, you don't want, I don't know that many people that will walk into a doctor and let a machine and be like all right, and the doctor be like all right, this is who's doing your surgery and some robot and a robot. Come on I don't think that we're there yet, but we let.
Speaker 3:The precision is like 99.99 artistry.
Speaker 1:Right, like you gotta it'sa feeling. It's a feeling and it's like you gotta know what to leave and what to take away, right, so that's like completely based on your judgment, what you think is going to look good, your experience you can't really pick that up out of a textbook because everybody's different. You could set line up three more surgeons here and give us the same nose and we probably would all get a decent result with different techniques. So right, you know, that's the part. That's what they pay for this.
Speaker 3:How I will look at it right. A alpha surgeon for the surgery, right a? I will go scan your face right and then it will probably tell you the answer. All well, to take the questionnaire, and then it'll probably show you your face. Yeah, the way you want it to look yeah, yeah, that's what they do.
Speaker 1:Doctors can do that now, but it'll do it seamless like you don't even have to put any input in yeah um, but um yeah right now you can do that with, with uh, basically with photoshop. There's surgeons who will take your picture and photoshop wow, and then show it to you. But that's the closest. But I think ai is going to be doing that. It's going to do it. It like before you even come to the doctor's office.
Speaker 3:Yeah, like I want to know.
Speaker 1:And this is it yeah, and then you're going to come, just don't tell me you can't do this.
Speaker 3:It's going to work. Don't tell me you can't do this, and if you can't, I got the notes under here on how you can get it done.
Speaker 1:Right to me. I know it is.
Speaker 3:I mean it's gonna be smarter than any surgeon out there yeah, because you got you're gonna have regular people coming and telling you your job, yeah, and you're gonna be like what?
Speaker 1:yeah, they're not gonna be wrong, they're gonna be a hundred percent they actually started the ai hospital in china that can see like 10 000 patients in like a couple of days get out of here, so they're already rolling that out.
Speaker 1:It's only seeing like clinical stuff, not surgical, yeah, but it's seeing the volume of patients that you know never gets tired, you know what I mean. Like you can line patients up around the block and it's gonna knock them all out all if it takes all day, it's just going. It ain't like I'm gonna punch out, I'm going home, I'll see y'all tomorrow, ain't none of that, it's just boom boom, boom boom, yeah, knocking them out.
Speaker 3:So we're here. I heard it's different. I heard they like. I heard like they really like you get healed over there To the point you don't need treatment.
Speaker 2:Because they got all them herbs and stuff like that, all them little things.
Speaker 3:It's more be chicken.
Speaker 2:There's a bowl on your back with some smoke in it. You know the twink in your back. There's a bowl on your back with some smoke in it. Next thing you know, the twink on your back is stopping tweaking.
Speaker 3:They put water on top of your head with a napkin and then bubbles come in the cup. Next thing you know you got a headache.
Speaker 2:Bro, you put a little pin on your acupuncture and be clear you be like what the fuck?
Speaker 3:What the fuck they do? Yeah, all right. If you had to take a patient on the table right now, say if it was sports NBA, right, it's NBA players who would be difficult to do surgery around while they're yelling at you. This is a sport Coach, or?
Speaker 1:player Player Draymond Green. Oh man, I knew you was going to Draymond Green.
Speaker 3:Oh man, I knew you was going to say Draymond. I knew you was going to say Draymond, green man. I respect him as a ball player, but as a mouth he just wow, yeah, he really stirs it up and I don't think I would be able to concentrate Right right. Listen man, it's the Real of the Most podcast. We got Doc in the building. Uh trade, right right. Listen man, it's the real of the most podcast. We got doc in the building. Uh-huh man, make sure y'all share, like, subscribe, comment if you don't you're a muff later.
Speaker 3:why? Because it's free. Look, make sure y'all go to wwwrealitermostpodcastcom check out our latest video man. Hey, we got a few games this to play just before you go um. These just some hip-hop games we play. Yeah, um, just to see where you at hip-hop wise. Okay, yeah, because we, we for the culture yeah um, it might not just be music. We might even go to fashion, we might go to movies. We just want to see where you at culture wise.
Speaker 2:So the first game, called fast track, is where I say two things. You just pick one of the others. It's real easy and um, I like to call you hip-hop doc.
Speaker 1:So we're gonna go, we're gonna start right here, we're gonna start with.
Speaker 2:We're gonna start with. Let's start with all right dc. So let's go with wow.
Speaker 3:Let's go with wow let's go with wow let's go, wow, let's go in dc, let's go um. Who else we just had from dc? It was like they don't get no recognition.
Speaker 2:Oh, that was baltimore okay, yeah, all right, dc, let's go. Damn, it's crazy because I can't even think of the name. But what's the name? Don't do that.
Speaker 3:I ain't going to do it.
Speaker 2:All right, let's just do this one. Let's do Rockefeller or Rough Rider Records, which one?
Speaker 1:Rockefeller all day, man All day. Jay-z, Beanie Siegel those are my Jay-Z. I mean, he's got multiple classics. You know what I'm saying I love Rough Riders too, but I think there's more classic albums on Rockefeller yeah.
Speaker 2:Beans, my uncle.
Speaker 1:Okay, yeah, I love Beans man, I feel like Beans was the second coldest, next to Jay-Z, in my opinion on Rockefeller.
Speaker 3:Oh Doc Talk.
Speaker 2:Yeah for sure, I like Doc.
Speaker 1:Because he could go to war. He went to war when they went to war with Nas Beanie had the hardest. Freestyles in that whole battle.
Speaker 3:You know what I mean. I'm like yo.
Speaker 1:I'm going to war with Beans. If I got to go against the MC, I want Beans on my side For real Damn.
Speaker 3:I know where Doc at now. Maxie he going to love that shit, I'm sorry, he is All right that shit. All right, let's go not really with the team all right, okay, I like that, doc, let's go um g unit or dip set oh um, man, I'm gonna go with.
Speaker 1:Uh, I'm gonna go with dip set.
Speaker 2:Yeah, yeah, cameron, I mean, kill my guys.
Speaker 1:Yeah, I like them, I mean outside of 50,. Lloyd Banks was nice, but I don't know. I got way more stuff that I still play to this day from Dipset.
Speaker 2:Yeah, dipset was definitely more like influential for the culture. All right, let's go Okay.
Speaker 1:Wale or J Cole. Oh man, J Cole. I love Wale man. I love Wale Wale's like he's DC, he gets with the Go-Go Bands, he does live shows with Go-Go Bands, he's connected. But J Cole, he's up there, man. Lyrically-wise and classics-wise and and mixtape wise. Yeah, I gotta go with him.
Speaker 2:So that would be the argument. Like J Cole probably got two classes under his belt and Wale just ain't hit that pinnacle yet.
Speaker 1:Yeah, he's got some good mixtapes, but I think he I don't know something with his formula is missing. I love Wale.
Speaker 3:Yeah, I love him too man, one of our somebody's uh knocking on the door. Mercedes, oh that's Mercedes, hello Mercedes, we're just finishing up. The doc, the hip-hop doc, hip-hop doc, that's family y'all. Mercedes just came in. All right, I'm gonna say one man because I I don't know if doc want this, but I'm going to say one man because I don't know if Doc won this, but I'm going to just pick one Fat Trout, okay, chag Lizzy. Oh, man, had to do it to you, doc, it's DC.
Speaker 1:I like Fat Trail. He's MMG man.
Speaker 3:There we go.
Speaker 1:Yeah, I'm a real hip-hop dude man.
Speaker 3:Doc really tuned in.
Speaker 1:I would say, shotgluzy got some joints too, though I'm going to go with Fat Trail man, I'm going to go with Fat Trail, yeah Shout out to both of them.
Speaker 3:Man, Both of them guys from DC Fat Trail, shout out to you and we're going to play this next game.
Speaker 2:All right, one got to go.
Speaker 3:This is the one got to go.
Speaker 2:I named four things and we picked one to go. But when they go, they hold existence. Go, okay, I like to start with this one. Let's go. Yo, gotti, gucci, man, jeezy, lil Wayne, one gotta go.
Speaker 1:Man, that's tough.
Speaker 3:They all had pivotal moments.
Speaker 1:Yeah, yeah, i'ma get rid of Yo Gotti Just cause he's the latest. He's the latest comer Out of all three of those. Yeah, okay.
Speaker 3:That's a good way to go about it.
Speaker 1:There's no way you can go with him.
Speaker 3:The way I go about it is millionaires I like that I like that people want who fed families yeah, I like that way yeah, there's a bunch of ways you can go with them. There's so many ways to go about it okay, let's go here.
Speaker 2:A little baby lord, dirt, slime, pluto, one gotta go.
Speaker 3:Wow, you acting bad yeah.
Speaker 1:Why you do Doc like that. He ain't Atlanta man, I'm going to go with Lil Durk man. Lil Durk, yeah, I got to keep the other three man.
Speaker 2:Yeah, it probably would be the same for me, yeah.
Speaker 1:What's your thought process? See, I like all right, Pluto is my right, my number one guy yeah, he's a game changer man, especially out of atlanta yo slime come right at the home and then baby, I just like that hustler mentality.
Speaker 2:More so if like shooting a nigga, yeah, yeah, I want to make the money. I don't know, I'm cool on violence a little bit. You know what I'm saying right only, only when needed. Right, I want to make the money. Yeah, I'm going to go with Lil Baby a little more. Shake the streets up.
Speaker 3:Yeah man, that's fire. I'm going to do some old hair ladies for him.
Speaker 2:Let's go.
Speaker 3:Ready I'm ready. Because I heard you speaking on a little bit of hip hop. Let's Lil' Kim Foxy Brown, nikki Cardi.
Speaker 1:Cardi, Cardi. The other three can really. They can really write. They did a lot. They can really spit. They did a lot.
Speaker 2:They did a lot for the women in the gang. Yeah, yeah, yeah.
Speaker 1:Yeah, Lil' Kim's the pioneer, Nikki's probably the one who took it the farthest. The highest. Facts, facts. Foxy was right there with Lil plus. She was.
Speaker 2:She was in the firm yeah, right, she held her own next to nas. Yes, she did.
Speaker 1:Yes, yes people write her rhymes and core mega.
Speaker 2:We can't like, not like, yeah, easy rid of cardi.
Speaker 1:No disrespect to cardi, but that's a good pig doctor on some yeah, yeah, I'm gonna make sure, because I can really hop in the car with me.
Speaker 3:I ain't gonna lie they're gonna be like.
Speaker 2:I like that with me, I ain't gonna lie they're gonna be like I like that, bro, I like how you want it especially my brother, my brother's like my hip-hop.
Speaker 3:You know me and him we hip-hop heads together.
Speaker 2:So yeah, you can hop in the car. I'm proud man. I appreciate that. Man, let's go. Let's go. Um, I like to do these. Drew hill, oh who jagged edge.
Speaker 3:ah, you just seen the Jagged Edge.
Speaker 2:Jagged Edge.
Speaker 3:That was funny.
Speaker 2:Jodeci.
Speaker 3:Need one 112. 112. Yes.
Speaker 2:That's it, that really was it, that's really it?
Speaker 1:That was coming anyway. Yeah, that was really it, drew.
Speaker 3:Hill and guess what they got to go who 112.
Speaker 2:Hold up, hold up, hold up. Yeah, I'm dropping off Drew Hill Me too, I'm dropping Drew Hill off Me too.
Speaker 3:What so? That means Cisco? No, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no yeah yeah, yeah Bro did?
Speaker 1:you just say Drew, you got 112,.
Speaker 3:Jodeci, what Drew Hill album you know, I mean what 112 album you know. But they got so many hits.
Speaker 1:They got all that man.
Speaker 3:They do, got hits, they got 112 hits they got.
Speaker 1:Biggie hits they got. Mase hits they got. I don't know.
Speaker 3:Oh, no he talking, Cupid, Doc, no he talking.
Speaker 1:Cupid Doc. No, come on, man, it's some joint stuff, doc, you know.
Speaker 3:Doc you know, you know, you got with me. Yeah, that's just me, man. No, you know you know, sometimes I need a little refreshment yeah.
Speaker 2:Let's go.
Speaker 3:Let's do the major.
Speaker 2:That's the main one. Right here, let's do the major.
Speaker 3:Diddy Wait, wait, wait Before you do it, right? He just said Diddy, right? There's nothing personal About this, right?
Speaker 1:So Just music, just influence.
Speaker 2:Yeah, yeah, yeah, stuff like that. So uh, jay Z, diddy, dr Dre, birdman, one gotta go Birdman.
Speaker 1:Yeah, birdman, easy, easy Out of those three.
Speaker 2:Yeah, out of those three Birdman got the best trifecta in hip-hop history. You don't think so nicki, nicki, wayne and drake.
Speaker 1:Yeah, yeah but that's not that's. That's young money, though that's like not even I mean he's.
Speaker 2:He's like the old bro, that wouldn't be, that wouldn't be possible without, without baby bro yeah, I mean he bankrolled it.
Speaker 3:You just made perfect sense, though. Right there, that is young money that's young money.
Speaker 1:That's way Wayne found Drake, wayne signed and found Nicki Minaj that is young money under Birdman, but it's and then, Birdman was Robin, robin folks. He was taking people. You know, I'm saying you got people, that's broke cuz. I never got paid. You know, I mean allegedly so.
Speaker 3:DJs and all funny business. You know what I'm saying. I mean, did he do some funny?
Speaker 1:business pause, um. But I would say, I gotta go with bird man.
Speaker 2:Man, I gotta do your birth that's the first time the first time I ever heard and you broke it down. Go crazy yo, you broke it down to the pocket now like did you and I want to they know, he hard, he like thinking yeah, yeah, yeah, I appreciate you. He precisely thinking.
Speaker 1:Yeah, yeah, yeah, you know what I'm saying. I appreciate it, Like you.
Speaker 3:Yeah, if I get my nose job and all that when I get them little checks. Yeah, I might you know that I ain't going to lie. Nobody never picked Birdman, ever bro, Really.
Speaker 2:Nobody, never. I get no nose job A year doing this. Nobody never picked Birdman bro. Now that was crazy.
Speaker 3:That was crazy.
Speaker 1:What was the other one besides Biggie? I'm trying to remember it was Biggie.
Speaker 2:It was. Birdman it was hold on Diddy.
Speaker 1:Jay-Z.
Speaker 2:Jay-Z Birdman.
Speaker 1:Dr Dre, dr Dre, oh, dr Dre. Yeah, I'm still. I'm rocking with my same pick. I bet a lot of people get rid of Dre, right, everybody Okay.
Speaker 3:Forget the West Coast, they could go.
Speaker 2:Everybody pick the West Coast. They could go without the music. That's 50 Cent, that's a lot of careers.
Speaker 3:That's Louis Banks, that's Young Buck, that's Kendrick right now, that's Kendrick Right now. There's Mustard All them, dudes, all them. He made all the classic beats all them dudes on the east coast.
Speaker 1:He made uh what was he made one of those beats for?
Speaker 2:me uh fair family affair dog you know where snoop snoop is?
Speaker 1:everywhere I love snoop everywhere. Like the hip-hop rapper, he's the most famous I love snoop too.
Speaker 2:I just love like hi, I love snoop household name.
Speaker 1:He's on tv every five minutes.
Speaker 2:Yeah, man I'd be picking dr dry that's controversial man. It is I like the accent, though just the young man yeah, so.
Speaker 3:So how how can someone actually reach out to you for?
Speaker 1:questions and anything, yeah, um I would say the quickest way is through the gram. I'm on it. Uh, at aaron fletcher, md and um, I got another page called dr knows better. It's basically like me and my brother made a bunch of hip-hop songs into healthcare jingles wow, and my brother got original rhymes on there. So we took took like so Fresh, so Clean and made like a nasal wrench jingle out of it. That's a good one. We got just a whole bunch of content. So follow Dr Dot Knows Better, my brother, who's a nurse here in Atlanta. We both came up here in Atlanta. That's fire. We want to make hip hop cool for the kids and we want to make being in health.
Speaker 3:Can you tell them more about what you do here in Atlanta?
Speaker 1:Because you do here in Atlanta, because you do what nobody else actually does here. You know I'm saying, yeah, I'm an ear, nose and throat, so I do like tonsils. I mean, I'm not just plastic surgery. I can, you know, take the wax out of your grandma's ears. I can fix your, you know your vocal cords. I can take your thyroid out, I can do all that. Sinus surgery, allergies, um, you can bring your kids in, I do. You know pediatric stuff as well.
Speaker 1:Otherwise, y'all heat as shit. I do everything, but I, my subspecialty, is like the plastic, so not everybody is a candidate for plastics. I always say, like you know, I don't go trying to look for work, but it, you know, finds me. So if you, if you thought about it, you want to have an honest conversation with somebody who's not going to spin you, uh, yeah, shoot me a dm or look me up on the internet. My website is wwwaaronfletchermdcom. My office is in stockbridge, so I'm on the south side of town and we got a film project coming up where we're going to be talking about the health care desert that was created in south atlanta below i-20 when those two hospitals closed in 2020. So, okay, we want to raise some awareness for people that don't have health care at all, which is a lot of us on the south side of town. So that's the next project we got coming oh man, they all have it.
Speaker 3:Fire, fire. Yeah, I want. I got one question, though. You said townshaws, right, a lot of people that get that, like I know y'all think I'm about to say something. A lot of people that get that is like people that snore. Yeah, that's one reason to get them out all right.
Speaker 1:Yeah, big tonsils if you have sleep apnea or if you get a lot of strep throat like sleep apnea, that's like you stop breathing and you stop breathing.
Speaker 2:I got my tonsils took out in sixth grade yeah, I mean it's best to do it.
Speaker 3:wow, so that's people get surgery for that, right? Oh, oh, yeah, I got my tonsils took off man.
Speaker 2:I broke my foot in the same year, sixth grade.
Speaker 1:Yeah.
Speaker 2:I missed a whole year of school.
Speaker 3:Yeah, all right, there y'all have it, man, we got Doc in the building. Hip-hop Doc y'all. Thank you for having me, man, I enjoy it Hip-hop Doc.
Speaker 2:Dr Aaron, I'm White Boy D2 Ray and this is the Really the Most Podcast, serski, really the Most Podcast.