Show Us Your Jaw-Dropping Before And After Cosmetic Surgery Results
That being said, some people want to make a change simply for themselves, like a woman named Michelle Wood who shocked the internet with her plastic surgery transformation...
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She had a face lift and some other procedures done in Guadalajara, Mexico, saving her well over $30,000 by doing so!
But others might need cosmetic surgery for other purposes, like to repair a cleft lip, for example.
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Maybe you are someone who has microtia, when someone is born with a small or absent external ear, and you've had ear reconstruction or got a very realistic prosthetic.
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Perhaps you were in an accident and needed some other sort of reconstruction done, and the doctors did a phenomenal job.
Maybe you are just someone who wanted to get a boob job for yourself.
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Or perhaps you had a facelift like Michelle, and your before-and-after photos always shock people, so you want to share it with us!
Whatever it was, we would love to celebrate YOU. If you had a cosmetic procedure done out of the country and saved a ton of money, we want to hear about that, too! Share all the details along with your before and after photos in the comments, and you could be featured in an upcoming BuzzFeed post.
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He was a cultural TV icon best known for introducing Elvis and the Beatles, but Ed Sullivan had a much deeper effect on American music and culture than most ever realized. For twenty-three years, tens of millions of people gathered around the television to see what new and different acts he might feature on his Sunday night show. 'If you were on the Ed Sullivan Show, it meant you mattered,' says Sullivan's granddaughter, Margo Precht Speciale, producer of Netflix documentary Sunday Best: The Untold Story of Ed Sullivan. 'He didn't showcase only pop stars, he brought on opera, ballet, and Broadway artists, as well. He trusted the audience to care about all of it and made culture feel accessible to everyone during that time.' The show was originally called The Toast of the Town when it debuted in 1948. The name was later changed to The Ed Sullivan Show. He was a print journalist before making the move to TV, but Sullivan had an extensive background gauging talent as the Broadway columnist for The Daily News. He also had a strong connection to many New York entertainers who ended up as early guests on the show. The show hit the airwaves at a time America was deeply divided by segregation which resulted in a push for the show to have white guests only. And that pressure would continue in the years that followed. Sullivan was not only the host of the show, but the producer, as well. He had sole responsibity for booking guests. But despite political pressure, calls for advertising boycotts, and the risk of jeopardizing his career, Sullivan refused to follow the directive to exclude Black singers, musicians, or bands. He continued choosing guests based on the only criteria that mattered to him. 'He admired talent and that's what it came down to,' says Speciale. 'It wasn't about the color of your skin or your background. He really only cared about talent." Sunday Best looks back at Sullivan's dedication to highlighting Black artists and Black culture on prime-time television. While the country was sharply divided by racial lines in all other aspects, his weekly show brought a multi-cultural blend of all types of music into America's living rooms. The documentary has been ten years in the making and includes with the late Harry Belafonte, Dionne Warwick, Motown Founder Berry Gordy, and many others. 'When Ed Sullivan came along," Gordy says in the film, 'he seemed to be fearless and didn't seem to care what other people thought.' There are performances by Belafonte, a 13-year-old Stevie Wonder, the Jackson 5, and many other artists welcomed to the Ed Sullivan stage, despite the racial strife that raged across the country. At one point, CBS banned Belafonte from the network due to his involvement in the fight for Civil Rights. Sullivan had him on the show anyway. 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