logo
Surgeon's warning after influencer with 50 inch BBL brags about flying first class only as she can't fit her curves into economy seats

Surgeon's warning after influencer with 50 inch BBL brags about flying first class only as she can't fit her curves into economy seats

Daily Mail​16 hours ago
Surgeons today issued fresh warnings over the dangers of Brazilian butt lifts after a model claimed she enlarged her buttock by 50 inches.
The procedure, also known as a BBL, involves taking fat from the hips, abdomen and other areas via liposuction, before injecting it into the bottom.
The result is a bigger, more pert behind—theoretically at least.
But experts have long warned of the dangers of BBLs, which can prove fatal, including ruptured blood vessels and serious skin infections.
Now, one US model and influencer has claimed she underwent a 50-inch double BBL and can only fly first class as she can't squeeze into economy seats.
Annie Grant, from Los Angeles in California, said the procedure—which cost $50,000—has left her 'super confident', but also unable to sit on rollercoasters, cinema seats or even squeeze into a pair of jeans.
Surgeons, however, today cautioned a BBL of this size 'crosses the line between aesthetics and excess' and 'puts lives at risk'.
Dr Leonard Josipovic, a consultant plastic surgeon at Seline Clinic in London told the Daily Mail: 'As a plastic surgeon, I always ask "what is truly beautiful?"
Fat is first harvested from the hips, lower back, abdomen, thighs and other areas via liposuction . Special equipment is used to prepare it for transfer before it is injected directly into the glutes at specific points, giving the buttocks a bigger, curvier appearance
'A 50-inch butt may get attention, but it often crosses the line between aesthetics and excess—and can be life-threatening.
'BBLs carry the highest death rate of any cosmetic procedure, mainly due to fat embolism when done improperly.
'True beauty is about balance and proportion, not extremes.
'When performed safely and conservatively, a BBL can enhance natural curves—but pushing the limits puts lives at risk.'
According to Ms Grant, the surgery was all worth it to achieve the 'hot' look of her dreams.
The 26-year-old spent the five-figure sum undergoing surgery in April 2023 and November 2024, and claimed she now lives in lycra leggings and shorts.
She said: 'I never fly economy. I have to fly first class now because I can't fit in economy.
'If there's no space in first class I have to get a flight the next day so I have more room.
'I tend to travel in leggings and people stare at me everywhere I go.
'I've had flight attendants and other passengers look at me snootily. They don't say anything but I get a lot of stares.'
'I wanted a peachy, more curvaceous bum, I like big butts. I just wanted to be hotter and now it's 50 inches, it's really big.
'I used to love amusement parks but I can't sit on the rides anymore so when someone asks me to go to one I can't.
'One time I couldn't sit in a chair. My butt was too big for me to lie down, I needed a little hole for it, so I lay across two chairs.'
But she added: 'I've made more money thanks to my BBLs—they've made life a lot easier when it comes to content creation.
'I feel super confident now. I'm really into fashion and now I can dress the way I want to.
'I'm not focused on dating, I just want to spend time with my family at the moment.'
On average, the procedure costs around £6,000 in the UK. But according to the NHS, it could be priced as high as £8,000.
There may also be additional costs for consultations, aftercare and further treatment sessions, if required.
Yet, adverts for the procedure abroad, meanwhile, claim people can pay as little as $2,750 (£2,190).
BBLs, however, are one of the most dangerous types of cosmetic surgery available.
The risk of death is higher than most operations, currently estimated at one in 15,000.
This is because fat injected into dense buttock muscle does not stay there. Instead, the liquid squeezes through the muscle fibres, stretching delicate blood vessels and causing them to rupture.
Such a complication is what killed Leah Cambridge, 29, a British mother who died in August 2018 after paying £6,500 to get a BBL in Turkey.
Generic side effects include bruising, swelling, temporary numbness and scars.
And, like any op, it carries the risk of excessive bleeding and an infection.
In her response to Ms Kerr's prevention of future death report, Maria Caulfield, minister for mental health and women's health strategy, wrote: 'The risk of death for BBL surgery is at least 10 times higher than many other cosmetic procedures, and it has the highest death rate of all cosmetic procedures.'
Last year, London-based aesthetic surgeon Dr Veerle Rotsaert also told the Daily Mail she discourages patients from getting any BBL and instead recommends they go to the gym and do squats.
She said: 'In my practice if people want more volume in the buttocks area, I first of all educate them on normal anatomy.
'I recommend going to the gym to do squats.'
Dr Rotsaert also urged Brits to shy away from BBLs, stating that the 'Kardashian body type is a trend'.
Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

RFK Jr's health department to halt $500m in mRNA vaccine research
RFK Jr's health department to halt $500m in mRNA vaccine research

The Guardian

time40 minutes ago

  • The Guardian

RFK Jr's health department to halt $500m in mRNA vaccine research

The US Department of Health and Human Services said on Tuesday it would terminate 22 federal contracts for mRNA-based vaccines, questioning the safety of a technology credited with helping end the Covid pandemic and saving millions of lives. The unit, Biomedical Advanced Research and Development Authority, helps companies develop medical supplies to address public health threats, and had provided billions of dollars for development of vaccines during the Covid-19 pandemic. HHS said the wind-down includes cancellation of a contract awarded to Moderna for the late-stage development of its bird flu vaccine for humans and the right to purchase the shots, as previously reported in May. The US health agency said it was also rejecting or canceling multiple pre-award solicitations, including proposals from Pfizer, Sanofi Pasteur, CSL Seqirus, Gritstone and others. In total, the affected projects are worth 'nearly $500 million', the Department of Health and Human Services (HHS) said. Certain late-stage projects were excluded from the move 'to preserve prior taxpayer investment'. This is the latest development under US health secretary Robert F Kennedy Jr, a longtime vaccine skeptic who has been making sweeping changes to reshape vaccines, food and medicine policies. 'We reviewed the science, listened to the experts, and acted,' Kennedy said in a statement. Kennedy said the HHS is terminating these programs because data show these vaccines 'fail to protect effectively against upper respiratory infections like COVID and flu', but did not offer scientific evidence. 'We're shifting that funding toward safer, broader vaccine platforms that remain effective even as viruses mutate,' Kennedy said. HHS said the decision follows a comprehensive review of mRNA-related investments initiated during the Covid-19 public health emergency. Since taking office, Kennedy, who spent two decades sowing misinformation around immunization, has overseen a major overhaul of US health policy – firing, for example, a panel of vaccine experts that advise the government and replacing them with his own appointees. In its first meeting, the new panel promptly voted to ban a longstanding vaccine preservative targeted by the anti-vaccine movement, despite its strong safety record. He has also ordered a sweeping new study on the long-debunked link between vaccines and autism. Unlike traditional vaccines, which often use weakened or inactivated forms of the target virus or bacteria, mRNA shots deliver genetic instructions into the host's cells, prompting them to produce a harmless decoy of the pathogen and train the immune system to fight the real thing. Though in development for decades, mRNA vaccines were propelled from lab benches to widespread use through Donald Trump's Operation Warp Speed – a public-private partnership led by Barda that poured billions into companies to accelerate development. The technology's pioneers, Katalin Karikó and Drew Weissman, were awarded the 2023 Nobel prize in medicine for their work contributing 'to the unprecedented rate of vaccine development during one of the greatest threats to human health in modern times'.

4 people die in crash of medical transport plane on Navajo Nation in northern Arizona
4 people die in crash of medical transport plane on Navajo Nation in northern Arizona

The Independent

timean hour ago

  • The Independent

4 people die in crash of medical transport plane on Navajo Nation in northern Arizona

A small medical transport plane crashed and caught fire Tuesday on the Navajo Nation in northern Arizona, killing four people, the tribe said in a statement. A Beechcraft 300 from the CSI Aviation company left Albuquerque, New Mexico, with four medical personnel on board, according to the Federal Aviation Administration and other agencies. It crashed in the early afternoon near the airport in Chinle, about 300 miles (483 kilometers) northeast of Phoenix. 'They were trying to land there and unfortunately something went wrong,' district Police Commander Emmett Yazzie said. The crew was planning pick up a patient who needed critical care from the federal Indian Health Service hospital in Chinle, said Sharen Sandoval, director of the Navajo Department of Emergency Management. She said the plan was to return to Albuquerque. The patient's location and condition were not known Tuesday evening. Tribal authorities began receiving reports at 12:44 p.m. of black smoke at the airport, Sandoval said. The cause of the crash wasn't known, the tribe said. The National Transportation Safety Board and the FAA are investigating. Navajo Nation President Buu Nygren said in a social media post that he was heartbroken to learn of the crash. 'These were people who dedicated their lives to saving others, and their loss is felt deeply across the Navajo Nation,' he said. Medical transports by air from the Navajo Nation are common because most hospitals are small and do not offer advanced or trauma care. The Chinle airport is one of a handful of airports that the tribe owns and operates on the vast 27,000 square-mile (70,000 square-kilometer) reservation that stretches into Arizona, New Mexico and Utah -- the largest land base of any Native American tribe. In January, a medical transport plane crashed in Philadelphia, killing eight people. The National Transportation Safety Board, which is investigating the crash, has said the voice recorder on that plane was not working. ___ Associated Press journalists Hannah Schoenbaum in Salt Lake City and Felicia Fonseca in Flagstaff, Arizona, contributed to this report.

OpenAI stops ChatGPT from telling people to break up with partners
OpenAI stops ChatGPT from telling people to break up with partners

The Guardian

time2 hours ago

  • The Guardian

OpenAI stops ChatGPT from telling people to break up with partners

ChatGPT will not tell people to break up with their partner and will encourage users to take breaks from long chatbot sessions, under new changes to the artificial intelligence tool. OpenAI, ChatGPT's developer, said the chatbot would stop giving definitive answers to personal challenges and would instead help people to mull over problems such as potential breakups. 'When you ask something like: 'Should I break up with my boyfriend?' ChatGPT shouldn't give you an answer. It should help you think it through – asking questions, weighing pros and cons,' said OpenAI. The US company said new ChatGPT behaviour for dealing with 'high-stakes personal decisions' would be rolled out soon. OpenAI admitted this year that an update to ChatGPT had made the groundbreaking chatbot too agreeable and altered its tone. In one reported interaction before the change, ChatGPT congratulated a user for 'standing up for yourself' when they claimed they had stopped taking their medication and left their family – who the user had thought were responsible for radio signals emanating from the walls. In the blog post, OpenAI admitted that there had been instances where its advanced 4o model had not recognised signs of delusion or emotional dependency – amid concerns that chatbots are worsening people's mental health crises. The company said it was developing tools to detect signs of mental or emotional distress so ChatGPT can direct people to 'evidence-based' resources for help. A recent study by NHS doctors in the UK warned that AI programs could amplify delusional or grandiose content in users vulnerable to psychosis. The study, which has not been peer reviewed, said the programs' behaviour could be because the models were designed to 'maximise engagement and affirmation'. The study added that even if some individuals benefited from AI interactions, there was a concern the tools could 'blur reality boundaries and disrupt self-regulation'. OpenAI added that from this week it would send 'gentle reminders' to take a screen break to users engaging in long chatbot sessions, similar to screen-time features deployed by social media companies. OpenAI also said it had convened an advisory group of experts in mental health, youth development and human-computer-interaction to guide its approach. The company has worked with more than 90 doctors, including psychiatrists and paediatricians, to build frameworks for evaluating 'complex, multi-turn' chatbot conversations. 'We hold ourselves to one test: if someone we love turned to ChatGPT for support, would we feel reassured? Getting to an unequivocal 'yes' is our work,' said the blog post. The ChatGPT alterations were announced amid speculation that a more powerful version of the chatbot is imminent. On Sunday Sam Altman, OpenAI's chief executive, shared a screenshot of what appeared to be the company's latest AI model, GPT-5.

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into a world of global content with local flavor? Download Daily8 app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store