
‘Face BBLs’ can undo horrid Ozempic side effect — and people are spending thousands: ‘I can look in the mirror now’
NY Post
Kya Odom was forced to face a shocking truth after dropping 30 pounds in just over 30 days.
Her face had deflated.
So to re-plump her mug after shrinking from 155 to 125 pounds, the newly svelte Gen Zer from Columbus, Ohio, opted for a facial fat transfer.
“I got a face BBL,” Odom, 22, a Hooters waitress turned beauty influencer, told The Post with a laugh, likening her $9,000 cosmetic procedure to the celeb-buzzy Brazilian butt lift.
And like the BBL surgery, during which baggy bums are made bountiful with fat from other areas of the body, facial fat transfers use liposuctioned chub to reinflate patients’ cheeks for a youthful finish.
It’s a minimally invasive treatment (and a more natural alternative to dermal filler) that’s increasing in demand amid the rapid weight loss craze spurred on by Ozempic, Wegovy and Mounjaro.

The killing of Iran’s tyrannical Supreme Leader Ali Khamenei on Saturday in an unprecedented joint military attack by the US and Israel called Operation Epic Fury set off widespread celebrations from Iranians around the world — as President Trump said it would give them their “greatest chance” to “take back the country.” Meanwhile, in Iran, a lack of internet has made it impossible for Iranians to easily communicate daily conditions. Over a period of three days, with limited VPN connection, an eyewitness currently in Tehran — who, for her safety, is concealing her identity — shared her account of life under a country in the midst of battle with The Post’s Natasha Pearlman.







