Chloe Lattanzi had fillers removed from her face: ‘I like the way I look naturally’


Chloe Lattanzi, 30, is a singer and actress and she’s Olivia Newton John’s daughter, so she was born into fame and wealth. We’ve talked about her before, when outlets first noticed that she’d had extensive plastic surgery and when she was calling out Internet trolls on her Instagram. Chloe has that kind of homogeneous doll look that I see often enough in the media, but not much in the rural south where I live. She’s a lovely woman, you can just tell that she’s had a lot of work done and that she’s gone too far with it. Chloe has struggled with anorexia and with body dysmorphia and she’s been open about that in the past. In a new interview with The Doctors, she talked about the fact that a negative self image drove her to get fillers, which she regrets and has since had removed.

You can see the video above and I do think she’s had plastic surgery even though she denies it, although maybe that’s just tons of injectables. Her face really doesn’t move when she says that she likes the way she looks naturally. I suspect there’s no rolling that back and the way she coped with too many injections was to get more injections to try to offset the original injections.

On her anorexia and body dysmorphia
After my parents divorce I went through this chubby phase. I would eat to comfort myself. I would see comments in magazines about how I was chubby. Around 16 I started to restrict food… along with the anorexia came OCD and depression.

I didn’t have a clear sense of myself so I had my lips pumped up… I looked ridiculous. I got into using drugs and alcohol. I would read in the tabloids I was this alcoholic crazy disappointment. That really hit hard. I was at my lowest.

Funnily enough I met the love of my life at the darkest time of my life. I still have my battles today. When I read these things that they say – having big breasts, not being thin enough, it’s like you can’t win no matter what you do.

On how she’s doing today
I’m really happy. I’m stable, I’m in a loving relationship [plugs her music].

On how it feels to open up
I’m really nervous. This is really terrifying to me. I still have anxiety disorder.

Claims she hasn’t had any surgery
There was rumors that I’ve had like work done, like plastic surgery on my face. Like I really haven’t. When I was in the height of my body dysmorphia I had a whole bunch of fillers. I’ve had all that removed from my face because I like the way I look naturally.

On the pressure for girls to conform
I look back at myself as a teenager and I’m like ‘what a beautiful young woman, what was I thinking, why was I so secure?’ So many young girls are going through body dysmorphia. We’re constantly told how we’re supposed to look via Instagram and filters and there’s constant pressure for us to look person.

[From The Doctors, via People]

Chloe seems like a sweet person and there’s this sense that she’s still really struggling with her self image. In terms of social media affecting women’s self esteem, I’m glad I grew up pre-social media but I also make a conscious choice not to engage in it now. For a while I was doing Facebook, posting photos and chatting to my friends, but then I started thinking “oh I already wore that in photos last month, I should wear something different today.” I was also planning outings around posting to Facebook and noticed it was changing my choices so I decided to stop. Can you imagine social media making you feel like your body and face are inadequate? That’s horrible. I don’t do Instagram, but there are strangers giving you validation and commenting on your photos. Is that even healthy for Chloe? It sounds like she’s still having issues and like she should keep her social media among friends if she doesn’t want to shut it down entirely, which would probably be a better option for her. She’s got to promote herself and her music though.

Here’s Chloe in 2002. She looks like a completely different person. That’s not just fillers and fillers being removed, but good for her for opening up about this.

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photos credit: FameFlynet, WENN and Instagram

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100 Responses to “Chloe Lattanzi had fillers removed from her face: ‘I like the way I look naturally’”

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  1. Michael Kelly says:

    Very little about her looks natural to me

    • doofus says:

      to me, looks like a nose job, cheek implants and DEF lip enhancement.

      I’d say likely a boob job, too.

      in the pic with the glasses, she literally looks like one of those Real Dolls.

    • LiterallyaShambles says:

      That photo with the glasses honestly looks alien.
      But can you imagine being the daughter of Sandy from Grease? That’s a hell of an act you feel like you have to follow.

      • detritus says:

        She looks like a Bratz doll. All pieces very pretty, but without normal proportions.
        The giants boobs and lips, I think if she toned down both it would look 100x times better, but I am not her. I do not have the right to criticize her body and she has every right to do what she wants to make herself happy. (this is my new mantra to repeat to myself when I want to be incredibly judgey about plastic surgery)

        Sandy from Grease was so iconic, it would be really rough to feel like you had to out-hot your mom… which is also a very weird dynamic, but on that seems to play out publicly in Hollywood frequently.

      • Myrna says:

        Came here to post exactly the same thing.
        Imagine have Sandy from Grease as your mom???
        That’s got to be a lot of pressure for a young adolescent girl, who, by the way, was already lovely.
        She does look like a blow up or Bratz doll with the obvious plastic surgery (nose and boobs, for sure) and other fillers.
        I hope she finds peace within, but come on, it’s not the same in Hollywood.
        There are different standards and values.
        If Olivia is a sweet and down to earth as she seems (but who knows) there is some hope that she can help her daughter overcome her demons.

      • LiterallyaShambles says:

        Detritus, good for you.
        That’s something I have to work on, because I still find myself being judgey over excessive plastic surgery.

      • detritus says:

        Sorry Shambles, hope that didn’t come off as shade for you, its not so!

        Also where is that line? Because I don’t think tons of plastic surgery is healthy from mental standpoint, but can we point that out? If there’s a grey area, can we make any judgements?

      • Sumodo1 says:

        I hope Chloe Lattanzi finds love and inner peace. I’m rooting for her.

      • LoveIsBlynd says:

        I had a bf (x) who was mesmerized by wealth. He told me that women with plastic surgery have “upgrades” hence status symbols even if it looks obvious. I guess to him it means a free ride financially, so I guess that’s partly what perpetuates this trend.

    • Samtha says:

      Agreed, and there was nothing wrong with the way she looked before. She was a cute girl.

      • Alexi says:

        Yes very cute before. And hello, she had GYYYYYnormous implants put in…her eyes done, lips, supposedly a rib removed. Just be honest about it….but few celebs are….as if we are brain dead and stupid. She talks about inner peace yet in all selfies her boobs are super huge with deep cleavage!! I mean are you that delusional?? She clearly still has bod dysmporhia- she’s tiny.

    • ShoeAddict says:

      Please, that is not her original nose. I’m sorry to spew trash, but that nose screams alteration.

    • Mary Mary says:

      Too much plastic surgery = Barbie doll on steroids. Next…..

  2. Tourmaline says:

    She makes me feel a bit sad. “Her face really doesn’t move when she says that she likes the way she looks naturally”— mm hmmm. Hope she finds peace with herself but agree that social media may be a toxic pool for her to frequently swim in

    • mbh12 says:

      Sad, She was so pretty before the work, she has already ruined her natural good looks. I don’t think she can go back to a natural look even without the fillers in.

      Are SOME of these stars daughters under pressure to be considered as attractive as their successful mothers were at the peak of their celebrity? I sometimes wonder if agents , managers gently suggest or push or talk them into some of the early procedures thinking it will help get them work and they go overboard?

      • sherry says:

        I think about this with both Chloe Lattanzi and Demi Moore’s daughters. Olivia Newton John and Demi Moore were and are beautiful women. It can’t be easy growing up and reading things like, “Sadly, it looks like the girls got their father’s genes.”

        I have seen words to that effect written about all of them. That’s got to play with your psyche a bit, right? Especially if you grow up in a town that prizes looks/status above all else.

        As an aside, I always thought my mother was stunningly beautiful. People would always tell me she was one of the most beautiful women, inside and out, they had ever known. However, one time, one of my distant relatives was saying that, then she turned to me and said, “You look just like your father!”

        I don’t think she meant it in a bad way (because I do look like my father). Thankfully, I have a healthy amount of self-esteem, so it just made me laugh, but I can see how something like that can cause emotional damage for someone.

      • Tourmaline says:

        @Sherry I get what you’re saying–but actually Chloe’s father Matt Lattanzi is ridiculously good looking. He was/is as pretty as Olivia Newton-John! So in that way it is different from the Demi Moore/Bruce Willis daughters.

      • mbh12 says:

        I agree, Both of Chloe’s parents were goodlooking and I think actually Chloe was so pretty before, all the work, she looked like both her mom and her dad, but in her mind she perhaps thought she had to do more things to herself to become on the level of her mother. Now she just has such an artificial look when in reality she was so pretty before when natural.

        I wonder what it must be like for some of the celebrity daughters.
        Christy Brinkleys daughter Alexis? went through a rough patch emotionally.
        Demi Moore’s daughter gets ripped to shreds by some;
        .
        And it’s not new really. I was reading about old old school vintage Hollywood and so many of the daughters of icons had a hard time dealing with it at various points in their lives emotionally. eg> Shirley McClain’s daughter, actress Jennifer Jones daughter, old old school.

      • SnarkAtLarge says:

        Sounds like the women who have excessive plastic surgery perpetuate narcissism- threy seek attention so they get it; there’s not enough attention then they post on social media and finally they seek attention for getting it reversed or feeling victimized if they feel it was botched.

  3. HappyMom says:

    That poor girl.

    • Indeed. Proof that being rich cannot buy happiness. All that privilege and she’s a hot mess. The oldest looking 30 year old ever

      • The New Classic says:

        “The oldest looking 30 year old ever.”

        I would like to take a moment to point out Lindsay Lohan still exists. 😉

      • moosh says:

        Olivia is 68 and still doesn’t have grandchildren. What does her daughter do with her life other than get plastic surgery? I’m not saying everyone needs to have kids but ONJ would probably be very happy if she did.

  4. shewolf says:

    I don’t understand why some people go so hard with their looks. When I’ve been “chubby” I never felt like restricting what I ate. That sounded like torture and like it wouldnt get me anywhere. I learned how to eat properly and exercise and more importantly, how to get over my hangups. I’m not saying I’m a role model but where is the voice of reason anymore? Do people not have it? Is it not exhausting to go through life the hard way? Is it not exhausting to hate oneself like that? How long can one really maintain that level of energy in the wrong direction? I just don’t get it.

    • Pedro45 says:

      Anorexia, bulimia and body dysmorphia are all diseases. I am glad you were never afflicted with them but please don’t dismiss those who are as not having a “voice of reason”.

      • Lipreng says:

        Many studies show that the majority of American women have disordered eating habits. I feel like Shewolf is referring more to the women who practice disordered eating and extreme dieting fads than woman with actual Anorexia/Bulimia, etc.

      • Kitten says:

        Thank you, Pedro45.

      • Mel says:

        Thank you for your thoughtful and perfect answer Pedro45. That’s exactly what it is.

    • aus says:

      OMG really its a MENTAL ILLNESS
      there a BIG difference in someone wanting to loose weight and someone suffering from a mental illness that is a eating disorder. the reason people who have not had a eating disorder can not imagine staving themselves is because thankfully they did not develop a eating disorder. it is hell ,there a reason why the suicide rate of anorexia is so high.
      if you have had one you would not wish it on anyone. trust me……..

      • aus says:

        shewolf if you don’t understand research it, don’t through arounds comment like that around it harmful, hurtful and extremely ignorant.

      • Kitten says:

        Additionally, many ED-sufferers are also abuse victims. Sexual abuse often leads to skewed body perception and a need for the victim to regain control of a body that was not theirs while enduring years of abuse.

        Empathy, people, please. You don’t know what precipitated an ED so best not to judge.

      • caitlinK says:

        True. I wouldn’t wish my former years of anorexia on ANYONE. It is a way of being alive that is not living, just very barely enduring.

      • susanne says:

        Kitten, right there with you about sexual abuse and ED. With an ED, as unhealthy as it is, a person has the ability to control their body. Sexual abuse victims did not have that choice.
        Again, not healthy, but a matter of what may seem like functioning under their own control- ironically it spins out of control.
        Just one theory of how this can come about.
        I also believe that there is a brain component, the same way that some of us are more succeptible to addiction.
        Wishing recovery for us all. Battle of a lifetime. I’ve found that acceptance (and therapy and support groups) can be a lifesaver.

      • hmmm says:

        I’ve had borderline EDs and experienced some sexual abuse– although I had heard about the connection before I hadn’t realized that it was related to trying to control the body. Thank you Kitten for highlighting that. It’s always been about control for me, trying to gain control over things I felt I had no control over, including not only the abuse but other parts of my life.

        I feel badly for Chloe and wonder what sorts of trauma she’s had. Maybe just growing up in the glare of Hollywood and the pressures of looking perfect were trauma enough

    • Birdix says:

      This sounds just like my mom: “why are you still depressed? Can’t you just snap out of it? Must be exhausting to be that negative. Just buck up! I get down too, but I don’t wallow in it like you do.”

      • squee says:

        Oh god I have heard people say that too. My partner’s ex would say that to him regularly … so helpful and informed!

    • shannon says:

      I am genuinely glad for you that you are at peace with your body and I wish everyone could feel that way. We should! No matter our size or shape, we are each unique and our own kind of beautiful. Having said that, I still struggle to this day with body image issues. When I was a teenager my mom was naturally very thin and petite. I was several inches taller and had a different build, but always felt fat compared to her and hated myself. I got so sick of always hearing people telling her how jealous they were of her figure and commenting on how thin she was (in a positive way) so it got into my head that anything but her level of thinness was unacceptable. Yeah, rationally this is ridiculous, but there it is. Had I had access to Chloe’s money and the ability to go have plastic surgery AND the unfair comparison to a very famous beautiful mom I am sad to say I probably would have gone the same route she did. I have a lot of compassion for her.

      • wolfpup says:

        What is sad to me, is that this cultural ideal, split your mother and you, into mere body types.

    • Freyja says:

      You obviously need to educate yourself on body dysmorphia, eating disorders, and anxiety disorders and why they are called DISORDERS.

    • Kitten says:

      Yeah I feel kind of bad piling on but what everyone else here said times a million.
      I just wanted to say thanks to you guys for getting it ♥

    • Jennah says:

      I hate to pile on too but whether you have anorexia, bulimia, or even certain types of EDNOS (eating disorder no otherwise specified) it is a biological brain illness.

      When a non-eating disordered and eating disorder (ED) person both starve their leptin levels plummet in their systems.

      A non-ED person will say she feels irritated, fatigued, hungry and moody when starving. The leptin levels dropping are creating unpleasant moods and signal to the brain that it is time to go find more food/energy to eat.

      An ED person will say she is not hungry. The ED-skewed neurotransmitters are able to override what the leptin levels should be triggering: unpleasant moods and the desire to eat more. There seem to be certain genes and brain sections which get activated in the ED person which do not in the non-ED person.

      The trigger for someone to stop eating and activate the ED genes can be as simple as going on a diet, getting a really bad stomach flu or being in a war starvation (my grandma), or just stress or trauma that makes you lose your appetite, like many rape or abuse victims.

      My daughter developed anorexia just because in her school they talked about good foods and bad foods and how cutting out sugar made you healthier.

      Every bite of food she ate for a while was an act of bravery, as one part of her brain was telling her eat and the other said otherwise.

      The doctor said they have seen children as young as 5 or 6 with an ED, no fear of gaining weight, but who just didn’t want to eat, and in older people who couldn’t eat because of chemo making them lose their appetite and then after they were scared of food and scared to gain the weight back.

      Our doctor told us our daughter is no more to blame for her illness than someone with Asthma (which also used to be in the DSM, along with homosexuality!) or type 1 diabetes.

      I hate the stigma and self blame associated with EDs or any brain condition like anxiety or depression or schizophrenia or OCD.

      Chloe is beautiful and EDs are horrible.

      • susanne says:

        I wish the very best for you and your kiddo. I am so grateful that you have an informed doctor. So many are ignorant about ED and addiction.
        I had a ton of negative things said about my body by my mother. I think it’s just my wiring that kept me from that particular disorder. Luck.
        So to those moms with kids with ED, blaming yourself is just hurtful. Love yourself and kids and get help.
        Hugs to you all.

      • laulau says:

        I’m so glad for your daughter that she has this kind of support.

        When I was in my late teens I was put on something called Wellbutrin which caused immediate, near-death levels of anorexia. It took years to get off of due to a lack of understanding about the drug at the time and the severity of symptoms upon withdrawal.
        Since finally getting off it, I struggle with eating well past the point of being full, and the reality is it feels so similar in terms of something beyond your control pushing you to do something that’s unhealthy.
        I believe the medical cure for anorexics will likely be the same cure for over-eaters and I hope for everyone’s sake it will happen soon.

        good luck to you and yours.

    • mell says:

      @shewolf,

      sorry you got so attacked. I like to hear from everyone.

  5. Jayna says:

    It’s sad what young women do to their faces and then become delusional, lie and expect everyone to believe they are natural, when nothing in their face moves, or they come to believe it themselves. Her face is disturbing to me because it’s so plastic. She’s made herself into a plastic doll and is only famous for nothing, being Olivia’s daughter and getting on some rag mags every once in a while with very little interest in her.

    Move on and do something with your life as far as a real career, not social media and Daily Fail. She’s too old at 30 to be this shallow. There is no singing career to be had. She’s too old for the Kylie look. She will never get into acting because her look is so fake. Find a skill and do some honest work, not laying around posting so-called “model” photos on social media feeling famous — for nothing. I guess she thinks massive boobs pushed up to her neck will help her singing career.

    I’m glad she has a loving mother and father. I just feel sad for her on how lost she still is.

    • Freyja says:

      Ever heard of body dysmorphic disorder or eating disorders? There’s a fine line between vanity and disordered thoughts. Educate yourself.

    • marjiscott says:

      Jayna- What you are saying what is true. It doesn’t matter WHAT the reasoning is. Body Dysmorphia? Eating disorders? Yes, also, they are real as we all know, but it’s one thing to have that diagnosed, and be working on those things, and another to use them as a excuse to get some press. Poor Me! That is what I am seeing here. She is looking for pity, sympathy and attention though possibly a narcissistic issues. That is what is not healthy here. Still needs therapy. She isn’t out of the woods yet. Good Luck to her.

  6. kri says:

    Wow. She was lovely in 2002. I keep thinking these young girls will stop this craziness that the Kardashians basically started(of course ps has been around forever) and people like the Hadid girls continue…such extreme procedures at such a young age. I am not against plastic surgery, but I am so against this trend of extreme self-abuse.

    • mbh12 says:

      imo This started before the K’s , she was going through issues supposedly being compared to her mom or that was the rumor. She had a lot of problems, poor lady. I hope she gets better within herself.

    • echophoebe says:

      Do people ever feel really happy with their looks after cosmetic procedures? So many end up looking so unnatural, it becomes a new source of insecurities. They need counseling, not greedy plastic surgeons.

  7. tracking says:

    Oh, this makes me very sad.

  8. Lena horne says:

    I think she is beautiful .

  9. minx says:

    I feel sorry for her and hope she finds peace with herself. It sounds like she is making progress.

  10. Chetta B. says:

    Another one who’s “had nothing done,” huh? Overdone lip injections, buccal fat removal, under-eye procedures, eye-shape surgery, boob job, nose job, overdone botox, overdone fillers. Why such young people do this is beyond me. She was cute to begin with. I agree with many of the comments above. She seriously needs to work on what’s between her ears, and realize people have eyes and can see that she looks like a store-window mannequin. It’s not good plastic surgery when you constantly look like you’ve been goosed!

    • Chetta B. says:

      Add to that, awful cheek implants!

    • Mel says:

      It is very plain to see that she’s had work done, yes, but I find you very harsh.
      Her struggles with anorexia have been documented before and it is clear that she has body dismorphia. She doesn’t see herself clearly. There is a “filter” that prevents her form doing so and it’s a very tough disease to live with. If only because people are quick to judge, like they tend to do when dealing with mental illness. Let’s cut her some slack, she’s not promoting a fitness or cosmetics line while saying she’s “au natural”. She’s just telling her story.
      Also, she may not have had work done in a while and that’s why she says it. I don’t know enough about plastic surgery to tell how reversible it is. It’s possible that she cannot undo stuff that’s been done.

      • Chetta B. says:

        Fair enough. Yes, okay. It’s just such an extreme case, wouldn’t you agree? Also agreed, anything like this is very, very hard to live with. She has taken a small first step in saying no to more facial fillers.

  11. JustJen says:

    She was so cute before! Now she kind of reminds me of a younger, sober Brandi Glanville.

  12. bros says:

    she looks way older than 30. unfortunate.

    • Adele Dazeem says:

      Agreed. Exactly what I was coming on here to say. Funny how plastic surgery and its ilk serve to not make you look “old” but they really don’t make you look “young” either. Ironic.

      • Alix says:

        It makes you look old enough to feel the need to look younger.

        Poor girl looks as though she can’t even close her eyes.

  13. Jesie says:

    She’s had a lot of plastic surgery (she’s been photographed leaving plastic surgeon’s with bandages and other signs of surgery, so why she thinks that something she can lie about is beyond me), and she still has very, very obvious fillers. Like so many badly done fillers it would be easier to point out the areas of her face that aren’t ridiculously puffy and taut.

    She’s had so much work done she no longer gets attention for that, I guess lying about not having work done is all that’s left. I kind of feel bad for her, but honestly, she’s 30, and she’s had zero success trying to become a proper singer or actress despite her mother liberally funding her increasingly desperate attempts. Olivia really needs to cut her off and tell her to get an actual job, because she’s at the point where pathetic turns into shameful.

  14. poppy says:

    she needs a lot of help. so. much. help.
    she is seeking a lot of (negative) attention.
    above neck it looks like she goes to Cher’s surgeon. and below neck, Pamela Anderson’s.

  15. Birdix says:

    Can you remove fillers? How would that even be done?

    • Pamela says:

      I am hoping someone answers you as I had the same question.

      Aren’t fillers similar to Botox in that you inject them, and they aren’t permanent…so you have to go back every so often to “re-up”? And how WOULD you even begin to UN-inject them?

      • Arock says:

        Some injectables like Botox and radilesse (sp) dissolve over time (6-9 months generally) others have to be injected with an acid that dissolves the chemicals but doesn’t fully remove the effects. I think juvaderm actually has to be removed, but consult dr google before you quote me. Silicone can be removed but it’s a basically a surgical procedure. Ladies, Botox is a blessing but if you mess with the big ones make sure you have someone who knows what they’re doing and go low on the cc’s. Otherwise you’ll look like one of the crazy ladies wearing a face mask of a 25 yr old and the body and hands of the crypt keeper (see madonna post).

      • bluhare says:

        Juvederm dissolves. I’ve had it and it sure isn’t there any more!

  16. Trollontheloose says:

    Brandi Glanville 9.0..

  17. Adele Dazeem says:

    Celebitchy: you and I are 100 percent aligned on social media policy. Even in my small town Virginia world I found Facebook and its competitiveness and judgement to be detrimental to my mental health. Not to mention a HUGE time waster. I’m so much more productive now at work (When I’m not reading and commenting on Celebitchy lol).

    • Amanduh says:

      I’m with you two!!! I found myself acting and dressing for Facebook…like I had to document my life to prove to people I was fun!! I have friends!! I’m desirable!!
      I worked on a study of adolescent girls and esteem and it broke my heart to hear how Fbook was ruling their lives. They’d get depressed if they didn’t get enough “likes” or saw pictures of friends excluding them…’tis not the place for those with low self-esteem!

    • bluhare says:

      I’m with you three. I don’t do social media except to lurk on Twitter. 🙂

  18. K37745 says:

    Back up, is there anything else to value in a woman besides her looks?

    In 100 years history is going to point out how bizarre this is. Drinking straight vinegar to appear pale, ridic corsets, leeches, foot binding…..? Is that what our species considers normal? What a time to be alive. :/

    Go do some volunteer work and get off Instagram. The whole world isn’t like this.

  19. laur says:

    I didn’t realise who she was and thought she was a 40-something Real Housewife… I’m glad she’s speaking up about stuff like this. Yes she may not be being 100% truthful as I think anyone with eyes can see she’s had loads of surgery, but maybe that’s part of her BMD, maybe she can’t admit it. Hope she gets help.

  20. Kitten says:

    No snark from me. I just feel really sorry for her.

    • I Choose Me says:

      And now I feel bad for cataloguing everything I think she’s had done. It is sad Kitten and she’s obviously still struggling.

    • Nicole says:

      I really hope she stops with reading about herself. I hope she finds hope in herself and realizes that she does not have to fit into everyone’s beauty ideals. Poor lady. I feel like she is still a young girl in her psyche.

  21. scootypuffjr says:

    She clearly had her mom’s good looks. It’s sad that she felt like she needed all those procedures to be beautiful.

    • Myrna says:

      Dad is a looker, too, and she seems to me to have gotten the best of both of them.
      A lovely girl…sad she’s struggled and apparently continues to struggle…

  22. BTownGirl says:

    Oh, honey. Is it just me, or does it seem like she got more fillers since the last time we talked about her? Before she looked like all she’d done face-wise was rhinoplasty and some subtle injections, but this is really next-level. She seems like a lovely person and this is exactly why people really need to make sure they go to doctors with the words “no” and “enough” in their vocabulary. I’m also wondering if a dermatologist did this, rather than a plastic surgeon, because (and I mean this with no disrespect at all to all of the awesome dermatologists out there), sometimes they don’t have the experience to place the injections in juuuuuust the right spot and put in juuuuuust enough.

  23. Donna says:

    I feel terribly sorry for her, and wish her healing and peace.

  24. Redgrl says:

    Very sad. Hope she gets the help she so obviously needs…

  25. Anilehcim says:

    Unpopular opinion, but this is my number 1 issue with social media and how relevant it has become in our society. I guess it really depends on the people that you associate with/know, and age groups, and other factors, but I personally know so many people who LIVE for their social media accounts. I know a couple who plan day trips to go hiking, and they spend the entire time having these ridiculously contrived photoshoots trying to emulate the photos posted by popular IG accounts of people looking out over cliffs with their backs to the camera. That isn’t living your life, that’s living for the Internet and it’s sad and creepy.

    When I was in my early and mid-twenties in the late stage of Myspace and when Facebook took over as “THE” social media platform, I had plenty of times when I felt like crap about myself. My friends and I would go out and there was always someone in our group who wanted to spend the night trying to get the perfect picture for Facebook. It gets crazy for some people. I know so many women who photoshop the hell out of their photos, too.

    I know a lot of people who deactivated their Facebook accounts because they said it made them feel like they were inadequate. One of my really good friends said that she found herself constantly comparing her life to other people’s and she nipped it in and bud before it got out of hand. I could be wrong, but I believe more people have experienced than they let on.

    • BTownGirl says:

      Oh, I 100% agree! I have had ADULTS badger me about sharing pictures with my boyfriend, even after I’ve explained that social media privacy can be tricky for doctors and that he doesn’t even use it himself. Like…why would you care?! I had a good friend do this who has obviously met him in person, sooooo what’s the problem? It’s like some people can’t fathom that not everyone puts every. single. aspect. of their lives on Facebook/Instagram. I also recently had someone I went to high school with make a fake-kidding-snarky comment about “showing off” on a picture of a cake (!!!) that I made for one of my siblings’ birthdays. Sorry girl, I like to bake and I’m so sorry that upsets you, I should have considered your feelings first. If I had a nickel every time I wanted to tell someone to get a life outside of social media, I could fly us all on a special CB private plane to wherever the heck Duchess Kate is brushing her hair right now.

    • lucy says:

      Social media is not a safe place for people with shaky self-esteem. Users with “need” for validation from others don’t have healthy perspective to balance a little show-and-tell with damaging competition for attention and approval. While it can be a good outlet for a certain level of connection and superficial “keeping in touch”, social media use is a slippery slope populated with trolls, abusers, posers, identity thieves, and other opportunists. The more fragile among us can certainly become obsessed with the magnification of their own lives and others’ lives as presented.

      Celebrity culture has as much to do with this as anything, in that fame and a certain prescribed sort of sexiness are admired and proliferated in our culture. Social media has given everyone the platform to promote themselves, and to manipulate their self-images, without reasonable boundaries and guidelines.

      I really think parenting is such a harder job this century than last, whatwith so many threats to integrity and privacy abounding. Greater access to information (without gatekeepers) brings greater responsibility to manage it reasonably.

      I wish Chloe—and all of us in our struggles—peace, self-love, good health, and acceptance.

      Namaste!

  26. Velvet Elvis says:

    Idk what she had had done to her eyes but she looks really scary to me. The inflated lips, the immense boobs…it’s just a shame to me that she felt she had to go there with all of these surgeries.

  27. Matador says:

    She was a cute young woman; it’s painful to look at her now.

  28. Minina says:

    It’s kind of irresponsible for celebs to get sooo much work done and then come up with various excuses about how they are all natural and love their natural look.

    She’s about as natural as Kim Kardashian.

    Chloe, fillers don’t go away unless you dissolve them in which case you would be left with saggy hollow skin.

    Also I remember her saying she only got lip injections ONE time and then started to use a suction device. Again, I don’t believe her.

    I wish these types of celebs would just focus on their lives, instead of worrying about all the shitty things people have said about their body.

  29. paranormalgirl says:

    She looks to have had to nose done. And the boobs. But the eyes are the same, just overly defined with makeup. The cheeks look like they had fillers. Her lips, clearly pumped. Body dysmorphia is a horrible thing. It really is. I have treated both women and men with body dysmorphia and it honestly breaks your heart because they don’t see themselves anything like how they really look.

  30. enoughsaid says:

    I can see how much her Mom loves her and is so happy that she’s here. I hope she heals. I hope Olivia can wake up everyday knowing her baby is going to be just fine. I can’t imagine how much she hurts for her little girl.

  31. justwastingtime says:

    Full disclosure I had a not-so-radical nose job when I was 30 – I did it to look better and it was a convenient time as my husband and I we were moving cross country. So, clearly I think plastic surgery is fine.. but when I recently asked a plastic surgeon about fixing the fact that one of my eyelids is somewhat puffy and the other is not… the doctor told that the not- so-radical eye lift would result in both eyes having more lid eye, (I have deep set eyes) and therefore I would look different. So, I bailed.

    What she did doesn’t appear to be enhancement, it looks like wiping out the features that make you you. And that can’t be fixed and I am really sorry for her.

  32. A Fan says:

    This chick has some serious problems. Plastic face/body at its worst.

    [*Her mother’s had some work, too.*]

  33. EMAu says:

    In my mind, it appears she wants to distance herself from her father. Prior to the cosmetic work, she looked more like him.
    Michael Jackson did similar – had so many procedures, one wouldn’t think he was related to his parents or siblings.

  34. Kittyhawk says:

    Has anyone looked at ONJ lately? Clearly, she has a bit of a love affair with fillers as well.