Katy Perry admits to fillers: ‘I got injections under my eyes for the hollowing’

Stella McCartney Autumn 2018 Presentation

I tend to believe I have a good “eye” for celebrities and plastic surgery, in that I can usually tell when someone looks minorly tweaked, refreshed, or recently “lifted.” But I honestly couldn’t tell with Katy Perry! I kept seeing comments about how she looks so different now and I thought people were just talking about her hair, which obviously makes her look a lot different. But no – Katy has had some subtle injectibles, which she talked about in a new interview:

What she’s had done: “I’ve done lasers and got [filler] injections under my eyes for the hollowing—which I’d recommend for everyone who wants a solution for their dark circles—but all of my assets are real. People tend to think they are fake, but it doesn’t really matter.”

She’s a proponent of plastic surgery if it gives someone a boost of confidence. “We’re getting away from that negative stigma about physical alterations. Of course, always be your authentic self—but if someone wants a nose job that makes them feel better, and they love their profile more because of it, it’s like ‘Go ahead!’ Do whatever makes you feel better about yourself. Stay in therapy, but get it, girl.”

She claims she still uses Proactiv: “They do not pay me to say that! It actually solved my acne problem. I used to have really, really bad skin in my early 20s when things were starting to pop off, so it was stress-related and my body was changing from coming out of the teenage years. I remember I was doing laser treatments, trying different ointments, going to very expensive facialists, and nothing worked. Someone recommended I try the Proactiv cleanser and I thought, ‘No way, no how will that fix anything.’ And I’ve been using it for 10 years and it’s been incredible. I don’t break out because of that.”

She doesn’t eat fast food anymore either: “I love food, and sometimes if I’m in a bad mood, all I’ll want is the classic ice cream from McDonald’s that tastes the same no matter what country you’re in. But that quick dopamine hit that makes you feel good for one second turns on you in the long run. In the past year, I’ve eaten better than I have ever eaten—less fast food, less sugar—and the sustainability of my body is so much better. My face just glows.”

Instagram = the decline of civilization. “A lot of us are living for that picture, and then the currency is the like. It’s hard because I’d rather not care about that and just live my life. We buy clothing and products or pose a certain way or go to an event to get a picture — it’s not good for us as a society. I think it’s actually the decline of civilization if we’re going extreme about it. We have to find a balance, and I’m trying to find my own personal balance with it because I’m just as much a victim as everybody else.”

[Refinery 29 via E! News]

I’m out of the injectible-gossip loop because I didn’t know you could get fillers under your eyes and that you could get rid of dark circles that way. Damn. I might have to look into that – I have dark circles under my eyes too, but I just use a good night cream and that seems to keep the problem at bay for now. I believe her about her natural assets too – her boobs have always looked completely real to me. They have a natural sag – they don’t “sit up” like so many ladies’ implants (coughSnakeEmojicough).

As for avoiding fast food and McD’s soft serve ice cream… I find that I can easily avoid McD’s ice cream (although once in a blue moon, a McFlurry really hits the spot) but who can avoid the McNuggets? That’s probably why I still get breakouts – I’m PMSing, I want some McNuggets, I breakout because of the PMS and the greasy fast food. Sigh…

Disney ABC Winter TCA 2018

Photos courtesy of WENN.

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34 Responses to “Katy Perry admits to fillers: ‘I got injections under my eyes for the hollowing’”

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  1. Anners says:

    Kaiser – will you dish on your good eye cream? I have matching luggage under my eyes that nothing seems to touch. Le sigh.

    Any suggestions gratefully appreciated

  2. Clare says:

    Shes has really good, subtle work huh?

    I could do with less under eye smudges, but I think that is the LAST place on my body I’d want a needle near.

  3. Wren says:

    All I can this is….. ouch. I’ve got dark circles under my eyes, and they’re just part of what I look like. I cared for a bit when I was younger, but meh.

  4. Nancypants says:

    I wouldn’t do it!

    I’ve had Botox for years. I love it.
    You know, Botox was made to help people who had conditions such as lazy eye, crossed eyes, Parkinson’s disease.
    They just started reporting that the wrinkles were less noticeable and then it became a beauty thing and the longer you get it done, the less often you need it.

    I pay about $200. every 9 months.

    I get it from a real doctor at real medical clinic and I researched him first but my fillers were awful.

    Great Botox, crappy fillers and anyone who says ageism doesn’t exist is probably a dude.
    I looked worse. I was puffy and bruised for weeks.

    I’d like to try the laser.
    That’s what Jen A. uses and my mom got it done on the back of her hands but it’s expensive.

    • deets says:

      I’m saving up for broad band light therapy.
      I saw a peer reviewed study that showed people’s skin looking better after 15 years, better than when they started, and I’ve been obsessed since

  5. Georgia says:

    I would totally do some injections for my dark circles.

  6. Girl_ninja says:

    More power to her, but that short blonde do does nothing but age her. No bueno.

  7. HoustonGrl says:

    My whole problem with this trend is that beauty is equated with youth. I don’t think it should be this way. Natural IS beautiful.

    • ilove6kies says:

      Good lord – this is the same type of judgement with people who wear makeup. If you like it natural then more power to you, but I think it’s a bit rich saying other who shouldn’t use surgery or makeup to make themselves feel more confident and happier. As long as it is not overly done not sure why this would bother anyone.

      • Milla says:

        The problem is that women are expected to look younger, fresh, sexy… It is makeup, it is fillers, it is tones of money you spend cos someone said that you aren’t good enough.

        And it doesn’t make you better, it is superficial and seems to be out of control. Compare how many makeup products we use now to the 80s. Someone’s making big money on making us feel insecure. And i don’t believe in loving makeup cos it’s not natural to have primer, foundation, blush, bronzer, highliter, etc… On your face.

        And there’s the whole hair industry. There’s no silver vixen, just silver fox. Face it, we are slaves to cosmetics and we get nothing out of it.

      • ilove6kies says:

        That’s fine if you believe that these products are superficial and people are vain to use it. I can only speak for myself that I do use makeup daily and I enjoy the process. I don’t wear it to impress other people but to make myself happy. I never once think that just because I wear makeup means I am somehow better than other people. That’s a weird assumption. In my experience it’s usually the other way around – some people who don’t wear makeup or approve plastic surgeries look down on and judge the ones who do.

        You like makeup? Wear it! You don’t like it? Don’t do it.

      • HoustonGrl says:

        I am not passing judgement on people who use fillers etc. I’m pointing out the problem our society has in defining “beauty.”

  8. minx says:

    Good work; now she should do something about her hair.

  9. Harryg says:

    That hair does not suit her. She looks like a character from EastEnders.

  10. DiegoInSF says:

    Can’t believe she was all hair, with this awful hair she lost all of her sex appeal. She needs to go back to long and dark!

  11. Veronica says:

    At least she’s admitting to it. I’m fine if they’re honest about it. I also admit I’m intrigued to know what kind of surgery it was, specifically, because I have natural dark circles under my eyes and I’d do ANYTHING to reduce them.

  12. Slowsnow says:

    I find dark circles sexy.

    I just realized that all these procedures freak me out completely. I like skin and detest the doll-like complexion these things achieve.

  13. sunnydeereynolds says:

    Katie used to be so attractive with sex appeal and her teenage dream album was a bop.

    Does she have a new single out or something? What is she promoting? Just curious. I don’t follow her and I didn’t like any of the new songs she put out last year.

  14. Judith Butler says:

    My mom gets light botox (I think?) injected for her under-eye area and it really does make her look 5-10 years younger without being noticeable at all. It looks particularly good in pictures!

  15. Astrid says:

    when I need a little sprucing, remind me to not go to her hair dresser or plastic surgeon!

  16. Egla says:

    Be sure these people in the public eye all have things done. No one is wrinkle free as they are at their ages. I have good skin but I started having my eleven between my eyes around 25 and it progressed with time. Still at 37 I am wrinkle free (sometimes when I tell my age people take a second look at me just to be sure and it’s very flattering that is still happening) but I have my eleven there. I am considering getting botox there but how will people know when Im really pissed at them???? Really porcelain skin looks freakish after a while.
    She told us two of the 100 procedures that she has done. Still more honest than some.

    • Trillion says:

      I have somewhat of an eleven as well. I got botox for it, but didn’t notice much change. I went to a different doctor and was told botox is preventative. It will not erase lines that are already made. That would need fillers, and I’m scared of fillers. I do light botox twice a year (since about 2 yrs ago) and use a collagen-boosting serum that I’m in love with (and I’m a skeptic, but I started seeing the difference after about a month of use). I’m 52 and people regularly think I’m approaching 40. ( full disclosure- part of this is genetic,).

      • Jayna says:

        @Trillion, my sister had botox for the deep line(s) or 11, as you say, between her eyes. She’s not a vain person and looks great for her age, but those lines in that spot always she felt gave her an angry or worried look. The botox helped a lot. There was a big difference. She loved it what it did. Try a third doctor. Maybe the first doctor didn’t inject enough.

  17. Fleur says:

    Understand the temptation about fillers (props to Katy for admitting it), but I’ve researched it and they’re not without risk specifically in the under-eye area. There is a risk that the under eye fillers could migrate and cause blindness.

    For awhile many plastic surgeons wouldn’t offer the injections because they thought it was too dangerous. Now they’re a lot more common, but I think the risk is still there. Just putting that out there.

  18. Sarah says:

    I have under-eye hollows and dark circles. I have ever since I was a kid; I’m very fair and I notice it in every photo and it’s there no matter what skincare or makeup I use. I got fillers two years ago for the hollows – the aesthetician was very clear that the fillers would not solve the dark circles, fwiw – and it made a difference for a few months. But we were being cautious, and I didn’t get enough done and it didn’t last. I could have gone back and gotten more done ($$$) but I felt like there was no guarantee more filler was really the answer…more money and what if that didn’t last? It was pretty expensive for something I wasn’t sure would even work. (As for the pain: they used a numbing cream and it really wasn’t a big deal.)

  19. Mabs A'Mabbin says:

    I say let ’em all tweak. Tweak like there’s no tomorrow so we have something to enjoy lol. Those of us financially challenged will relish the sea of humans morphing into largemouth bass.

    Is it me or does that first image illustrate some scary lipstick coverage? I had a spine chill upon zooming. I’m sure Stephen King had something to do with it…maybe he should be the judge… might cheer him up.

  20. Suki says:

    I don’t have a problem with small procedures/treatments such as this, although I don’t use any myself. My concern is that people usually start small and then progress, largely because their industry is so Image-oriented. The temptation to tweak like there’s no tomorrow can be very strong.