Did This Comedian Really Have Plastic Surgery? His new book reveals everything

Did This Comedian Really Have Plastic Surgery? His new book reveals everything

Comedian Matt Rife throws caution to the wind and addresses persistent rumors about a sudden change in his appearance in his new memoir, “Your Mom’s Gonna Love Me,” which hit shelves Tuesday.

In the book, described as “part memoir, part comedy special and part first date,” the 29-year-old wrote about the plastic surgery rumors and claimed that the changes to his face were due to the late-onset of puberty, according to Parade .

“After more than 20 years of sweet time, puberty finally decided to hit me right in the face,” he writes in the book. “Over the course of a few months, I went from looking like a 13-year-old to looking, you know, my actual age. Like a real grown man. My face became wider, my facial features became more prominent, I became a few centimeters taller.”

One of the changes that caused the most stir was his jaw, which gave way to rumors of plastic surgery.

The “Wild ‘N’ Out” star went on to say that his “bizarrely stunted journey through puberty” became the basis for about “a million and one internet conspiracies about all this elaborate plastic surgery.” “I somehow had the time and money to go through with it.”

Rife also called out people who accused him of having plastic surgery, saying they “shockingly lacked common sense” when they tried to “diagnose” his alleged cosmetic surgeries without ever having him as a patient to have.

“Sure – if you’re a real doctor who actually announces a guaranteed diagnosis on Tik-Tok about a guy you’ve never met before, let alone treated, then how the hell do you not lose your license?” he asked . “Can the medical board please just give you an official certificate telling you to do something that will help these people get their priorities straight because they desperately need it?”

In the book, which details Rife’s childhood in Ohio and his rise to comedy fame before the age of 30, he also claims that his looks negatively affected his career, writing: “Good-looking people don’t always have it easy.”

“As a comedian, you’re supposed to make the audience like you, right? Now who the hell likes attractive people? Nobody!” he explained in the book.

“If anything, it actually made the swear words harder for me as a comedian,” he quipped. “It turns out that pretty people are (expletive) haughty too. Who knew? I’m in therapy. I had several anxiety attacks. I struggle with clinical depression and have complicated feelings about life, my mother and loneliness.”

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