A Los Angeles plastic surgeon is going viral after delivering a brutally dry response to a critic who dismissed a facelift result.
Dr. Ben Talei, a Beverly Hills-based facial plastic surgeon, shared before-and-after images of a facelift patient on X yesterday (January 5). The original procedure had been performed last year, but the comparison photos quickly drew attention once reposted this week.
Highlights
- A Beverly Hills plastic surgeon went viral after responding to a facelift critic with a deadpan comeback.
- The subtle before-and-after results divided viewers, with some saying they noticed no difference at all.
- Experts say natural facial rejuvenation often causes debate precisely because it avoids dramatic changes.
Among the replies, one user cut straight to the point, writing, “Looks the same.”
Talei did not let the comment slide. His response was immediate and so deadpan it became a meme.
“That comeback was tighter than the facelift,” a reader wrote.
A plastic surgeon went viral after his deadpan response to a critic left the internet laughing

The comeback struck a nerve online. Screenshots of the exchange began circulating across platforms, with users praising the surgeon’s wit.
The exchange itself was not new. Talei had originally shared the same response on Instagram on September 6, where it had already gained traction.
“Only posting this because my colleagues asked me to,” he added. “I love her face so much.”

“It’s giving mother/daughter. So good!” another added. “She looks 5-7 years younger.”
Its resurfacing months later gave the quip a second viral life, this time reaching a broader audience through X and meme accounts.
“This is the best facelift I’ve ever seen! Why did they expect her to get a whole new face?” a user asked.
Viewers were divided. Some applauded the results, while others said they saw no difference at all

Some echoed the original criticism, insisting they could see little to no difference between the before and after images.
“Looks like the same person on a good hair day,” a user wrote. “It really just looks like she’s trying to smile on the right,” another added.


“That’s how you know it’s good work,” a commenter argued. “Still her, just softer, brighter, more youthful, better. The way it should always be.”
In October 2025, the surgeon addressed the debate directly, revisiting the same patient’s outcome

“My goal is never to change someone’s face, but to bring back the ease and warmth that time slowly takes away. The eyes, the jawline, the neck, the subtleties of movement – everything is designed to flow in harmony again.”

According to the surgeon, the technique goes beyond traditional facelift methods. Rather than relying on surface-level tightening, the AuraLyft focuses on deep plane release to reposition underlying facial structures.

Conventional facelifts typically separate the skin from the deeper tissues, tightening and redraping it over the face, which places most of the tension on the skin itself.
Deep plane techniques, by contrast, work beneath the superficial muscular layer, lifting the muscles, connective tissue, and ligaments together as a single unit. This allows the skin to settle naturally, reducing the risk of an artificial appearance.
According to a comprehensive September 2025 report by Cape Cod Surgery analyzing large-scale patient surveys and peer-reviewed studies, overall satisfaction in plastic surgery remains high.
On average, about 76.8% to 87% of patients report being satisfied with their surgical outcomes, with quality-of-life scores closely tracking those satisfaction levels.
Regret, however, varies sharply depending on the type of procedure.

These procedures tend to carry heightened emotional expectations and longer recoveries, factors that increase the risk of disappointment when outcomes do not align perfectly with patient hopes.
