In his new memoir, Your Mom’s Gonna Love Me, which was released on Tuesday, comedian Matt Rife is ignoring the persistent claims that he has undergone a dramatic change in appearance.

According to Parade, the 29-year-old wrote about the plastic surgery rumors in the book, which is characterized as a combination of memoir, comedy special, and first date. He claimed that the alterations to his face were caused by late-onset puberty.

In the book, he writes, “After its sweet time for more than 20 years, puberty finally decided to hit me square in the face.” I went from looking like a 13-year-old to looking like my own age in a matter of months. like a real, mature man. I grew a couple of inches taller, my features were more noticeable, and my face widened.

His jaw was one of the most noticeable modifications, leading to allegations of plastic surgery.

The Wild N’ Out singer continued by saying that his oddly stunted puberty served as the basis for a million and one online conspiracy theories about all this expensive plastic surgery that I somehow managed to afford and have done.

Those who accused him of having plastic surgery were also criticized by Rife, who said that they lacked common sense in trying to diagnose his alleged cosmetic surgery treatments without ever having him as a patient.

Simply put, “How in the hell do you not lose your license if you are a real doctor who goes on Tik-Tok to declare a guaranteed diagnosis about a guy you’ve never even met, much less treated?” he said. Would the medical board kindly simply provide a formal certificate directing you to receive life insurance? These folks are in dire need of something to help them reorganize their priorities.

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Rife says that his appearance hurt his career in the book, which describes his Ohio childhood and how he became a comedic star before the age of thirty. He writes that attractive people don’t always have it easy.

You’re supposed to win over the audience as a comic, right? Well, who the [expletive] enjoys being attractive? Nobody! In the book, he said.

He joked that it actually made [expletive] harder for him as a comic. As it happens, attractive people are also [expletive]-up. Who could have known? I’m receiving therapy. I’ve experienced several episodes of anxiety. I have complex feelings about life, my mother, and loneliness, and I battle serious depression.

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EmilyAnn Jackman

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