These days, if you’re in the public eye, it’s near impossible to escape speculation of receiving cosmetic enhancements. Ariana Grande has long been at the center of plastic surgery rumors since she’s lived most of her life in the spotlight. Last year, Grande got candid and revealed she’d gotten lip filler and Botox over the years but stopped in 2018. If the honesty in her Vogue video wasn’t enough, Grande recently got further proof that she’s plastic surgery-free. The star just did Vanity Fair’s iconic lie detector test on camera and answered hard-hitting questions about cosmetic treatments and changes.
“You sing Popular in our film. Did you ever get any work done to make yourself feel more popular?” Grande’s Wicked co-star Cynthia Erivo asks the celeb while she’s attached to the lie detector. Grande is clearly excited about the opportunity to clear up any confusion and says, “Thank goodness,” when the question comes. “To my face? To my physical appearance?” Grande clarifies. “I’ve had fillers in various places and Botox,” she confirms. “But I stopped like four years ago. And that is the extent.”
Erivo then got more specific, asking if Grande has gotten a nose job, to which she said no. “Did you get a boob job?” Erivo asks. “No! Can you imagine?” When asked about a facelift, Grande says, “No, not yet,” noting that she’s open to it down the line. Her co-star also asks if Grande has gotten a fox eye lift. “No, but I discovered it through people who thought I did, and I said, ‘Thank you,'” Grande responds.
“What about a chin implant?” Erivo asks, to which Grande asks, “How do they do that? No.” The pair can’t control their giggles when Erivo asks if Grande had had a BBL [Brazilian butt lift]. The lie detector confirms she did not. “That wouldn’t work for me. I don’t think that’s my thing, and I’m okay with that.”
The lie detector operator continuously confirms that Grande is telling the truth. “This is the best day of my life,” Grande says. “Take that, you YouTube people.” While the star was relieved to clarify her own personal history of cosmetic treatments, she had no judgment for those who enjoyed them. “In full support of all people who do these things,” says Grande, noting that whatever makes people feel beautiful should be allowed. “Why do we care?”