Since a time ago, Fran Marianoformer participants of Matter of weight, is making known the difficult times it is going through due to the operations that have been carried out and for which it accuses Aníbal Lotocki for malpractice. This time, it made the news for what he decided to tell about his addiction to surgeries.
This happened in “Seres Libres”, the program that Gastón Pauls carries out through the Crónica TV screen, where he was blunt when telling what he is going through. “I associated my addiction to surgeries as having to do with the physical. “They never told me how cute you are,” he began saying with great regret.
“My teacher told me ‘no one calls you cute’. I think there are factors that have to be external. Addictions affect good will. “I want to stop having surgery, but I can’t. When you have surgery you live it like a duel, first you feel like a monster, then you like it, then you don’t like it so much and you want to double down,” she said.
“Like any addiction there are relapses,” he stated. Fran Mariano in relation to his present. However, this was not all, since to finish he left a very strong phrase in front of Gastón Pauls. “I wonder what’s going on inside me, the same thing happens to me as when I was a child, I feel not accepted,” he said.
About Lotocki
Days ago, Fran Mariano was present at DDM and attacked Aníbal Lotocki. “For him it was promotion. I had just come out of a reality show that had been very successful, Dreaming about dancing, and I went to his clinic because I always had a complex. I wanted to change my nose and my chin. “I didn’t like my profile,” she said.
“I go to the consultation and I tell him, ‘Look, I can’t pay you with money, but if you operate on me, it will be filmed and shown on TV.’ She said yes at the time. I told him that I wanted to refine my nose and chin, I had just lost 200 kilos, not showing my body, I felt intimidated when this man undressed me, he pulled down my pants, my boxers, my T-shirt and brought a lump and started marking me. everything,” he commented.
“When I had the first surgery with him, it was terrible. I got up and it was the first time I looked in the mirror and said ‘I ruined my face.’ It ruined my nose. I had 4 surgeries on my nose, although it may not seem like it, to fix it. It was a pig’s nose. He practiced, if he succeeded he succeeded and if he didn’t, well. “He was experimenting,” he concluded about Lotocki.