
Skin Anarchy
Ekta et al.
Show overview
Skin Anarchy has been publishing since 2020, and across the 6 years since has built a catalogue of 767 episodes. That works out to roughly 540 hours of audio in total. Releases follow a several-times-a-week cadence.
Episodes typically run thirty-five to sixty minutes — most land between 34 min and 50 min — though episode length varies meaningfully from one episode to the next. It is catalogued as a EN-language Arts show.
The show is actively publishing — the most recent episode landed 3 months ago, with 19 episodes already out so far this year. The busiest year was 2021, with 191 episodes published. Published by Ekta et al..
From the publisher
Skin Anarchy is where beauty meets curiosity and science. Hosted by Dr. Ekta, this podcast dives deep into the behind-the-scenes world of beauty, uncovering the stories, trends, and innovations shaping skincare, makeup, haircare, fragrance, and more. Featuring candid conversations with industry pioneers, we explore the art and science behind beauty with passion and purpose. Join the revolution on Instagram @skincareanarchy and discover the beauty world like never before. (Not legal or medical advice, all views expressed are non-legal and non-medical opinions.) Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.
Latest Episodes
View all 767 episodes
Ep 836The Branding Balancing Act with Camille Moore
Send us Fan MailIn this episode of Skin Anarchy, Dr. Ekta Yadav sits down with branding and marketing strategist Camille Moore to unpack what actually drives growth in today’s beauty industry—and why so many brands get it wrong. In a market saturated with content, Moore challenges one of the most common assumptions: social media is not the brand. It’s only an extension of it.Moore brings a unique perspective shaped by her early work in “unsexy” industries like law, real estate, and medical aesthetics—spaces where demand isn’t built on hype, but on trust and strategy. That foundation allowed her to understand something many founders overlook: if your brand only works when it’s exciting, it doesn’t actually work. The brands that scale are the ones that can create demand regardless of category.A central theme throughout the conversation is alignment. Moore reframes authenticity not as a tone or aesthetic, but as consistency across every touchpoint—product, packaging, messaging, customer experience, and content. When those elements don’t align, consumers don’t question it—they disengage. The strongest brands feel cohesive, not because of one channel, but because everything works together.She also challenges the idea that content should directly sell. Instead, high-performing brands focus on building trust, knowing that conversion follows connection—not pressure. In a real-time, consumer-driven market, relevance comes from listening, adapting, and evolving alongside your audience.This episode offers a clear shift in perspective: brand isn’t built through posts—it’s built through systems.Listen to the full episode to hear Camille Moore break down how modern beauty brands actually grow—and why most are playing the wrong game.Learn more about Third Eye InsightsDon’t forget to subscribe to Skin Anarchy on Apple Podcasts, Spotify, or your preferred platform.Reach out to us through email with any questions.Sign up for our newsletter!Shop all our episodes and products mentioned through our ShopMy Shelf!Support the show

Ep 835Inside CEW Innovators Awards 2025
Send us Fan MailIn this special episode, Skin Anarchy is partnering with CEW to shine a spotlight toward a group that rarely receives public recognition in the beauty industry: the scientists behind the products we use every day. Joined by CEW leaders Elana Drell Szyfer and Andrea Nagel, along with award recipients Dr. Jaime Emmetsberger of The Estée Lauder Companies & La Mer and Lavinia Popescu of Olaplex, the conversation explores the vision behind the CEW Innovator Awards and why celebrating scientific talent has become more important than ever.The awards were created to address a long-standing gap in the industry. While founders, executives, and brands often take center stage, the chemists, biologists, and engineers responsible for developing breakthrough ingredients and formulations typically remain behind the scenes. Through its partnership with the New York Society of Cosmetic Chemists, CEW launched the Innovator Awards to recognize women leading scientific progress across research, formulation, sustainability, packaging, and emerging technologies.Throughout the episode, we explore what true innovation in beauty really looks like inside the lab. Jaime discusses how breakthroughs begin with understanding the biology of skin—how cells communicate, how environmental stressors influence aging, and how new tools like artificial intelligence can accelerate discovery without replacing scientific judgment. Meanwhile, Lavinia offers insight into the science of hair repair and how bond-building technologies and emerging peptide research continues to transform modern hair care.Listen to the full episode to hear how these innovators are shaping the future of beauty through science.Learn more about CEW's Innovator AwardsDon’t forget to subscribe to Skin Anarchy on Apple Podcasts, Spotify, or your preferred platform.Reach out to us through email with any questions.Sign up for our newsletter!Shop all our episodes and products mentioned through our ShopMy Shelf!Support the show

Ep 834The Reality of Scaling a Beauty Brand with Morgan Gordon of Sliick and Salon Perfect
Send us Fan MailIn this episode of Skin Anarchy, Dr. Ekta Yadav sits down with Morgan Gordon, VP of Brand Development and Marketing at Salon Perfect and creator of Sliick, for a candid look at what it really takes to build—and sustain—a modern beauty brand. From her early days as a licensed cosmetologist to leading innovation at scale, Morgan brings a rare perspective that bridges professional beauty and retail execution. What emerges quickly is a shift in how beauty brands operate today. The industry no longer moves in predictable cycles—brands are now responding to consumers in real time. Trends evolve within weeks, not seasons, and relevance depends on how closely brands stay connected to what consumers are actually saying, searching, and using. For Morgan, success comes down to translation: turning fast-moving signals into products that meet real needs, without losing quality or execution. The conversation also pulls back the curtain on retail realities. Getting into major retailers is only the beginning—staying there requires constant innovation, operational precision, and the ability to deliver at scale. This becomes even more critical as at-home beauty continues to reshape consumer behavior, creating demand for products that replicate professional results with simplicity and ease.That insight led to the creation of Sliick, a brand built to reimagine at-home waxing by removing friction from the entire experience. Instead of intimidating systems, Sliick focuses on intuitive design, streamlined formulas, and a more approachable user experience.Ultimately, this episode reveals that modern beauty success isn’t about predicting trends—it’s about evolving with the consumer in real time.Listen to the full episode to hear Morgan Gordon break down the mechanics of scaling a beauty brand and staying relevant in today’s fast-moving industry.Shop Sliick & Salon PerfectDon’t forget to subscribe to Skin Anarchy on Apple Podcasts, Spotify, or your preferred platform.Reach out to us through email with any questions.Sign up for our newsletter!Shop all our episodes and products mentioned through our ShopMy Shelf!Support the show

Ep 833The Truth About Med Spa Safety Standards with Tom Terranova of QUAD A
Send us Fan MailIn this episode of Skin Anarchy, Dr. Ekta Yadav sits down with Tom Terranova to explore a side of aesthetic medicine that patients rarely see—but that ultimately determines their safety: infrastructure. While most conversations focus on results, pricing, or provider reputation, this episode shifts the lens to what happens behind the scenes, where clinical protocols, operational systems, and regulatory gaps quietly shape outcomes.Terranova shares the mission behind QUAD A, a nonprofit that has long established safety standards in surgical settings and is now expanding into the rapidly growing med spa space. As aesthetic treatments move further into consumer-driven environments, the industry faces a critical challenge: demand has scaled faster than standardization.One of the most compelling insights from the conversation is the idea that risk in aesthetics is not binary—it’s stratified. Procedures often perceived as “low risk” can vary significantly in complexity and potential for harm. Yet unlike traditional medicine, med spas have lacked a clear framework to define and manage that risk. QUAD A’s tiered approach introduces a more structured way to evaluate procedures, shifting how both providers and patients should think about safety.The discussion also challenges a common assumption: that credentials alone ensure safe care. Terranova emphasizes that true safety depends on more than technical skill—it requires the ability to recognize complications, respond in real time, and operate within a system designed for consistency and accountability. Ultimately, this episode reframes safety as something systemic, not superficial.Listen to the full episode to hear Tom Terranova break down the hidden gaps in aesthetic medicine and what every patient should understand before choosing where to get treated.Learn more about QUAD ADon’t forget to subscribe to Skin Anarchy on Apple Podcasts, Spotify, or your preferred platform.Reach out to us through email with any questions.Sign up for our newsletter!Shop all our episodes and products mentioned through our ShopMy Shelf!Support the show

Ep 832From Infant Immunity to Cancer Therapy: The Power of the Microbiome with Dr. Stephanie Culler of Persephone Biosciences
Send us Fan MailIn this episode of Skin Anarchy, Dr. Ekta Yadav sits down with Dr. Stephanie Culler, co-founder and CEO of Persephone Biosciences, to explore one of the most rapidly evolving frontiers in modern health science: the human microbiome. From early immune development to cancer therapy, the conversation reveals how the trillions of microbes living in our bodies may shape health in ways scientists are only beginning to understand.Dr. Culler’s path into microbiome research began with a personal mission to understand disease after losing both of her grandmothers to cancer. Following her PhD at the California Institute of Technology, where she studied gene therapy approaches to cancer, she moved into industrial biotechnology and microbial engineering. That work eventually led her to co-found Persephone Biosciences, a company focused on translating microbiome science into real-world therapeutics and consumer health solutions.A major focus of the discussion centers on the infant microbiome and its role in shaping immune development. Dr. Culler explains how microbes transferred during birth and nourished through breast milk help “train” the immune system in the earliest stages of life. Yet modern research suggests that key beneficial bacteria—particularly Bifidobacterium infantis—have dramatically declined in Western infants. In large-scale studies conducted by Persephone, only a small percentage of U.S. infants carry adequate levels of this once-dominant microbe.The conversation also explores how microbiome balance may influence responses to cutting-edge cancer treatments like immunotherapy. Emerging research suggests that gut bacteria can significantly affect how patients respond to checkpoint inhibitors, opening the door to microbiome-based interventions that could enhance treatment outcomes.Listen to the full episode to hear Dr. Stephanie Culler explain how microbiome science is transforming our understanding of immunity, disease prevention, and the future of medicine.Learn more about Persephone BiosciencesDon’t forget to subscribe to Skin Anarchy on Apple Podcasts, Spotify, or your preferred platform.Reach out to us through email with any questions.Sign up for our newsletter!Shop all our episodes and products mentioned through our ShopMy Shelf!Support the show

Ep 831Lessons in Leadership: The Future of Beauty with CEW President Elana Drell Szyfer
Send us Fan MailIn this episode of Skin Anarchy, Dr. Ekta Yadav sits down with Elana Drell Szyfer, president of Cosmetic Executive Women (CEW) and one of the most influential leaders in the global beauty industry. With more than three decades of experience spanning companies like Chanel, L’Oréal, Avon, Estée Lauder, and RéVive, Elana offers a rare behind-the-scenes look at how careers in beauty evolve—and what it takes to navigate an industry that constantly reinvents itself.Elana's path into beauty was anything but conventional. Originally a history major who imagined a future in nonprofit arts philanthropy, her first role at the Juilliard School focused on connecting donors with scholarship recipients. A shift toward business studies eventually led her into the beauty world through a position at Chanel’s family office. Determined to move closer to the operating side of the industry, she studied trade publications, reached out to industry leaders directly, and ultimately landed at L’Oréal—where her career in beauty truly began.Over the next two decades, Elana built a foundation in marketing leadership across some of the industry’s largest brands. Later, she transitioned into the entrepreneurial side of beauty, leading privately backed companies and guiding brands through transformation, acquisition, and growth—including her tenure as CEO of RéVive. Along the way, she witnessed firsthand how dramatically the beauty landscape has evolved, from traditional advertising and retail counters to today’s fragmented world of social media, influencer discovery, and science-driven storytelling.As she steps into her new role at CEW, Elana reflects on leadership, the future of marketing, and the growing need for clarity around industry buzzwords like biotech and longevity.Listen to the full episode to hear Elana Drell Szyfer share lessons from her career and her vision for the future of the beauty industry.Learn more about CEWDon’t forget to subscribe to Skin Anarchy on Apple Podcasts, Spotify, or your preferred platform.Reach out to us through email with any questions.Sign up for our newsletter!Shop all our episodes and products mentioned through our ShopMy Shelf!Support the show

Ep 830A Breakthrough in Exosome Skincare ft. Madhavi Gavini of Droplette
Send us Fan MailIn this special episode of Skin Anarchy, Dr. Ekta Yadav welcomes back Madhavi Gavini, founder of Droplette—one of the earliest science-forward brands featured on the show. What once felt like a radically different approach to skincare technology now feels increasingly relevant as the industry shifts toward biologics, regenerative ingredients, and delivery science. The conversation revisits Droplette’s origins and explores why effective delivery may be the missing piece in modern skincare innovation.Gavini’s journey into skincare began far outside the beauty industry. With a background in pharmaceutical development, she spent years designing therapies for pediatric diseases, where she encountered one of medicine’s most persistent challenges: delivery. Even when researchers identify the therapeutic molecule that could help treat a condition, getting that molecule into the correct layer of skin is often the hardest part. That realization became the foundation of Droplette’s technology, originally developed alongside MIT-affiliated researchers to enable large molecules to reach skin tissue without needles or barrier injury.The Droplette device generates high-velocity, submicron droplets capable of moving ingredients past the stratum corneum—the skin’s protective outer barrier—allowing molecules far larger than traditional topical ingredients to access viable layers of skin. The implications extend beyond cosmetics, with ongoing collaborations exploring delivery for antibiotics, gene therapies, and other advanced biologics.The episode also dives into the science behind exosomes—one of the most talked-about yet misunderstood areas in regenerative skincare. Gavini explains what exosomes are, why sourcing and stability matter, and why many topical exosome products degrade or fail to penetrate the skin barrier. Double Board-Certified Dermatologist, Dr. Dan Belkin, also shares his clinical perspective on how exosomes are currently used in dermatology and why reliable sourcing, cold-chain handling, and effective delivery systems are essential for maintaining biological activity.Listen to the full episode to hear Madhavi Gavini explain how Droplette is bringing pharmaceutical-grade delivery science into the future of regenerative skincare.Use discount code 'ANARCHY' to get the Exosome Starter Set on subscription for just $349SHOP DROPLETTE1.Quek BL, Srinivas RL, Gavini MP. Droplette: a platform technology to directly deliver nucleic acid therapeutics and other molecules into cells and deep into tissue without transfection reagents. Methods Mol Biol. 2022;2398:211-230. doi:10.1007/978-1-0716-1811-0_14.2.Mahmood A, et al. Droplette—a fluid dynamics-driven platform for transdermal and intracellular delivery of large molecules. FASEB J. 2018;31(S1):924.7.3.Pulakat L, Chen HH, Gavini MP, Ling LA, Tang Y, Mehm A, et al. Transdermal delivery of high molecular weight antibiotics to deep tissue infections via Droplette Micromist Technology Device (DMTD). Pharmaceutics. 2022;14(6):1134*This is a sponsored collaborationSupport the show

Ep 829Rewriting Allergy Care with Lorne Lucree of Wizard Wellness
Send us Fan MailIn this episode of Skin Anarchy, Dr. Ekta Yadav sits down with beauty industry veteran and product innovator Lorne Lucree to explore an unexpected frontier: allergy care. After decades helping shape iconic brands across L’Oréal, Estée Lauder, and Unilever Prestige, Lucree turned his attention to a category that had remained largely unchanged. What he discovered was striking—while skincare had evolved into a science-driven, barrier-focused discipline, allergy care still relied on reactive treatments designed for symptom suppression rather than biological support. That’s why he created Wizard Wellness.The conversation reframes the nasal cavity not simply as an airway, but as a living barrier system—one with its own microbiome, immune signaling, and protective function, much like the skin. When that barrier becomes disrupted, allergens and pollutants penetrate more easily, triggering inflammation that extends far beyond congestion, affecting sleep, mood, and overall resilience. Instead of approaching allergies as isolated flare-ups, Lucree saw an opportunity to apply principles from microbiome skincare: support the environment itself so the body can defend more effectively.Lucree shares how advances in microbiome science opened the door to a new preventative model—one that focuses on restoring equilibrium rather than sterilizing or suppressing. He also reveals the complexity of formulating for mucosal tissue, where safety, compatibility, and biological precision become paramount.At its core, this episode explores how consumer health categories evolve when science, design, and behavioral insight converge. Listen to the full episode to hear Lorne Lucree explain how barrier biology and microbiome innovation may redefine allergy care—and why the future of wellness begins with protecting the body’s most overlooked interfaces.SHOP WIZARD WELLNESSDon’t forget to subscribe to Skin Anarchy on Apple Podcasts, Spotify, or your preferred platform.Reach out to us through email with any questions.Sign up for our newsletter!Shop all our episodes and products mentioned through our ShopMy Shelf!Support the show

Ep 828Hormones, Oxytocin, and Aging with Dr. Sabrina Fabi of XOMD Skincare
Send us Fan MailIn this episode of Skin Anarchy, Dr. Ekta Yadav sits down with double board-certified dermatologist Dr. Sabrina Fabi to examine how hormonal signaling actively shapes skin resilience, recovery, and structural integrity. This conversation moves beyond trend-driven skincare and into the biology that determines how skin functions at every stage of life.Dr. Fabi emphasizes that skin constantly responds to hormonal shifts. Changes in progesterone, estrogen, testosterone, and neurohormones influence collagen production, barrier strength, inflammation, muscle tone, and healing capacity. Aging reflects signaling patterns — not just the passage of time. When hormones fluctuate, skin behavior changes.A central focus of the discussion is oxytocin. While most people associate oxytocin with bonding and mood, Dr. Fabi explains that skin contains oxytocin receptors that participate in local repair and inflammatory signaling. That neuroendocrine connection reframes how we think about resilience. The brain and skin communicate continuously, and hormonal signaling drives that dialogue.Dr. Fabi applies this signaling-first framework directly through XOMD. Instead of topically applying exogenous hormones, she built XOMD around activating intrinsic pathways that support recovery and tissue strength. The focus remains on optimizing communication within the skin rather than overwhelming it with isolated actives.Throughout the episode, she challenges casual aesthetic culture and reinforces the importance of individualized, long-term planning. Hormones shape anatomy, metabolism, and tissue quality — treatment strategies must reflect that complexity.Listen to the full episode to hear Dr. Sabrina Fabi break down hormonal biology, oxytocin science, and how XOMD advances a more intelligent approach to skin resilience.SHOP XOMD SkincareDon’t forget to subscribe to Skin Anarchy on Apple Podcasts, Spotify, or your preferred platform.Reach out to us through email with any questions.Sign up for our newsletter!Shop all our episodes and products mentioned through our ShopMy Shelf!Support the show

Ep 827Lessons in Longevity: The NAD Conversation and the Evolution of Modern Skincare with Melisse Shaban
Send us Fan MailIn this special installment of Skin Anarchy’s Lessons in Longevity series, Dr. Ekta Yadav sits down with beauty industry pioneer Melisse Shaban for a conversation that bridges decades of brand leadership with the cutting edge of cellular science. From her early days at Revlon’s counter at Macy’s Herald Square to leading Aveda and The Body Shop — and later founding science-driven ventures like Virtue Labs and Aramore — Shaban has witnessed beauty evolve from aspiration to physiology.But this episode isn’t about nostalgia. It’s about where we’re headed.Together, Dr. Yadav and Shaban unpack how the narrative around aging is shifting. Youth is no longer the sole benchmark of beauty. Instead, vitality, recovery, and cellular performance are redefining the industry. Skincare is moving beyond “hope in a jar” marketing toward biologically grounded innovation — often rooted in research that began in oncology, peptide science, and regenerative medicine labs.A central theme of the conversation is NAD — a molecule essential for cellular energy and mitochondrial function. Rather than attempting to apply NAD topically in ways the skin cannot absorb, Shaban explains how Aramore focuses on supporting the body’s own NAD production through metabolically intelligent pathways. The message is clear: aging begins at the cellular level, and true longevity requires daily metabolic support — not reactive damage control.This episode also tackles accountability in a crowded, hype-driven market. Clinical rigor, mechanistic plausibility, and transparent data are no longer optional — they are the future.Listen to the full episode of Skin Anarchy to hear Melisse Shaban break down cellular energy, NAD science, and why the next era of beauty belongs to longevity-driven innovation grounded in real biology.SHOP ARAMOREDon’t forget to subscribe to Skin Anarchy on Apple Podcasts, Spotify, or your preferred platform.Reach out to us through email with any questions.Sign up for our newsletter!Shop all our episodes and products mentioned through our ShopMy Shelf!*This is a paid collaborationSupport the show

Ep 826Creating Iconic Products and Intentional Beauty with Jaimee Holmes of Fel Beauty
Send us Fan MailIn this episode of Skin Anarchy, Dr. Ekta Yadav sits down with longtime friend and beauty industry force Jaimee Holmes for an intimate conversation that marks a new chapter in her career—the launch of Fel. Known for shaping some of the most iconic products in prestige beauty, Holmes opens up about the personal experiences, creative pauses, and emotional clarity that ultimately led her to build something entirely her own.The episode traces Jaimee’s journey from her early days at Sephora—where she learned the power of founder vision and retail storytelling—to pivotal roles at Benefit, Perricone MD, and Too Faced. She reflects on leading the launch of Better Than Sex Mascara, the conviction it took to push past skepticism, and how trusting instinct over trend can redefine an entire category. Later chapters at Kendo and Goop offered a different lens: overseeing countless brands and SKUs revealed just how crowded—and emotionally disconnected—the industry had become.That realization, paired with personal loss and reflection, became the quiet catalyst for Fel. Rather than chasing what’s next, Holmes chose to look inward—building a brand rooted in nostalgia, emotion, and the universal language of a kiss. Fel’s debut, Kissylips, is designed to be felt as much as worn: playful, tactile, and intentionally uncomplicated, with packaging and textures that evoke memory rather than perfection.At its core, Fel is about responsibility and care—especially for younger consumers. From globally clean, vegan formulations to a proprietary fel-good complex™ designed to support both the lip barrier and emotional wellbeing, every detail is deliberate. This isn’t makeup built for speed or spectacle—it’s built for connection.Listen to the full episode of Skin Anarchy to hear Jaimee Holmes share how Fel came to life, why meaning matters more than momentum, and how beauty’s future may be rooted in feeling something again.SHOP FEL BEAUTYDon’t forget to subscribe to Skin Anarchy on Apple Podcasts, Spotify, or your preferred platform.Reach out to us through email with any questions.Sign up for our newsletter!Shop all our episodes and products mentioned through our ShopMy Shelf!Support the show

Ep 825The Global Future of Aesthetic Medicine with AMWC Americas Leaders Ft. Dr. Steven Dayan, Dr. Sabrina Fabi, & Dr. Nathan LeBrasseur
Send us Fan MailIn this episode of Skin Anarchy, Dr. Ekta Yadav is joined by Dr. Steven Dayan, Dr. Sabrina Fabi, and Dr. Nathan LeBrasseur—key advisory voices behind AMWC Americas—for an inside look at why this meeting has become one of the most influential platforms shaping modern aesthetic medicine.As an official media partner, Skin Anarchy and Dr. Ekta are part of the global conversations unfolding at AMWC Americas—conversations that go far beyond injectables to explore longevity science, systems-based care, and how real-world clinical insight travels across borders. What makes this meeting different, the guests explain, is its truly international lens. From early-career clinicians to seasoned experts, the meeting prioritizes anatomy, physiology, and safety—most notably through its standing-room-only live cadaver dissection sessions. For many providers, this hands-on anatomical education is both rare and transformative, refining technique and elevating patient outcomes.A central theme throughout the conversation is the convergence of aesthetics and longevity. Rather than focusing solely on correction, AMWC Americas increasingly addresses hormones, peptides, nutrition, inflammation, and metabolic health—recognizing that durable aesthetic results depend on biological resilience, not isolated procedures.Listen in to hear why AMWC Americas isn’t just a conference—it’s a benchmark for where the field is headed.Attend AMWC AmericasRegister for AMWC Americas: use code EKTA for 20% off registrationAt AMWC, make sure to join the incredible presentations scheduled by Dr. Nathan LeBrasseur, Dr. Steven Dayan, Dr. Sabrina Fabi, and Dr. Ekta Yadav!Dr. Nathan LeBrasseur:Welcome Keynote Address: Aging: Can We Intervene? A Longevity-Informed Approach for Aesthetic Practice | Saturday, February 14 | 9:00am - 10:00am ETAging: Can We Intervene? A Longevity-Informed Approach for Aesthetic Practice | Saturday, February 14 | 9:05am - 9:50am ETDr. Steven Dayan:Welcome Keynote Address: Aging: Can We Intervene? A Longevity-Informed Approach for Aesthetic Practice | Saturday, February 14 | 9:00am - 10:00am ETFull-Face Anatomy Review on Cadaver for Injectors (includes Ultrasound Imaging) | Saturday, February 14 | 2:00pm - 3:30pm ETLunch & Learn: Beyond Treating Lips and Cheeks, Patients Desire Facial Balancing - Featuring Live Injections with the Galderma Portfolio*Live Demonstration Sponsored By: Galderma | Sunday, February 15 | 12:15pm - 1:15pm ETDr. Sabrina Fabi:Sponsored Lunch & Learn: Perimenopausal Skin: Clinical Considerations Sponsored By: Allergan Aesthetics | Saturday, February 14 | 12:30pm - 1:30pm ETLunch & Learn: Beyond Treating Lips and Cheeks, Patients Desire Facial Balancing - Featuring Live Injections with the Galderma Portfolio*Live Demonstration Sponsored By: Galderma | Sunday, February 15 | 12:15pm - 1:15pm ETDr. Ekta Yadav: When Skin Speaks: Understanding the Mind-Skin Connection | Saturday, February 14 | 1:00pm - 2:15pm ETPerception, Identity, and Aesthetic Decision-Making: Understanding the Patient Mindset | Saturday, February 14 | 1:20pm - 1:35pm ETBreaking Boundaries: Revolutionary Approaches to Clinical Skincare & Peels | Saturday, February 14 | 3:30pm - 4:45pm ETThe Longevity Gap: How Post-Treatment Skincare Protects Aesthetic Outcomes | Saturday, February 14 | 4:20pm - 4:35pm ETSupport the show

Ep 824Masterclass Monday: The New Era of Personalized Skin Science at Codex with Dr. Barbara Paldus
Send us Fan MailIn this Masterclass episode of Skin Anarchy, Dr. Ekta Yadav welcomes back Dr. Barbara Paldus of Codex Labs for a compelling deep dive into integrative dermatology—a next-generation approach that treats skin not as a surface problem, but as a window into whole-body health.This conversation reframes chronic skin issues through a systems lens, exploring how the gut, brain, immune system, hormones, and microbiomes continuously communicate—and how disruptions in one system can ripple outward to the skin. Instead of asking “How do we suppress this flare?” Dr. Paldus challenges us to ask “Why is the skin signaling distress in the first place?”You’ll hear how stress, inflammation, microbiome imbalance, and intestinal permeability can quietly drive conditions like acne, eczema, rosacea, and psoriasis—often long before symptoms appear on the skin. The episode unpacks why conventional symptom-focused treatments sometimes fail to deliver lasting relief, and how root-cause care can create more durable, meaningful outcomes.Dr. Paldus also introduces a personalized teledermatology model that leverages biological data, at-home testing, and longitudinal tracking to design interventions tailored to each patient’s unique internal landscape. From hormone-driven breakouts to chronic eczema and immune dysregulation, the discussion highlights how precision diagnostics can guide smarter, more sustainable treatment strategies.At its core, this episode invites listeners to rethink skincare entirely—not as a cycle of stronger products or short-term fixes, but as a long-term investment in systemic resilience.If you’re curious about the future of dermatology, microbiome science, and why healing skin often starts far beyond the mirror, this episode offers a powerful preview of what root-cause, science-led care can look like.Listen to the full episode to explore how integrative dermatology is reshaping chronic skin care from the inside out.SHOP CODEXDon’t forget to subscribe to Skin Anarchy on Apple Podcasts, Spotify, or your preferred platform.Reach out to us through email with any questions.Sign up for our newsletter!Shop all our episodes and products mentioned through our ShopMy Shelf!*This is a sponsored collaborationSupport the show

Ep 823Masterclass Monday: Understanding the Fundamentals of Clinical Trials in Skincare ft. Timeline and Dr. Brad Currier
Send us Fan MailIn the third installment of the Skin Anarchy and Timeline Masterclass, Dr. Ekta Yadav sits down with Dr. Brad Currier, Manager of Clinical Trials at Timeline, for a behind-the-scenes look at what real evidence in longevity science and skincare actually requires.With a foundation in muscle physiology, exercise science, and aging research, Dr. Currier brings a performance-driven lens to longevity — reframing skin not as a cosmetic surface, but as a mitochondria-dense longevity organ, biologically linked to muscle health, metabolic resilience, and cellular energy. The episode explores why mitochondrial function may be one of the most underappreciated drivers of how both skin and the body age.At the center of the conversation is Timeline’s research on urolithin A, a postbiotic shown to support mitochondrial renewal. Rather than relying on marketing narratives, Timeline has built its platform on mechanism-first science, translating years of cellular research into human clinical trials — including biopsy-based studies that reveal measurable changes in collagen synthesis and skin structure.Dr. Currier also pulls back the curtain on the truth about clinical claims in beauty — explaining why many “clinically tested” labels lack rigor, how underpowered or biased studies distort results, and what separates meaningful, published human data from perception-based marketing. From wrinkle depth to hydration to barrier function, he outlines how Timeline measures outcomes that reflect real biological change — not just surface-level improvement.The episode ultimately reframes longevity as precision science, not hype — emphasizing the importance of human trials, mitochondrial health, and transparent evidence in an industry flooded with buzzwords.Listen to the full episode of Skin Anarchy to hear Dr. Brad Currier unpack what clinical validation should look like — and why the future of longevity skincare depends on measurable biology, not marketing promises.SHOP TIMELINEDon’t forget to subscribe to Skin Anarchy on Apple Podcasts, Spotify, or your preferred platform.Reach out to us through email with any questions.Sign up for our newsletter!Shop all our episodes and products mentioned through our ShopMy Shelf!*This is a sponsored collaborationSupport the show

Ep 822Lessons in Longevity: Debunking NAD and Cellular Health with Dr. Tiffany Libby of Niagen Bioscience
Send us Fan MailIn this episode of Skin Anarchy, Dr. Ekta Yadav sits down with Dr. Tiffany Libby for a clear, science-forward conversation on supplements, cellular energy, and why NAD biology has become such a focal point in modern longevity discussions. As interest in “aging better” grows, this episode cuts through hype to explore what NAD optimization can—and cannot—realistically do for skin and whole-body health.Dr. Libby brings a rare perspective to the conversation. As a board-certified dermatologist and Director of Mohs Surgery at Brown University Health, her work spans both skin cancer care and cosmetic dermatology, treating patients across decades of life. That long view has shaped her understanding of longevity not as youth preservation, but as maintaining resilience, repair capacity, and function over time—especially in the face of inflammation, environmental stress, and chronic disease.Much of the discussion centers on why supplements, particularly NAD boosters, are having a cultural moment. Dr. Libby explains that this surge reflects a gap in the healthcare system itself—one that prioritizes treatment over prevention. While supplements can offer support, she emphasizes they are not shortcuts. Longevity still rests on fundamentals: sleep, nutrition, movement, stress regulation, and inflammation control.The episode offers a practical breakdown of NAD (nicotinamide adenine dinucleotide), explaining its role in mitochondrial energy production, DNA repair, and cellular defense. As NAD levels decline with age, skin becomes less efficient at repairing damage, producing collagen, and maintaining barrier integrity. Crucially, Dr. Libby explains why NAD itself can’t be absorbed directly—and why precursors like nicotinamide riboside (NR) matter instead.Throughout the conversation, skepticism and safety remain central themes. In an underregulated supplement space, quality, dosing, and clinical validation matter. From a dermatologic standpoint, supporting mitochondrial health may help skin function closer to its biological potential—but only when paired with evidence-based care and realistic expectations.Listen to the full episode of Skin Anarchy to hear Dr. Tiffany Libby unpack the science of NAD, cellular energy, and why longevity begins with supporting biology—not chasing promises.SHOP TRU NIAGENDon’t forget to subscribe to Skin Anarchy on Apple Podcasts, Spotify, or your preferred platform.Reach out to us through email with any questions.Sign up for our newsletter!Shop all our episodes and products mentioned through our ShopMy Shelf!*This is a paid collaborationSupport the show

Ep 821Lessons in Longevity: The Science Behind OneSkin with Co-Founders Carolina Reis Oliveira and Alessandra Zonari
Send us Fan MailIn this episode of Skin Anarchy, Dr. Ekta Yadav welcomes Carolina Reis Oliveira and Alessandra Zonari, co-founders of OneSkin, for a rigorous, eye-opening conversation that reframes skincare as a true longevity intervention. Part of the Lessons in Longevity series, this episode asks a bold question: what if skin aging isn’t cosmetic at all—but cellular, systemic, and deeply biological?OneSkin began not as a brand, but as a lab-based mission. Trained in stem cell biology, tissue engineering, and genomics, Carolina and Alessandra spent years growing real human skin in the lab to test existing products. What they found challenged the industry: many so-called “anti-aging” formulas increased inflammation, cellular stress, and long-term damage. Meanwhile, longevity science was accelerating—yet skin, the body’s largest organ, was being left out of the conversation.At the center of the episode is cellular senescence—a state where damaged cells stop dividing and begin secreting inflammatory signals that degrade surrounding tissue. In skin, this process weakens the barrier, disrupts collagen, and accelerates visible aging. Rather than masking symptoms, OneSkin set out to target this root cause. After screening hundreds of compounds, they developed OS-01, a proprietary peptide shown in lab models to significantly reduce senescent cell burden while increasing collagen—without irritation.The conversation also expands beyond the face. OneSkin’s decision to focus on body skin revealed something unexpected: improving the skin barrier may reduce systemic inflammation. Clinical data discussed in the episode suggests that healthier skin doesn’t just look better—it may influence whole-body aging.This episode is a must-listen for anyone curious about where skincare, biotech, and longevity science truly intersect.Listen to the full episode of Skin Anarchy to hear how OneSkin is redefining skin as a living organ—and why the future of longevity may start at the surface.SHOP ONESKINDon’t forget to subscribe to Skin Anarchy on Apple Podcasts, Spotify, or your preferred platform.Reach out to us through email with any questions.Sign up for our newsletter!Shop all our episodes and products mentioned through our ShopMy Shelf!Support the show

Ep 820Poetry, Balance, and the Art of Scent with Pissara Umavijani of Parfums Dusita
Send us Fan MailIn this Fragrance Friday episode of Skin Anarchy, Dr. Ekta sits down with Pissara Umavijani, founder and perfumer of Parfums Dusita, for a quietly powerful conversation about perfume as emotion, memory, and meaning. In an industry increasingly driven by trends and virality, Dusita stands apart as a house built on poetry, patience, and feeling.Pissara shares her deeply personal journey—leaving Thailand to start over in Paris with a singular intention: to create fragrance that makes people feel. Entirely self-taught, she immersed herself in the craft of perfumery through persistence and intuition, guided by a belief that scent should communicate something human, not perform for attention. Even the name Dusita, which refers to a level of paradise in Thai culture, reflects this ethos—living with purpose, warmth, and emotional presence.Rather than relying on obvious cultural motifs, Dusita expresses Thai heritage through values: gentleness, hospitality, compassion, and balance. These qualities shape not only the fragrances themselves, but how the brand engages with people—inviting closeness rather than spectacle.At the heart of every Dusita fragrance is poetry written by Pissara’s late father. Each poem serves as an emotional blueprint, translated into scent rather than illustrated literally. This approach comes to life in beloved creations like Tonka Latte, a soft, comforting gourmand inspired by warmth and love, and Pavilion d’Or, a serene composition that captures balance and stillness without adhering to a single category.Throughout the conversation, Pissara returns to one guiding principle: balance. For her, great perfumery isn’t about intensity—it’s about harmony, evolution, and restraint. Dusita’s fragrances don’t demand attention; they reward it.Listen to the full Skin Anarchy episode to hear how poetry, Thai cultural values, and emotional honesty shape Parfums Dusita—and why the most powerful fragrances are often the quietest ones.SHOP Parfums DusitaDon’t forget to subscribe to Skin Anarchy on Apple Podcasts, Spotify, or your preferred platform.Reach out to us through email with any questions.Sign up for our newsletter!Shop all our episodes and products mentioned through our ShopMy Shelf!Support the showSupport the show

Ep 819Pioneering Protocol-Based Solutions for Skin Longevity Featuring 111SKIN Founders Dr. Yannis Alexandrides and Eva Alexandridis
Send us Fan MailIn this episode of Skin Anarchy, Dr. Ekta Yadav is joined by Dr. Yannis Alexandrides and Eva Alexandridis, the husband-and-wife team behind 111 Harley St. and 111SKIN, for a candid, science-forward conversation on regenerative aesthetics, protocol-based skincare, and what longevity really looks like when it’s rooted in medicine—not marketing.111SKIN didn’t start as a beauty brand. It began in the operating room. Dr. Alexandrides shares how his work in facial plastic surgery led him to develop skincare that could support faster healing and stronger outcomes after surgery—when nothing on the market met his clinical standards. What surprised him most wasn’t just improved recovery, but the long-term transformation in skin quality patients experienced once healing was complete. That insight became the blueprint for translating surgical-grade science into daily care.A central theme of the episode is maintenance. Procedures, Dr. Alexandrides explains, are only as successful as the skin’s baseline health. Eva expands on this philosophy, emphasizing that 111SKIN was never about instant fixes—it was about training skin to behave better over time. Longevity, in their view, is built through consistency, restraint, and respect for biology.The conversation also dives into the brand’s measured approach to advanced technologies like exosomes—used as targeted protocols rather than trends—and the broader shift in aesthetics toward regeneration over replacement. From deep plane techniques to micrografting, Dr. Alexandrides explains why modern plastic surgery is moving away from excess and toward preservation.Throughout the episode, one message remains clear: longevity aesthetics aren’t about changing who you are—they’re about supporting skin health so you can look like yourself, for longer.Listen to the full episode of Skin Anarchy to hear Dr. Yannis Alexandrides and Eva Alexandridis unpack the science behind 111SKIN, regenerative skincare, and the future of evidence-based aesthetic care.SHOP 111SKINDon’t forget to subscribe to Skin Anarchy on Apple Podcasts, Spotify, or your preferred platform.Reach out to us through email with any questions.Sign up for our newsletter!Shop all our episodes and products mentioned through our ShopMy Shelf!Support the show

Ep 818Building a Beauty Brand Beyond Trends with Natasha Denona
Send us Fan MailIn this episode of Skin Anarchy, Dr. Ekta sits down with Natasha Denona for a rare, reflective conversation that traces the creative and philosophical roots of one of modern makeup’s most influential brands. Known for palettes that have become industry benchmarks, Natasha opens up about how her work has always been driven less by trends—and more by intention, education, and respect for the user.Growing up between science and art shaped everything. Natasha’s mother, a chemist in inorganic chemistry, exposed her early to laboratories, precision, and technical thinking. While chemistry itself didn’t immediately click, the discipline behind it did. That structured curiosity later resurfaced in how Natasha approaches formulation, texture, and product architecture—where creativity is always grounded in control.Before makeup, there was painting, theater, and dance. Natasha shares how color became both emotional language and psychological tool, first explored through art and stage makeup. That foundation explains why her palettes feel cohesive yet expressive—each one designed as a complete story rather than a collection of random shades.A defining theme of the episode is education. Natasha doesn’t create products to sit on a shelf; she designs tools that teach. Long before “educational beauty” became a marketing buzzword, her launches embedded technique—guiding users through layering, sculpting, and dimension the way professional artists actually work.Rather than chasing novelty, Natasha deliberately builds for longevity. Palettes like Biba and Camel weren’t designed for a moment—they were designed to last across ages, skin tones, and styles. Inclusivity, she explains, has always been non-negotiable, not performative. Her decision to launch 52 foundation shades wasn’t strategic—it was personal.Throughout the conversation, one belief remains constant: the product should be the star. Natasha never wanted her image to overshadow the work itself.Listen to the full episode of Skin Anarchy to hear Natasha Denona reflect on creativity, inclusivity, and why true innovation in beauty comes from intention—not trends.SHOP NATASHA DENONA CHAPTERS:(0:02) - Welcome & Introducing Natasha Denona(1:14) - Growing Up Around Science, Art, and Photography(4:43) - Early Relationship With Color, Makeup, and Expression(6:11) - From Dance & Modeling to Makeup Artistry(7:26) - Building Iconic Color Stories & Palette Philosophy(9:05) - Inclusivity as a Core Creative Principle(13:19) - Creating Complexion Products at Scale(17:05) - Longevity, Creativity, and Avoiding Trends(24:08) - Entrepreneurship, Visibility, and Authentic LeadershipPlease fill out this survey to give us feedback on the show!Don’t forget to subscribe to Skin Anarchy on Apple Podcasts, Spotify, or your preferred platform.Reach out to us through email with any questions.Sign up for our newsletter!Shop all our episodes and products mentioned through ourSupport the show

Ep 817Redefining the Modern Red Lip with Denise Vasi, Founder of MAED
Send us Fan MailIn this episode of Skin Anarchy, Dr. Ekta sits down with Denise Vasi, founder and creative force behind MAED, for a thoughtful conversation about building beauty with intention, patience, and care. Denise’s path into the industry began early—signed to Ford Models and immersed in on-set artistry long before social media shaped beauty culture. Those formative years, paired with memories of her grandmother’s at-home esthetic rituals, planted the seed for a philosophy rooted in preparation, respect, and craft.Before MAED ever existed, Denise built something rarer than hype: community. Through years of honest storytelling around wellness, motherhood, and clean living, she created a dialogue with women who trusted her voice. That trust shaped MAED’s slow, deliberate evolution. Rather than chasing trends or speed, Denise chose to listen—developing products only when they solved real, lived problems.At the heart of the brand is a deceptively complex product: the red lip. Denise unpacks why most formulas fail—dryness, poor undertones, and exclusion baked into development—and how MAED set out to fix that. Comfort came first, followed by rigorous testing across skin tones, lip shapes, ages, and backgrounds. Inclusivity, she explains, isn’t a campaign—it’s formulation, design, and function.Central to MAED’s ethos is one guiding principle: care before color. Lips lack oil glands and cannot repair themselves without real barrier support. MAED’s formulas focus on hydration, resilience, and wear—so color performs because the foundation is healthy.Beyond product, the conversation explores beauty as ritual and self-expression. The red lip becomes more than pigment—it’s confidence, protection, and presence.Listen to the full episode to hear Denise Vasi share the philosophy behind MAED, the science of lip health, and why meaningful beauty innovation starts with care—not trends.SHOP MAED and learn more on their social media!CHAPTERS:(0:02) - Introduction & Welcoming Denise Vasi(0:59) - Early Career: Modeling, Beauty Sets & Formative Influences(2:16) - Building Community Through Editorial & Made.co(4:48) - Slow Beauty, Brand Intention & Resisting Trend Cycles(7:13) - Reimagining the Modern Red Lip(8:04) - Formulation, Testing & True Inclusivity(12:16) - What Inclusivity Really Means in Beauty(16:30) - Lip Health, Barrier Science & Care-First Formulation(23:10) - Care Before Color & The Cultural Power of a Red LipPlease fill out this survey to give us feedback on the show!Don’t forget to subscribe to Skin Anarchy on Apple Podcasts, Spotify, or your preferred platform.Reach out to us through email with any questions.Sign up for our newsletter!Shop all our episodes and products mentioned through our ShopMy Shelf!Support the show