Dr. Pimple Popper is getting all “sentimental” in a new “squeeze me” compilation video with a jazzy soundtrack.
I get sentimental… which would you like me to SQUEEZE? #drpimplepopper #squeezeme โ๐ผโค๏ธโ๐ผ#goodnight pic.twitter.com/xXk22u0a6f
โ Dr Pimple Popper (@SandraLeeMD) April 15, 2018
The video, which Dr. Pimple Popper shared to Twitter, features her popping and squeezing various zits, pimples, and bumps on patients bodies. The whole, thing is set to the Ella Fitzgerald classic “Just Squeeze Me (But Don’t Tease Me),” which is unsurprisingly fitting.
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Many of the doctor’s Twitter followers commented on the new video, with one complimenting the “great soundtrack,” and another calling it, “Mello, soothing and satisfying!”
“Yes! I’m a jazz Nut case, but had no idea of of the magic of mixing these two,” someone else wrote.
Those who find Dr. Pimple Popper‘s videos exciting may also want to check out a gushing pop video that she posted recently.
In the clip, the doctor lances a pimple that begins to ooze, and then once all the puss is out she lances it again with tweezers and more puss oozes.
A number of Dr. Pimple Popper’s fans turned up in the comments on that video as well, with one person commenting, “Savage!! Go get em Dr. Pimple Popper,” and another joking, “He’s got his own soft serve machine on the side of his body!”
In another video she shared earlier this year, Dr. Pimple Popper took on a couple of cysts that had grown on a man’s eyelids.
In the clip posted to Dr. Sandra Lee’s Twitter page, she lances and squeezes out the contents of two cysts that grew on her male patient’s eyelids.
The captions on the video reveal Lee informing her viewers that it’s important to keep the patient talking during a procedure like this, as “silence is terrible in this situation.” She also notes that “if a patient is talking it means that he is breathing and it can help distract.”
These are NOT tear drops๐ง https://t.co/8Q0PcA2mDZ #drpimplepopper #hydrocystomas #eyelids pic.twitter.com/3dVfoqHdFX
โ Dr Pimple Popper (@SandraLeeMD) March 28, 2018
The video received a lot of responses, with one person saying, “I’m fine with watching these videos but when there’s something so close to the eye, I freak out a little bit.”
“I go crazy when a single hair gets caught in my eye lashes and obstructs my view. Can’t imagine what it was like for him to see these dangling cysts for years!!!! Peripheral vision must be on point after this procedure,” another commented.