The youngest of the Kardashian/Jenner clan, Kylie Jenner, is the cover star of the December issue of Elle Canada magazine.
The cover was revealed a while ago and now we’ve got excerpts from her interview where she talks about keeping her relationship with Tyga private, her mum Caitlyn Jenner, getting her lip fillers and more.
See it below.
On sharing her relationship with Tyga: “That
has been pretty organic. But I do think that if you let people in too
deep, it gets hard—your fans get too invested, and then they know when
you break up and make up. I don’t want people to know every time we
fight or break up, so I’d rather keep some things private.”
On plastic surgery: “When
I got my lips done, I literally told no one! I didn’t tell my best
friend or even the guy I liked at the time. I really thought it was no
one’s business. My mom was super-against it, but I begged her and begged
her and she finally let me do it. After I did them, I thought it was so
obvious that I didn’t have to say anything. I never denied it because I
always told my publicist ‘no lip questions,’ so no one ever asked me. I
never said I got them done, but I never denied it either. But people
thought I was such a liar!”
On other plastic surgery rumours:
Yeah, then people were saying I got my chin reconstructed, that I got a
nose job, an eyebrow lift, I got my boobs done, this and that. So I
wanted to come out and say that this is crazy and I only got my lips
done. I don’t think people realize that I just turned 18. There’s no way
my mom or any doctor would let me go under the knife like that—that’s
just so crazy!” [Laughs]
On Caitlyn: “I
just find that because everything is open and honest now, we actually
spend a lot more time together. It was really hard for me in the
beginning, but now it’s much easier. It’s ‘she’ now, but it was ‘he’ who
always had this secret. Now she’s just free and way happier, and it
makes me feel more comfortable. It’s cool. She’s the same person—she
just looks different.”
On dealing with social media remarks:
I mean…I’m still human; I can’t come across something so hurtful and
just brush it off and go on with my day. It’s really hard, and I’m still
growing up. Surprisingly, it wasn’t as hard for me when I was younger.
When I was 15 or 16, I never looked at the comments; I never Googled
myself—I wouldn’t go there. I didn’t even know about any of these mean
blogs. I know that if you don’t read it, it doesn’t affect you, but it’s
still hard.
Read the full feature here.
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