Brandi Glanville Shocks Fans Using Nair to Treat ‘Facial Parasites’ in Bizarre Video
Fans are stunned after Brandi Glanville, 52, shared a bizarre TikTok video claiming she used Nair — a chemical hair remover — on her face to combat what she described as “facial parasites.”
📹 In the clip, the former Real Housewives of Beverly Hills star appears with red, inflamed skin around her cheeks and chin.
“I know I look attractive,” she jokes, before claiming, “Nair is the fountain of youth… but I overdid it. Seven minutes. Don’t do it.”
She even suggests Nair could replace pricey skincare treatments, saying it “pisses off whoever is living in my face.”
💬 In the caption, Glanville admitted to using the product on her arms too, calling it a “cheap fix” for loose skin — but ignored Nair’s official warnings, which explicitly state not to use it on the face or irritated skin.
⚠️ The internet quickly lit up with concern and disbelief, with fans calling it “reckless” and “dangerous.”
🚨 “Please Don’t Use Nair on Your Face!” — Brandi Glanville Alarms Fans with Shocking Skincare Video
Brandi Glanville’s latest TikTok has fans deeply concerned after she revealed she’s been using Nair — a body hair removal cream — on her face in an attempt to treat what she believes are “facial parasites.”
💬 The comments flooded with worry:
- “Please do NOT put Nair on your face!!”
- “You gotta get out of LA girl…”
- “Brandy, please don’t do anything not approved by a doctor.”
- “I have no words… praying for you.”
Some followers even suggested Glanville may be suffering from Morgellons disease — a controversial and rare condition linked to delusional parasitosis, where sufferers believe parasites or fibers are embedded in their skin. Experts, including the Mayo Clinic, say no parasites are typically found in testing.
Others feared she was experiencing a chemical burn and urged her to seek emergency care.
🧪 Back in December, Glanville shared she’d been battling an undiagnosed health issue that caused swelling, disfiguration, and speech problems — despite spending $10,000 on lab work and seeing multiple specialists.
While Glanville believes she’s dealing with a parasite, dermatologists suggest it could be demodicosis — an overgrowth of naturally occurring Demodex mites found on most human faces.
⚠️ Nair specifically warns against using its product on the face, irritated skin, or broken skin — making the situation even more alarming.