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A dog tore off her upper lip. Five surgeries later, she’s a voice for others with facial injuries.

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At 20 years old, Brooklinn Khoury knew she wanted to do something different with her life. She was teaching English as a second language courses, but she wanted to focus on her true passion: skateboarding.

For a while, everything was going just as she planned. Khoury was building a career in the worlds of both skateboarding and modeling, landing major sponsorships and being featured in Vogue. Through the early days of the coronavirus pandemic, she continued building her platform and honing her skills. She wanted to be a voice for women in the sport, and had garnered tens of thousands of social media followers who were invested in her journey.

In November 2020, her cousin invited her to take advantage of a cheap flight and visit her in Arizona. The visit was normal, and the biggest worry Khoury had was about a zit on her upper lip that she was cropping out of selfies sent to friends. Then, something Khoury still can’t identify triggered her cousin’s pit bull, a dog she had known for years.

The dog launched at her face, Khoury told CBS News, and bit down. The pit bull, which weighed “100-something pounds easily,” clamped its jaws around her upper lip and stayed there for nearly a minute. Khoury said that she was too startled to scream, but when she finally got the dog to release its grip, she saw “something fly on the wall and then fall to the floor.” 

“It didn’t really hit that that was my lip. I couldn’t process that,” Khoury said. She didn’t realize the true extent of the damage for several minutes, when she opened her phone’s selfie camera to inspect what she thought might just be a deep cut. Instead, she found that “everything from the nose down was completely ripped off.”

Feeling “completely alone” and wanting better

Khoury immediately went to an area hospital, sitting alone in her room because of coronavirus restrictions on visitors while she waited for hours for a plastic surgeon to drive in. She scrolled through social media to see if she could find anyone else with a similar injury — and found nothing.

“I couldn’t find anybody that had no upper lip and was sharing a story or sharing a problem. I don’t want anyone to feel how I felt in that moment, which was just alone and very secluded,” Khoury said. “I picked up my phone and just started recording everything.”

Khoury detailed the time in the hospital and captured multiple images of the injury, even as her phone battery dwindled. She had thought the plastic surgeon might be able to reattach her lip, but it couldn’t be done: Instead, the injury was sewn up and the skin from the inside of her mouth was flipped to the outside to close the wound. It left her with no upper lip and massive scarring. Her teeth were visible even when her mouth was closed.

Just days after the surgery, Khoury was sharing photos and videos on social media. It was a huge change from the modeling photos and athletic shots she had previously been known for posting.

“I genuinely wanted to share my story. I felt so alone in the hospital … I needed a community of difference in a world of perfect,” Khoury said. “So I just made sure to be super vulnerable and have it be a safe space to post what I wanted to post. I just wanted somebody else, if they were going through it, to be able to relate.”

Finding help

Even as Khoury mentally prepared to “rock no lip” for the rest of her life, she hoped more could be done to bring her smile back. She said she saw dozens of doctors in the year after the accident, but was told that little could be done to fully restore her face. It wasn’t until she met Dr. Nicholas Do, a plastic surgeon at UCLA Health, that she finally felt hopeful again.

Do, who has extensive experience with microsurgery and craniofacial reconstruction, spent four hours with Khoury, answering every question she had and beginning to develop a plan to restore her face.

It wasn’t a simple process. Do told Khoury it would be multiple surgeries over the course of months, and said that it could take up to two years for the process to be completed. To repair the injury and return her face to its former appearance, Do merged a number of surgical techniques that have been developed over the decades. He even drove to a Hollywood special effects shop to get the supplies necessary to make casts of Khoury’s face so he could conduct trial runs of different surgical options. 

The first of five surgeries took a piece of skin from Khoury’s wrist and attached it to where her upper lip had been. This created a thick, fleshy area that Do could connect to the blood vessels in the face and build the rest of the repair from. He compared the process to a sculptor finding a big chunk of marble, then carving a statue from it. The bulky skin changed Khoury’s speech, the way she ate, and more. 

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The progress of surgeries to reconstruct Brooklinn Khoury’s face.

Brooklinn Khoury / UCLA Health


“I got so used to having no lip and I was so OK with what I looked like that I was actually scared for another change,” Khoury said.

Her lip stayed that way for several months. Then, a second surgery advanced skin through her nose, helping Khoury breathe bigger breaths and creating a better surgical area for Do to work within. The third surgery was a reconstructive rhinoplasty, which helped alter the appearance of Khoury’s nose and adjust the skin in the area. The fourth and fifth surgeries focused on refining Khoury’s lip.

When it was all done, Khoury’s face looked much closer to her original appearance. Khoury said when she looks at the photos she took immediately after the accident, she’s shocked by the difference.

“Now it’s something I look at and I’m like, ‘Oh God, I can’t even believe I went through that,'” Khoury said. “Then I look at my face now, and I’m so thankful and grateful that I look the way I do. If you were to tell me two years ago that I would have looked this way, I would have probably not believed anybody.”

Creating a community online

Khoury’s Instagram page has become the exact kind of account she looked for in the hours after being attacked. While undergoing the surgeries, she posted frequently about her life and spoke candidly about what she was going through. Many of the posts show her engaging in the same activities other women her age enjoy. Videos and photos show her trying out lipsticks and practicing skateboarding moves. In the comments, people share their own stories of reconstructive surgery.

“I can’t even believe how many people have shared their stories with me,” said Khoury. “It’s been such a beautiful experience. I felt so alone, and now I have such a beautiful community of people. … I felt so alone in the beginning, and now I have so many people sharing their stories.” 

Paige Towers is part of that community. The 23-year-old was attacked by a dog in December 2023. She lost part of her lip and had multiple bites on her body. In the days after the attack, she was feeling overwhelmed and struggling to “accept that a part of my face was altered in a way” she never expected. While scrolling Instagram one day, she found Khoury’s page.

“I watched a reel about her experience and maybe stalked her account a bit,” Towers said. “I felt inspired by her journey and confident in my own. The fact that she could endure being attacked so severely and still press on with grace made me feel seen. … Her account only proved to further boost my own self-realization that my journey of healing from this trauma can happen and was happening.”

It’s not what Khoury expected, but more than four years after quitting her job, she has found the new life she was looking for.

“It trips me out every day,” Khoury said. “It’s a full circle.”





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Hurricane Oscar forms off the Bahamas

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The National Hurricane Center in Miami says Hurricane Oscar has formed off the coast of the Bahamas.

Oscar, which the hurricane center characterized as “tiny,” formed Saturday. Oscar – the 15th named storm of the hurricane season – formed as a tropical storm just east of the Turks and Caicos islands, before quickly becoming a hurricane.

The government of the Bahamas has issued a hurricane warning for the Turks and Caicos Islands and the southeastern Bahamas. The government of Cuba has issued a hurricane watch for the provinces of Guantanamo, Holguin, and Las Tunas. 

Turks and Caicos and southeastern Bahamas can expect heavy rainfall later tonight and tomorrow, the hurricane center said. Rains are expected to spread to eastern Cuba on Sunday. 

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Hurricane Oscar formed off the coast of the Bahamas on Saturday.

National Hurricane Center


The storm’s maximum sustained winds were clocked at 80 mph with higher gusts. Its center was located about 165 miles east-southeast of the southeastern Bahamas and about 470 miles east of Camaguey, Cuba.

Tropical Storm Nadine formed hours earlier  in the western Caribbean and is moving westward toward Mexico’s Yucatan Peninsula. It made landfall near Belize City in Belize around 12 p.m. Eastern.

Heavy rain and tropical storm conditions were occurring over parts of Belize and the Yucatan peninsula.

A tropical storm warning is in effect for Belize City and from Belize to Cancun, Mexico, including Cozumel.

The Atlantic hurricane season officially began on June 1 and finishes Nov. 30, with most activity occurring between mid-August and mid-October. Hurricane activity tends to peak in mid-September, according to the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration.

In Florida, Gulf Coast communities are struggling in the wake of back-to-back hurricanes, as Hurricane Helene rammed into the region less than two weeks before Hurricane Milton arrived.





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10/19: Saturday Morning – CBS News

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10/19: Saturday Morning – CBS News


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Cuba electricity returns for some after major power outage left millions in the dark

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Florida sees surge in migrants


Florida sees surge in migrants from Haiti and Cuba

03:37

Cuba’s government on Saturday said that some electricity was restored on the island after one of the country’s major power plants failed and left millions without electricity in an outage that started two days earlier.

Energy minister Vicente de la O Levy said the country had 500 megawatts of energy in its electrical grid early Saturday. He posted on X that “several substations in the west now have electricity.”

O Levy also said two thermoelectric power plants are back and two more will resume their operations “in the next few hours.”

In addition to the Antonio Guiteras plant, whose failure on Friday affected the entire national system, Cuba has several others and it wasn’t immediately clear whether or not they remained functional.

There is no official estimate for when the blackout will be ended. Even in a country that is used to outages amid a deepening economic crisis, Friday’s supply collapse was unprecedented in modern times, aside from incidents involving intense hurricanes, like one in 2022.

The Cuban government has announced emergency measures to slash electricity demand, including suspending classes, shutting down some state-owned workplaces and canceling nonessential services. Officials said that 1.64 gigawatts went offline during peak hours, about half the total demand at the time.

Local authorities said the outage, which started in a smaller scale on Thursday, stemmed from increased demand from small and medium-sized companies and residences’ air conditioners. Later, the blackout got worse due to breakdowns in old thermoelectric plants that haven’t been properly maintained and the lack of fuel to operate some facilities.

Changes to electricity rates for small- and medium-sized companies, which have proliferated since they were first authorized by the communist government in 2021, are also being considered.



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