Actors who are now obviously, on ozempic

Anonymous
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:This is a pretty inane thread but I don't think the curiosity about this is automatically jealousy. I think a lot of us are trying to get a sense of what is reasonable or realist in terms of weight or weight loss at different ages or with different body types, both on semiglutide and not on it. It's not just people trying to be nasty or critical. Like I'm genuinely interested in women who are taking it in menopause and at what starting weights and with what results, because that's my situation. I'm not shaming anyone, just looking for info.


Plenty of people talking about this on the health thread, and one’s doctor is a really good source of information about medical issues, in my experience. I don’t think this thread was started out of benign curiosity regarding health care information. It stems from wanting to shame people who have sought help with weight loss, as a logical outgrowth of general fat shaming.


DP and there is a lot of that in semaglutide discussions, obviously. But I think it's kind of silly to dismiss every discussion as fat shaming. Especially with celebrities, there's a "don't pee on my leg and tell me it's raining" reaction - when everybody on screen loses 4 BMI points in 8 months the very year that Ozempic hits the shelves, the denials are obnoxious.

I am on Wegovy. It's magical and wonderful and life changing. I don't necessarily want to tell anyone that I'm getting "help" with my weight loss but I still look askance at my sister, who is on Mounjaro, posting to Facebook that she's found the miracle way to lose weight and it's some electric shock workout BS, all to throw people off the scent. Most people don't like being lied to, and even less when the lie assumes they're complete simpletons who will believe anything.


Were you overweight before Wegovy? Or thin but just not at your ideal weight?


Obese in spite of being very active (multiple triathlons active). When I say that it's life changing I mean it. So I do have a bit of judgment around people taking it to lose 10 lbs but I also recognize that for celebrities 10 lbs can be the difference between getting a job and not. We all make our choices.

But, would you be ok with people judging you for getting obese? In spite of being very active does not excuse letting yourself go that much. If you judge people who take it to lose 10 lbs, would it not be ok then to judge you for getting obese? What is that saying? Two wrongs don't make a right?
Anonymous
Anonymous wrote:At $1200 a month, how are people affording it and don’t you have to then take forever? Is it that easy to get a prescription? At what weight will doctor write a prescription to use it to lose weight?


You can get pure compounded much more cheaply online. My 8 month supply costed me about 1900 total, while saving me about $150/month on groceries. So my per month cost was <$100, from what I was saving. That said, my dose was low
Anonymous
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:At $1200 a month, how are people affording it and don’t you have to then take forever? Is it that easy to get a prescription? At what weight will doctor write a prescription to use it to lose weight?


You can get pure compounded much more cheaply online. My 8 month supply costed me about 1900 total, while saving me about $150/month on groceries. So my per month cost was <$100, from what I was saving. That said, my dose was low


From an online pharmacy and don’t need prescription?
Anonymous
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:At $1200 a month, how are people affording it and don’t you have to then take forever? Is it that easy to get a prescription? At what weight will doctor write a prescription to use it to lose weight?


You can get pure compounded much more cheaply online. My 8 month supply costed me about 1900 total, while saving me about $150/month on groceries. So my per month cost was <$100, from what I was saving. That said, my dose was low


From an online pharmacy and don’t need prescription?


You get a prescription online, like telemedicine.
Anonymous
Vanderpunp rules Stassi Schroeder—

Not an actress—but obviously on it in latest photos. Legs virtual sticks. Bones jutting out
Anonymous
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:Kathy Bates

Katy Perry


It’s so obvious. Everyone looks like they have no muscle mass.


It’s the weird spindly legs that do it for me. Men do not find this attractive, but it’s women goals, competing with other women for skinniest.

So many get legs that look like an 80-year olds.
Anonymous
Anonymous wrote:Everyone who was listed here does nor have enough weight loss for me to automatically say GLP-1. Mindy Kaling is the most obvious case


Mindy looks so strange now.

She was cuter before.
Anonymous
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:Kathy Bates

Katy Perry


It’s so obvious. Everyone looks like they have no muscle mass.


It’s the weird spindly legs that do it for me. Men do not find this attractive, but it’s women goals, competing with other women for skinniest.

So many get legs that look like an 80-year olds.


Yeah, Shania Twain has those spindly legs now. It looks weird.
Anonymous
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:This is a pretty inane thread but I don't think the curiosity about this is automatically jealousy. I think a lot of us are trying to get a sense of what is reasonable or realist in terms of weight or weight loss at different ages or with different body types, both on semiglutide and not on it. It's not just people trying to be nasty or critical. Like I'm genuinely interested in women who are taking it in menopause and at what starting weights and with what results, because that's my situation. I'm not shaming anyone, just looking for info.


Plenty of people talking about this on the health thread, and one’s doctor is a really good source of information about medical issues, in my experience. I don’t think this thread was started out of benign curiosity regarding health care information. It stems from wanting to shame people who have sought help with weight loss, as a logical outgrowth of general fat shaming.


DP and there is a lot of that in semaglutide discussions, obviously. But I think it's kind of silly to dismiss every discussion as fat shaming. Especially with celebrities, there's a "don't pee on my leg and tell me it's raining" reaction - when everybody on screen loses 4 BMI points in 8 months the very year that Ozempic hits the shelves, the denials are obnoxious.

I am on Wegovy. It's magical and wonderful and life changing. I don't necessarily want to tell anyone that I'm getting "help" with my weight loss but I still look askance at my sister, who is on Mounjaro, posting to Facebook that she's found the miracle way to lose weight and it's some electric shock workout BS, all to throw people off the scent. Most people don't like being lied to, and even less when the lie assumes they're complete simpletons who will believe anything.


Were you overweight before Wegovy? Or thin but just not at your ideal weight?


Obese in spite of being very active (multiple triathlons active). When I say that it's life changing I mean it. So I do have a bit of judgment around people taking it to lose 10 lbs but I also recognize that for celebrities 10 lbs can be the difference between getting a job and not. We all make our choices.

But, would you be ok with people judging you for getting obese? In spite of being very active does not excuse letting yourself go that much. If you judge people who take it to lose 10 lbs, would it not be ok then to judge you for getting obese? What is that saying? Two wrongs don't make a right?


I'm cracking up at the idea that this is a grand hypothetical you've dreamed up. People judge obese people ALL. THE. TIME. There's no "what if" involved. There's no chance the person you're talking to didn't spend their life being judged. But you experience someone saying they have "a bit of judgment" toward your choices and you've got a soapbox at the ready. Grow up.
Anonymous
I’m late to this thread but I think Michele Obama looks better with more weight
Anonymous
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:Kathy Bates

Katy Perry


It’s so obvious. Everyone looks like they have no muscle mass.


It’s the weird spindly legs that do it for me. Men do not find this attractive, but it’s women goals, competing with other women for skinniest.

So many get legs that look like an 80-year olds.


Yeah, Shania Twain has those spindly legs now. It looks weird.


DP. I’m on it too and I do have weird legs. I’ve always been skinner on the bottom and now it looks off. My upper body is still fleshy
Anonymous
Anonymous wrote:Michelle Obama
Kristen bell.

I’m I’m honest I do sort of judge very thin people who use it to get tinier. But more I’m just really curious how everyone is handling the side effects, nausea etc… or is it really not that bad ?


Kristen Bell has always been thin..
Anonymous
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:Jesse Plemons is hot now. Never thought I'd say that! Of course, it's' just "intermittent fasting" 😉https://pagesix.com/2024/06/21/lifestyle/jesse-plemons-reveals-how-much-weight-he-lost-without-ozempic/


He’s only 37 and has been relatively slim for much of his adult life. No reason to think he couldn’t/didn’t lose the weight without medication.



He and Kirsten Dunst both dropped a ton of weight at exactly the same time. Of course it's Ozempic.


Kristen Dunst has always been skinny
Anonymous
Kathy Bates and Jesse Plemons

and both look amazing now
Anonymous
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:Kathy Bates

Katy Perry


It’s so obvious. Everyone looks like they have no muscle mass.


It’s the weird spindly legs that do it for me. Men do not find this attractive, but it’s women goals, competing with other women for skinniest.

So many get legs that look like an 80-year olds.


Yeah, Shania Twain has those spindly legs now. It looks weird.


I have very spindly legs, but carry my menopause weight in my midsection. I am not on ozempic (but would really like to be bc I feel like I can barely eat in order to maintain my current weight, which is still 10 lbs above my goal weight).
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