They preached self-love until the needle came out. Now Megan Trainor is rewriting her own lyrics, Kelly Osbourne is denying a drug she *admitted* taking, and Margot Robbie looks unrecognizable.

The Ozempic pandemic in Hollywood is getting worse by the day, and from the looks of it, the trend is not stopping anytime soon. First it was Ariana Grande, then Meghan Trainor, Kelly Osbourne, and now Margot Robbie.
This is an epidemic sweeping through the entertainment industry, and don’t think for a second the men are excluded, because they are right there on the list, too.
They all look like twink versions of 2017 Timothée Chalamet—no shade to Timothée, by the way—but there is something seriously wrong, and critics are screaming that it needs to stop before people start dropping dead.
The craziest part? These Ozempic transformations are glaringly obvious, yet almost everyone denies it, even when the proof is written all over their gaunt faces and hollowed cheekbones.
For years, social media has watched the craze for Ozempic and Mounjaro take over Hollywood. People who have never lost weight before are suddenly skeletal. And it’s not necessarily the weight loss itself that has fans upset—it’s the whiplash.
Some of these celebrities built entire careers on body positivity when it was trendy, only to abandon the movement the second Ozempic came into the chat.

Take Meghan Trainor, for example. Back when she couldn’t lose weight, she made songs like “All About That Bass,” celebrating men and women with bigger bodies. But once she got her hands on Ozempic, she abandoned all that and started preaching a different message.
During one of her recent concerts, she changed the lyrics of her signature song from “It’s pretty clear I ain’t no size two” to “It’s pretty clear I got some new boobs.” Mind you, this is a song that was once supposed to make her fans feel positive about their bodies. Now they can’t even have that anymore.
People have been calling out her transformation because it has changed her face so dramatically she doesn’t even look like the same person anymore. But her change is nothing compared to what Kelly Osbourne has gotten herself looking like. Kelly recently had her fans shook with her very drastic transformation, going from having a fuller body to now literally being all bones and skeleton.
The thing about these Ozempic warriors is that they don’t just lose fat—they usually also lose a lot of muscle, causing them to become sickly and frail. And that is the exact case for Kelly.
“Look at her. This is actually sad to me,” one observer noted. “She has lost the slight, ever so slight fullness that was in her face before.”
Most people don’t know this, but Kelly has been desperately trying to get skinny for a long time. In 2018, she had gastric sleeve surgery for this same reason, but she ended up gaining over 100 pounds even after the procedure.
In February 2024, she finally popped out looking skinnier than ever and even admitted to taking Ozempic, praising it on camera and encouraging everyone struggling with their weight to give it a try.
But a few months later, she did a complete 180, denying ever using it. You cannot make this up. She saw the backlash and knew she had to take her words back.
“I know everybody thinks I took Ozempic. I did not take Ozempic. I don’t know where that came from. My mom took Ozempic,” she claimed.
Recently, she made an appearance at the Brit Awards, and as you can already guess, people had a lot to say. Kelly clapped back at critics who expressed concern about her dramatic weight loss, taking to Instagram with a full statement.
“There’s a special kind of cruelty in harming someone who’s clearly going through something. Kicking me while I’m down, doubting my pain, spreading my struggles as gossip, and turning your back when I need support and love most.”
While many acknowledged she was grieving her father, who had recently passed away and was honored at the event, the concern over her physical state remained.
Listen, I don’t want to add on to the comments people were saying, but let me tell you something: Kelly definitely seems to need help, whether she wants to admit it or not.

Moving on, we also need to get into Margot Robbie’s recent new looks, which she debuted at Paris Fashion Week looking 40 pounds smaller. From the looks of it, she seems to have also gotten buccal fat removal while at it because her cheeks looked really hollow. She honestly looked like a female version of Elijah Wood—no tea, no shade.
“I saw Margot Robbie in person two years ago. We look like two normal humans next to each other,” one commentator recalled. “Now she just showed up at a fashion show and she looks absolutely skeletal. Look at her. This is actually sad to me. She has lost the slight, ever so slight fullness that was in her face before. Now she’s got the sunken, sunken cheek.”
A pattern with these Ozempic queens that people are noticing is that they all seem to jump on the drug after giving birth. Meghan said she started taking her weight seriously after having children. And it seems it’s also the case with Margot.
Mind you, she wasn’t big in any way, shape, or form by the time she had her son in 2024. But during her recent British Vogue cover interview, she talked about how insecure she felt when shooting a project because she didn’t feel physically ready to be on camera just yet.
“I was three months postpartum when we started shooting, so I was in a very different headspace,” she admitted. “I didn’t do my usual routine. It was more haphazard. And I remember saying to the director, ‘What if I’m not prepared enough?’ She kept saying, ‘Don’t want you to prepare. I just need you to be in the moment.’”
Then there is Ariana Grande. Ariana seems to be hopping off the Ozempic train, though, because she recently made an appearance at the Golden Globes looking like her old self. But back when she was actively working on *Wicked*, it was a completely different story. Ariana was never even a big girl, so when she lost that extra weight for the film, it was very noticeable.
At the time, a lot of people blamed it on the producers of *Wicked*, claiming they were the ones who made her lose weight. I’m not here to confirm or deny that, but the theory checks out. She only started looking frail when she was on set, and it was the same for her co-star Cynthia Erivo. But interestingly enough, she stopped looking frail and actually began gaining a healthy amount of weight right after the movie wrapped up.
“I’m really so happy that Ariana came back to her old style,” one fan commented. “The ponytail is getting higher and she’s more tanned and now she has her eyeliner and even her hair is darker and her brows. I really do feel like the blonde and the blonde brows and everything doesn’t really suit her and that now she looks so much better actually. And she even looks happier and more healthy.”
Oh, and let’s not forget Kelly Clarkson. She also went from being bigger for years to now suddenly losing a ton of weight. But just like everyone else, she denied using Ozempic, claiming her weight loss was due to a different medication she needed for blood work issues.
But it isn’t only the women. Men in Hollywood are also obsessed with Ozempic, though at least some of them are being a bit more open about it instead of lying that they lost it from a calorie deficit. Initially, Scott Disick didn’t want to talk about his weight loss, but during one episode of *The Kardashians*, people spotted Mounjaro in his fridge. Before this, people were already speculating, but that was when fans finally got an answer.
“Did you see from the show? Did you see what’s in your fridge?” a family member asked him on camera.
“No.”
“It shows the Mounjaro. You’re lying.”
“It’s everywhere, Scott. Wow, you’re really being healthy.”
“By the way, I’m not embarrassed,” Scott replied. “When I was fat, I would have drank that.”
Ryan Seacrest has also been catching straight heat for his snatched, gaunt transformation. Back in the day, he always talked about his struggles with his weight, and at some point he even started preaching about his Mediterranean diet.
The Ozempic allegations didn’t start until June 2025 when he dropped photos on Instagram looking frail as hell—his face hollowed, his arms slender, his body way too slim. You know, the usual Ozempic face and body. He never addressed the rumors, but those rumors never stopped.
Now, John Goodman is a different case entirely. That man lost 200 pounds over the years and is still catching major Ozempic neck shade. The thing with John, though, is he lost his weight way before Ozempic became a thing. So I really don’t know why folks are saying he used it. He has been on the journey since 2007 when he was pushing 400 pounds.
He quit drinking cold turkey after 30 years of alcoholism, cut sugar, switched to Mediterranean eating, started walking 10,000 to 12,000 steps a day, boxing, and practicing portion control. However, people claim he started using Ozempic to maintain the results so he doesn’t have to be so strict with himself anymore.
As usual, people had their thoughts. One commentator summed it up this way: “So basically, Hollywood went from an opioid epidemic to being obsessed with food to the point of feeling like they needed the Ozempic. And now they all look like they’ve been exposed to radiation for a long time and people are supposed to think it’s okay and not talk about it ’cause they get uncomfortable. Yeah. No.”
Another person added, “The world is becoming a sick lonely planet full of lookalike thin aliens.”
And honestly, it’s hard to argue with that assessment. The Ozempic era has produced some of the most jarring celebrity transformations in recent memory, and the pattern is undeniable: hollow cheeks, skinny arms, and a sudden loss of the fullness that once made these faces recognizable.
Some are using it for legitimate medical reasons—Meghan has spoken about being at higher risk for diabetes after pregnancy—while others seem to be chasing an aesthetic that leaves them looking frail rather than fit.
But the biggest disappointment in all of this, as many have noted, is the silence and the denial. Rather than being honest about their choices, most of these celebrities double down, gaslighting the public into thinking we don’t have eyes.
Kelly Osbourne praised it, then denied it. Meghan Trainor admitted it, then caught heat from both sides. And the men are no better, hiding prescriptions in their fridges and hoping no one notices.
At the end of the day, the conversation isn’t really about the drug itself. It’s about the hypocrisy. It’s about building a brand on body positivity only to abandon it the moment a quick fix becomes available.
It’s about watching people who were once healthy and vibrant turn into shadows of themselves while insisting everything is fine. And it’s about the fans who are left to wonder: if these celebrities can’t be honest about something as simple as weight loss, what else are they hiding?
Now I want to know your thoughts. What do you think of all these celebrities taking Ozempic? And do you really think they are being paid to do this? Let me know in the comments—because this conversation is far from over, and if the current trend continues, we haven’t even seen the worst of it yet.