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Terry Dubrow Slams Kelly Clarkson’s ‘Ozempic-shaming’
Terry Dubrow has mixed feelings after Kelly Clarkson’s weight loss drug was revealed.
Three days after the “Kelly Clarkson Show” host admitted to viewers that she had lost “a lot” of weight with “something that helps break down sugar,” Dubrow slammed her “Ozempic shaming.”
Clarkson, 42, explained to her listeners on Monday that while “everyone thinks” she took Ozempic, “it’s something else.”
Dubrow, 65, he told TMZ Thursday that while he didn’t want to “criticize” the “fantastic” Grammy winner, he believed her comments were only “approaching honesty.”
“If you don’t want to admit Ozempic and you want to say it’s just another drug, there’s only one other drug left and that’s Mounjaro,” said the plastic surgeon. “Let’s just say it. Let’s celebrate it.”
However, he praised Clarkson for coming clean after months of headlines about her 60-pound loss.
“Thank you for admitting it,” the star of “Spartant” gushed. “I think it’s fantastic. … Looks amazing.”
Clarkson detailed her decision in an interview with Whoopi Goldberg, who revealed in March that she had a “fast start”[ed her] “metabolism” from Mounjaro.
The “Since U Been Gone” singer said “her blood test results were so bad” that she decided to be prescribed the drug.
Clarkson initially “didn’t see” how much weight she had gained and asked “who the hell.” [is] This?” when she watched a video of her performance.
“She’s about to die of a heart attack,” she recalled thinking. “My heaviest was 203 [pounds] and I’m 5 years old [foot] 3 and a half [inches tall]”
Al Roker has since defended Clarkson against “judgment” online, telling haters to “back off” on Tuesday’s “Today” show.
Prior to her admission, Clarkson had been coy about her weight loss techniques.
“Walking around the city is a good workout. And now I really like infrared saunas,” she said he told People in a January interview, calling her diet a “healthy mix” of foods.
As for Dubrow, the reality star admitted to using the drug Ozempic that same month, telling Page Six that he eventually stopped taking it because he missed the “joy of eating.”