
A question for you: Have you noticed anything different about the faces getting around Hollywood?
Because they've all started to look eerily similar...a little hollow and gaunt.
Welcome to 'Ozempic face' — the weight loss injection side effect that's becoming increasingly common.
Take Sharon Osbourne, for example. After admitting to using weight loss medications, she warned others against the side effects of the drug.
In an interview with the Daily Mail, she said, "I'm too gaunt and I can’t put any weight on. I want to, because I feel I'm too skinny. ... I can't afford to lose any more."
Robbie Williams also recently shocked fans with his slimmed-down features, admitting he shed weight with the help of weight loss medication.
In an interview with The Times, he said: "Babe, I’m on Ozempic. Well, something like Ozempic," he revealed. "It's like a Christmas miracle."
In recent times, rumours have also been circulating about celebrities such as Jessica Simpson. In an interview with Bustle, Simpson said: "Oh Lord. I mean, it is not (Ozempic)," referring to her recent weight loss. "It's willpower."
There's also Scott Disick. In a recent episode of The Kardashians, fans spotted Mounjaro (a brand of weight loss drugs) in Disick's fridge, with social media blowing up about whether this has a connection to his weight loss and changing face.
As yet, neither Simpson nor Disick have admitted they are on the medication.
But it's not just A-lister faces that seem to be changing. Cosmetic doctors in Australia have noticed a significant rise in patients with the same characteristics—essentially, a glaring side effect of rapid or regular weight loss.