Catherine Huntley

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Why would anyone be jealous of someone that had lost so much weight (intentionally) that their previous attractive, pretty look had become hard and harsh? Far too many people I see that looked lovely have Ozempicked their way to bony, hard features and skinniness. OK you're a size 8 but take a real look in the mirror. Do you REALLY look better? It's not up to me, people can do what they want but I think it's a one way ticket to ageing faster than you need to.

CC
 
Losing cutaneous fat is not helpful to maintaining your looks as you get older.
Not enough is known yet about ozempic and other weight loss drugs.
Essentially all prescribed with them are guinea pigs to an extent... as we were with covid injections. We are still learning. The benefits probably outweigh the risks for people who need to lower their weight for medical reasons... but for those taking it for more vanity reasons they are not necessarily going to like either the side effects or the longer term impact on their lives.
Just look at the emerging information about injectable fillers... that they don't really dissolve away, they disperse and can expand on their own.
Knowledge about drugs and treatments continues to expand as more people experience them.
My stance is that any drug or treatment needs to be medically necessary; it needs to be better than any alternative approach; and the benefits need to outweigh the current known risks.
I have sympathy with people in the public eye, as there are thousands of eyes on them, and plenty with opinions which may be quite destructive. The temptation to become slimmer by a quicker route must be enormous.
I hope all the Q guests and presenters lose weight in a healthy way and stop before they go too far.
 
Losing cutaneous fat is not helpful to maintaining your looks as you get older.
Not enough is known yet about ozempic and other weight loss drugs.
Essentially all prescribed with them are guinea pigs to an extent... as we were with covid injections. We are still learning. The benefits probably outweigh the risks for people who need to lower their weight for medical reasons... but for those taking it for more vanity reasons they are not necessarily going to like either the side effects or the longer term impact on their lives.
Just look at the emerging information about injectable fillers... that they don't really dissolve away, they disperse and can expand on their own.
Knowledge about drugs and treatments continues to expand as more people experience them.
My stance is that any drug or treatment needs to be medically necessary; it needs to be better than any alternative approach; and the benefits need to outweigh the current known risks.
I have sympathy with people in the public eye, as there are thousands of eyes on them, and plenty with opinions which may be quite destructive. The temptation to become slimmer by a quicker route must be enormous.
I hope all the Q guests and presenters lose weight in a healthy way and stop before they go too far.
Dangerous to muck around with Mother Nature, but since I don't know the people on QVC, I don't have much sympathy for them (unless they would be seriously ill, and then I would be sorry.)
 
Saw Keeley yesterday doing Elemis Black Friday. Looks like words got round re Ozempic (sp). Newly thin to match her new teeth & new forehead.
Think she was on verge of being diabetic. Know she had some health issues along with other things and was taking lot of supplements and started to exercise coupled with changing her diet. She had discount code from company she was using
 
Think I read somewhere that being on tv makes you look 1to 2 sizes larger than you actually are. In that case some of them must be real Skinny Binnies in real life.

Some of them look as if their heads are too big for their bodies.
 

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