Whoopi Goldberg has joined a growing list of stars openly discussing personal use of weight loss medication.
The US actress said she used medication after starring as grandmother Alma Carthan in a film titled Till, based on the true story of Mamie Till-Mobley’s pursuit of justice for her 14-year-old son Emmett, who was lynched in 1955.
“I weighed almost 300 pounds when I made Till,” Goldberg said on chat show The View, which airs on US network ABC.
OPRAH SPECIAL EXPLORES WEIGHT-LOSS DRUGS: After Oprah Winfrey opened up about changing the conversation around obesity and shared her own struggles in the spotlight, #TheView co-hosts discuss. https://t.co/cVclFZQmjA pic.twitter.com/R3Ls4XquhF
— The View (@TheView) March 19, 2024
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“I had taken all those steroids, I was on all this stuff and one of the things that’s helped me drop the weight was the Mounjaro. That’s what I use,” referencing weight loss medication.
Goldberg previously corrected a critic who said she was wearing a fat suit in the film, instead confirming she had to take steroids for sciatica.
“When I realised how much [weight] I had put on – I just always felt like me and then I saw me and I thought, ‘Oh, that’s a lot of me’,” Goldberg said.
Her comments come after Oprah Winfrey addressed past criticism of her weight on a TV special titled An Oprah Special: Shame, Blame And The Weight Loss Revolution on ABC.
“I have to say that I took on the shame that the world gave to me, for 25 years making fun of my weight was national sport,” Winfrey said.
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The TV presenter urged people to “stop the shaming and blaming” in conversations around weight.
Meanwhile Goldberg said: “My weight has come and gone but it has never been an issue for me, because I don’t listen to what other people say about me, so it has never been a problem.”
She added: “I think it is a matter of how we treat ourselves.”