Suki Waterhouse Breaks Silence On Wardrobe Choice That Sent Her To The Hospital
The multi-hyphenated entertainer broke her silence on X, revealing that she was hospitalized due to a poor wardrobe choice during a concert. The incident occurred while she was promoting her new album, "Memoir of a Sparklemuffin."
Suki Waterhouse is no stranger to making headlines for her unique style, and she turned heads earlier this year by adding comfort to her elegant ensembles.
Waterhouse got vulnerable with fans on X while addressing her absence from the social media platform. She shared two pictures detailing the problem, the first capturing her onstage in green leather pants that stuck to her body like a second skin.
The second image was a selfie of Waterhouse lying on a hospital bed with a tangled mess of white wired earbuds and a blue vape. "Suki, you never tweet anymore. Have you ever considered I wore pants so tight 6 months ago it caused a hernia & I've been too scared to tell you," she captioned the post.
Waterhouse's words sparked mixed reactions from her followers, with some loving her bold actions while others berated her for vaping in a hospital. One supporter found her post relatable, writing:
"Tangled wired earbuds and vape on ur chest in the hospital is so real I love you."
Waterhouse's health update resonated with another fan, who claimed, "Vape in the hospital, that was me." An X user labeled the entertainer "a f-cking icon," while a fellow supporter chimed:
"On stage in leather trousers then attached to a drip in hospital later like a true 70s rockstar."
Although many loved Waterhouse's honesty, others criticized her recklessness. "This is what happens when we let Bradley Cooper read us Lolita in the park," someone declared, referencing the singer's infamous relationship with the older actor.
Another critic noted she needed to put the vape down, stressing, "D-mn girl! You gotta be able to breathe!"
The criticisms continued with an X user admonishing Waterhouse with the comment: "Girl, what is wrong with you. You can't vape in your hospital room, and if you are in the hospital, you clearly shouldn't be for your health either."
Meanwhile, others reacted to the health update with memes and jokes about tight trousers.
Waterhouse's hernia update might shock some fans, given her past wardrobe choices. The entertainer wowed her admirers early this year by choosing comfort over heels while navigating the snow-filled streets in New York City.
She rocked an all-black ensemble featuring an elegant cut-out leather trench coat with black tights and matching dark sunglasses. While many would complete this chic look with heels or boots, Waterhouse protected her feet with trainers from Kurt Geiger's SS25 collection.
The shoe choice added a splash of color to Waterhouse's elegant fit, keeping it chic yet retro. Her outfit, according to Women's Health Magazine, was the perfect trans-seasonal look for women looking to add comfort and personality to their outfits while commuting.
Waterhouse's hernia update comes a year after she welcomed a daughter with her fiancé, Robert Pattinson. The Blast covered the story, reporting that the longtime couple were spotted enjoying a family stroll with the newborn in Los Angeles.
At the time, the couple had not revealed their baby's gender but hinted at their first child being a girl by using an adorable pink stroller. Additionally, the model's mom, Elizabeth, wore a vibrant pink jumper while joining the lovebirds on their stroll.
Waterhouse first announced that she was expecting a child with Pattinson in November 2023, during a performance at the Corona Capital Festival in Mexico City.
"I thought I'd wear something sparkly today to distract you from something else I've got going on," she told the crowd before pushing back her dress to reveal her growing baby bump.
Months after welcoming her daughter, Waterhouse graced the cover of British Vogue and shared her candid thoughts on motherhood. She confessed that she was initially shocked after childbirth because she didn't know babies had to be breastfed every two hours.
"I was alarmed in the hospital when they kept waking me up. I was like, 'Excuse me? Is this what this entails?'" she recalled, per ABC News. Despite her anxiety, Waterhouse pushed through with the help of a good rap playlist and her loving fiancé.
She credited Pattinson for being her biggest supporter, noting: "He was there with me, and like all dads, he was nervous. But for someone who's quite an anxious person, he's been very calm." Waterhouse also dubbed "The Twilight" star the best dad she could hope for.
Here's to hoping Suki Waterhouse makes a swift recovery!

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles


Hamilton Spectator
2 days ago
- Hamilton Spectator
In her gripping whodunnit ‘Fox,' Joyce Carol Oates jolts with a superb twist ending
Have you ever wondered why turkey vultures are bald? The answer is not pleasant. Turkey vultures feed on the viscera of dead animals, and sliding their heads into and out of carcasses — preferably through the anus — is easier without feathers. Turkey vultures are scavengers; they see opportunity where others can't bring themselves to look. In this they bear some resemblance to serious novelists, like Joyce Carol Oates , who, at 87, has made an astonishing career in part by turning over what others wouldn't touch, sliding into the darkest orifices, pushing forward until she's found all the tenderest bits. Her novels can be hard to stomach, but for this she can blame reality. Some truths are revolting. Oates's latest novel is 'Fox' (Hogarth), which begins at the Wieland Swamp in southern New Jersey, where turkey vultures circle ominously over what turns out to be a human corpse. At first, the corpse is unidentifiable — due to 'significant animal activity,' as the police chief puts it — but is found alongside a vehicle belonging to Francis Fox, a popular new teacher at the prestigious local prep school, the Langhorne Academy. 'Fox,' by Joyce Carol Oates, Hogarth, 672 pages, $42. In an interview with People , Oates described the novel as a 'classic whodunit,' and the unfolding of the police inquiry — and multiple related storylines — is mostly propulsive, despite the novel's 672 pages and some tiresome stylistic tics ( so many words are in italics ). The most impressive structural feature is the superb twist ending. This is a book that continues to change shape until the very last page. But the novel's real interest lies in its anatomy of the crimes of Francis Fox — a predator, as his name implies, who preys on his middle-school students — and the institutions and norms that make his behaviour possible. Oates does not seek out the origins of his conduct in some childhood trauma or — as in the case of 'Lolita''s Humbert Humbert — a thwarted erotic encounter, but in Fox's own sense of superiority. Fox is the product of a partial Ivy League education — he was ejected from a Columbia PhD program for plagiarism — and the heir to a Romantic tradition that insists on the individual's right to transgress convention in pursuit of his own personal ideal of beauty. Fox quotes Blake and Thoreau as his grandiloquent authorities — 'God himself culminates in the present moment, and will never be more divine in the lapse of all the ages' — as he flatters himself that his obsession with prepubescent girls is a sign of esthetic refinement. Fox keeps a bust of Edgar Allan Poe — who married his 13-year-old cousin, Virginia — on his desk, and fills his apartment with the paintings of the controversial French Polish painter Balthus, best known for his prurient portraits of very young female models. In this way, Oates's analysis of child abuse goes beyond the psychology of the criminal to indict American society, where every educated child is expected to know Poe's poems and where Balthus's portraits hang in the Met. On a more immediate level, the adult characters in 'Fox' are guilty of extreme neglect. In the same interview with People, Oates described Fox as a 'charming con man,' but the novel has no sympathy for the adults who let themselves be conned. Teachers on hiring committees neglect to look into Fox's past, though several red flags call out for closer scrutiny. Later, rather than raising alarm bells, the attention Fox receives from his female students elicits jealousy from his petty colleagues. Parents, too, are fooled by Fox, and lulled into a moral stupor by their reluctance to believe the worst. Even those who harbour suspicions prove unwilling to jeopardize their professional status by levelling accusations against a teacher who has made himself a favourite of the headmistress. One of the few adult characters to see through Francis Fox is a lawyer Fox hires to help him through his first scandal with a student. (Fox tries to quote Kierkegaard to the lawyer: ' The crowd is a lie … The individual is the highest truth. ') The lawyer has nothing but contempt for Fox, but professional pride makes him pursue the best possible settlement for his client — an outcome that all but ensures that Fox will be able to continue teaching. How did things get so bad? The novel hints that the community's (almost complete) failure to stop Fox has something to do with the fragmentation of the community itself. The rich and the poor of 'Fox''s Atlantic County have almost nothing to do with each other. Instead, the locals — 'poor whites,' 'old families that have failed to thrive in the twenty-first century, left behind by the computerized, high-tech economy' — are filled with resentment for the smug nouveau riche who try to ignore them while enjoying a much more comfortable existence, one they seek to make hereditary by sending their children to Langhorne and onward to the Ivy League. Political scientists like Katherine Cramer have been warning of the growing rents in the American social fabric caused by the increasing distance between the well-off and the hard-done-by. As Cramer and her co-author put it in a recent piece in the Hill , 'Constitutional democracy flourishes when people feel common purpose with one another, and it is impossible for people who never come into contact to build that common purpose.' The institutions depicted by Oates serve not to advance a common purpose — or enforce a shared morality — but to prop up the strivers while grinding down the rest. This is an unflattering portrait, but not a hopeless one. Over a long and illustrious career — including a National Book Award for Fiction (1970), a National Humanities Medal (2010) and a 'by the same author' page in 'Fox' that looks like the sides of the Stanley Cup — Oates has sometimes been accused of trafficking in moral turpitude for its own sake. A 1991 review of 'Heat and Other Stories' claimed that 'Ms. Oates … is as cavalierly cynical as a teenager. Her stock in trade is precisely not to be shocked, and she pretends to be equally, mildly, analytically interested in all forms of human behaviour, however grotesque.' But 'Fox' reads more like a quiet jeremiad against complacency and hypocrisy, masquerading as a coolly analytic murder mystery. In a 1972 article about the role of literature in America, Oates claimed that the serious writer must recognize that his or her destiny is inescapably 'part of the nation's spiritual condition.' More than 50 years later, Oates has become an integral part of her nation's spiritual condition, circling its revolting truths as the tireless turkey vulture circles a kill. A weak stomach is no excuse for looking away.
Yahoo
3 days ago
- Yahoo
NEWS OF THE WEEK: Suki Waterhouse hospitalised for hernia caused by tight trousers
Waterhouse made the revelation when she took to Twitter on Monday, to respond to fans who have been wondering why she hasn't been tweeting that much this year. ''Suki you never tweet anymore' - have you ever considered I wore pants so tight six months ago it caused a hernia and I've been too scared to tell you?' Suki also tweeted a selfie taken from her hospital bed and an image of herself performing on the supporting tour for her Memoir of a Sparklemuffin album. The concert photo showed Suki wearing figure-hugging black leather pants.


Buzz Feed
4 days ago
- Buzz Feed
Celebrities Who Took Beauty Is Pain Too Seriously
We've all heard the saying "beauty is pain," and unfortunately, that sentiment has been way too normalized (especially for women). Way too often, putting yourself through discomfort or injury is praised for the sake of beauty standards — especially in Hollywood. Here are 34 times celebrities took "beauty is pain" way too seriously: In 2025, Suki Waterhouse tweeted, "'suki you never tweet anymore' have you ever considered I wore pants so tight 6 months ago it caused a hernia & I've been too scared to tell you." She also shared a picture of herself wearing said pants onstage (you can see it here). Sofía Vergara's red carpet looks often cause her to bleed. In 2016, she told Net-A-Porter, "My body has changed with age. People will often say that I wear the same thing on the red carpet, but I know my body: it's very voluptuous, and I've got the boobs of a stripper. They're a 32DDD, and because they're real, they're everywhere, so I need my dresses to have structure — and under armor. There is so much going on under my dresses that I bleed at the end of award ceremonies. In ten years, I think it would be good to have a reduction. I don't think it's even going to be an option not to have surgery, because I'm going to start having back pains. I wouldn't make them too small – just enough that I don't end up looking like an old stripper." In 2022, Jennifer Coolidge told Allure, "For The White Lotus, I didn't want to look like a big, white marshmallow on the beach in Hawaii, so I got a spray tan. I got on the plane, and I started to feel really weird. By the time I got off the flight, I had to go to the emergency room. [During the production], I think we ended up using regular makeup. The minute we stopped filming, I would shower." In 2016, Gwyneth Paltrow told the New York Times, "Generally, I'm open to anything. I've been stung by bees. It's a thousands of years old treatment called apitherapy. People use it to get rid of inflammation and scarring. It's actually pretty incredible if you research it. But, man, it's painful." (Note: According to the BBC, researchers say bee sting therapy is "unsafe and unadvisable.") In 2022, Zac Efron told Men's Health, "That Baywatch look, I don't know if that's really attainable. There's just too little water in the skin. Like, it's fake; it looks CGI'd. And that required Lasix, powerful diuretics, to achieve. So I don't need to do that. I much prefer to have an extra, you know, 2 to 3 percent body fat." The process also impacted his mental health. He said, "I started to develop insomnia, and I fell into a pretty bad depression, for a long time. Something about that experience burned me out. I had a really hard time recentering. Ultimately they chalked it up to taking way too many diuretics for way too long, and it messed something up." In 2011, Joan Collins wore a Georges Hobeika dress that was so tight, she had to be rushed from the Vanity Fair Oscars Party to the hospital. In an essay for the Daily Mail, she reportedly wrote, "Next thing I knew, I was surrounded by some rather attractive firefighters who were asking me questions such as: 'What's your name?' (as if they didn't know) and 'How old are you?' (which I refused to answer). Apparently, I had fainted in [her husband] Percy's arms, and he, in a panic, had asked security to call an ambulance — which was roomier than [her sister] Jackie's limo and, thanks to the sirens, much swifter in Hollywood traffic. Not quite how I had expected to end this glamorous night!" "Nevertheless, I put myself in the care of professionals at the hospital's Emergency Room. There, after an hour of tests, the doctors discharged me with stern admonishments not to wear such tight dresses — and to eat in future if I was expected to last the pace at the fabulous Vanity Fair party," she said. Before she was a megastar, Cardi B got illegal butt injections at a basement apartment in Queens for $800. In 2018, she told GQ, "They don't numb your ass with anything. It was the craziest pain ever. I felt like I was gonna pass out. I felt a little dizzy. And it leaks for, like, five days." However, she later had 95 percent of them surgically removed and warned her fans to never get the procedure done. In a 2022 Instagram Live, she said, "All I'm going to say is that if you're young, if you're 19, 20, 21, and sometimes you're too skinny, and you be like, 'OMG, I don't have enough fat to put in my ass,' so you result to ass shots, don't!" Zendaya's stylist, Law Roach, trained her to wear painful Christian Louboutin heels when she was a teenager. In 2024, he told the Cutting Room Floor podcast, "I think that the So Kate is one of the most versatile shoes. It's also one of the most painful. It actually started when she was, like, 14, and I remember she had these So Kates on all day. It's the first time she'd ever worn them, and she was collapsing. She's like, 'I have to take these shoes off.' I'm like, 'You will not take these shoes off.' And she kept them on, and the next day she put them on again, and the next day she put them on again. So, it kind of became our thing, and now, her feet are just kind of, like, trained... She could wear them all day. She could dance in them, she could kick her legs up, she could run downstairs." When it comes to toughing it out on the red carpet, shoes are just the beginning for Zendaya. At the 2018 Met Gala, she wore a cumbersome Joan of Arc-inspired look. She told Vogue, "The day before, going there, putting it on, I was like, 'Wow.' It was so heavy 'cause of the beading, but it was so beautifully constructed, and it's Versace. And typically, like, I can handle a night out, you know, with my heels and everything. I've been wearing heels for a long time, but I don't know. It was something about a mixture of, like, wearing these platforms and, like, the heaviness of my dress. I was struggling. I was like, 'I need to sit down.' But it was all worth it." Zendaya famously wore a vintage metal Mugler suit to the Dune: Part 2 premiere in London. In 2024, she told Vogue, "This suit, everybody knows it. And I was like, 'I wonder if I could wear that.' And so, I sent it to [stylist Law Roach], and I was like, 'What if we wore this for the premiere?' He was like, 'Are you being serious?...Don't play with me. Like, don't get me started on something and make me do this, and you're gonna like chicken out at the last minute and be too scared to wear it.' And I was like, 'I mean, if we can do it.'" She continued, "One of the men who originally made it was with us, and he was like, 'You know, we can try it, but there's also a world where certain parts won't fit.' Like, our proportions might be very different — my elbow is a little bit lower or my whatever, then it doesn't work because there's certain hinges and places where your arms and things need to move. But we tried it on, and I was like, 'Guys, I think it's fitting.' It fit like a glove, and I was like, 'This is so crazy.' And everybody was like, 'Woah!' It just felt very like, I was meant to be, whatever. Immediately, I think after wearing it for like 10 minutes or less than that, I got, like, really, like, lightheaded. The metal conducts and holds onto heat very quickly and kind of traps heat in." "I'm wearing a complete bodysuit, so there's a barrier, so you already have a layer of material kind of on your skin. As the days were coming up, I was like, 'This is a bad idea. Like, why did I do this?' But I put it on, I went out there, and I did it," she said. Another one of Zendaya's iconic Dune outfits — the wet-look Balmain gown from the 2021 Dune premiere in Venice — was modeled after a corset she saw on the runway, but it was custom-made and molded to her body. After her stylist, Law Roach, contacted the designer about collaborating, they sent a woman to Zendaya's house to make a cast of her body. She told Harper's Bazaar, "This is made of leather, but it kind of looks liquid, but it's all solid. So it's really difficult to sit in and to breathe in because it doesn't, you can't breathe. It's just, like, hard, so the whole movie, I'm focusing on breathing." In a 2018 blog post titled "The Skincare Treatment I'll Never Do Again," Kim Kardashian said getting the vampire facial — where your own blood is drawn, and the platelet-rich plasma is separated and injected back into your face via microneedling — was "so not worth it." She wrote, "Before I got the procedure, I just found out that I was pregnant, so I couldn't use numbing cream or a pain killer, and both are suggested. It was really rough and painful for me…My show was also filming the treatment, so I felt I couldn't chicken out. It was honestly the most painful thing ever!" Kim Kardashian also has a long history of painful Met Gala looks. In 2019, she wore a wet look Mugler outfit that consisted of a corset made by Mr. Pearl beneath silicone-covered silk organza. On Instagram, she shared that she had to take "corset breathing lessons from none other than Mr. Pearl." She also told the Wall Street Journal, "I have never felt pain like that in my life. I'll have to show you pictures of the aftermath when I took it off — the indentations on my back and my stomach." At the 2022 Met Gala, Kim wore Marilyn Monroe's famous "Happy Birthday, Mr. President" dress. In order for it to fit without alterations, she did a dangerous crash diet, which involved adding meat back to her typically plant-based menu. One of the side effects was a painful psoriasis flareup. She told Allure, "Psoriasis broke out over my body, and I got psoriatic arthritis, so I couldn't really move my hands. It was really painful, and I had to go to a rheumatologist who put me on a steroid. I was freaking out. I cut out the meat again, and it's calmed down." And the 2024 Met Gala, she wore a custom Margiela by John Galliano gown with a metal corset. In a Season 6 episode of The Kardashians, she said, "I've never felt this way before, where I feel like I can't breathe. I can handle it for so long, but it's like, I have to pee, I can't breathe… I literally was dying... I'm literally gonna throw up. I've never been more uncomfortable...I've never been in this much pain before. I was gonna sneak out right before the dinner, but then I walked by [Anna Wintour's] table, and Anna goes, 'Perfect, you're here. Can you sit in my seat while I go make my rounds?'" Here's what her back looked like when she took off the corset. She said it was "abso-fucking-lutely" worth it. She said, "Yes! That's just who I am. If you look good, it was all worth it." Kim's little sister, Kylie Jenner, has followed in her footsteps. It started when she made her Met Gala debut in 2016, where she wore a silver Balmain gown. Afterward, she shared a picture of her bruised feet and scratched-up ankles on Snapchat with the caption, "When ur dress made you bleed and ur feet are purple." In a follow-up post, she added, "It was worth it though." At the 2017 Met Gala, Kylie wore a tight Versace dress. On an episode of Life of Kylie, she tried it on for the first time. She said it needed to be tight enough for her to "kind of suffocate." Here's the full look: And in an Instagram story post following the 2025 Met Gala, Kylie shared how a styling tip from Ferragamo creative director Maximillian Davis left her feet in pain. Sharing a video of her team trying to help her get her shoes off, she said, "Max told me to tape my feet into these shoes, and now my feet are stuck in the shoes! Ow!" In a follow-up post, she shared that they were able to get the shoes off successfully. Will Poulter put himself through "a lot of gym work and a very, very specific diet" to prepare for his MCU debut as Adam Warlock — who's genetically engineered to be "perfect" — in Guardians of the Galaxy 3. He told the Independent, "It's difficult talking about it because with Marvel it's all secret squirrel, but the most important thing is that your mental and physical health has to be number one, and the aesthetic goals have to be secondary, otherwise you end up promoting something that is unhealthy and unrealistic if you don't have the financial backing of a studio paying for your meals and training. I'm in a very privileged position in that respect, and I wouldn't recommend anyone do what I did to get ready for that job." He also said, "I've gone through periods of looking at food and feeling like I can't face it, and then you blink and the next minute you're ready to eat furniture because you're so hungry... The whole social side of your life has to take a back seat. I'm in a routine that is so rigid that being able to go out for dinner with friends is not something I've been able to do. I'm looking forward to being able to again." While playing the titular role in The Marvelous Mrs. Maisel, Rachel Brosnahan got a "corset-related injury" from her character's '50s and '60s-era outfits. She "can't take super deep breaths anymore." In 2020, she told The Late Late Show with James Corden, "We talk so fast on the show that to get all the words out, you can't really take very many breaths. And I think I wasn't breathing a lot, and I was a bit constrained, and apparently, some of my ribs are sort of fused together." At the 2012 London premiere of Total Recall, Jessica Biel reportedly said, "My dress is so tight. Getting up the stairs was a lot harder than any of the stunts we did in the film." In 2021, actor Zhang Meng ended up in the hospital after attending China's Weibo Awards Ceremony in a dress with a built-in corset. On the social media Weibo, she reportedly posted, "Red carpet + corset = [a visit to the] orthopedic department? I used my life as collateral for my good figure." In a follow-up comment, she added, "Thank you everyone for your concern, it's not a major issue. When the dress arrived, it was a little small [for me], but I didn't have the time to alter it. There's nothing wrong with the dress, I'm just too fat! Everyone, please make sure to take care of your health, even as you continue in your pursuit of beauty!" Old Hollywood icon Rita Hayworth reportedly went through a year of electrolysis to raise her hairline by an inch. The treatment involved shocking her follicles with a skinny metal probe to remove the hair permanently. In 2024, Mary Jo Eustace told E! News, "I tried Morpheus8, which is a great procedure, I'm not knocking it, but it's very painful... It actually injures your skin to get results. And it was a little painful. I have a lot of friends who've done that, and they're not going to do it again because of the pain factor." She also said that the numbing cream she was given only worked "to a certain extent." In his 2024 memoir Karma, Boy George wrote, "I had a tummy tuck not long after [getting hair transplants], which was the most painful thing I've ever done because I went on tour straight after with Cyndi Lauper with the blood bag attached. I'd previously lost seven stone [98 lbs.] doing the metabolic balance diet, and I needed to get rid of the excess skin. When anyone asks about my scar, I say I had twins by Cesarean." At the 2018 AMAs, Taylor Swift wore a Balmain mirror ball dress. In her Netflix documentary Miss Americana, behind-the-scenes clips revealed that she had trouble breathing in the outfit. Here's the full look: In a since-deleted Instagram post, Priyanka Chopra Jonas said, "My second Met Gala outfit was this blood-red Ralph Lauren beautiful outfit with the gold hood. But the corset under that thing, I couldn't breathe. I felt like it reshaped my ribs. So hard to sit during dinner and I obviously couldn't eat too much during that night." At the 2018 Met Gala, Rihanna's pope-inspired Margiela look was difficult to wear because of its weight. She told Entertainment Tonight, "It was heavy. Every step was a squat. I promise you, my butt gained from that night. I had another option that was a lot more simple, same Margiela, but I felt like it was an insult to the people who sat there and, like, hand-beaded that entire thing, to just say, 'No, put that in the archives.' It was so great, I couldn't deny it." In a 2025 TikTok post, Ellie Goudling shared the painful-looking results of her cosmetic procedure, adding, "I give up trying to look snatched." In the caption, she said she "got attacked by a laser grill," reportedly referring to a laser facial. To prepare for the titular role in Ant-Man, Paul Rudd "basically didn't eat anything for about a year." In 2015, he told Variety, "I took the Chris Pratt approach to training for an action movie. Eliminate anything fun for a year, and then you can play a hero." At the 2018 Met Gala, Bella Hadid wore a Chrome Hearts gown with a coordinating Chrome Hearts x Gareth Pugh veil. On her Instagram story, she said, "If anyone was wondering why I couldn't move, it's because a legend by the name of @jenatkinhair sewed a whole entire 10-pound veil to my head." While playing Kate Sharma in Bridgerton, Simone Ashley needed help getting dressed "because when you're in a corset, you can't put your shoes on." The corset caused other problems, too. In 2022, she told Glamour UK, "On my first day, I was like, 'OK, first day as a leading lady, got to eat lots of food, be really energized.' So, I had this massive portion of salmon, and that's when I needed to be sick, basically because I was wearing the corset. I realized when you wear the corset, you just don't eat. It changes your body. I had a smaller waist very momentarily. Then, the minute you stop wearing it, you're just back to how your body is. I had a lot of pain with the corset, too. I think I tore my shoulder at one point!" At the 2019 Billboard Latin Music Awards, Anitta wore a Galia Lahav look. She told Entertainment Tonight, "It's painful. A lot. I'm here smiling to you, pretending everything's okay, but I'm dying here inside. It's everything. Everything — hair, shoes, clothes." And finally, at the 2016 Oscars, Jennifer Garner wore a custom Versace dress. On The Tonight Starring Jimmy Fallon, she said, "Do you know how they make it? See how I have a waist right now? I don't have one in real life anymore. What they do is, they move your organs around. There are basically two men who come in with screw guns, and they screwed me into a metal corset — this isn't true, but it was a metal corset, and it did take two Italian people who were talking very quickly. And the next thing you know, my ribs were compressed."