Latest news with #KateMoss


The Sun
17 hours ago
- Entertainment
- The Sun
Lottie Moss recreates sister Kate's iconic Glastonbury 2005 look as she parties at festival
LOTTIE Moss has recreated her sister Kate's iconic Glastonbury 2005 look as she parties at a festival. Kate, 51, used to be a regular at the four-day event — but now Lottie, 27, is taking centre stage. 4 4 Lottie dressed up like her supermodel sister Kate, 20 years on, as she lets loose at Glastonbury. She wore a slinky gold minidress with a belt, along with wellies, to copy an iconic look of her sibling's from the festival in 2005. Lottie was seen buying drinks in a VIP hospitality area in the outfit on Friday afternoon in the dress. She previously teased how she would recreate Kate's look from when she was dating rocker Pete Doherty, who is on the line-up again this weekend. Speaking on her Dream On podcast, Lottie said: 'I actually found this gold dress. "I don't know if you remember this picture of my sister, she's walking through Glastonbury and she's wearing Hunter welly boots and this gold dress and a little belt. 'I found pretty much the exact dress in Zara. "I was like, how cute would it be to recreate one of my sister's most iconic looks? So I've got my long Hunters and I've got the dress. 'I bought this dress maybe a month ago and it's just been sat on my table waiting for Glastonbury. I'm really excited.' Kate was last seen attending Glastonbury back in 2023 when she was pictured watching Primal Scream from the side of the Pyramid Stage. Watch the heartbreaking moment Lottie Moss breaks down in tears and admits rehab 'didn't work' on Bear Hunt Lottie recently dissolved her facial fillers and is embracing her natural appearance. The model wiped away a tear as she opened up in an emotional video on TikTok explaining her decision. She said she reversed all the cosmetic procedures she had done on her face when she was younger, saying it has helped her feel like herself again. Lottie got the word Lover inked under her eye while on holiday in Bali in December 2022 but had it erased last year. Glastonbury 2025 - confirmed acts so far TICKETS to the 2025 festival sold out in just minutes before some of the acts were even confirmed. Here is who has been confirmed so far. Confirmed headliners: The 1975 will take to the Pyramid Stage on Friday. Neil Young will headline the festival for the second time after his last set in 2009 on Saturday after RAYE makes her return. Charli xcx will headline the Other Stage on Saturday night. On Sunday, Olivia Rodrigo is due to belt out her hits for her first appearance while Rod Stewart will perform in the legends slot. More acts to appear on the Other Stage include Loyle Carner and The Prodigy. Doechii will make her Glastonbury debut on the West Holts Stage on Saturday night. Other names confirmed include Noah Kahan, Alanis Morissette, Gracie Abrams, Busta Rhymes, Lola Young, Brandi Carlile, Myles Smith, En Vogue, Amaarae, Cymande, Shaboozey, Osees and Gary Numan. In a warning to fans, she joked at the time: "Don't drink alcohol kids!" Speaking in her latest video, the Bear Hunt contestant said: 'I dissolved everything in my face that I had before. "I used to have jaw filler, which looked awful, and I used to have lip filler, but it's all gone now, and I look like me again.' 4 4


Daily Mail
19 hours ago
- Health
- Daily Mail
Experts: What Ozempic really does to your face
The Ozempic boom has seen a drug widely used to treat diabetes and manage obesity in adults transform into 'miracle' weight loss jab that's coveted by anyone with a few extra kilos to shed. Ozempic and other alternatives like Mounjaro and Wegovy are all different brand names for the drug semaglutide that mimics the the actions of GLP-1 - a hormone in the brain that regulates appetite and feelings of fullness . Weekly doses of these blockbuster weight loss medicines can help people shed 15 to 20 per cent of their body weight on average - but it can also pile on the years and make you look older than you are, experts say. The rapid and drastic weight loss triggered by these medicines has left people 'freaking out' about developing so-called 'Ozempic face', celebrity nutritionist Rose Ferguson told Femail. The 49-year-old former model, who is close friends with Kate Moss and boasts 116,000 followers on Instagram, reported a rise in the number of her clients who are worried about their face transforming from these injections. Semaglutide, which is not a targeted drug, does not just cause loss around the stomach and thighs, but the entire body - including the face. People using skinny jabs like Ozempic might notice a greater number of wrinkles all over their visage - including on the forehead - as these 'miracle' weight loss treatments cause a loss of volume in the face . According to New York-based cosmetic dermatologist Dr Michele Green, 'this volume loss can also worsen the appearance of existing fine lines, wrinkles, and skin laxity' and, therefore, contribute to a more 'aged' look with continued use. Eyes sink Experts also pointed out how Ozempic can make your eyes look more sunken as a result of rapid weight loss - with people reporting anywher Speaking to US-based plastic surgeon pointed out a 'hollowing under the eyes' and 'more wrinkles' and fine lines around them as the weight loss drug begins to show results. Noting how the face of Robbie Williams, who admitted to taking 'something like Ozempic' to shed pounds and manage his 'type-2 self-loathing', she added: 'With Robbie, you can see the direct results of weight loss.' Cheeks sag When you lose weight over an extended period of time, it allows the skin to contract and shrink with the body - but drugs like Ozempic significantly accelerate the process. And while this weight loss reduces facial or subcutaneous fat - as well as making the body leaner - it also leads to loose skin because it hasn't had enough time to retract. This leads to cheeks that sag or droop , and is one of the main characteristics of 'Ozempic face'. 'By depleting the subcutaneous fat, the skin appears thinner, with more wrinkling and often lipstick lines,' New York-based plastic surgeon Dr Barry Weintraub told this website. Lips get bigger While the most common symptoms of this condition include drooping around the cheeks, sunken eyes, and an increased number of wrinkles, a plumper, more pronounced pout can also occur in people who have injectable fillers. Speaking to MailOnline , aesthetician Kayti Brooks said that 'Ozempic face' makes lip fillers look more pronounced. The expert - who runs Grey Door Aesthetics in Hove - said: 'Losing weight at the phenomenal rate Ozempic allows will lose the fat all over the body including the face - but overfilled lips will not shrink. 'Any filler won't have the support structure of the skin. The filler will stay and the lips stay big or bigger! With the skin laxity disappearing the client may feel the need to plump up with filler. 'This is hugely aging and so obvious what procedures have been carried out.' Folds at the corner of the mouth Dr Green told that 'Ozempic mouth' is something she is seeing among many of her clients taking the blockbuster weight loss medication. She said: 'Many users of Ozempic who I know report noticeable volume loss in the face, which can result in the formation of fine lines, wrinkles, sagging skin, and jowls around the mouth. The condition is considered part of a broader phenomenon dubbed 'Ozempic face' where rapid weight loss causes sagging in the cheeks and around the mouth . Dr Green noted that the appearance of an aged mouth is especially apparent on people who rapidly lose weight from higher doses of the GLP-1 drug. It is characterised by deep folds at the corners of the mouth, increased vertical wrinkles on the lips, sagging skin around the borders of the lips and and drooping skin around the chin. Dr Green has noticed a number of celebrities suffering from Ozempic mouth as the result of taking weight loss drugs, with some of her standout examples being Sharon Osbourne, Rebel Wilson and Whoopi Goldberg. Tooth decay The latest side effect linked to the use of skinny jabs is tooth decay, with experts noting a rise in the number of patients complaining of 'Ozempic teeth'. The unofficial umbrella term refers to dental problems such as tooth decay and gum disease linked to these weight loss drugs that are now used by millions across the world. 'While there is no direct scientific evidence yet , in clinical settings semaglutide drugs like Ozempic are starting to show correlation with damaged teeth,' Dr Sandip Sachar, a dentist, told The Standard. Experts told the outlet there could be a couple of different reasons for this. First, GLP-1 receptor agonists like Ozempic can lead to less saliva being produced and, consequently, hinder the mouth's self-cleansing abilities. The second reason is linked to acid reflux, a common side-effect of these jabs. An increase in the amount of acid 'can erode your teeth,' Dr Daniel Atkinson, clinical lead at told the paper. Finally, Ozempic's appetite-suppression qualities can make it difficult for the body to get the nutrients it requires to maintain healthy teeth.


Daily Mail
20 hours ago
- Entertainment
- Daily Mail
Lottie Moss channels sister Kate's iconic Glastonbury style as she slips into THAT gold dress and wellies - 21 years after the supermodel stunned in the leggy look
Kate Moss 's sheer sparkling gold dress matched with a low-waisted brown belt is perhaps the most iconic Glastonbury outfit. And now Lottie Moss, who has always been sensitive about living in the shadow of her supermodel older half-sister, has copied the outfit at this year's festival. Lottie, 27, shared a picture of herself on her Instagram wearing an almost identical sheer chainmail-esque long-sleeve dress, brown belt and Wellington boots. Kate, the undisputed queen of festival looks, wore her now legendary outfit in 2005 when she attended Glastonbury with her then-boyfriend, Pete Doherty, whose band The Libertines is playing on Sunday. She looked the epitome of chic as she picked her way through the mud in her Hunter wellies - which cemented the brand's association with the UK festival. Hanging out in the hospitality section, Lottie posed with a tray of drinks as she celebrated the second day of the Worthy Farm event where 200,000 revellers are partying. It comes after Lottie candidly revealed she always felt 'compared' to her supermodel sister Kate, and would try weight loss jabs again after suffering a seizure. The model was rushed to hospital last year after suffering a seizure as a result of taking Ozempic, which she admitted she obtained 'illegally' from a doctor. Speaking to Olivia Attwood on her ITV series The Price Of Perfection, she said: 'I think I've always really struggled with my weight since I was younger and I think modelling didn't help, and always being around these gorgeous, tall models. 'You know I'm small as well, so I was like "I've got to be at least skinny".' Talking about her sister, Lottie went on: 'I think I always felt compared to her at the beginning of my career, and I think people expected me to be kind of like a carbon copy of her as well. 'You know, cos she was getting a little bit older, she wasn't doing so much so they thought "Oh perfect, now we can have a whole new Kate Moss". 'Like I felt a lot of pressure to be like her and look like her and you know, I dabbled in that party lifestyle. That was essentially how they stayed skinny back in the day cos they had this wild party lifestyle.' Lottie said the party lifestyle wasn't for her, so she turned her attention to weight loss jabs, which have grown in popularity. Ozempic is a diabetes medication but it is also being sold privately for weight loss, and celebrities including Sharon Osbourne, Amy Schumer, Boy George and Heather Gay have admitted to using the drug. Lottie, who obtained the jabs 'illegally', explained: 'For me, I needed to keep the weight off and I needed a quick fix and I heard about Ozempic and I thought " I might as well just give it a go". 'The way I went around it was really bad, and I shouldn't have, because it was kind of... I kinda got it in an illegal way. 'I got it from a doctor who was giving it out under a table. 'And to give it to someone without doing any tests or anything, or asking them any questions about their health is so, you know, crazy to me.' Lottie revealed she had lost between six to seven kilos after just two weeks on the drug, which she described as 'dramatic', before having a seizure. She said she didn't notice the huge drop in her weight at the time 'because you're so sick and tired all the time'. 'I felt something really weird happen as soon as I got on the bed, I had the seizure and they were holding me down,' she recalled.


Daily Mail
a day ago
- Health
- Daily Mail
What Ozempic really does to your face: All the tell-tale signs of using skinny jabs, from bigger lips to sunken eyes
The Ozempic boom has seen a drug widely used to treat diabetes and manage obesity in adults transform into 'miracle' weight loss jab that's coveted by anyone with a few extra kilos to shed. Ozempic and other alternatives like Mounjaro and Wegovy are all different brand names for the drug semaglutide that mimics the the actions of GLP-1 - a hormone in the brain that regulates appetite and feelings of fullness. Weekly doses of these blockbuster weight loss medicines can help people shed 15 to 20 per cent of their body weight on average - but it can also pile on the years and make you look older than you are, experts say. The rapid and drastic weight loss triggered by these medicines has left people 'freaking out' about developing so-called 'Ozempic face', celebrity nutritionist Rose Ferguson told Femail. The 49-year-old former model, who is close friends with Kate Moss and boasts 116,000 followers on Instagram, reported a rise in the number of her clients who are worried about their face transfroming from these injections. Semaglutide, which is not a targeted drug, does not just cause loss around the stomach and thighs, but the entire body - including the face. This means that, although it has helped millions around the world achieve their weight loss goals, the 'skinny shot' can also famously make users look extremely gaunt over time - a phenomenon critics have unflatteringly labelled 'Ozempic face'. But how exactly does Ozempic manifest? Dermatologists, aestheticians and cosmetic surgeons break down the tell-tale signs to watch for, as more information about the drug's side effects become known. More visible wrinkles People using skinny jabs like Ozempic might notice a greater number of wrinkles all over their visage - including on the forehead - as these 'miracle' weight loss treatments cause a loss of volume in the face. According to New York-based cosmetic dermatologist Dr Michele Green, 'this volume loss can also worsen the appearance of existing fine lines, wrinkles, and skin laxity' and, therefore, contribute to a more 'aged' look with continued use. Eyes sink Experts also pointed out how Ozempic can make your eyes look more sunken as a result of rapid weight loss - with people reporting anywher Speaking to US-based plastic surgeon pointed out a 'hollowing under the eyes' and 'more wrinkles' and fine lines around them as the weight loss drug begins to show results. Noting how the face of Robbie Williams, who admitted to taking 'something like Ozempic' to shed pounds and manage his 'type-2 self-loathing', she added: 'With Robbie, you can see the direct results of weight loss.' Cheeks sag When you lose weight over an extended period of time, it allows the skin to contract and shrink with the body - but drugs like Ozempic significantly accelerate the process. And while this weight loss reduces facial or subcutaneous fat - as well as making the body leaner - it also leads to loose skin because it hasn't had enough time to retract. This leads to cheeks that sag or droop, and is one of the main characteristics of 'Ozempic face'. 'By depleting the subcutaneous fat, the skin appears thinner, with more wrinkling and often lipstick lines,' New York-based plastic surgeon Dr Barry Weintraub told this website. Lips get bigger While the most common symptoms of this condtion include drooping around the cheeks, sunken eyes, and an increased number of wrinkles, a plumper, more pronounced pout can also occur in people who have injectable fillers. Speaking to MailOnline, aesthetician Kayti Brooks said that 'Ozempic face' makes lip fillers look more pronounced. The expert - who runs Grey Door Aesthetics in Hove - said: 'Losing weight at the phenomenal rate Ozempic allows will lose the fat all over the body including the face - but overfilled lips will not shrink. 'Any filler won't have the support structure of the skin. The filler will stay and the lips stay big or bigger! With the skin laxity disappearing the client may feel the need to plump up with filler. 'This is hugely ageing and so obvious what procedures have been carried out.' Folds at the corner of the mouth Dr Green told that 'Ozempic mouth' is something she is seeing among many of her clients taking the blockbuster weight loss medication. She said: 'Many users of Ozempic who I know report noticeable volume loss in the face, which can result in the formation of fine lines, wrinkles, sagging skin, and jowls around the mouth. The condition is considered part of a broader phenomenon dubbed 'Ozempic face' where rapid weight loss causes sagging in the cheeks and around the mouth. Dr Green noted that the appearance of an aged mouth is especially apparent on people who rapidly lose weight from higher doses of the GLP-1 drug. It is characterised by deep folds at the corners of the mouth, increased vertical wrinkles on the lips, sagging skin around the borders of the lips and and drooping skin around the chin. Dr Green has noticed a number of celebrities suffering from Ozempic mouth as the result of taking weight loss drugs, with some of her standout examples being Sharon Osbourne, Rebel Wilson and Whoopi Goldberg. Tooth decay The latest side effect linked to the use of skinny jabs is tooth decay, with experts noting a rise in the number of patients complaining of 'Ozempic teeth'. The unofficial umbrella term refers to dental problems such as tooth decay and gum disease linked to these weight loss drugs that are now used by millions across the world. 'While there is no direct scientific evidence yet, in clinical settings semaglutide drugs like Ozempic are starting to show correlation with damaged teeth,' Dr Sandip Sachar, a dentist, told The Standard. Experts told the outlet there could be a couple of different reasons for this. First, GLP-1 receptor agonists like Ozempic can lead to less saliva being produced and, consequently, hinder the mouth's self-cleansing abilities. The second reason is linked to acid reflux, a common side-effect of these jabs. An increase in the amount of acid 'can erode your teeth,' Dr Daniel Atkinson, clinical lead at told the paper. Finally, Ozempic's appetite-suppression qualities can make it difficult for the body to get the nutrients it requires to maintain healthy teeth.


Malaysian Reserve
a day ago
- Entertainment
- Malaysian Reserve
TikTok's #SkinnyTok rebranded eating disorders dangerously fast
Social media influencers mask their harmful content with seemingly-innocuous healthy buzzwords to reach a broader audience #SKINNYTOK is dead. Or at least that's what TikTok wants you to believe after its recent ban of the hashtag promoting an extreme thin ideal. That might have appeased regulators, but it shouldn't satisfy parents of teens on the app. An army of influencers is keeping the trend alive, putting vulnerable young people in harm's way. Today's social media landscape makes it all too easy for creators to repackage and disguise disordered eating as a 'healthy' part of everyday life. That lifestyle then gets monetised on various platforms — via habit trackers, group chats and 30-day aspirational challenges — and shared with a much broader audience. The rise of #SkinnyTok is in many ways a rehashing of the pro-eating disorder content of the past. In the mid 1990s it was Kate Moss and 'heroin chic.' Then came the Tumblr posts in the early aughts praising 'Ana' and 'Mia,' fictional characters that stood for anorexia and bulimia. Now, it's 23-year-old influencer Liv Schmidt telling her followers to 'eat wise, drop a size.' Schmidt, a prominent # SkinnyTok influencer who is often credited with lopping the 'y' off of 'skinny' and replacing it with an 'i,' is the founder of the members-only group 'Skinni Société.' In September, she was banned from TikTok amid scrutiny by the Wall Street Journal. The fact that she continues to make headlines some nine months later drives home the perpetual game of whack-a-mole that regulators are playing with problematic content. After her TikTok ban, Schmidt simply moved her audience over to Instagram, where her followers have grown from 67,000 to more than 320,000. Until recently, she was charging people US$20 (RM94) per month for a 'motivational' group chat, but when The Cut found at least a dozen of those users were in high school, Meta Platforms Inc demonetised her profile in May. And yet her Instagram account still exists and she's actively posting to her YouTube channel. A video titled 'How to Create a Skinni Body on a Budget' raked in nearly 50,000 views within a week, a particularly disturbing level of engagement considering she's encouraging her viewers to consume fewer than 1,000 calories a day — far less than what health officials recommend for a nutrient-dense meal. In her Instagram bio, Schmidt links to a Google LLC application where anyone can apply to her Skinni Société. While membership previously cost just US$20 per month, screenshots posted on social media suggest this latest iteration could run about US$2,900 per month — a gulf that proves her schtick is a complete black box. Regardless of price point, she continues to use public platforms to lure people into private spaces where conversations promoting disordered eating can flourish unchecked — all while profiting from them. Bloomberg Opinion made several attempts to reach out to Schmidt for comment, but she did not respond. This sort of content is causing real harm. National Alliance for Eating Disorders, founder and CEO Johanna Kandel said the uptick in callers mentioning #SkinnyTok to her organisation's hotline began last winter. And despite social media companies' efforts to blunt the reach of the trend, as many as one in five calls fielded by the nonprofit in recent weeks have referenced the hashtag. Some of those callers had past struggles with an eating disorder that was restarted by the hashtag, while others started following #SkinnyTok to 'better themselves' or 'get healthy' only to be pulled into a precarious mental space, Kandel says. The bombardment of images of a skinny ideal can have even broader harms. Although this type of content has always lurked in the dark corners of the internet, people had to actively seek it out. Now, the algorithm delivers it on a platter. That's being served in insidious ways. While Schmidt's rhetoric may leave little to the imagination, other influencers frame their content more subliminally. They encourage a disciplined lifestyle that blurs the lines of health consciousness and restrictive eating, which makes it all the more difficult to detect: Walk 15,000 steps a day, drink tea, nourish the body — these are things that might not raise alarm bells if a parent were to find them on their kid's social feeds. Sure, the TikTok trends that do raise alarm bells — remember 'legging legs'? — are quick to get shut down. But what about something as seemingly innocuous as the popular 'what I eat in a day' videos? How are social media companies expected to police troubling content that's cloaked in euphemisms like 'wellness' and 'self-care'? It's a question that weighs on wellness and lifestyle creators who are trying their best to combat the negative content out there. When speaking with Kate Glavan, a 26-year-old influencer, it's clear why she has been vocal about her experience with disordered eating: 'I don't know a single woman that hasn't struggled with some sort of body image or food issue,' she said. 'The only thing that snapped me out of my eating disorder was learning how it was destroying my health. I had a doctor look at my blood work and tell me I had the bone density of a 70-year-old woman at the of age 17.' Whether that would work on today's 17-year-olds is up for debate. 'A lot of younger Gen Zers now believe that everything is rigged — schools, doctors, the government. That paranoia has created a distrust of expertise itself,' Glavan explained. 'They think the whole medical system is corrupt, so they turn to influencers instead — which is incredibly dangerous.' How dangerous? University of Toronto assistant professor Amanda Raffoul, who studies eating disorders, says there's 'a pretty solid body of evidence that the more young people in particular spent time online and on social media, the more likely they are to have poor body image, have negative thoughts about their appearance and to be engaging in harmful eating-related behaviours.' For example, a 2023 review of 50 studies found that social media leads to peer comparisons and internalisation of a 'thin' ideal, which together contribute to body image anxiety, poor mental health and for some, disordered eating. That effect is exacerbated when someone has certain risk factors — they are female or have a high body mass index (BMI), for example — and are exposed to content that encourages eating disorders. The danger is most acute in adolescent girls. That skinny ideal can elicit strong emotions and feelings of inadequacy at a time when they don't yet have the tools to separate reality from fiction. But researchers also see a worrisome trend in adolescent boys who have been drawn in by fitfluencers pushing obsessive muscle training, unproven supplements and restrictive diets. After a 2021 Wall Street Journal investigation revealed Meta was fully aware of Instagram's potential to pull teen girls into a body image spiral, social media companies have offered some guardrails around problematic content. Kandel says when her nonprofit starts to hear multiple callers mentioning specific body image-related hashtags, it notifies companies, which typically are quick to shut them down. While helpful, it also feels like the companies are doing the bare minimum to protect kids. Although eating disorder researchers can glean insights from individual social feeds, they still can't get their hands on the internal data that could help them identify who is most at risk of harm and craft better safeguards. For adolescents, the most powerful solution would be to step away from social media. A research by American Psychological Association shows that spending less time scrolling can improve body image in struggling teens and young adults. But if that's not realistic, parents and teachers could help them think more critically about what they're seeing online — and how influencers like Schmidt make money by chipping away at their self-esteem. — Bloomberg This column does not ecessarily reflect the opinion of the editorial board or Bloomberg LP and its owners. This article first appeared in The Malaysian Reserve weekly print edition