The premiere that set off the alarms
Last week, Olivia Wilde stole the spotlight in San Francisco, but not for her film. Fans noticed that he had lost weight and that his look looked sadder, with sunken eyes. And of course, the internet did not forgive.
Comments that hurt
“It looks like a corpse that came back to life, Ozempic is ruining women” and “What is happening in Hollywood?” were some of the comments that circulated. She joined the list of actresses like Demi Moore who have been singled out for drastic physical changes.
Wilde’s response
But Wilde did not remain silent. Before her appearance at the Met Gala this Monday, where she shone again, she uploaded a story to Instagram and blurted out: “I’m not dead.” Direct, without turns. A way to shut up and remember that behind every photo there is a real person.
The context that we cannot ignore
This isn’t just celebrity gossip. It is a mirror of how we judge other people’s bodies, especially those of women in the industry. Ozempic has become the favorite villain, but the real problem is the aesthetic pressure that makes us comment ad nauseam. Wilde reminds us that, in the end, we are all human. And that sometimes, a “I’m not dead” is more powerful than a thousand criticisms.




