Starting last month, British TV personality Katie Hopkins has been stirring up controversy by tweeting “fat shaming” messages about Kelly Clarkson:
Jesus, what happened to Kelly Clarkson? Did she eat all of her backing singers? Happily I have wide-screen. #grahamnorton
— Katie Hopkins (@KTHopkins) February 20, 2015
Katie apparently saw Kelly on on the Graham Norton show, which prompted the criticism:
Darling, if you had a baby a year ago, that is not baby weight. It is fat. Quit calling it cute names to make yourself feel better.
— Katie Hopkins (@KTHopkins) February 20, 2015
But she didn’t stop there, either. Four minutes later, she attacked again:
Baby weight, puppy fat, muffin top. We’re so weakwilled we have to make up cute names for fat. Babies, puppies, muffins. Nope. Just fat love
— Katie Hopkins (@KTHopkins) February 20, 2015
Following Katie’s twitter rant, Kelly was asked for comment. E! Entertainment shared the scoop, calling Katie the “most hated woman in Britain”:
Clarkson, who does not follow Hopkins on Twitter, was unaware of the online bullying.
“She’s tweeted something nasty about me?” she asked after Heat magazine mentioned it.
After she was informed of what Hopkins wrote about her, the three-time Grammy winner said, “That’s because she doesn’t know me. I’m awesome! It doesn’t bother me. It’s a free world. Say what you will. I’ve just never cared what people think. It’s more if I’m happy and I’m confident and feeling good, that’s always been my thing. And more so now, since having a family—I don’t seek out any other acceptance.”
Kelly gave birth to daughter River Rose on June 12, 2014, about eight months before Katie’s attack. Several days after giving birth, Kelly shared details and a picture with her fans on Twitter:
Here is our beautiful baby girl River Rose; 6lbs 6oz, 18 inches, and the greatest thing on the planet
pic.twitter.com/zMlwNQPpRw
— Kelly Clarkson (@kelly_clarkson) June 20, 2014
Almost two weeks after her first round of tweets, Katie was at it again.
Look chubsters, Kelly Clarkson had a baby a year ago. That is no longer baby weight. That is carrot cake weight. Get over yourselves.
— Katie Hopkins (@KTHopkins) March 3, 2015
She followed it up with:
@melissalouise_x £5 billion a year cost to NHS – 1 in 10 kids start school age 4 already obese – problem? Yes, we have a problem
— Katie Hopkins (@KTHopkins) March 3, 2015
…to which someone pointed out:
@KTHopkins @dylw5 Clarkson is American, doesn’t use our nhs, so her lifestyle choices have nothing to do with you or your teenage fanclub
— Gary Cowell (@cowell_gary) March 3, 2015
But Katie isn’t the only one criticizing Kelly’s weight. Celebrity Dirty Laundry notes that the March 16 cover of OK! Magazine follows suit:
The March 16th cover of OK! Magazine is plastered with the least flattering photograph of Kelly Clarkson that the tabloid could get their hands on and the title screams, “Kelly Clarkson: Don’t Call Me Fat!”
The OK! cover goes on to reveal that Clarkson is embracing her new body despite all of the fat-shaming she has endured as of late, she refuses to diet and claims her sex life with husband Brandon Blackstock is “still amazing.”
Obviously OK! had to include a comparison photo of Kelly Clarkson when she was at her thinnest – and only weighing in at 105 pounds.
RadarOnline reported in November 2013 that Clarkson stated she would not be undertaking ultra-fast baby weight loss the way other celebrities do, adding that she has “never been Gisele Bundchen,” so no one would expect that from her.
While most moms are anxious to lose the weight following giving birth, doing so after pregnancy is not the same as it is during other times, according to WebMD. The medical advice site also notes that breastfeeding can complicate the weight loss process.
Kelly Clarkson Delivers Classy Response to TV Star Who Bullies Her Over Post-Baby Weight
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