Christina Aguilera showed off her dramatic transformation at the gym, with fans concerned she has turned to weight loss drugs.
The 43-year-old singer was filmed attending an event for Barry’s Bootcamp on Friday and the video has gone viral on social media. In the clip, Christina was seen chatting to other attendees before playfully dancing for the camera.
She wore a skin-tight bodysuit for the gym session, which she paired with knee-high leather boots. Fans have grown concerned after watching the video, with some accusing Christina of using drugs such as Ozempic to help achieve her weight loss. While Ozempic is a drug used to treat type 2 diabetes, some people have used it to aid weight loss.
As the clip of Christina was shared on X, one person wrote: “Ozempic is not what a girl wants or what a girl needs,” referencing the singer’s 1999 hit What A Girl Wants. Another agreed: “She never needed the ozempic omg.”
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Tiktok)
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Tiktok)
A third fan posted: “Exactly. She never needed the Ozempic, she looked good, healthy and like herself before.” Another concerned person posted: “Sometimes tryna go back to your old size is not a good look. she looks sick.”
However, others defended Christina as she shared a video from the Barry’s Bootcamp event on Instagram. In the video, Christina was seen chatting to fans and getting stuck in with the workout.
“In her fitness influencer era,” one fan gushed. Another said: “You’re glowing you look happy you look healed I am so happy for you.”
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Getty Images for Voltaire)
“She is nothing, but a true Legend!!! And more than a legend, a champion in life!!!” a third fan posted, while someone else added: “Queen of then and Queen of Now!!” Christina’s post has received more than 135,000 likes.
Christina has previously admitted to being body shamed in her career. She explained how her self-esteem was based on “how skinny I was” when she was younger.
“When you’re a teenager, you have a very different body than when you’re in your 20s. I started to fill out, and then that was unacceptable because it was like, ‘Oh, she’s getting thicker’,” she told Glamour. “Then I had industry people: ‘They liked your body and how you were as a skinny teenager’.”