Sutton Stracke isn’t buying Erika Jayne’s claim that menopause helped her lose weight.
“I’ve been through the menopause, but I still don’t look like that. But OK,” the 51-year-old told Us Weekly on Thursday, visibly rolling her eyes.
Stracke did, however, go on to praise her “Real Housewives of Beverly Hills” co-star’s slimdown.
“Good lord,” the party planner gushed. “I need to do whatever she’s doing.”
Stracke’s shade came one week after Jayne, 52, alleged to “Watch What Happens Live” viewers that she shed pounds “hormonally,” not “Ozempic-ally.”
When host Andy Cohen said that the “Pretty Mess” singer looked like “a whisper” of herself,” Jayne claimed she “took it all down” while “going through menopause.”
She doubled down when fellow guest Jackie Hoffman questioned anyone actually “los[ing] weight in menopause.”
Jayne replied, “I went to the doctor and I said get it off me.”
She was quick to note that she didn’t want her comments to “trigger” anyone watching, explaining, “We have this conversation in Beverly Hills and we have a cast member with an eating disorder, [Crystal Kung Minkoff].”
Cohen, 55, has asked many other Bravolebrities about their Ozempic use in recent months, with some admitting to trying the diabetes drug.
Can’t get enough ‘Real Housewives?’
- 10 most expensive homes owned by Housewives
- Why so many Housewives divorce their husbands
- Which ‘Real Housewife’ Are You based on Your Zodiac Sign
In April, Dolores Catania confessed to hopping “on the bandwagon,” saying she didn’t want to attend the “Real Housewives of New Jersey” reunion “looking any bigger than anyone else.”
Her co-star Jennifer Fessler hinted at the same the previous month, telling Cohen, “You said it, I didn’t. But … whatever works, here I am.”
Emily Simpson copped to taking semaglutide in a June “Jeff Lewis Live” interview, but other reality stars — Kyle Richards included — have repeatedly denied using it themselves.
“Botched” star Terry Dubrow warned against Ozempic-shaming people in an episode of Pvnew’s “Virtual Reali-Tea” podcast last month.
“If somebody’s on Ozempic because they wanna lose weight, [we should] celebrate that we have a breakthrough for obesity,” Heather Dubrow’s husband told listeners in July of “open[ing] up the dialogue.”