Kelly Osbourne has pressed pause on her postpartum weight loss after going “too far.”
When Scheana Shay complimented the “Fashion Police” alum’s appearance in Friday’s episode of “her Scheananigans” podcast, Osbourne said she “was on a mission after having the baby to lose all [her] baby weight.”
The former reality star, who gave birth to baby boy Sidney last year, added, “Then I was like, ‘Well, I lost all the baby weight. Let’s see how far I can go with it and then went a little too far.”
Osbourne, 38, clarified, “We’ve stopped.”
While the “Project Runway Junior” judge has shown off her post-baby body in recent months in a plunging leopard-print dress, a floral number and more looks, she “hid for nine months” while pregnant with her and Sid Wilson’s son.
“I did not want to get fat-shamed,” the “Osbournes” alum explained to an Instagram hater in August when asked why many have “never [seen] a pregnant picture of” her.
At the time, she also denied getting Botox — which Osbourne doubled down on during a Daily Mail interview Tuesday.
“Now that I’ve lost weight, everybody is criticizing and trying to figure out what it is that I’ve done, and I really just lost some weight,” she told the outlet. “It’s just the shape of my face!”
While the former “America’s Got Talent” judge also clapped back at “weird” rumors she has had plastic surgery, she did speak candidly about her gastric sleeve procedure in 2020.
She defended her decision on “Hollywood Raw with Dax Holt and Adam Glyn,” insisting that “there is no right way” to slim down.
“The road to happiness is different for everybody,” Osbourne said at the time. “I think that instead of picking apart the journey, they should just be happy that you reached your destination.”
Sharon Osbourne, for her part, has been vocal about having plastic surgery and “playing the odds” with Ozempic.
Kelly’s brother, Jack Osbourne, joked in an “Osbournes Podcast” clip that Sharon, 70, “goes in for a tune-up … every 5,000 miles.”
The former talk show host laughed off her son’s comment, agreeing, “That’s right. Everybody needs it.”