Nara Smith has responded to claims that she is on Ozempic after fans accused her of using the weight loss drug in her latest viral ‘tradwife’ video.
The 22-year-old Mormon model shares three children with husband Lucky Blue Smith, 26: daughters Rumble, three, and Whimsy, four months, and son Slim, two.
She regularly posts TikToks that jump on the “tradwife” trend, cooking elaborate meals for her family while wearing extravagant and glamorous outfits.
In a new clip, she rocked a tight black dress that showed off her amazingly slender figure as she prepared homemade French fries.
Viewers were left wondering if she was taking Ozempic, the diabetes drug that has become a Hollywood weight-loss fad, and now she has issued a response.
Nara Smith has responded to claims that she is on Ozempic after fans accused her of using the weight loss drug in her latest viral ‘tradwife’ video
“GIRL PLEASE STOP TAKING OZEMPIC. You don’t need it!” wrote one user, to which she replied: “Let’s stop accusing people of taking Ozempic” with a heart emoji.
She has been married to Lucky since 2020, and in addition to the three children they had together, she is also a stepmother to his seven-year-old daughter Gravity, whom he shares with his ex Stormi Henley.
Nara has never publicly called herself a “traditional wife,” but has nonetheless received criticism for her content, as some viewers have criticized her for promoting an unattainable and outdated lifestyle.
Her TikToks show her dressed to the nines, looking like she stepped out of a 1950s magazine, as she cooks dishes like waffles, pudding and cinnamon rolls from scratch.
Nara and Lucky have revealed that they make their own toothpaste, and she even went viral for making her own homemade sunscreen.
When she posted her new fries video on TikTok, she was showered with comments joking that she should do a tutorial on how to make Ozempic from scratch.
There has been speculation on the Internet that Nara and Lucky secretly have a team of helpers to reinforce their do-it-yourself image.
Nara has denied this, saying GQ‘What people think online is that we have housekeepers, cleaners, nannies and all that stuff, when in reality it’s just me and Lucky wanting a family and sharing our lives online.’
In a new clip, she rocked a tight black dress that showed off her amazingly slender figure as she prepared homemade French fries.
“GIRL PLEASE STOP TAKING OZEMPIC. You don’t need it!” wrote one user, to which she replied: “Let’s stop accusing people of taking Ozempic” with a heart emoji.
When she posted her new fries video on TikTok, she was showered with comments joking that she should do a tutorial on how to make Ozempic from scratch.
Nara’s fans recently urged her to star in a reality show following her family photoshoot with husband and fellow model Lucky Blue Smith.
For a new issue of GQ, she and Lucky frolicked on their Texas ranch with their daughters Rumble, three, and Whimsy, four months, and son Slim, two.
She recently revealed the real reasons behind her controversial tendency to prepare as many of her meals from scratch as possible.
“I didn’t know that finding joy in cooking for my husband and kids would automatically mean slaving away in the kitchen,” she said.
“I don’t have a job and I have a whole production team at home making sure that happens. To be clear, none of that is true,” the professional model said. “I’m a working mother juggling all kinds of responsibilities.”
She added: “Cooking has always been a big part of my life, especially after I was diagnosed with lupus and my eczema started to flare up. I knew I had to change the way I eat and the way I approach life.”
Nara has also insisted that she and Lucky split their parental responsibilities equally and have a nanny for only a few hours a week.
She also challenged her self-image as a repressed wife, saying: “It’s not about thinking, ‘Oh, I need to make my husband a meal right now, or he’ll get mad.'”
Lucky described their marriage as “a great partnership in every aspect of our lives,” and Nara explained that while she does the cooking, her husband “does the cleaning. Which I appreciate, because I hate that part.”