Bronx rap star Ice Spice is clearing the air — and doing it in her own words.
On Feb. 25, the “Munch” hitmaker responded to swirling rumors that her recent weight loss was linked to Ozempic, the Type 2 diabetes medication that has become pop culture shorthand for dramatic celebrity slim-downs. The speculation reignited after a workout clip surfaced online with the caption:
“Ice Spice shows off her workout and that her weight loss wasn’t from Ozempic.”
Ice Spice shuts down Ozempic rumors and explains that her weight loss was actually the result of depression:
“na it was depression im better now tho
” pic.twitter.com/0GMnagPfZO
— Kurrco (@Kurrco) February 25, 2026
Not everyone was convinced. One user fired back, “This weak ass video just shows it was definitely from Ozempic,” dismissing the footage as proof of anything other than pharmaceutical assistance.
Ice Spice didn’t dodge the jab. She met it head-on. “Na it was depression. I’m better now tho
,” she wrote.
Ice Spice Says Weight Loss Was Due To Depression, Not Ozempic
With one sentence, she shifted the narrative. Instead of entertaining debates about gym routines or shutting down Ozempic chatter with a polished denial, she revealed something far more personal. Her weight change, she suggested, was tied to mental health struggles — not a trending injection.
The honesty landed differently in a digital space that often treats women’s bodies like public property. Throughout 2025, social media users dissected side-by-side photos of the rapper, fueling Ozempic accusations without evidence. The drug’s growing visibility in Hollywood has only intensified that scrutiny, especially for women in entertainment whose appearances constantly trend.
By naming depression, Ice Spice reframed the conversation around wellness rather than aesthetics. “I’m better now” reads as both reassurance and quiet triumph — a signal that she has emerged from a darker chapter.
In an era where celebrity transformations spark instant conspiracy theories, Ice Spice’s response served as a reminder: not every glow-up is cosmetic. Sometimes the real story lives beneath the surface.