EPISODE · Nov 26, 2025 · 3 MIN
Lizzo's Raw Revelation: Surviving Suicide, Redefining Beauty, and Reclaiming Her Power
from Lizzo - Biography Flash · host Inception Point AI
Lizzo BioSnap a weekly updated Biography. Lizzo has been back in the cultural spotlight in a big way this week. The biggest headline is her raw and deeply personal essay published on Substack just days ago, where she admits she was “deeply suicidal” when she started losing weight in late 2023, in the aftermath of a highly public lawsuit and media firestorm that left her feeling isolated and accused. Lizzo says she channeled her pain through Pilates and began therapy, only discovering later that she had lost weight, though that was never her primary intention. She explains that her weight had for years acted as a “protective shield” but she reached a turning point where she wanted to let it go. According to Lizzo, her identity and talent as a musician were often overshadowed by public fixation on her size, forcing her to perform in hypersexual and bold ways as a reaction to stereotypes about Black plus-size women. She is highly critical of the current “Ozempic boom,” writing that the mass uptake of weight loss drugs is quietly erasing plus-size bodies from culture, modeling, and retail while declaring, “I am still a proud big girl. Objectively big. Over 200 pounds. And I love myself as much as I’ve loved myself no matter what the scale says.” She wants the body positive movement to escape its “commercial slop” and reclaim complexity and nuance. Her essay has triggered major discussion across social and traditional media. Fans and commentators are widely sharing her words, with prominent radio hosts and news outlets like BET and CBS highlighting both her openness around mental health and her call for honest dialogue about changing standards in beauty and fashion. Core themes of her plea are circulating on X, Instagram, and TikTok, with the public largely responding with support and recognition of her courage to speak frankly about depression, suicide, and systemic erasure. On the public appearance front, Lizzo made a showstopping turn at the 2025 Baby2Baby Gala, arriving with boyfriend Myke Wright and drawing praise for her glamorous sequin gown and visible weight loss—a moment captured by media outlets like AOL. Her first live performances since 2023 are already major news, after Rolling Stone revealed she will embark on a mini tour titled Lizzo In Real Life in March 2025, with three dates only: New York, Los Angeles, and Minneapolis. Tickets are in high demand, a signal that despite everything, Lizzo’s star power remains undimmed. There have been no major new business launches or partnerships announced, and for now, speculation about new music remains just that—unconfirmed rumor. For Lizzo, these past few days have marked a turning point: her most candid reckoning with fame, body, and survival, and a bold re-entry on her own terms. Get the best deals https://amzn.to/3ODvOta This content was created in partnership and with the help of Artificial Intelligence AI.
What this episode covers
Lizzo BioSnap a weekly updated Biography. Lizzo has been back in the cultural spotlight in a big way this week. The biggest headline is her raw and deeply personal essay published on Substack just days ago, where she admits she was “deeply suicidal” when she started losing weight in late 2023, in the aftermath of a highly public lawsuit and media firestorm that left her feeling isolated and accused. Lizzo says she channeled her pain through Pilates and began therapy, only discovering later that she had lost weight, though that was never her primary intention. She explains that her weight had for years acted as a “protective shield” but she reached a turning point where she wanted to let it go. According to Lizzo, her identity and talent as a musician were often overshadowed by public fixation on her size, forcing her to perform in hypersexual and bold ways as a reaction to stereotypes about Black plus-size women. She is highly critical of the current “Ozempic boom,” writing that the mass uptake of weight loss drugs is quietly erasing plus-size bodies from culture, modeling, and retail while declaring, “I am still a proud big girl. Objectively big. Over 200 pounds. And I love myself as much as I’ve loved myself no matter what the scale says.” She wants the body positive movement to escape its “commercial slop” and reclaim complexity and nuance. Her essay has triggered major discussion across social and traditional media. Fans and commentators are widely sharing her words, with prominent radio hosts and news outlets like BET and CBS highlighting both her openness around mental health and her call for honest dialogue about changing standards in beauty and fashion. Core themes of her plea are circulating on X, Instagram, and TikTok, with the public largely responding with support and recognition of her courage to speak frankly about depression, suicide, and systemic erasure. On the public appearance front, Lizzo made a showstopping turn at the 2025 Baby2Baby Gala, arriving with boyfriend Myke Wright and drawing praise for her glamorous sequin gown and visible weight loss—a moment captured by media outlets like AOL. Her first live performances since 2023 are already major news, after Rolling Stone revealed she will embark on a mini tour titled Lizzo In Real Life in March 2025, with three dates only: New York, Los Angeles, and Minneapolis. Tickets are in high demand, a signal that despite everything, Lizzo’s star power remains undimmed. There have been no major new business launches or partnerships announced, and for now, speculation about new music remains just that—unconfirmed rumor. For Lizzo, these past few days have marked a turning point: her most candid reckoning with fame, body, and survival, and a bold re-entry on her own terms. Get the best deals https://amzn.to/3ODvOta This content was created in partnership and with the help of Artificial Intelligence AI.
NOW PLAYING
Lizzo's Raw Revelation: Surviving Suicide, Redefining Beauty, and Reclaiming Her Power
No transcript for this episode yet