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Breaking: Ariana Grande broke down in tears while addressing ‘dangerous’ weight loss backlash about looking ‘skinnier’: ‘I’ve heard every version of it, of what’s wrong with me. And then you fix it and then it’s wrong for different reasons because I have been diagnosed of… See More
A defiant Ariana Grande has revealed how she shields herself from the societal pressure to appear perfect.
While promoting Wicked with co-star Cynthia Erivo, Grande, 31, was asked by French influencer and journalist Sally how she ‘copes’ with criticism of her appearance and beauty standards in general.
The question struck a chord with Ariana, who paused momentarily to gather her thoughts and seemingly hold back tears.
Ariana, whose recent apparent weight loss has sparked concern from fans as of late, said she’s been dealing with the ‘noise’ since she was a teenager – however she’s since learned to tune out the critics by leaning into her work and friends.
Immediately after Sally asked her question, Grande appeared emotional as she paused momentarily with Cynthia, 37, offering her a comforting hand. ‘My goodness… Good question,’ she said.
‘I’ve been kind of doing this in front of the public… a specimen in a petri dish really since I was 16 or 17. So I have heard it all,’ she said.
‘I’ve heard every version of it, of what’s wrong with me. And then you fix it and then it’s wrong for different reasons but that’s everything from even just the simple thing, your appearance, you’re young and you’re hearing all those things.’
‘It’s hard to protect yourself from that noise. And it’s something that’s uncomfortable no matter what scale you’re experiencing on.
No matter where the comment originates from, Ariana insists it’s all difficult to deal with, even if it’s from a family member.
‘Even if you go to Thanksgiving dinner and someone’s granny says, “Oh my God you look skinnier! What happened?” or “You look heavier! What happened?” That is something that is uncomfortable and horrible no matter where it’s happening, no matter the scale it’s happening on. I think in today’s society there’s a comfortability that we shouldn’t have at all.
Commenting on other’s looks, appearance, what they think is going on behind the scenes, or health, or how they present themselves. From what you’re wearing to your body to your face to your everything.’
She defiantly called the ‘comfortability’ people have with ‘commenting’ on people’s appearance ‘dangerous.’
There’s a comfortability that people have commenting on that that I think is really dangerous. And I think it’s dangerous for all parties involved,’ she said.
Ariana now makes no room for the criticism: ‘I just don’t invite it in anymore, it’s not welcome. I have work to do, I have a life to live, I have friends to love on, I have so much love! And it’s not invited, I don’t leave space for it anymore.’
‘And however you all can protect yourselves from that noise, whether it’s at a family reunion or online… I don’t care if you have to delete your app entirely, you keep yourself safe because no one has the right to say s**t.’
The National Board of Review, a long-running New York-based organization comprised of film enthusiasts and academics founded in 1909, has no correlation with the film academy.
But the win hands Wicked some early momentum ahead of Monday’s Golden Globe nominations, where it should perform well.
‘Wicked represents the pure magic that movies can bring to audiences,’ said Annie Schulhof, NBR president. ‘Every detail is beautifully crafted and designed, the actors are all exceptional and the music is second-to-none – together it adds up to a transporting experience like no other.’
The NBRs add to the recent run of prizes dished out this week, including the Gotham Awards on Monday, the New York Film Critics Circle on Tuesday and the Spirit Awards nominations announced Wednesday.