Amberlynn Reid - 600 pound pathological liar and U-Haul lesbian moving in with her next live-in maid/nurse/girlfriend.

Are you looking forward to seeing Jade's face on camera?

  • Yes

    Votes: 550 15.6%
  • No

    Votes: 349 9.9%
  • I don't care

    Votes: 2,621 74.5%

  • Total voters
    3,520
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[Edit: how is she sitting on the couch? It looks like she is kneeling on the floor which we know she is unable to]

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So busy putting on this cardigan and making faces with my nostrils so I can't livestream today
 
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Note to Big Al: extreme closeups of your face are not flattering. Nor is teetering on the edge of the couch.

Imagine not being able to rest your hands in your lap. Or hold your arms at a normal level because your fat has expanded so far from your core. Or not needing a cushion at a ball game because you brought your own and it's your ass.

JFC, she's horrifying in every single way.
 
Did anyone hear of the "revolutionary" new extreme weight loss medication that the American FDA just approved? It's called Wegovy (semaglutide), and I couldn't find it in a search of this thread.

FDA Article + Archive

Non-medfag Article Summary:
The drug targets parts of the brain that regulate appetite, and the dose is increased every week. (It's injectable.) The average participant lost 12.4% of their body weight over an up to 68 week period. However, the average participant was much smaller than our gorl. The average BMI of the fattest group in the study was 38, and the average weight was 105 kg/231 lbs. I've heard people guess that AL's BMI is now over 100. I wonder if she'd qualify. The press release said Wegovy could be used on patients who are diabetic with special precautions. It's the first extreme WL drug that's been approved by the FDA in over five years.

It seems far more obtainable than WLS. If this drug is the miracle worker the news has made it out to be, it might not give deathfats the option to binge because their brain will be screaming that they're disgustingly full. But AL will probably find a way to fuck it up. She has a talent for that. I'm sure she'll bring it up soon because she loves a shortcut, and this is being sold as a shortcut (that is supposed to be combined some icky diet and exercise.)
 
Did anyone hear of the "revolutionary" new extreme weight loss medication that the American FDA just approved? It's called Wegovy (semaglutide), and I couldn't find it in a search of this thread.

FDA Article + Archive

Non-medfag Article Summary:
The drug targets parts of the brain that regulate appetite, and the dose is increased every week. (It's injectable.) The average participant lost 12.4% of their body weight over an up to 68 week period. However, the average participant was much smaller than our gorl. The average BMI of the fattest group in the study was 38, and the average weight was 105 kg/231 lbs. I've heard people guess that AL's BMI is now over 100. I wonder if she'd qualify. The press release said Wegovy could be used on patients who are diabetic with special precautions. It's the first extreme WL drug that's been approved by the FDA in over five years.

It seems far more obtainable than WLS. If this drug is the miracle worker the news has made it out to be, it might not give deathfats the option to binge because their brain will be screaming that they're disgustingly full. But AL will probably find a way to fuck it up. She has a talent for that. I'm sure she'll bring it up soon because she loves a shortcut, and this is being sold as a shortcut (that is supposed to be combined some icky diet and exercise.)
Fun fact: wegovy is just a higher dose of ozempic
 
Fun fact: wegovy is just a higher dose of ozempic
Exactly. Wegovy is a 2.4mg dose of semaglutide (same manufacturer and same drug as Ozempic). Ozempic is capped at 1mg dose per week, which is what Foodie Beauty currently takes and struggles with the gastrointestinal side effects. Just imagine how ALR would handle more than double the dose Chantal takes. Plus there's the cost issue. Chantal bitches about the $300/month cost (and that's with her insurance), according to what cost information is currently out there for Wegovy, ALR will looking at around $1350/month.

Edit to add: To put this cost into perspective, Stella Williams vlogged yesterday that her VSG surgety in Mexico a week ago cost her $4200 all up...so about the equivalent of 3 months of Wegovy. Her Q&A WLS vlog was interesting in that she said even though she has medical insurance, to use that for her WLS meant a 5 month wait to get an appointment to start a mandatory 6 month monitored weightloss program with the bariatric surgeon, and even then she would have to pay approx $6200 deductible...so she crossed the border and had it done in Mexico quickly and for less $$$.
 
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It seems far more obtainable than WLS. If this drug is the miracle worker the news has made it out to be, it might not give deathfats the option to binge because their brain will be screaming that they're disgustingly full. But AL will probably find a way to fuck it up. She has a talent for that.
She was on Phentermine years ago, and despite not having an appetite, was inhaling pizza. She actually ate through the phentermine. Wegovy will have the same results.
 
Exactly. Wegovy is a 2.4mg dose of semaglutide (same manufacturer and same drug as Ozempic). Ozempic is capped at 1mg dose per week, which is what Foodie Beauty currently takes and struggles with the gastrointestinal side effects. Just imagine how ALR would handle more than double the dose Chantal takes. Plus there's the cost issue. Chantal bitches about the $300/month cost (and that's with her insurance), according to what cost information is currently out there for Wegovy, ALR will looking at around $1350/month.

Edit to add: To put this cost into perspective, Stella Williams vlogged yesterday that her VSG surgety in Mexico a week ago cost her $4200 all up...so about the equivalent of 3 months of Wegovy. Her Q&A WLS vlog was interesting in that she said even though she has medical insurance, to use that for her WLS meant a 5 month wait to get an appointment to start a mandatory 6 month monitored weightloss program with the bariatric surgeon, and even then she would have to pay approx $6200 deductible...so she crossed the border and had it done in Mexico quickly and for less $$$.
I don't know how the costs differ from Canada to the US, but out of curiosity I priced Ozempic according to what my insurance says. Like full cost in the US is nearly 3.5k a month - assuming it's a weekly injection.
 
I don't know how the costs differ from Canada to the US, but out of curiosity I priced Ozempic according to what my insurance says. Like full cost in the US is nearly 3.5k a month - assuming it's a weekly injection.
From what I've been able to find out in Australia (it's really hard to get the actual private prescription pricing), the 0.5mg cost is AU$1700/month. If a person qualifies under the government subsidised pharmaceutical benefits scheme (must have diabetes plus already being prescribed both metformin and a sulfonylurea with no significant results) the cost is $41/month or $6.60/month if on govt benefits. It's definitely not easy to get prescribed under the govt subsidised scheme and is categorised as an "authority" medication where drs have to call a govt health department hotline to get approval prior to prescribing. There's no subsidy without meeting the diabetes diagnosis and failed alternative treatments...so if being prescribed off label (e.g. for weightloss) it's full price every month.

Edit to add: the pricing I used in other posts of US$1350/month, came from articles published last week in the US after the FDA approval went tbrough suggesting that Wegovy would be priced similarly to Saxenda which comes in at that price. The same news reports were suggesting that Wegovy would not be covered by health insurance as it is a weightloss drug and therefore not covered by those health insurance companies that do not cover "lifestyle" illness/conditions. Ozempic on the other hand, is a T2D drug (even though the same drug just lower dosage), so is covered by many insurers. The manufacturer Novo Nordisk seems to be charging different amounts in different countries for Ozempic. Presumably they are taking into account what the market can bear along with the differing insurance systems and government subsidies in various countries. Weightloss is big $$$ business.
 
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