Oprah Winfrey is putting the spotlight on weight-loss drugs, including her own experience of slimming down with a medication, in a new TV special.
Titled “Shame, Blame and the Weight Loss Revolution,” the program airs at 8 p.m. Eastern on Monday, March 18, and features interviews with patients and doctors who specialize in obesity.
“The one thing I hope people come away with is knowing that it’s a disease and it’s in the brain,” Winfrey, 70, said in a preview of the show released by ABC News.
It comes three months after she announced she was taking a weight-loss drug, though she hasn’t specified which one.
How to watch Oprah’s weight loss TV special tonight
Oprah’s new TV special — which will address topics such as weight loss drugs, like Ozempic and Wegovy, and the shame associated with obesity and trying to lose weight — will air live on ABC at 8 p.m. Eastern.
It will also be available to stream on Tuesday, March 19, on Hulu.
Why did Oprah quit Weight Watchers?
In February, Winfrey confirmed she’ll step down from the board of directors of WW, formerly known as Weight Watchers.
The media mogul has been a spokesperson for WW and on the company’s board since 2015, but will not put herself up for re-election at the May shareholder meeting.
Winfrey said in a statement that she plans to donate her WW shares to the National Museum of African American History and Culture, which the WW board said would “eliminate any perceived conflict of interest around her taking weight loss medications.”
WW confirmed it would be offering medications such as Wegovy and Ozempic in the spring of 2023.
Prior to Winfrey sharing that she’d been taking a weight loss medication, rumors were already swirling that she was doing so after she walked the red carpet at the premiere for the remake of “The Color Purple” in December 2023.
About a week after the event, she shared in an exclusive interview with People that she’d been taking a weight loss drug.
Has Oprah Winfrey taken Ozempic?
Winfrey confirmed that she is taking a weight-loss drug in an interview published in December, but did not confirm which medication she is taking. (Ozempic is a brand name medication that’s been approved by the U.S. Food and Drug Administration to treat Type 2 diabetes. Weight loss is a famous side effect.)
“I now use it as I feel I need it, as a tool to manage not yo-yoing,” she told People.
“The fact that there’s a medically approved prescription for managing weight and staying healthier, in my lifetime, feels like relief, like redemption, like a gift, and not something to hide behind and once again be ridiculed for. I’m absolutely done with the shaming from other people and particularly myself.”
Winfrey said she took the medication before Thanksgiving “because I knew I was going to have two solid weeks of eating,” she told People, and “instead of gaining eight pounds like I did last year, I gained half a pound. … It quiets the food noise.”
Winfrey revealed she once thought taking a weight-loss drug would be “the easy way out.”
“There’s a part of me that feels … I’ve got to do it the hard way. I’ve got to keep climbing the mountains. I’ve got to keep suffering. I’ve got to do that because otherwise I somehow cheated myself,” Winfrey said in September 2023 during a panel on Oprah Daily, called “The State of Weight.”
It was after that discussion that she changed her mind about using a weight-loss drug, Winfrey told People, calling it her “biggest aha” moment: “I realized I’d been blaming myself all these years for being overweight, and I have a predisposition that no amount of willpower is going to control.”
Frustration with her weight has “occupied five decades of space” in her brain, she noted.
Obesity is a disease, she added: “It’s not about willpower — it’s about the brain.” It was then that she “released my own shame about it,” she noted, and was prescribed the weight-loss medication by her doctor.
Winfrey realizing that obesity is a biological condition rather than a matter of willpower is wonderful, said Dr. Roshini Raj while appearing on TODAY in December.
“When we think about what Oprah has accomplished in her life, we know she’s not lacking in willpower,” Raj, a gastroenterologist and associate professor at the NYU Grossman School of Medicine, noted.
“She’s also not lacking in resources with nutritionists, I’m sure, and trainers, but sometimes some people do need biologically that extra help.”
How did Oprah lose weight?
Winfrey has lost her latest weight using a weight-loss drug and with a healthy diet and exercising. She told People the weight-loss medication is just part of her regimen for maintaining a healthy weight.
“I know everybody thought I was on it, but I worked so damn hard. I know that if I’m not also working out and vigilant about all the other things, it doesn’t work for me,” she said.
The talk show host added that she eats her last meal at 4 p.m., drinks a gallon of water a day and uses the WeightWatchers principles of counting points.
She’s also been hiking 3 to 5 miles every day and doing a 10-mile hike on weekends, noting that she’s been feeling “stronger, more fit and more alive” than she’s felt in years.
When asked about her transformation at the “The Color Purple” event, Winfrey didn’t even mention a weight-loss drug.
“It’s not one thing, it’s everything,” she told Entertainment Tonight. “I intend to keep it that way. … I was on that treadmill today.”
Raj praised Winfrey for emphasizing that the weight-loss drugs need to be part of a holistic approach. Studies that show promising results from these medications involve people who are also eating a healthy diet and exercising, she noted.
Can you get Ozempic from WeightWatchers?
Yes, WeightWatchers offers prescription weight-loss drugs and diabetes drugs, like Ozempic.
Oprah’s history with weight loss
Winfrey has struggled with her weight for decades, famously losing 67 pounds with a liquid diet in 1988 then regaining the weight as soon as she “returned to real food,” she recalled on Oprah.com.
In 1992, Winfrey reached 237 pounds, the most she ever weighed, she said during the “The State of Weight” panel discussion. She recalled feeling frustrated that no matter what she did, her body always wanted to go back to a certain weight.
In 2019, Winfrey revealed she was diagnosed with pre-diabetes before doing WW. She then lost 42 pounds with the program, getting her blood sugar and blood pressure back into normal ranges.
Her goal weight now is 160 pounds, though she told People it’s “not about the number” but about living “a more vital and vibrant life.”
As she approached her 70th birthday, her No. 1 concern was her health, Winfrey said, noting she doesn’t live with a fear of death, but with “a conscious acknowledgment that it’s possible at any time.”
“(I) recognize what an absolute miracle it is that 70 years on, that heart’s still pumping,” she added.
Not ‘the easy way out,’ doctor says
Ozempic and similar drugs work by mimicking the hormones the body releases when a person eats food, as TODAY.com previously reported. People have reduced appetite, and when they do eat, they feel full sooner.
Semaglutide, the active ingredient in Ozempic and Wegovy, targets one hormone, known as GLP-1. Tirzepatide, the active ingredient in Mounjaro and Zepbound, targets two different hormones, GIP and GLP-1, which can lead to even greater weight loss, research shows.
Wegovy and Zepbound are approved by the U.S. Food and Drug Administration for people with obesity or those who have complications from being overweight. Ozempic and Mounjaro are approved to treat Type 2 diabetes.
The most common side effects include nausea, diarrhea, vomiting, stomach pain and constipation. People self-inject the drugs once a week and have to keep taking them to maintain weight loss.
Patients can expect to lose 15% to 20% of their body weight, says Dr. Christopher McGowan, a gastroenterologist and obesity medicine specialist who runs a weight loss clinic in Cary, North Carolina.
Using a weight loss medication is “in no way the easy way out,” he notes.
“You still have to improve your nutrition. You still have to stay active. You really have to stay quite consistent over time to achieve the results that are seen in the clinical studies,” McGowan tells TODAY.com.
“The reason these new medications are such game changers is they really are effective, and it’s quite remarkable to help someone who’s tried oftentimes for years, decades, maybe their entire adult life, to lose weight.”
New option for menopausal weight gain
It can be more difficult for people to shed pounds as they become older, and with women in particular, there may be hormonal impacts on weight during and after menopause, McGowan notes.
It’s common for the extra weight to distribute around a woman’s waist, and because belly fat contributes to the risk of cardiovascular disease, the drugs can be good options for a patient who’s gained weight during or after menopause, he adds.
Winfrey has previously been open about menopause’s effect on her body, from brain fog to heart problems.
However, taking a weight-loss drug to combat later-in-life weight gain is not without downsides. Even though there can be benefits — such as improvements in blood pressure, cholesterol, joint health and mood — aging leads to a decrease in lean muscle, which can be exacerbated by weight-loss medication, McGowan says.
To combat that, doctors recommend resistance and weight training, plus eating plenty of protein.
“That’s very important for patients on these medicines in particular because they can diminish appetite to such a degree that patients may be at risk of inadequate protein intake,” McGowan notes.
Other concerns include the long-term impact of the weight-loss drugs on people’s health, potential side effects that weren’t detected in clinical studies and whether patients will be able to stay on these medicines for years or decades, he adds.
As with any relatively new medication, there’s concern about the effects years down the road, but since there are so many medical complications of obesity, treatment is needed, even if there are some potential unknowns, Raj said.
“But it’s a very individual case. I don’t want people to base their medical decisions on what Oprah or any celebrity is doing. You have to have a conversation with your doctor about your particular case,” she advised.
“These are not easy fixes,” McGowan says. “But when someone’s willing to speak openly about (undergoing treatment for obesity), that’s going to help others who also need help.”