‘Who is that?’: Kelly Osbourne baffles fans with ‘unrecognisable’ picture

Kelly Osbourne has left fans baffled after a picture of the star was posted to Instagram on Wednesday.

The TV star has been mistaken for another celebrity after she shared the photo shortly after revealing she’d undergone a non-surgical procedure.

Osbourne appeared to be almost unrecognisable when she posed for a snap taken by celebrity hairstylist Laura Rugetti.

Her followers shared their stunned reactions, with some claiming she looked like former Real Housewives star Kim Zolziac.

“Hi, where’s Kelly,” pondered one fan, with another asking: “And who is that in the picture exactly?”

Another replied: “Sorry but this is clearly Kim Z,” while a fourth hit back: “You don’t look like you anymore.”

Earlier this week, she posted a video of herself about to have a procedure called EmSculpt, which she captioned: “Time for this mama to get lifted and toned – without lifting a finger!”

It comes after she insisted that she’s never used Ozempic in a recent interview.

While chatting with PEOPLE, the 39-year-old said that while her mother, Sharon Osbourne, has used Ozempic (an FDA-approved prescription medication for people with type 2 diabetes), she herself has not.

“I just have to clarify, I’ve never taken Ozempic. I don’t know what Ozempic does to you other than what I saw it do to my mum,” she said. “I think that it is the miracle drug in the right hands.”

“The pros outweigh the cons, and if you really do research, the kind of medication and what it can do for you cognitively and what it does for the rest of your body, like I said, it’s a miracle drug,” she claimed.

“For some reason, society is trying to paint it out to be a bad thing. And I don’t understand why,” she added. “If you need to lose some weight, who cares how you do it, as long as you’re doing it in a healthy way.”

Ozempic has been popularised in the US in recent months by stars like Oprah Winfrey and weight loss giant Weight Watchers. However in Australia Ozempic has been evaluated by the TGA for its safety, quality and efficacy for the treatment of type 2 diabetes only and not for weight loss, which is called ‘off-label’ use creating a wave of controversy surrounding it’s usage.

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