Kelly Osbourne has had her fill of body shaming. The former star of "The Osbournes" reacted strongly to a comment on one of her Instagram posts, in which a critic suggested that Kelly "looks like a dead body" and added, "Looks like she's going to see her dad soon."
"Honestly, I can't believe how truly disgusting some people are!" Kelly posted on Instagram Stories on February 23 alongside a screenshot of the comment. "No one deserves this kind of abuse!"
Many of her fans agreed, with one writing in response to the original message, "What a disgraceful comment! Have you no empathy?" Another wrote, "You seem to be carrying a lot of jealousy and envy around, literally and figuratively."

But criticism about her appearance is nothing new for Kelly. The 41-year-old has responded to critics who have called her "ill" multiple times, especially since her father Ozzy Osbourne passed away in July at age 76.
"I am ill right now," she said in a December Instagram Story. "My life is completely turned upside down. I don't understand why people expect me to bounce back and look like everything is just fine in my life when it's not."
"The fact that I'm getting out of bed and facing my life—trying should be more than enough," she added. "And I should be commended for that."
And mom Sharon Osbourne had her daughter's back. "She's right," Sharon said on Piers Morgan Uncensored in December. "She's lost her daddy. She can't eat right now."
The 73-year-old also wondered if a lot of the negative comments on social media were "a shield for people that are unhappy." "They've something wrong with their lives," Sharon said. "They're not happy."
Since the passing of her father, Kelly—who is mom to son Sidney, 3, with fiancé Sid Wilson—has been extremely candid about the toll it's taken on her. "People usually say, 'I'm great.' [But] I'm not doing so great," she said at the 2026 Grammys on February 1. "It's the hardest thing I've ever been through in my life."
Still, Kelly shared that she was "getting through" it, saying, "We're doing everything we can to try and just live in his legacy and be happy."