Jackie O: Tanya Hennessy, former I'm A Celebrity star, discusses body image
Stellar: When you were last in Stellar in 2018, we called you a 'radio host, comedian and YouTube sensation'. How should we describe you in 2025?
Tanya Hennessy: Hot as! [Laughs].
Stellar: That goes without saying.
Tanya Hennessy: I'm really humble … Look, the cover is unbelievable and I'm obsessed with myself. You know, I've been doing social media 10 years, which is crazy. I started in 2015 and I remember life changing so radically. I have a Before Viral and After Viral Tanya. They're such different people. I'm a slashie, and people have a real problem with it. I work in comedy, I write TV scripts, I do columns, I'm an author, I do radio shows, and I make social media content. I would say I'm a social media creator. I used to write the word 'influencer' out of all my contracts because what it really means is to influence sales. If the word was to influence joy, positivity or positive change, I'd be like: great, but it's to influence sales and being aligned as a commodity didn't feel comfortable. It still doesn't. That's why I don't like the word 'influencer' for me. Some people do identify with it. I hate it, actually.
Listen to the full interview with Tanya Hennessy on Something To Talk About below:
Stellar: What has been your experience in this era of the splintered algorithm between mainstream and social media?
Tanya Hennessy: I'm lucky that I'm able to do both traditional and social media, but I feel like a fraud in both scenarios. If I'm doing TV, I feel like the social media girl. If I'm doing social media, I feel like the commercial radio/TV girl. It's really weird. I never know which place I sit. I always feel a little bit of neither. But I also know I'm kind of fierce because no-one can do what I can do. It's taken me a really long time, like 39 years, to admit that … I'm really trying to get on Dancing With The Stars, but they won't let me on. Because I think the audience that are watching it aren't on social. So I don't know if I'm ever going to get on that show. And so help me God, I will, because I'm very determined and I want to wear a leotard and rhinestone pants. That feels like my destiny. I feel I could body roll very intensely. I'm really willing to move my hips in a sexual way – but not too sexual for PG, Channel Seven timeslots.
Stellar: Talking about weight in a sensitive way is always fraught, but you've also been open about losing weight as part of your fertility journey. Can I ask about the reaction to your body changing?
Tanya Hennessy: People are really curious about it. I lost a lot of weight, because I needed to, and I needed to quite quickly, because I've been doing IVF since I was 34 and now I'm 39. I feel different, but I also understand why people want to comment on it, because I look different. I get it. But also, this is the shape and size I was when I started creating. I gained 50kg within a couple of years because I was prioritising work. I was eating really badly, I was very stressed. I gained a lot of weight in the media, and then I was like, can we just not talk about my body? Can I just be a creative being who isn't their body? I guess that's how I want people to see me, because I will fluctuate, and I will continue to fluctuate my whole life. I'm going to be big and small … But I'm tenacious. I'm smart. I'm really creative. And I want you to see that. I want you to see my soul and my heart before you see the way I look.
Stellar: Whenever a high-profile woman's body changes, there is always such unnecessary commentary and scrutiny directed at them. I recall discussing this exact issue with Jackie O on the Stellar podcast a couple of years ago.
Tanya Hennessy: As a radio person, Jackie O is my mecca and I don't care what weight she is – her brain, and her ability to create radio, is exceptional. And that is all I care about. I guess that's how I want people to see me because I will fluctuate and I am going to continue to fluctuate my whole life. I'm going to be big and small and I have been that – [and that] is my that is my M.O. That is who I am. I am emotionally eating … I have a weird relationship with food. I'm going to struggle with food for my whole life. I am going to be up and down. But I am really tenacious … And I want you to see that. I want to see my soul and my heart before you see the way I look. Please. And not just me. Like, every other person out there. We are more than … the bag of skin that we are walking around in.
Listen to the full interview with Tanya Hennessy on Something To Talk About below:
Stellar: You married your husband Tom Poole last September. How is married life?
Tanya Hennessy: He's seven years younger than me, which is kind of crazy because sometimes I'll be like, 'Oh, do you know that song 'Never Ever' by the All Saints?' And he's like, 'Who are the All Saints?' When I was in uni, he was in Year 5. Don't bring that up too often because it's harrowing to think. Like, good Lord, I'm having Vodka Cruisers while he's having a Paddle Pop. No, look, I loved getting married. The whole day I was so present, which is really rare for me because I'm always so in my head. And I gave myself permission to be in it and it just be about us. I had the best day.
Stellar: You're currently undergoing your seventh round of IVF. Why did you decide to reveal your fertility story publicly, and what has the response been?
Tanya Hennessy: I spoke about it because I was so feral on hormones. And I truly thought that after the first two rounds, it would just work. So I was like, oh, so we'll talk about this and then I'll just be pregnant, and then I'll have a kid and then that'll be the end of the story. But the story is more of a chapter book than a picture book. So it's been a long, drawn out, mentally draining process. I feel like it's robbed me of a lot of my personality. I miss my old, dirty, downright funny self. Now I'm sad and complex [laughs]. But it's exhausting getting blood tests almost every single day and changing so much of your food. I've got to keep warm and I've got to have hot drinks and I can't have coffee and I used to be addicted to Red Bull, sugar-free. Now I have to eat all these friggin' fibre foods and high protein, and da da da. And it's fine, but it doesn't work. And it's fine, but it doesn't work. And it's fine, but it doesn't f*cking work.
Tanya Hennessy (continued): As someone who's so attuned to working hard and getting what they want, it's really hard. I can't outwork infertility. And it's so humanising and painful because [a baby] is something everyone seems to get so easily and I'm here just like, what? So there's a part of me that goes I'm glad I shared it because you can see the exhaustion of it.
It's not solved, it's a process. It's not 'Oh, Tanya said she had infertility struggles, and two weeks later she's pregnant.' It's 'Tanya says she had an infertility problem – and five years later, she's still experiencing it.' That's important to see. Working is really hard. I've been on shoots while miscarrying. I've been on shoots bleeding.
Listen to the full interview with Tanya Hennessy on Something To Talk About below:
I've been on shoots crying because the hormones take over and people ask you questions and you're like, ugh. It's the worst thing I've ever had to go through. I've had two endo[metriosis] surgeries that have been so hard and, yeah, I just don't get anywhere. And it's expensive. I'm only able to do seven rounds because [of my income from] sponsored content. It's a privilege. Not everyone has this privilege to be able to afford it. And I don't know where to draw the line to stop. Because in the dark soul of the night, when you're by yourself, all I want to do is see my baby. And if I draw the line, I will never see them. And other people get to be grandparents and I won't. I'll go through a grief again. Will I always live with a grief?
Read the full interview and see the cover shoot with Tanya Hennessy in the new issue of Stellar out today inside The Sunday Telegraph (NSW), Sunday Herald Sun (VIC), The Sunday Mail (QLD) and Sunday Mail (SA).
For more from Stellar and the podcast, Something To Talk About, click here.
Originally published as Reality star Tanya Hennessy on body image, being called an 'influencer' – and why her weight is none of your business
Hashtags

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles


Perth Now
41 minutes ago
- Perth Now
Karol G honoured to perform at NFL game in Brazil
Karol G will perform during the halftime show of YouTube's first-ever broadcast of an NFL game. The Colombian star will take to the stage when the Kansas City Chiefs play the Los Angeles Chargers at the Corinthians Arena in São Paulo, Brazil, on 5 September, and as well as being the video-sharing platform's first live football match, it also marks the NFL's debut in South America. Karol said in a statement: 'I'm so excited to be part of YouTube's first-ever NFL live broadcast, it's truly an honour and a moment I'm so proud to be part of. 'I've watched many NFL halftime shows over the years and now having this opportunity to bring my music to this global stage means the world to me. "I can't wait to celebrate with everyone in São Paulo and fans all around the world.' In addition, Kamasi Washington will perform the US national anthem at the game, while Brazilian artist Ana Castela will sing her home country's national anthem. Angela Courtin, vice president of connected TV and creative studio marketing at YouTube, is excited about the broadcast. She has said: 'This broadcast is a landmark moment in our partnership with the NFL, where the worlds of football, music and creators will powerfully collide.' Meanwhile, Karol is one of the few Latin artists – including Luis Miguel, Bad Bunny and Shakira – who have embarked on a global stadium tour and she recently admitted she still hasn't processed how monumental it is. She told Variety: 'I haven't spoken with [Bad Bunny], but I would love the opportunity to get to talk to him about the experience, because it is such a massive accomplishment that I haven't fully digested. When we first sat down to route the tour, everyone kept telling me, 'Don't you think it's too much too fast?' I'm so proud that we did it. I remember thinking 'My God, Shakira is doing this. I'm doing this?! I get to do what she does on this scale?!' It's insane.' The 34-year-old star recently hit out at critics of her song Latina Forever after she was accused of sexualising women. She said: 'I feel like the bigger the project gets, the harder the people get with me. I think there are different opinions on how I should and shouldn't be acting at this point in my career and it gets so confusing sometimes that it becomes hard to handle. 'It's difficult, because the video is incredible but I knew having us in bikinis with me singing about t*** and a** … I just knew it was going to be a talking point. But the way I see it, I am just singing of my realities. I don't want to change myself to have to please anyone, either. I have emotional songs on this record that are soul-touching, and then I have my fun and sometimes raunchy songs - Latinas are everything. Why can't we just be everything?'

News.com.au
9 hours ago
- News.com.au
Sunrise co-host Natalie Barr's insane morning routine revealed
After marking a huge milestone of 23 years on the Seven Network's Sunrise – and officially becoming Australia's longest-serving breakfast TV presenter – Natalie Barr revealed she still loves getting up to go to work, despite the 'ungodly hour'. In a new interview with the Stellar podcast Something To Talk About, the Sunrise co-host detailed her daily schedule, which is not for those who enjoy late nights and a morning sleep-in. 'I go to bed at 7:30, eight o'clock,' she told Stellar. 'I'm up at … well, this morning was 1:30. Mostly it's 2:30. My alarm is set for 2:40, but usually I beat it. 'I'm at my desk at 3:30. I'm down to make-up at 10 past four. I'm in the studio at quarter past five. It's very regimented. Listen to the full podcast interview with Natalie Barr below: 'And then I'm home midmorning. I have a nap for an hour in the middle of the day. And my afternoon is reading news, then making dinner. It's pretty all consuming.' Barr, who has two sons (Lachlan, 23, and Hunter, 19) with film editor and husband Andrew Thompson – with whom she will celebrate 30 years of marriage in December – said the packed schedule was easier to manage now that her children are grown. 'This job is your life. It's so much easier now that I don't have little kids,' she admitted. 'If you're a working mum, particularly, that's really, really hard. Particularly if you're a single mum or a single parent, that is very, very hard. 'So I couldn't say that it was that hard. But now I feel like I can't see past what I'm doing now. I'm sort of just trying to live in the moment.' Listen to the full podcast interview with Natalie Barr below: The 57-year-old said things she still catches up with former co-host David Koch, who stood down in 2023. Matt Shirvington then joined the Sunrise team to host alongside Barr. 'We catch up for lunch sometimes and I congratulate him on things he's done,' she said of Koch. 'We text each other and see what the kids and grandkids are doing. I think when you work with someone for a long time – I talk to Mel [Melissa Doyle] as well – I think you always do that sort of thing when you've worked with someone for that long. You just keep in touch. It's nice.' And once again, Barr firmly put to rest any bad blood between her and former Sunrise co-host Samantha Armytage. 'I missed her at the Logies because I saw shots of her and I didn't run into her. She was at one of the tables just in front of us. So I meant to catch up with her, but I missed her,' she told Stellar. 'I think there's this whole sort of philosophy that everyone is sort of somehow enemies in the media. We're actually not, surprisingly.'


Perth Now
12 hours ago
- Perth Now
'Who cares?': Denzel Washington dismisses cancel culture
Denzel Washington doesn't care about cancel culture. The Oscar-winning actor was dismissive of the concept when asked if he feared being "cancelled" during an interview to promote his new movie Highest 2 Lowest. Denzel asked Complex News in response: "What does that mean - to be cancelled?" When told by interviewer Jillian Hardeman-Webb that "it means you lose public support", the Gladiator II star said: "Who cares? What made public support so important to begin with?" Washington also poured scorn on the interviewer's claim that "followers are now currency". The 70-year-old star said: "I don't care who's following who. You can't lead and follow at the same time, and you can't follow and lead at the same time. I don't follow anybody. I follow the heavenly spirit. I follow God, I don't follow man. I have faith in God. I have hope in man, but look around, it ain't working out so well." Denzel continued: "You can't be cancelled if you haven't signed up. Don't sign up." The star has won two Oscars for his roles in Glory and Training Day and says that he's "not that interested" in landing another Academy Award. Denzel - who has received 10 Oscar nominations during his career - told Jake's Takes: "I don't do it [make movies] for Oscars. I really don't care about that kind of stuff. "I've been at this a long time, and there's times when I've won, shouldn't have won, didn't win, should have won. "Man gives the award, God gives the award. I'm not that interested in Oscars. People say: 'Well, where do you keep it?' I say: 'Next to the other one.'" He went on to add: "I'm not bragging. I'm just telling you how I feel about it. On my last day, it ain't going to do me a bit of good." Denzel found it hard to take when he missed out on the Best Actor gong at the 2000 ceremony for his role in Hurricane to Kevin Spacey's performance in American Beauty. He recalled to Esquire magazine: "At the Oscars, they called Kevin Spacey's name for American Beauty. I have a memory of turning around and looking at him, and nobody was standing but the people around him. "And everyone else was looking at me. Not that it was this way. Maybe that's the way I perceived it. Maybe I felt like everybody was looking at me. Because why would everybody be looking at me? "Thinking about it now, I don't think they were. I'm sure I went home and drank that night. I had to. I don't want to sound like: 'Oh, he won my Oscar', or anything like that. It wasn't like that."