
Lottie Moss puts on a very busty display in a skimpy pink bikini as she shares a playful dance on social media
Lottie Moss put on a very busty display in a skimpy pink bikini as she shared a playful dance to Instagram on Thursday.
The former OnlyFans creator, 27, flaunted her assets as she was seen swinging her arms above her head while wearing a buckle bandeau two-piece.
Keeping the attention on the ensemble, Lottie slicked her blonde tresses up into a twisted bun.
To accessorise, she finished her look with a myriad silver necklaces and a pair of chunky silver earrings.
As she finished her dance, the blonde personality laughed to herself after twirling around in the home clip.
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Lottie's clip comes after she revealed she thought she was dying after overdosing on Ozempic in Olivia Attwood 's upcoming series The Price of Perfection.
The first series of the popular docu-series hit our screens in 2024 and fans will be happy to know that the second is due to return very soon.
According to ITV, Olivia, 34 - who shot to fame on Love Island in 2016 - 'continues her search for how science and social media are redefining beauty as we all chase the perfect selfie'.
In a first look clip, Olivia asks Lottie: 'How much weight did you lose on the Ozempic?' to which she replies: 'Within two weeks I'd lost like 6 or 7kg. It was so dramatic.'
She adds: 'Coming off really quickly and you almost don't even notice it, because you're so sick and tired all the time.'
Olivia points out: 'You're not meant to lose weight that quickly.'
Lottie continues: 'This is the thing. That's why they rushed me to the hospital, in the E&R, I could feel something really weird happen as soon as I got on bed.
'I had the seizure. They were holding me down, it was terrifying.'
Lottie's clip comes after she revealed she thought she was dying after overdosing on Ozempic in Olivia Attwood 's upcoming series The Price of Perfection
The first series of the popular docu-series hit our screens in 2024 and fans will be happy to know that the second is due to return very soon
A shocked Olivia asks her: 'Do you remember that?'
Lottie confesses: 'I do remember it. I started to feel... I honestly felt like I was dying.
'It sounds really dramatic, but I've never had a seizure before.
'I was like "This so wasn't worth it... What am I doing to my body?"
'Why did I feel like I needed to do this?
'I remember when I had just come out of the hospital, I felt good because I was so slim and I get how that feeling can be so addictive now.'
Olivia was keen to know if she'd ever do it again, to which Lottie says: 'I have thought about it a couple of times, I won't lie!
'I wish I could sit here and say no. I have definitely thought about it since.
'It's those moments where you wish "Oh God..." then you remember.'
It comes after Lottie first spoke about the ordeal back in September last year.
The model was rushed to hospital after she took high doses of Ozempic given to her by a friend who bought it under the counter from a doctor.
The model was violently ill, suffering a seizure and severe dehydration after taking the drug when she weighed around 60kg - just 9stone.
She said she would rather 'die' than use Ozempic again, which is meant to treat the obese or diabetics and has suffered global shortages.
Her sister is supermodel Kate Moss, 50, who was poster girl for 'heroin chic' in the 1990s due to her slim frame and once famously declared, 'nothing tastes as good as skinny feels.'
Lottie recalled having the seizure, which was caused by severe dehydration, and said her face and hands clenching up was one of the 'scariest' experiences she has ever endured.
She said there were, 'small things I wish I'd known before taking it' and revealed her weight plummeted to around 53kg in a few weeks.
After being seen by medical professionals, Lottie learned the dosage of Ozempic she was injecting into her leg should be prescribed to someone weighing at least 100 kilos - nearly double her size.
Lottie explained: 'A few months ago, I was not feeling happy about my weight, I had a friend, and she could get it for me.
'It was below board, from a doctor, but it wasn't like you go into a doctor's office and he prescribes it for you, takes your blood pressure, and takes tests, which is what you need when you go on something like Ozempic.
'At the end of the day it is a medication, it is dangerous and really meant for weight loss of people of a very large size.
'When I was taking it, the amount that I was taking was meant for people who are 100 kilos and over and I'm in the 50s range.
'It's these small things I wish I'd known before taking it. But I took it, you inject it into your leg, and it was the worst decision I ever made.

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