It’s been weighing on her.
Nicole “Snooki” Polizzi calls out body shamers in a 3-minute clip that’s gotten 1.9 million views because it was posted Wednesday to TikTok.
“It’s an enormous issue and folks must love themselves — even when hater-trolls tell them they’re ugly and worthless,” the “Jersey Shore: Family Vacation” star told The Post on Thursday. “F – – k the load bullying. Persons are so f – – king rude.”
Polizzi, 35, has been targeted by weight watchers since she joined the “Jersey Shore” solid in 2009. Now she’s shaming those that scrutinize others’ waistlines.
“Who’re you to call people ‘pigs’ and ‘fat’ and ‘disgusting’ and [say], ‘Your body looks terrible?’” she asked.
“Don’t comment [on other people’s bodies] on the web because persons are sensitive. Especially those that have had eating disorders and trouble with their body and image they usually finally are beginning to love themselves,” she continued.
The “Meatball” podcaster says if you could judge another person’s looks and body, then “do it within the own comfort of your a – – hole mind. Or identical to, call someone. Call your a – – hole friend to gossip about someone’s weight.”
She also got vulnerable about her own journey, revealing, “I even have struggled with my weight my entire life.
“Highschool? Not great. Wasn’t eating, underweight, had no energy. It was getting scary. So highschool was not a very good place for me with weight. I desired to be Size 0 and so skinny. And I fit within the jeans but, oh my God, I used to be so sad and never eating,” she added.
Polizzi admitted that after she turned 21 and began to film her reality TV series, her perspective on her body modified.
“I wasn’t figuring out really, but I used to be like, you already know what, I’m going to enjoy my life,” the mother of three shared.
Polizzi confessed that she gained weight during “Jersey Shore,” however it didn’t faze her.
“I feel like I used to be all the time confident in my skin irrespective of what size I used to be,” she explained.
The mom to sons Lorenzo, 10, and Angelo, 4, and daughter Giovanna, 8, says she groans at comments like, “Oh my God, [you] gained 5 kilos. You’re a fat pig. You’re disgusting. You gained weight. Wow, what happened to you?” since it harms the one that could also be scuffling with self-love.
“So this video is for everybody on the market. Stop commenting on people’s weight,” Polizzi pleaded.
“So long as you’re a very good person and you’re feeling good in your personal body, who cares? So stop commenting on people’s bodies. It’s not nice.”
Polizzi concludes her message by saying, “Please, I like you. Be kind to one another.”