Jamie Lee Curtis supported Karol G after the Colombian singer called out GQ Mexico for being “disrespectful” and allegedly photoshopping her April/May magazine cover.
“I’m so completely happy that @karolg is bringing awareness to a problem I even have been concerned about for a very long time,” Curtis, 64, wrote Saturday on Instagram. “We’re human beings. We are usually not AI and this genocide against what is of course beautiful is alarming and desires to be talked about.”
“There are just a few people being very vocal like @_justinebateman_ and @andiemacdowell and myself and I’m very encouraged that a younger person is joining the chorus of disapproval. The cosmeceutical industrial complex wants you to look within the mirror and hate yourself after which buy their bulls – – t,” she added.
GQ has yet to handle the singer’s allegations.
The Post has contacted reps for Karol G and GQ Mexico for comment.
Curtis’ post comes after the “Provenza” songstress slammed the international magazine last week on Instagram for allegedly editing her body.
“I don’t even know where to begin this message … Today my GQ magazine cover was made public, a canopy with a picture that DOES NOT represent me,” Karol G, 32, wrote, posting an all-natural selfie before sharing the quilt.
“My face doesn’t appear to be this, my body doesn’t appear to be that and I feel very completely happy and comfy with how I look naturally.”
“I understand the repercussions this will have, but beyond feeling it’s disrespectful to me, it’s to the ladies that we get up day by day trying to feel comfortable with ourselves despite society’s stereotypes,” she concluded.
In October 2021, Curtis told Today that while she’s received Botox, she’s also “pro-aging” and tells her kids to not mess with their faces.
“I did cosmetic surgery,” Curtis admitted. “I put Botox in my head. Does Botox make the massive wrinkle go away? Yes. But then you definately appear to be a plastic figurine.”
She further claimed to Fast Company that cosmetic surgery “got me hooked on Vicodin” but that she has now been sober for over 20 years.
“The present trend of fillers and procedures, this obsession with filtering, and the things that we do to regulate our appearance on Zoom are wiping out generations of beauty. When you mess along with your face, you may’t get it back,” she said on the time.