Claudia Oshry is pregnant with her first child.
“I’M HAVIN’ HIS BAAABY!,” the Girl With No Job star, 30, wrote on Instagram on Sunday. That was apparently a reference to Taylor Swift’s song But Daddy I Love Him.
The influencer, who left Ozempic after losing 70 pounds, revealed the pregnancy in a joint post with her husband Ben Soffer, 32, who goes by Boy With No Job on social media.
An instrumental version of Swift’s Never Grow up played underneath the video, showing the excitement of seeing the positive pregnancy test and a huge hug from the new parents.
Oshry is also seen getting an ultrasound, wiping a tear from her eye and then smiling at the camera.
The couple, who have been married since 2017, are expecting their little one in the spring of 2025.
Claudia Oshry, 30, and her husband, Ben Soffer, 32, made a joint announcement on social media on Sunday, November 17, revealing they were expecting their first child. “I GOT HIS BAAABY!” The Toast podcast host wrote
The congratulations for the expectant parents have arrived.
‘Yesss! More oshry-Soffer!!!’ wrote Josh and Drake star Josh Peck.
Social media star and new mother Campbell “Pookie” Puckett expressed her joy “So happy. I love you.’
During her show on Monday, The Toast podcast host said she was still getting used to the idea of being around the family, in a video on her subscription site, revealing: “It’s so crazy to love something like that so much wanting to be, like: It makes you cry for months, and then you become that one thing, and seriously, I don’t know how to respond.”
Oshry, who reported feeling hungry all the time after leaving Ozempic, said she came to terms with gaining weight during her pregnancy.
“I will eventually reach the weight I was when I started Ozempic,” she told her fans.
“I already have such a deteriorated self-image with, for example, Ozempic and the weight loss,” she explained.
The comedienne revealed that she craved “bagels” all the time, but also “ate everything in sight.”
The video the couple shared showed Oshry’s reaction to the positive pregnancy test
She then shared the results with her husband, who embraced her in a huge hug
Another scene shows Oshry getting an ultrasound, wiping a tear from her eye and then smiling at the camera. The couple has been married since 2017
Oshry didn’t go into detail about how long she had been trying to get pregnant, but her weight loss may have helped the process.
Being overweight can cause hormonal imbalances that disrupt or interrupt ovulation, and weight loss can reverse these imbalances.
“Women who lose weight with Ozempic and who have not previously ovulated may ovulate, and if they are not using effective contraception, they may become pregnant while taking Ozempic,” Dr. Karen Wheeler, a reproductive endocrinologist. The bump.
Because the medications containing semaglutide slow digestion, some doctors theorize that they may also affect the way birth control pills are absorbed and processed.
After losing significant weight, Oshry revealed in August 2023 that she was “obviously” taking medication.
“You thought they were going to make a weight loss drug and I wouldn’t take it?” she told her The Toast audience. ‘You’re stupid. Of course I’ll take it.’
The Lean In comic admitted she was embarrassed to admit she was taking the medication originally used to manage diabetes, which has also proven helpful in weight loss.
After demonstrating significant weight loss, Oshry admitted to using Ozempic in August 2023. She explained on her The Toast podcast on Monday, November 18, that she stopped taking the drug when she started trying to get pregnant.
Oshry told her podcast audience that she had come to terms with regaining the weight she lost during her pregnancy and was “eating everything in sight,” all the while “craving bagels” (pictured in New York City in June)
‘Other people can do without it, why not me? At first, my decision not to share was a bit rooted in shame,” she explained, adding, “I don’t recommend anyone do this. I don’t advise anyone to do anything.’
Oshry stopped taking Ozempic when she tried to get pregnant. Doctors do not recommend that women who are pregnant or trying to become pregnant use the drug.
‘One day I will have children. I’m not going to be able to do this,” she said on The Toast earlier this year.
“It’s what works for me now. That’s the only reason I’ve been hesitant to talk about it, because I don’t want to say, “I’ve figured it out. I’ve solved the problem for life.” I don’t have that.’