The way Josh Gad’s weight has followed his career—rising and falling in tandem with the roles Hollywood has chosen to give him or withhold—is almost too neat. For years, the Frozen star carried his size in a way that only some actors can: with humor, charm, and a kind of self-awareness that put everyone else at ease before they could become uncomfortable. Up until it broke down, it operated flawlessly.
Gad relied on his size for many of the jokes that characterized his early career, building his early reputation on the chubby best-friend archetype. That’s simply a category Hollywood created and then upheld for decades; it’s not an insult. The weight gain that occurs in between projects, the cycles of loss and recovery, and the silent exhaustion of a body that keeps telling you something you’re not ready to hear are all aspects of that archetype that are more difficult to discuss.

Gad underwent a drastic makeover in 2012 for the movie Jobs, losing thirty pounds while following a low-carb, high-protein diet. He had a goal, a deadline, a nutritionist, and everything else that makes short-term change seem feasible. The weight returned shortly after the movie’s release. Even then, Gad might have realized that discipline wasn’t the problem. Seldom is it.
The situation had changed significantly by January 2025. Gad claimed to have lost forty pounds while taking a GLP-1 medication, referring to it as a “miracle drug” and stating that it would enable him to “be there for my kids.” In part because Gad didn’t sound victorious, the confession, which was made on Dax Shepard’s Armchair Expert podcast, landed differently than the typical celebrity weight story. He seemed to be in the middle of a sentence, still trying to figure it out.
The texture of his ambivalence is what makes his story worth listening to. Ida Darvish, his wife, voiced worries that the drug might keep him from addressing the underlying causes of his weight gain. Gad acknowledged this insightful concern. He acknowledged that he felt he was “cheating” by taking the drug because he was torn between the idea that he should be able to live without it and the knowledge that it was necessary for his health. In all honesty, that tension is more fascinating than any before-and-after picture.
Additionally, he revealed that he had to change his medication after his initial medication caused diverticulitis, an inflammation of the colon’s tiny pouches. This is not the kind of information that usually finds its way into the sanitized celebrity wellness narrative. It’s important, and it’s messy. It shows that there isn’t a straight line for weight loss at this scale. There are several recalibrations involved.
Then there’s the career issue, which Gad brought up on his own and which merits careful consideration. He openly questioned whether he can be the “funny skinny guy” or even the “hot leading man,” telling the podcast that he is concerned about whether Hollywood will still find him funny now that he is thinner. Grieving for a body that helped you succeed professionally is an odd experience, but the grief is genuine. Additionally, he was told he looked like a “tall, overweight Smurf” when digitally rendered as one of the blue characters in Avatar, and he was fat-shamed out of a part in the movie. The half-life of that type of rejection is quite long.
Observing all of this, it’s difficult to avoid the conclusion that Gad’s weight was never solely a result of diet or exercise. It had to do with identity and how an industry determines your value and which shelf to put you on. He considers his life, career, and future priorities in his memoir In Gad We Trust, stating that “this is my journey, and I’m figuring it out.” Perhaps the most humane thing he’s said in public in years was that unresolved statement. He’s not offering a conclusion. He is introducing a character who is still in the middle of the narrative and unsure of its conclusion.
FAQs
1. Why did Josh Gad gain weight back after losing 30 pounds in 2012?
He never addressed the deeper psychological relationship with food, driving the cycle.
2. What medication is Josh Gad currently using for weight loss?
He’s taking a GLP-1 drug after switching due to diverticulitis from his first one.
3. Why is Josh Gad worried about losing weight?
He fears Hollywood will no longer cast him as the “funny fat guy.”
4. What did Josh Gad’s wife think about him taking weight loss drugs?
She worried the medication would stop him from confronting the root cause of his weight gain.
5. Was Josh Gad ever rejected from a role because of his weight?
Yes — he was fat-shamed out of an Avatar role for resembling an overweight Smurf.

