Marin Cole.
I'm Marin. I cover the celebrity desk for Real Easy Diet — which mostly means I read every interview transcript, every podcast appearance, and every on-camera statement before I write a single sentence about anyone's body.
The desks under my byline.
On-the-record celebrity interviews
Late-night, podcast, magazine sit-downs. If a celebrity hasn't said it on tape or in print, I don't put it in their mouth.
Tabloid claim debunking
Cover stories, paparazzi captions, anonymous 'sources close to the star.' I label each one so readers can see the difference.
Public-record health disclosures
When a celebrity has talked openly about a diagnosis, a medication, or a recovery, I cite the original interview and let their words stand.
Body-image and tabloid culture criticism
Why we keep clicking. Why the press keeps printing. What a fairer celebrity desk looks like.
How Marin writes.
I write the celebrity desk the way an old-school music critic writes a review — with one strict rule: nobody gets a quote in my piece they didn't say on tape or in print. If a tabloid claims a star is on Ozempic and the star has not confirmed it, I say tabloid claim. If a podcast has them on the record, I cite the episode and timestamp. I won't speculate about whether a body change is from medication, surgery, illness, or just time. That's between the person and their doctor. I write about what was said, when it was said, and who heard it. The job is to give readers a clean reading of the public record — not to tell anyone their body is wrong, and not to tell readers what they should weigh tomorrow.
Five rules
Marin won't break.
Real Easy Diet is editorial, independent, and reader-supported. These are the standards every byline lives under — and the ones an editor checks before any story goes live.
- 01 · Citation policy
Every health claim links to a peer-reviewed paper, a regulatory filing, or a named primary source. No anonymous "studies show."
- 02 · Disclosure policy
Affiliate links are flagged at the top of every review. Financial relationships are named. We never disguise sponsored placement as editorial.
- 03 · Correction policy
If we get something wrong, we fix it publicly. The page shows a timestamped correction and the original is archived. We don't quietly rewrite history.
- 04 · AI disclosure
We use AI tools to help research, summarize, and draft. Every published claim is reviewed by a human editor. AI does not get a byline.
- 05 · No medical advice
Real Easy Diet is a media publication, not a clinic. We don't diagnose, treat, or guarantee outcomes. For your own health, talk to your own doctor.
The line between editorial and noise.
Stating these out loud matters. If a byline can't list what it refuses to publish, it's not a byline — it's a feed.
- 01 ·
Diagnosing a celebrity from a magazine cover photo.
- 02 ·
Speculating about Ozempic, Mounjaro, or any medication a celebrity has not confirmed publicly.
- 03 ·
Tabloid 'source close to the star' quotes treated as fact.
- 04 ·
Before-and-after photo galleries built on paparazzi shots.
- 05 ·
Body-shaming framing — even with positive intent, even when the star is in the news.
From my byline.
Jelly Roll Weight Loss: What Changed
How the country star reframed food without a fad diet.
Read the storyLainey Wilson's Approach to Staying Lean on Tour
Tour-bus eating, walking habits, and a refusal to crash diet.
Read the storyKelly Osbourne Weight Loss: What She's Said Publicly
What's confirmed, what's tabloid, and what to ignore.
Read the storyPam Bondi's Reported Diet and Workout Routine
What we know, what we don't, and why that matters.
Read the storyAriana Grande's Plant-Based Approach
A vegan-leaning routine she's followed for years.
Read the storyAmy Schumer on Endometriosis, Recovery, and Body Changes
Why her story isn't really a 'weight loss story' at all.
Read the storyTip, correction, or comment?
Reader tips and correction requests come in through the editorial inbox. We read every one. We won't publish your name without permission.