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Jason Kelce’s Pregnant Wife, Kylie Kelce, Fires Back with Violent Insults at Fans Criticizing Her Looks on Latest Podcast Episode

Kylie Kelce is raising her eyebrows at some of these comments.
The pregnant wife of retired NFL star Jason Kelce—and the sister-in-law of Kansas City Chiefs tight end Travis Kelce—shared several DMs fans have sent her in which they expressed their thoughts about her appearance.
“You guys really have some opinions on my eyebrows,” the 32-year-old said on the March 13 episode of her podcast Not Gonna Lie With Kylie Kelce. “Guys, if I cared, I would have fixed it by now.”
Kylie continued, pointing to her eyebrows, “They look like cousins and that’s close enough, and I’m fine with that. And people who do eyebrows professionally, please stop sending me DMs that you want to fix my eyebrows. I don’t have it in me.”
But Kylie made sure to note she hasn’t received only negative feedback. In fact, she showed one message in which a fan had written that she “always looks effortlessly beautiful.”
“That is so sweet,” the podcaster said. “I’m going to save that for the days where I feel like a bridge troll.”
Kylie—who shares daughters Wyatt, 5, Elliotte, 4, and Bennett, 2, with Jason and is pregnant with their fourth baby girl—went on to detail her makeup routine.
“I have been wearing the same makeup since high school,” she said, noting that she uses products such as Bare Minerals powder and Covergirl mascara. She added, “I’ve recently graduated to curling my lashes, so big deal.”
Kylie also said she prefers to wear Chapstick on her lips, and occasionally lip gloss.
“Never with a color,” she added. “No sparkle. God, no.”
The former field hockey player’s comments about her looks come two months after she revealed she was once bullied over her appearance, specifically her height.
“There was a period of time where I was like, ‘Don’t call me big,’” Kylie, who is 5 feet and 11 inches tall, told guest Drew Afualo on the Jan. 2 episode of Not Gonna Lie. “I would be like, ‘I’m not big, I’m tall.’ There was this whole idea that I had to switch the narrative of. Not allowing those words to hold the weight that they expected them to hold with me.”