Actress steps out with allegedly cheating husband, is looking thinner than ever

Oct 25, 2011 15:16 GMT  ·  By
Photos confirm Demi Moore has lost a lot of weight since cheating scandal began
   Photos confirm Demi Moore has lost a lot of weight since cheating scandal began

After weeks of speculation, it seems that Demi Moore has truly put the cheating scandal behind her and is back with Ashton Kutcher. The two were photographed together the other day – but she's looking skinnier than ever.

The Daily Mail obtained one shot of Demi and Ashton leaving their home together, presumably to attend Kabbalah.

It shows the two as they're about to get into a waiting car and, while Ashton appears to be in no worse shape than he was before the scandal began, Demi is stick thin.

“The couple kept their distance as they left their Los Angeles home, apparently on the way to a counseling session at the Beverly Hills center for the Kabbalah religious group,” the British tabloid writes.

“The 48-year-old actress’s skeletal frame caused a sensation last week when she appeared alone at a film premiere. Fears are growing that her dramatic weight loss could cause permanent damage to her health,” the Mail further writes.

In the photo, Demi is seen wearing a pair of baggy boyfriend jeans, a casual top and a jacket. She's wearing towering heels and seems to be holding a bottle of natural homemade juice.

However, her weight loss is apparent, with the Mail even calling her figure “disturbingly thin.” Her arms look like delicate twigs, while it's clear she has not one pound left to lose on her body.

Over the weekend, for the first time since the cheating debacle began, Ashton addressed the controversy in a vlog he posted online.

He doesn't say anything specific about the scandal, but he does talk a lot about the freedom of press and how social media and technological advances have made it too easy to “bastardize the truth,” as we also informed you at the time.

“Thereby, there is no gatekeeper of the truth. We are our own editors, and our own publishers. We are our own printers. Therefore people can bastardize the truth in any way, shape or truth they want,” he said.

“We really have to take it upon ourselves to instill a level of honesty in our works and the media we create and we share with each other,” Ashton added.