Kristen Doute is hitting back at body shamers — again.
The “Valley” star clapped back at Instagram trolls Thursday after Bravo released a clip of an on-air conversation between herself and boyfriend Luke Broderick.
“I was asked to be a collaborator on this video and I’ll have to pass,” the “Vanderpump Rules” alum, 41, wrote on her Story.
“Everyone making comments about my weight, my ‘saggy boobs’ and my body in general — you should really be ashamed of yourselves,” Doute continued. “Could you imagine someone saying this to your girl[friend], wife, sister, mother, daughter?”
She concluded by calling herself “sad, disgusted and appalled.”
Many of the reality star’s fans came to her defense against “really gross” disses in the comments section of the original post.
“She looks amazing & its completely normal for someone to look different than they looked oh I don’t know 10 YEARS AGO,” one Instagram user wrote, telling others to “get a grip.”
When a fan pointed out that they didn’t see anyone “commenting on her weight and body” while “scrolling” through, some speculated that “Bravo deleted the others.”
One user guessed, “I think they deleted a lot of them (thankfully) because there were a bunch yesterday. people are just so mean & gross.”
Doute is no stranger to defending herself against body shaming, with the Bravolebrity most recently clapping back in May 2023.
When the “Balancing Act” podcast host noticed “Watch What Happens Live With Andy Cohen” viewers criticizing her appearance, she flipped off her negative Instagram followers and told them to “suck a d–k.”
She similarly slammed “losers” hating on her weight two months prior, telling them to “get f–ked.”
Earlier this month, Doute exclusively told Page Six that she bought her “first two-piece bathing suit in, like, five years” after a “mind-blowing” AirSculpt body contouring procedure helped her “drop a dress size.”
She showed off her results, gushing that she felt “confident” enough to follow in former co-star Ariana Madix’s revenge dress footsteps.
Doute clarified that hateful comments online were not the reason she previously felt insecure — although they have been “very tough” to read.