
There is a photograph, never published, never supposed to be shared, that Hannity has called a turning point on more than one occasion. It was taken by a friend on a golf outing, perhaps around 2012. It captured him at what he would later call his worst: about 207 pounds, noticeably soft, with what he would describe, with little vanity intact, as the look of a guy four months pregnant. It’s the kind of photo friends occasionally shoot without a second thought. It’s also supposedly the kind of photo that changes you.
That moment set off a shift Hannity has since recounted in some detail in radio segments, interviews and social media. He went on the stringent Atkins diet, low in carbohydrates and rich in protein, and within a week had lost six or seven pounds. He lost twenty seven pounds in all, and was down to about 180 pounds in six weeks. He hired a personal trainer and poured himself into an eclectic martial arts routine his teacher called street fighting: kickboxing, Japanese jiu jitsu, submission grappling, kempo, Filipino blade work, even guns training. The sessions went for an hour, nonstop, and left him, by his own admission, bruised and tired. He seemed to love it for that reason.
The funny thing is, looking back, none of this was celebrity wellness dramatic. No surgery No program branded. No announcement. Just an Atkins book and a trainer who allegedly didn’t want to take it easy on him. The weight fell off through the sort of persistent, repetitive, unglamorous work that rarely makes headlines. It was the before and after that many saw the leaner, noticeably more muscular version of Hannity that showed up on TV later.
But the narrative didn’t end so clean. It seldom does. The early years of the Trump administration were marked by a different kind of pressure. According to accounts in several insider books, Hannity was functioning as something like an informal adviser, receiving frequent late night calls from the president at the time and living inside an unusually compressed orbit of power. At least the people around him could see the stress. His weight began to creep back up. He reportedly took up vaping. This is a familiar pattern to anyone who has ever tried to maintain a fitness regimen at a prolonged professional intensity. Discipline seems to hold until the pressure reaches a particular pitch, and then it doesn’t.
By 2021 he was talking about it openly again. In an interview with a prominent UK outlet he called his weekday regimen “living like a Marine” early starts, hour and a half workouts, bare fisted practice on heavy bags, grappling rounds, kempo combos. He added almost in passing that he had fractured several fingers while training.
Listening to him describe these sessions, there’s a sense that the physical torture is at least part of the goal. He has talked about carrying firearms due to threats from his criticism, and about training for scenarios including chokes, gun to the temple that most people would consider entirely imaginary. Whether one agrees with his politics or not, the commitment to physical readiness feels genuine, not fake.
Then came 2026, and a different scrutiny. Fans watching Hannity’s on location broadcasts started noting on how different he looked, his skin more stretched, his features altered, something amiss in ways that were impossible to pinpoint precisely, during a presidential trip to China in May. Clips were handed out. Speculation mounted.
By June, when the live footage of New York primary results came, the commentary was more intense: his face looked more puffier, his voice was raspy and sluggish, and social media did what social media does. Comparisons varied from comic characters to global collapse. A guest presenter on a late night show made the apparent joke. It generated, as such things occasionally do, significantly more online traffic than the actual election coverage did.
Hannity’s answer, given on radio and social media, was medical and detailed. Training had left him with a pinched nerve in his neck. His doctor put him on prednisone a corticosteroid used to relieve inflammation. He had opposed it at first, describing the medicine as something that flushes the face, makes you hungry, and basically makes you puffy in all the ways a broadcaster would want not to be puffy. Eventually he surrendered, as staff noted his voice was fading before critical interviews.
The consequences that came with the moon face, the raspiness, the water retention are well known as common side effects of short term corticosteroid use. Hannity recognized them openly and went on, adding with some dry humor that the entire affair had received more public attention than much of what he considers his genuine professional legacy.
It’s tough to miss the throughline between all of this. From the golf photo to the Atkins conversion to the stress gains and the prednisone puffiness, the Sean Hannity weight narrative is less a story of failure or success than one of ongoing management. Maintenance work that doesn’t end, that requires resetting after weekends or stressful periods or, apparently, prescribed medication. He has remarked that when his weight creeps back up, he goes back to the same protocols: decrease the carbs, get back in the gym, go again. They’re ugly. It works, until it doesn’t, and he does it again.
i) https://mightylad.com/sean-hannity-weight-gain/
ii) https://www.huffpost.com/entry/sean-hannity-reveals-health-diagnosis-viral-speculation_n_6a3cf801e4b03bf31982c797
iii) https://www.latimes.com/health/la-he-5q-sean-hannity-20141010-story.html