A shirtless Russell Brand and a former member of the Pussycat Dolls are among those chiming in on weekly Make America Healthy Again calls to lend public support to Health and Human Services Secretary Robert F. Kennedy Jr.'s agenda. 

The Zoom gatherings are happening every Wednesday, organized by MAHA Action President Tony Lyons, who ran RFK Jr.'s super PAC during Kennedy's 2024 presidential campaign. 

News website NOTUS reported Tuesday on some of the most eyebrow-raising moments from the weekly calls.

Government officials, including Dr. Mehmet Oz, the administrator for the Centers for Medicare & Medicaid Services, are frequent guests, as are those of the more colorful variety. 

After Kennedy's wife, actress Cheryl Hines, the most famous participant has been Brand, a comedian and ex-husband of pop star Katy Perry, who pleaded not guilty to rape and sexual assault charges in May.

In late August, he popped onto the weekly 'MAHA Action Media Hub' meeting from a bathtub, telling participants they needed to be wary of mainstream media coverage.

The example he used was a claim that 'Australia and Canada built internment camps during the COVID pandemic' - which didn't happen - though both countries provided quarantine facilities to people who needed them. 

'I'm a person that's been, personally, subject to simultaneously dropped stories and character attacks and what seemed like an alliance between various media groups and online entities,' Brand then claimed, suggesting it was 'weird, weird stuff.' 

Comedian Russell Brand is a famous participant of the Make American Healthy Again movement.  He's been participating in weekly MAHA Action Media Hub Zoom meetings, joining one in late August while taking a bath

Comedian Russell Brand is a famous participant of the Make American Healthy Again movement.  He's been participating in weekly MAHA Action Media Hub Zoom meetings, joining one in late August while taking a bath 

He then told participants they needed to keep an eye on the agriculture sector - as the MAHA movement has pushed for movement on pesticides.

Brand concluded his cameo by noting that 'joy and spirit' are fundamental to activism. 

He's set to join the next MAHA Action Media Hub call scheduled for Wednesday.

Participating in last week's call was another semi-famous face, Jessica Sutta, a former member of the Pussycat Dolls. 

Sporting a black hoodie scrawled with the saying 'I heart RFK' she spoke about how the MAHA movement has allowed her to speak freely about a suspected COVID-19 vaccine injury. 

'The fact that vaccine injury is actually a topic of conversation. Finally. We're not crazy people. We don't have tin-foil hats. It's a great feeling,' Sutta said. 

She said after the second dose of the Moderna vaccine, 'my health was ripped away from me.' 

Sutta told the Daily Mail in an interview in March that she had been diagnosed with vaccine-induced lupus, a rare autoimmune reaction, which can cause skin rashes, joint pain, fatigue and muscle pain. 

Jessica Sutta (right), a former member of the Pussycat Dolls, joined the weekly MAHA call last week and told participants how she believes she was injured by the COVID-19 vaccine. She was introduced by Tony Lyons (left), president of MAHA Action

Jessica Sutta (right), a former member of the Pussycat Dolls, joined the weekly MAHA call last week and told participants how she believes she was injured by the COVID-19 vaccine. She was introduced by Tony Lyons (left), president of MAHA Action 

Jessica Sutta filming The X Factor in November, 2019

Jessica Sutta filming The X Factor in November, 2019

She suggested that her experience has turned her into a vaccine skeptic - a stance long held by RFK Jr. 

'I have to say, to the people out there getting boosters out of spite, don't do it, don't do it,' she implored. 'Because it's been four years for me and it has been hell. And my body hurts always and I can't dance anymore.' 

The MAHA movement was created last August after Kennedy folded up his independent presidential campaign and merged it into President Donald Trump's MAGA coalition.

The move likely helped Trump win all seven swing states. In turn, the president repaid RFK Jr. by naming him HHS secretary. 

The weekly calls were originally interpreted as a way for those who supported Kennedy's 2024 campaign to organize another presidential bid in three years, but Lyons has pushed back on that, telling the Daily Mail back in July that RFK 'has given no indication whatsoever' that he would run again. 

Since then, the calls have been billed as a way to expand the MAHA movement - which includes issues as vast as making food dyes safer to monitoring chemtrails. 

Lyons did not respond to the Daily Mail's request for comment on the calls, but indicated to NOTUS that more than 5,000 people have joined in on recent ones.