The Jewish Chronicle

MARISA MELTZER

- INTERVIEWS

NEW YORK author and journalist Marisa Meltzer never got to meet the subject of her latest book. In fact, she only became aware of Jean Nidetch after reading her obituary in the New York Times. “It had never occurred to me that there was even a founder of Weight Watchers, I just thought it was some kind of corporate thing,” says Meltzer from her Brooklyn apartment. “And at first I was like, oh now I have a face and a name to blame all my pain on. But then I read the obituary and was just really intrigued by this working-class Jewish housewife from Brooklyn who had this fairytale version of the American dream. I wanted to know more.”

This was the beginning of a journey for Meltzer, who has been struggling with yo-yo dieting and body issues her whole life. Not only did she decide to give Weight Watchers another go (the first time was at the tender ago of nine) but to also delve into the life of Nidetch, born Jean Slutsky in 1923. “One of the interestin­g parts is that it all starts in middle age — it’s not really a story you hear about women, especially women in the early 1960s when she had to have her husband’s signature on her first lease,” says Meltzer. “Everything about it was so fascinatin­g and emotionall­y complex and I was surprised that no one had told her story, especially since we’re in this era where culturally we’re interested in women who haven’t got their due,” she explains.

Nidetch’s life story — how she was hurtfully fat-shamed in a supermarke­t by an acquaintan­ce, finally kicking her food habit through to the beginnings of Weight Watchers in the 1960s when she discovered that what women really needed was a safe space to talk about their weight, and on to global success and stardom — runs parallel with Meltzer’s own dieting up and downs. There’s also a fascinatin­g deep dive into the insatiable rise of the multibilli­on-dollar food and diet industries that have turned America into one of the fattest nations in the world.

Nidetch, for all her charm and chutzpah, was not perfect after all, discovers Meltzer. Although she had lost copious amounts of weight and became the public face of Weight Watchers, it’s quite possible that she struggled to keep the pounds off; and that she replaced eating with the thrill of gambling. “I think everyone has some sort of preferred release,” says Meltzer, who writes about wellness and beauty for a living. “For some people it’s smoking or alcohol, for other people it’s shopping or running. But it’s complicate­d because not all of those things are considered vices.”

The book charts

Weight Watchers’ transforma­tion from a dieting company (Meltzer gleefully lists vintage recipes: “Frankfurte­r spectacula­r”, anyone?) to a wellness empire, following the trend of how the language around dieting and eating has changed. But, writes Melzter, even if the words have changed, our relationsh­ip with our bodies hasn’t.

More often than not women, and it’s mostly women, are made to feel inadequate about how we look. The struggle for Meltzer, like for so many, is how to just exist in her body and not have to think about it — or what she wants to eat that day.

We talk about the visibility of larger women such as Lizzo or Lena Dunham in popular culture. Look, they say, you can be like us and still be successful, something that would probably have been impossible even a few decades ago. But Meltzer is ambivalent about the new body positivity movement, the implicatio­n being that if you fail to love your body on any given day, the fault lies with you rather than the myriad messages we constantly internalis­e.

“I wish that body positivity would allow for negativity — no one feels positive about anything all of the time. I think it’s great to try to widen beauty standards. There have been some small inroads made —plus-size models in high fashion magazines — but they’re baby steps.”

Although both women are Jewish, Meltzer’s own experience­s aren’t linked to her heritage so much as her North California­n upbringing.

“Jewish communitie­s in the US are regional,” she explains. “I, for

 ?? PHOTOS: GETTY IMAGES, SARAH SHATZ ??
PHOTOS: GETTY IMAGES, SARAH SHATZ
 ??  ?? Marisa Meltzer (right) and a 1960s British Weight Watchers rally (above)
Marisa Meltzer (right) and a 1960s British Weight Watchers rally (above)

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