New York Post

BOARD TO TEARS

Times Square sign sparks claims of ‘fat shaming’

- By JANE RIDLEY

Prominentl­y displayed in Times Square, among the customary ads for Hershey bars and H&M, a new billboard plugging an online program for fitness, weight loss and mindfulnes­s has caused outrage among the woke of New York.

The sign, on the southeast corner of West 48th Street and Seventh Avenue, shows a plus-size woman squeezed into workout gear sitting with her head in her hands.

Large letters above the despairing model ask: “Feeling fat and lazy?” The rhetorical question is being posed by selfstyled “wellness motivator” Deborah Capaccio, whose trim figure appears on the promo, which directs you to GetYourSpa­rkleBackGi­rl.com.

Actress and activist Jameela Jamil and influencer Matthew Anchel have blasted the 50-foot billboard as “blatantly fat phobic,” “toxic” and “triggering.” The vilificati­on reached an extreme when thousands of their followers took to social media to attack Capaccio’s “prejudice” against people who are overweight or obese.

But their target remains defiant. Capaccio insists her unapologet­ic use of “fat” and “lazy” calls out “the silent epidemic that’s going on in women’s minds every day.” She wants them to address their “negative self-talk” — the criticisms they may subconscio­usly give themselves that perpetuate a sense of inadequacy — rather than just lose weight. The coach, who previously suffered from disordered eating herself, explained that she noticed striking similariti­es in the way all dieters think.

“We identified as fat and lazy, and those thoughts were sabotaging our efforts to feel good about ourselves and get healthy,” Capaccio told The Post, saying that the solution is to change your attitude toward yourself.

Despite such a confident call to action, the 50-yearold said she was disappoint­ed by some of the reactions to her billboard — which cost her $13,000.

“I expected some backlash and was ready for it, especially the online abuse,” she said. “But I’m more disturbed by today’s culture where anything that causes discomfort or dissonance is considered taboo.”

Jamil, for one, cares little for Capaccio’s concerns. The 35-year-old recovered anorexic complained in recent Instagram and Twitter posts that the sign is “steeped in racism, ableism and classism,” and wrote that its “cruelty and offense to fat people” is “hate speech.”

The condemnati­on by the British star of NBC’s “The Good Place” has been liked by 114,000 of her 3.4 million followers on Instagram. Many call out Capaccio with comments like “Sizeism is the last acceptable prejudice” and “How are we supposed to bring up our daughters around this crap?”

Their sentiments are echoed by Anchel, who describes himself as “body positive.” He told The Post, “The billboard really pissed me off, especially in a city that is supposed to be the center of acceptance and open-mindedness.”

Recalling the moment he first spotted the sign, the profession­al opera singer said: “My jaw dropped and I thought, ‘Can you believe this?’ The messaging was so insulting and triggering. It didn’t belong in Times Square.”

The 300-pound, 6-foot-3 Upper West Sider immediatel­y filed a complaint with the nonprofit Times Square Alliance (which failed to respond). He called for the billboard to be taken down and considered launching a petition for its removal.

Anchel, 34, who has 16,000 followers on Instagram, explained that he wants other people to be spared the shame he once experience­d as a result of his size. He said: “I am a fat person who believes in fat liberation and can confidentl­y say that fat is not a feeling.”

Undeterred, Capaccio believes Anchel, Jamil and their supporters have missed the point, and that her clients benefit from her eight-module $1,000 regime, involving cardio and weight training.

Meanwhile, Capaccio doesn’t regret spelling out the terms “fat” and “lazy” on her polarizing Times Square billboard. She concluded: “The words might be disruptive — but they’re designed to make you think.”

 ??  ?? SPIRAL MARKETING: Fitness guru Deborah Capaccio defends her controvers­ial billboard, which cost $13,000.
SPIRAL MARKETING: Fitness guru Deborah Capaccio defends her controvers­ial billboard, which cost $13,000.
 ??  ?? VOCAL CRITIC: Matthew Anchel, an opera singer, slams the “triggering” ad.
VOCAL CRITIC: Matthew Anchel, an opera singer, slams the “triggering” ad.

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