Former footballer, journalist and best selling author, Peter Fitzsimons, has waged a war on sugar.
In his new book, The Great Aussie Bloke Slim-Down, he argues that by cutting out the white stuff (as well as alcohol) he went from “fat to fit” in two years.
Last Sunday, 55-year-old Fitzsimons told 60 Minutes “This is the key: stop the sugar, stop the hunger,” and by doing so, the father of three lost 45 kilos – a third of his body weight.
His message is very purposefully tailored towards middle-aged men.
In a column for Fairfax he writes "Oi! You. Fatty Boomka. Yes, you. Don't look around at others. I am talking to you, bloke. And don't be offended at being called 'Fatty Boomka' either, precious, because I used to be you..."
Can you imagine if those words were penned by a woman? How intense the backlash would be? How we would fiercely defend the 'vulnerable' women who are susceptible to disordered eating?
But for Fitzsimons, the reception seems to have been universally positive.
In 2012, Sarah Wilson published a book titled "I Quit Sugar". At the time, something about it made me uncomfortable.
Several friends and acquaintances tried it, and almost as many 'failed'.
For them, it was unsustainable. Some thought it was setting a bad example for their children and others said it triggered cycles of disordered eating. Most just eventually shrugged their shoulders and learned that the best thing for them was "everything in moderation".