World’s Fattest Man ate 40 chocolate bars and 100 bags of crisps a day

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Paul Mason was 80 stone at his heaviest (Pictures: ITV / Rex)

Viewers of The World’s Fattest Man: 10 Years On were stunned to learn about Paul Mason’s eating habits at the height of his addiction to food. 

The documentary followed Paul, 61, who weighed nearly 80 stone at his heaviest, in his decade-long bid to lose weight through gastric band surgery as well as the removal of his excess skin, and his battle with putting weight back on. 

During the film, he revealed that at the height of his food addiction, he would eat, four takeaways, 40 chocolate bars and 100 bags of crisps each day, leading to his weight gain.

Viewers took to Twitter to share their shock, writing: ‘40 chocolate bars & 100 packets of crisps a day. Say you slept 7hrs that’s over 3 choc bars & 6 packets of crisps every hour! I can’t believe my eyes here. Hes got down to 52stone at this point losing over 30stone.’

Another added: ‘4 takeaways a night? He needs to deal with the route cause, because you can lose all the weight in the world with surgery, but if you don’t deal with the underlying issues you’ll fall back into bad habits.’

The poor diet also led to Paul having to do his own risky dental surgeries including pulling out his own teeth after not being able to make it to the dentist due to his size. 

It was revealed that Paul’s overeating was partly down to trauma from his younger years as he claimed he was abused by an older female when he was a child, as well as the grief of losing his mother. 

Viewers were upset that Paul did not appear to be given nutritional and psychological help throughout his weight loss journey, which then saw him gain another 19 stone during lockdown, doubling the 19 stone bodyweight he had achieved six years after his gastric bypass. 


Paul got down to 19 stone after his gastric bypass but doubled his weight during lockdowm (Picture: Albanpix/REX/Shutterstock)

They tweeted: ‘I do feel bad for Paul, he should have had proper counselling,’ and: ‘His condition is psychological from losing his mum at an early age. He needs therapy, not bloody feeder carers. They are just as much to blame.’

Others added: ‘The man is numb. He eats for comfort. He just hasn’t got over the loss of his primary caregiver. Not f**king rocket science’ and ‘Zero nutritional/ psychological therapy (up until now) for a person who has suffered for so long is genuinely heartbreaking.’

Another wrote: ‘The NHS pay for these surgeries, but they aren’t supporting patients afterwards, which is leading to patients gaining weight again. In a support group of patients at the hospital, a large % have regained weight. It’s an addiction & surgery won’t magically fix it.’

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