A photo of a woman eating a burger in hospital after giving birth has sparked “outrage” over claims the intimate snap promotes unhealthy eating habits.

But the criticism of the image, which features as part of a new Burger King advert starring real women in the UK, has been widely condemned – with many claiming it is only men who are angry.

The fallout began after the fast-food giant, which goes by Hungry Jacks in Australia, published data that showed 39 percent of women wanted a burger as their first meal after giving birth.

The new study, conducted by the fast-food giant and Mumsnet, surveyed 2000 mothers for the research and also found that 55 percent of new moms said they were left feeling “absolutely ravenous” after giving birth.

In response, the brand rolled out an emotive campaign using images and videos of real moms who had just given birth tucking into a Whopper burger while holding their new baby.

Women were overwhelmingly supportive of the “Bundles of Joy” campaign, stating those who had ever given birth know all too well the “immense feeling of hunger” they’d experienced after the gruelling task of bringing a new life into the world.

But others said it was irresponsible to promote junk food as a mother’s “first meal” proceeding birth.

The ad quickly went viral, amassing almost 2 million views since it was shared on Burger King UK’s official Instagram page, leaving men and women debating over its messaging.

“I think any woman can eat what she wants after birthing her own child! She deserves a medal not just her own choice of food,” one woman argued.

“Amazing ad, literally the only time I’ve ever INSISTED on a big old burger. I deserved it,” another mom said.

As one ranted: “I’ve been good for the last 9 months, and have gone through unmentionable pain to bring this precious being into the world. Just let me eat what I f***ing want.”

But others said the campaign was “disgusting” and “gross,” suggesting it was “irresponsible advertising.”

“This is unsettling. After childbirth, moms need nutrients, not a burger loaded with calories and sodium. Promoting this right after such a major physical experience feels irresponsible,” one shared.

“This is disgusting!!! Mothers need proper nourishment after going through birth!” raged another.

One of the biggest critics was marketing strategist Will Poskett who declared the “ad goes too far.”

“It’s an ad that promotes cancer and obesity-causing ultra-processed foods next to the birth of a newborn baby,” he said in the viral LinkedIn post.

“Come on adland we can do better than this surely? The insight might be ‘true’ [but] this is cynical and disgusting.”

His comments sparked outrage in the marketing industry, with many women stating Mr Poskett was “mansplaining what women can and cannot do after childbirth.”

Michelle Hampton, managing partner at Sydney-based marketing agency WiredCo., described the remarks as “serious BS.”

“I see a new mom simply enjoying some well-earned comfort food after what can, to some (myself included), be compared to going on the biggest bender of your life,” she wrote on LinkedIn.

“Although a magical life-changing experience like no other, this woman has also likely experienced 9 WHOLE MONTHS of intermittent (or constant) insomnia, anxiety, nausea, vomiting, dizziness, raging hormone fluctuations, cankles, back pain, lightning crotch (yes it’s a thing). The list goes on.”

Ms Hampton, whose business won B&T’s 2024 Independent Marketing Agency of the Year, went on to detail how painful the birthing experience, which often lasts “30+ hours and involves 20/10 pain” can be.

“She not only deserves to smash a burger if she wants, she deserves a medal too don’t you think?!” she concluded.

Meanwhile another industry expert noted that the ad had “mostly outraged men,” pointing out the ad’s target audience had been “positive and supportive.”

“Burger King’s latest campaign in the UK has certainly outraged its target audience. Oh, hold on, sorry my mistake, it mostly outraged the people it was not aimed at – men,” said creative agency founder Rodd Chant told Marketing Beat.

“The overwhelming outpouring of anger, moral stances, and post-natal health advice mixed in with a decent helping of mansplaining was confusing, to say the least.

“But when you look at the comments and reactions from women, you know, the people it was aimed at and who can actually give birth, the majority were either positive and supportive – or at least not morally outraged.”

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