Warning: This article contains references to eating disorders
Viewers have been left furious after a resurfaced clip has shown Victoria Beckham being weighed on live TV - just 12 weeks after giving birth to son Brooklyn.
The shocking footage resurfaced in part two of the new documentary Spice Girls: How Girl Power Changed Britain, which reveals how the girl band was treated by the media amid their rise to fame, News.com.au reports.
However, the clip of Posh Spice being weighed by Chris Evans just 12 weeks after giving birth left viewers particularly upset.
In the scene from the show TFI Friday in 1999, Victoria could be seen saying that her weight had returned to normal after giving birth, but Evans asks her to prove it and directs her to a scale.
"Oh no, you did this to Geri, didn't you," Victoria says in reference to her Spice Girls' bandmate, Geri Horner, who News.com.au reports has previously spoken about struggling with bulimia.
"Oh come on, come on," Evans says to Victoria, before weighing her and having the camera zone in to reveal that she was eight stone (112lbs)
"Eight stone's not bad at all," he says.
People were quick to take to social media to comment on the segment.
One Twitter user addressed Chris Evans, writing: "Flabbergasted that you weighed @victoriabeckham in 1999 on TFI Friday 12 weeks after giving birth to Brooklyn. You're a pig. @achrisevans"
A second wrote: "Victoria Beckham being weighed on live TV after having given birth? WTF! Eating disorders being mocked and even encouraged because 'she looks good'? Are you kidding me? I don't care if I become a lefty loon after this. I'd rather be prevented from chatting s**t than be that cruel."
A third added: "I have no idea why I am watching the documentary, but the clip of Victoria Beckham being weighed live on TV after having a baby is just.... flabbergasting. Though with the way we treat female celebs these days, I'm not sure we've learned many lessons."
Meanwhile, a fourth simply wrote: "CHRIS EVANS WEIGHED VICTORIA BECKHAM ON LIVE TV 12 WEEKS AFTER SHE GAVE BIRTH!! WTAF! (No one should be getting weighed on TV)."
The clip comes after Victoria later revealed that she developed an eating disorder in her 2001 memoir Learning To Fly. "I began living on vegetables and nothing else," she wrote.
Per a 2001 BBC News article, the singer added that she became obsessive over her appearance, writing: "In the gym, instead of checking my posture or position, I was checking the size of my bottom, or to see if my double chin was getting any smaller."