The Marissa she's referring to (@binge.nutritionist on Insta) is another one of those skinny women selling intuitive eating to fat women.
Remember,
anybody can call themselves a nutritionist. I could call myself a nutritionist, and hand out the nutritional and behavioral advice I've got for binge eaters; there's nothing to stop me. And, having looked through this one's Insta, she has no business giving dietary advice, especially not to anybody with an eating disorder.
Her advice boils down to, "If you want to eat it, just trust that your body intuitively knows what it needs, and eat it. Let your body have what it wants, and it won't need to binge! What has obviously happened in Organizer's case is that she's traded less-frequent massive binges that left her feeling ashamed and demoralized for a steady stream of smaller overindulgences, which she can now justify as "healthy" intuitive eating. But the disordered nature of her eating habits shows clearly on her body.
Marissa posta about how there are no "good" or "bad" foods, and everything has a place in your diet, but if you've got issues with binge eating, there are definitely bad foods—they're the ones that you binge on, or that trigger the desire to binge. They're a problem for you in the way "just one drink" is a problem for an alcoholic. Not coincidentally, they also tend to be highly processed foods with low nutritional value that nobody really needs to eat on a regular basis. You can cut them out of your diet, and still have plenty of good things to eat—in the way that an alcoholic can cut out booze and still have fun and function socially.
So yeah, Organizer's eating is still disordered, as evidenced by the state of her body, no matter how she tries to justify it as healthy, and she's taking shitty advice from an unqualified individual who probably has serious issues of her own when it comes to food, and fatness, and competing with other women (as a lot of these "nutritionist" influencers seem to).