Fructose will certainly fill liver glycogen first and foremost, but whether excess fructose gets stored as 'fat' depends on the nutritional and hormonal status of the individual. There are three possible fates for glycerol generated from fructose. It can easily form triglycerides if there is adequate free fatty acids available in the liver. These triglycerides can easily be stored as fat if insulin levels are high or they are in excess to the current energy demands of the body. However, fructose by itself has a negligible impact on insulin levels. Glycerol can also be broken down into glucose. The fate of this glucose again depends on the energy demands and hormonal mileu. Epinephrine, Glucagon, Glucocorticoids, and growth hormone (to name a few) all favour the use of glucose and fatty acids rather than conversion and storage as fat. These hormones are stimulated by exercize and low blood glucose/low insulin levels. Glucose can be exported to the brain, muscles etc.... to be used directly as fuel in this case, or it can be turned into fatty acids which can react with other glycerol molecules to form triglycerides (again this is more likely if the fructose intake is in excess of energy demands). All in all, I don't think a modest intake of fruit is such a bad thing, but you don't want to overdo the high fructose stuff like mountain dew. On a calorie restricted diet some fructose will not hurt your fatloss efforts, and it helps with the conversion of T4 to T3 which can be a problem with long term low carb diets. It can accomplish this without raising insulin levels much, which is mostly a good thing unless you're intentionally trying to spike your insulin. I think that fruit/fructose is particularly suited to pre-workout meals since it is very unlikely to be stored as fat and can contribute a slow, even trickle of glucose to power high intensity muscle contraction. But that's just one person's opinion, and I know a lot of people are "anti fructose" folks.