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Where and when did Dr. Sanjay Gupta make public statements about Manuka honey (articles, TV segments, social posts)?

Checked on November 23, 2025
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Executive summary

Reporting in the supplied results shows two distinct threads: (A) verified, historical coverage in which Dr. Sanjay Gupta discussed Manuka and other honey uses in health reporting (notably a CNN piece from 2009) [1], and (B) a wave of scams and AI-deepfake ads from 2024–2025 that falsely use Gupta’s likeness to promote “honey recipes” or miracle Alzheimer’s cures — claims Gupta himself has publicly denounced as inauthentic and misused by scammers [2] [3] [4]. Available sources do not list a bona fide TV segment, article, or social-post in which Gupta endorses any “honey recipe” cure for Alzheimer’s; instead, multiple outlets identify those endorsements as fakes [3] [4] [5].

1. Where Gupta has actually talked about honey: mainstream CNN health reporting

Dr. Gupta has covered Manuka honey and honey’s medical uses as part of routine health pieces for CNN; one archival CNN story from 2009 described research finding Manuka honey’s antibacterial properties and noted licensed medical uses such as manuka-honey wound dressings in Britain [1]. That coverage treated Manuka as a subject of scientific interest rather than as a miracle cure and appears in the catalog of health stories Gupta has presented for CNN [1].

2. What the recent wave of “honey cure” items are: scams and deepfakes

Since at least 2025, multiple reports and watchdog posts document an online scam that fabricates ads, fake news pages, and AI-generated videos claiming Gupta (and other well-known figures) endorsed honey-based Alzheimer’s cures. Malwaretips articles characterize the campaign as using AI deepfake videos, fake CNN branding, and phony bylines to create false endorsements for products named things like “Memo Genesis” or “NeuroHoney” [4] [5] [3]. These posts assert the endorsements are fabricated and warn consumers not to trust such ads [4] [5] [3].

3. Gupta’s public response — denial and denouncement of fake ads

CNN published a piece in July 2025 in which Dr. Gupta explicitly spoke out after discovering scammers use his likeness in AI deepfake videos and doctored images to sell bogus health products. The article quotes Gupta’s reaction framed as “That’s not me,” documenting his denunciation of the misuse of his image and voice by fraudulent advertisers [2]. Malwaretips reporting likewise states that CNN has never aired a segment endorsing an Alzheimer’s honey cure and that Gupta has repeatedly warned against miracle cures [3].

4. Timeline and format: real segments vs. fraudulent ads

The legitimate CNN coverage of Manuka honey dates back at least to 2009 when Gupta covered a Sydney University study [1]. The fraudulent “honey recipe” ads and AI deepfakes have circulated more recently, with explicit reporting and warnings appearing in 2025 [2] [4] [5] [3]. The scam content typically appears as doctored video clips, faux news articles, and social-media ads rather than verified CNN broadcasts or social posts attributed to Gupta [4] [5] [3].

5. How to distinguish genuine Gupta content from fakes — signals from the sources

The supplied coverage suggests red flags: ads that claim a “secret honey recipe” reverses Alzheimer’s in weeks, pages using CNN logos or a bogus “By Dr. Sanjay Gupta” byline, or AI-sounding video/audio and rebranded product names (Memo Genesis, Golden Honey Tonic, NeuroHoney) are described as scam tactics [4] [5] [3]. CNN’s own reporting and the malware-tips analyses advise skepticism and identify those markers as indicators the endorsement is not genuine [2] [3].

6. Limitations, open questions, and what reporting does not show

Available sources do not provide a comprehensive list of every specific fake video, ad URL, or social-media post that used Gupta’s likeness, nor do they provide a complete timeline of when each fraudulent clip first appeared online — they summarize the phenomenon and call it an ongoing scam [4] [5] [3]. Also, while the 2009 CNN piece documents Gupta discussing Manuka’s antibacterial research, available reporting does not show him endorsing any honey-based remedy as a cure for Alzheimer’s [1] [3].

7. Bottom line for readers and researchers

Dr. Gupta has legitimately reported on Manuka and honey’s medical uses in mainstream health journalism (example: CNN, 2009) [1]. However, recent viral claims that Gupta publicly revealed or endorsed a “honey recipe” that cures Alzheimer’s are documented by multiple sources as fraudulent, produced by scammers using AI deepfakes and fake news formats; Gupta and CNN have denied those endorsements [2] [4] [3]. If you need to verify a specific clip or post, compare it against CNN’s official archives and the provenance signals noted above; available reporting recommends treating unsolicited miracle-cure ads bearing Gupta’s likeness as likely fake [2] [3].

Want to dive deeper?
What specific claims did Dr. Sanjay Gupta make about Manuka honey in each appearance?
Which media outlets or programs featured Dr. Sanjay Gupta discussing Manuka honey and on what dates?
Are transcripts or video clips available for Dr. Sanjay Gupta’s Manuka honey statements?
Did Dr. Sanjay Gupta cite studies or experts when discussing Manuka honey, and which ones?
How have fact-checkers or scientific experts evaluated Dr. Sanjay Gupta’s statements on Manuka honey?