Is gelatin’s a scam
Scam alerts and watchdog reporting show that the viral “gelatin trick” as pushed in slick social ads—often featuring deepfaked or AI-generated endorsements from figures like Dr. Mark Hyman and celebri...
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Australian actress, writer, and producer
Scam alerts and watchdog reporting show that the viral “gelatin trick” as pushed in slick social ads—often featuring deepfaked or AI-generated endorsements from figures like Dr. Mark Hyman and celebri...
Available reporting shows repeated complaints and third‑party scam checks raising red flags about Gelatide-style gelatin weight‑loss products and the advertising campaigns that push them; one consumer...
Available reporting paints Gelatide as a heavily marketed liquid “weight‑loss” supplement that employs dubious promotional tactics — including fake celebrity/physician video ads — and has drawn consum...
The “Gelatide” or “Dr. Oz gelatin” trend is a social‑media driven weight‑loss hack built around eating gelatin (often a 3‑ingredient cup or gel) to curb appetite; multiple wellness sites say Dr. Oz’s ...
The “Dr. Oz gelatin” or “gelatin trick” recipes circulating online are simple mixtures built around unflavored gelatin (often 1 tablespoon), water and an optional flavor like lemon or apple cider vine...
Documented evidence shows that bad actors have used AI-generated deepfakes to create fake endorsements for dietary supplements and other health products: fact‑checking groups and multiple news outlets...
Redactions and publisher-ordered alterations have occurred in high-profile memoirs — most notably Rebel Wilson’s Rebel Rising, where the UK and Australia/New Zealand editions removed or blacked out ma...