Your fact-checks

Your fact-checks will appear here

factually
Support us
  • Home
  • Politics
  • Business
  • Society
  • Technology
  • Health
  • Science
  • Entertainment
Index/Topics/Supplement Advertising

Supplement Advertising

Aggressive social ads direct users to glossy, pseudo-documentary pages and hard-sell a supplement while obscuring company identity, independent testing, or verifiable studies.

Fact-Checks

4 results
Jan 13, 2026
Most Viewed

Where has Dr. Jennifer Ashton posted rebuttals to weight‑loss ad scams and can those posts be independently verified?

Dr. Jennifer Ashton has publicly denied endorsing or affiliating with viral weight‑loss gummies and “gelatin trick” products, issuing at least one written statement to reporters and making denials rep...

Jan 23, 2026
Most Viewed

Is neurocept a legitimate product

is sold as a brain-health supplement, but the available reporting raises multiple red flags about misleading marketing, customer complaints, and potential deception; several consumer sites and watchdo...

Jan 12, 2026
Most Viewed

Dr Phil Sugar Contr

The phrase "Dr Phil Sugar Contr" appears to target controversies and claims around products and advice branded with "Dr. Phil" related to sugar control; available reporting shows a mixture of commerci...

Feb 3, 2026

Is dr phil gluco pezil drops real or fake?

The product marketed as “/Gluco Pezil drops” is being pushed in long-form social ads that falsely claim celebrity and media endorsements—most notably invoking , and a fabricated “60 Minutes” segment—w...

About
Blog
Contact
FAQ
Terms & ConditionsTerms
Privacy PolicyPrivacy
Manage data