Buyer Beware: Fake Ads About CBD Gummies With Celebrities

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Do you plan to purchase CBD gummies? If so, let us get one thing straight: not every celebrity associated with a cannabidiol gummy brand endorses it. Many celebrities do not even know what CBD is, but online scammers associate them with the product. Just keep it in mind as you search for the best CBD gummies in America or elsewhere.

Baptist Church Pastor Charles Frazier Stanley, Shark Tank contestant Rosy Khalife, CNN correspondent Sanjay Gupta, actor Kevin Costner, and TV evangelist Pat Robertson do not promote cannabidiol gummies. Still, you might have seen advertisements online that associated their names with cannabidiol gummies. Be wary of blogs that seem like news but advertise CBD with fake claims about celebrity endorsements.

The latest celebrity to be wrongly associated with CBD gummies is TV personality Phil McGraw. You might know him better as Dr. Phill, but he is not a CBD gummy brand endorser. A recent Facebook post suggests that he endorses CBD candies to treat dementia, which is what made us give the reality of the situation.

Facebook flagged the post in its efforts to fight fake news on the News Feed. Should you click the link in these kind of ads, with a photograph of a celebrity near CBD gummy bears, it would redirect you to a fake news article. Then, you could find misinformation about how the product helped someone to treat something and so on. In internet parlance, that form of advertisement is known as a clickbait ad. Only, here, it goes beyond the sort of clickbait that discusses facts in a hyperbolic way.

The thing is that online scammers know in what way to make a fake story seem convincing. For instance, one of these CBD scammers claimed that Costner supplied CBD candies through a brand following the death of his actor friend Betty White. Was White a friend of Costner? We would not know, and there is no piece of evidence to suggest that he was one. At the same time, White did die, which would have made you buy into the story.

There were some facts in the article that associated Dr. Phil with CBD, but that would not make it a genuine post. In a recent TMZ interview, Dr. Phil and Dr. Oz warned people about scammers endorsing CBD with their names. Oz tested that product and even found high levels of lead in it, meaning it was poisonous.