Weight Loss Gummies - Weight Watchers Keto & CBD Gummies Scam, Explained [c284c0b70]

Weight Loss Gummies - Weight Watchers Keto & CBD Gummies Scam, Explained [c284c0b70]

Here’s my previous video update with commentary about what’s been happening with Oprah Winfrey AVC Keto Gummies since my previous reporting:
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=xOIaUKU5lyk

Here are my previous videos about Ree Drummond as well:
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=zjo2qMa7Iq8
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Mu33U8TdkUc

Weight Watchers Keto Gummies is a scam, as is Weight Watchers CBD Gummies. They are not real products. Here’s what’s happening. In 2022, scammers are using the Weight Watchers name, sometimes with Oprah Winfrey’s image and likeness, to push a keto and CBD gummies scam. While Oprah Winfrey and Weight Watchers have worked together in the past, neither of them sells keto or CBD gummies, nor do they have anything to do with this scam.

Weight Watchers and Oprah Winfrey are not selling or endorsing Advanced Weight Loss Keto, Apple Cider Vinegar Gummies, Kiss My Keto Keto Gummies, Slim Shed Keto Apple Cider Vinegar Gummies, Apple Keto Gummies, ViaKeto Fat Utilising Weight Loss Keto BHB Apple Gummies, GoKeto Keto BHB Gummies, or any other similar products, including CBD gummies.

In this video, I show various websites where scammers have flooded the internet with nonsense in order to make the Weight Watchers keto and CBD gummies scam look more legitimate. Their goal is for the pages they create to appear in Google search results when potential victims search for the product name.

I found tons of Facebook pages that show the scam, as well as a Twitter page, DeviantArt page, video game forums, and so much more. The scammers are flooding the web with the scam. If you like my video, the video will have a chance of showing up higher in Google search results than these scammy pages.

How can you protect yourself from scammers? First off, be very careful before ordering any keto or CBD gummies products. Make sure it is a legitimate operation. If you found it through an ad that claimed that a celebrity endorsed the product, make sure the endorsement is real. Sometimes, scammers will create fake articles that make it look like you are on CNN, Fox News, Us Weekly, Time, Today, and other shows and organizations. They create lookalike pages. If you look up in your browser’s address bar, you’ll find that you are not on the official website for those news organizations. Thank you for watching.

Here’s my previous reporting:
https://www.snopes.com/fact-check/ree-drummond-cbd-gummies/
https://www.snopes.com/fact-check/oprah-winfrey-tragedy-keto-gummies/