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Understanding Cannabidiol and the Magic of CBD Gummies [5s_tR-VPi6Y]

2024-12-27T01:05:50-0600

Understanding Cannabidiol and the Magic of CBD Gummies [5s_tR-VPi6Y]

A product named Bloom CBD Gummies is appearing in scams, fake reviews and on Amazon, sometimes alongside various celebrity names including Dr. Charles Stanley, Dr. Phil McGraw, Dr. Ben Carson, Dr. Mehmet Oz and many other people. No famous people have ever endorsed Bloom CBD Gummies. This scam begins in paid ads on Facebook and Instagram. The ads are clickbait. The links in the ads lead to articles designed to fool people into believing they're reading from Fox News or some other major news publisher. However, all it takes is a glance at your browser's address bar to see you are not on that major publisher's website. The scammers copied the article design and layout of the publisher to try to trick people into thinking they're reading a legitimate article. In the instance of the scam I review in this video, a scam ad on Facebook claims Dr. Charles Stanley had last words or something like that. The ad leads to a scam website claiming Dr. Stanley created Bloom CBD Gummies, the product involved in this scam with fake reviews. Again, no famous people ever endorsed the product. The only place I could find that advertises the product for sale is Amazon. Xevich is apparently the brand. A seller named Beachside Commerce & Co apparently sells Bloom CBD Gummies. It's difficult to find any information about either of these two supposed company names. Perhaps that's by design or perhaps I am incapable of finding more information that might be out there. In the Bloom CBD Gummies scam, the fake articles claim the product can "reverse dementia" and cure chronic pain. Don't believe these claims. It's all lies designed to try to get you to make a purchase. One instance of the scam led me to an article claiming Dr. Phil and Dr. Oz endorsed BioHeal CBD Gummies. They never endorsed any CBD products, ever. Aaron Rodgers (https://www.snopes.com/fact-check/jets-rodgers-lifetime-suspension/) also has nothing to do with Bloom CBD Gummies, nor does Reba McEntire (https://www.snopes.com/fact-check/reba-mcentire-stormed-off-the-voice/), as I reported for Snopes. Bloom CBD Gummies is simply the latest mysterious CBD gummies product name where it's difficult to find any information about who is behind the product. Forget the scam for a moment. Who makes the product? Why is it so difficult to find this answer? Will the FTC ever do anything about gummies scams? We'll have to wait and see on that. As for now, don't trust the Bloom CBD Gummies scam or any of the fake reviews out there. Safeguard your personal information and financial data. The people designing these fake celebrity endorsement scams do not care about you one bit and will take all of the money out of your pocket that they can. There's a reason so many of these people hide. They know what they're doing is wrong.

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