Well -tied outs, known faces, and testimonies that are too beautiful to be true. However, behind the apparent credibility of these slimming campaigns hides a well -established scam, which doctor Jimmy Mohamed decided to denounce publicly.
In his column on RTL alongside Amandine Bégot and Thomas Sotto, the general practitioner Jimmy Mohamed reacted to a concern for a worried listener in the face of a dubious advertisement: “An advertisement turns on Facebook with its photo and weight loss capsules of the show Who is my partnerwhose merits you would praise. We agree, does that stink the scam?“, says Thomas Sotto on the antenna. The doctor’s response is immediate:”Yes, I regularly receive messages of this type, and yes you are right, it’s a scam. “
At the heart of the deception: food supplements sold as miracle solutions to lose weight. Doubtful products, which use its image, its voice, its videos, generated or diverted thanks to artificial intelligence. “”It must be said clearly: these are poor quality products to scam you. Personally, I will never sell you these junkies“, he insists. But then, why they seduce so much? because they exploit several springs: frustration in the face of weight loss, the dream of a rapid result, and above all, the influence of celebrities. Kim Kardashian, Kendall Jenner, and many others display them without restraint on social networks. What poses a problem is this illusion of credibility. A well -chosen photo, a false testimony, a magic promise: “lose three sizes effortlessly “. False, retorts Jimmy Mohamed. And dangerous.
The doctor is categorical: these grave-burning capsules, sold as metabolism accelerators, do not hold their promises. Silhouette refined, pounds flew in a few days … all this is not based on anything solid. No scientific evidence, no demonstrated efficiency. Just an attractive packaging, greenwashing and a lot of marketing. “”No dietary supplement will make you lose weightR “, insists Jimmy Mohamed. None.