Good! Because I have no idea of what you’re talking about. I don’t watch tv. I haven’t bothered with one in years. I never watch any network anything. Nor do I watch any newscaster’s interviews. Nor do I watch the big white house’s bs. Nor am I on FakeBook. Because all of the above is fake or contrived.
This has nothing to do with TV or networks, real newscasters, real interviews, or the White House press room, that I'm aware of. These are ONLINE on FACEBOOK, usually popping up as ads when you look at a short reel or video, and they have HIJACKED the images and voices of those persons FROM TV for ONLINE scams. Be careful with "ALL" absolutist language; things are rarely "all" anything.
I saw the fake "Musk" ad again today after a reel about the future as seen from the past. It wasn't a news anchor, but White House Press Secretary Karoline Leavitt, standing behind her lectern, in front of the White House logo, saying they had a "leaked" video of Musk warning about the dangers of metformin. When "Musk" started what sounded like a typical online ad, including mentioning a "30-second kitchen trick" and "30-second tea trick" I knew it was fake.
I can't seem to save the intro, but I saved the link it went to, which has an Ai "Sean Hannity" (under a non-linkable "FOX NEWS logo, making it seem like this was a NEWS piece) introduce an Ai "Musk" at a "MAHA conference" (there's no such thing), who then introduces this British-accented (actually, she's Australian, it seems) female "doctor" (not an MD, it seems) I've seen in many similar online ads (turns out, she too, is not really part of this, but also was hijacked by the scammers). And after the buildup, and following the standard ad template to the letter, it's all about selling pills. (And "the next nine minutes" turns into more than a half hour!)
All I could do was report this fake misrepresentation to Fecesbook, as a "fake celebrity impersonation" but, having reported frauds to FB in the past (like counterfeit US postage stamps that the USPS has declared as counterfeit) I know Farcebook will do NOTHING to stop such frauds, which they claim "does not violate our Community Standards" because they will do nothing to stop any flow of income to them, even if fraudulent.
I just found this video and article CONFIRMING what I suspected... the Al Roker video selling some hypertension cure was A DEEP FAKE!!! Meta (Fraudbook's parent company) claims it took the video down, but only likely because the high-profile celebrity it faked caught it, and Meta's lawyers could see a big lawsuit coming if they didn't. Until RFK and Musk threaten to sue Meta, I bet those fakes will remain up, because, even though it IS fraud, and IS illegal, Fartbook will NOT give up a single dollar they can generate until then.
I saw a new ad today, on Fecesbook, that I knew was of the same ilk, because it started with "ABC World News Tonight with David Muir" (clearly a deep fake heist of Muir) "reporting on" a "30-second ritual"! That was all I needed to hear to know it was FAKE, FAKE, FAKE!!!
Then the chyron blurts out "BREAKING NEWS/ VIRAL RITUAL STUNS EXPERTS" "Dubbed the Third-Eye Awakening" and "THIRD EYE HACK CHANGES ALL"! And, fortunately for us all, ABC News has obtained a "copy" of the "documentary" which "you must watch" before it's taken down "again."
Of course, the "brief" documentary "banned in 65 countries" is almost an hour long!
It follows EVERY trope that EVERY other such deep fake AD for PILLS (not revealed as such until near the end) utilizes, which you can, of course, buy in lots of 1, 3, or 6 --"for the best price!"-- with a mixture of real facts, made-up BS backstory, a narrator who "chooses not to reveal his face for fear of retribution by those powers who would silence him," and much mumbo jumbo that combines known facts (and some esoteric reveals) about the pineal gland and some blather about ancient Egyptian tombs and secret texts found there that detailed a secret formula to decalcify and activate the powers hidden in that mid-brain organ. (Turns out I take most of the ingredients in their formula, because I know of their value).
But what irks me is that this is so much like every other similar ad that uses deceptive deep fake intros to hook you into believing it's more than just an ad for pills, which it invariably turns out to be, complete with every other trope that must have been group-tested and proven to work to sucker the gullible into buying whatever they're selling.
Here's the URL the Farcebook link leads to. I don't expect you to waste an hour watching it all, though it does have some interesting material about the pineal gland that more persons should know about, particularly how it is negatively impacted by fluoride and other toxins, and, yes, studies have shown that certain mushrooms and other natural remedies, like chlorella and amla, CAN reverse such damage and improve pineal function. BUT, as this ad is so full of deception and hokum, I would strongly advise NOT dealing with such unscrupulous characters:
The latest example I just saw uses deep fakes of RFKjr. and Dr. Oz instead of Elon Musk to introduce Barbara O'Neill (from the same non-existent "MAHA rally" Musk did!). There are also deep fakes of Jane Fonda and Mel Gibson. And it is all to sell the same pills under a different name!
Here's a comment I posted on the link to this hoax:
"Deep fake fraud. Stealing the images of famous persons and putting lies in their mouths should have these liars arrested. NONE of the individuals shown have anything to do with this hoax. Before it was Elon Musk saying this stuff, so now it's RFKjr. And Barbara O'Neill has nothing to do with this either. Don't buy anything from these crooks."
Also a deep fake of Oprah Winfrey (and other deep fakes of famous persons, that I was linked to by a deep fake of Dolly Parton revealing "the Pink Salt Trick" (once there's a "trick" involved, you know it's a sham) at https://tranquilodyssey.com/prznt/cpda/vsl/l1/?cid=1398372096
Here, the bogeyman from Big Pharma is mounjaro pens, which this "trick" is supposed to be better than.
She interviews either fake doctors or deep fakes of real doctors, name-dropping several famous universities that likely also had nothing to do with this scam. Ostensibly, it's a formula you can make yourself from pink salt, green tea extract, berberine, resveratrol. (I have taken ALL those supplements on a regular basis for years, and I NEVER had the huge weight loss they claim in mere weeks!)
But where would be the profit in just telling you to make the formula at home? Yep, as usual, after the looooong intro, the usual finale comes into view... IT"S A BOTTLE OF PILLS! Same as always! I doubt that a single person on this hoax is real! Fake! Fake! Fake!
I'm surprised Oprah hasn't sued yet! (Or maybe she has) OH, and when they show the bottle name, it's clear that they have overdubbed the words, because I'll bet it was originally sold under another name. And of course you get the best deal when you BUY SIX BOTTLES! Same playbook as all the other frauds!
And here's another playbook example, "Weird Tea Hack Dissolves Stubborn Fat": Even at 6x speed I could see all the classic tropes and formulas. Fake people, fake stories, fake formula, fake science, fake endorsements, fake doctors. After all the hype, you guessed it... IT'S A PILL you take with your morning tea!!! A "bizarre five-second tea hack simple morning ritual"! Buy six bottles to save!
And here's a "Bizarre Ice Water Hack"! A fake person with the same exact formula of personal history, fake doctor's formula, fake breakthrough, fake results, fake science, fake trials, fake university endorsements. And the supposed ingredients are supplements I again have taken for years, with NONE of the fast results they claim. If you've seen all the other fake ads, you've seen this one. IT'S A PILL! Buy six bottles and save!
Today I saw two deep fake ads for questionable Diabetes 2 treatments. One which had the temerity to refer to OTHER scam ads AS scams, including the Oprah ad, but not why. This one has Jeff Bezos selling some liquid supplements in a looooong video that uses nearly all the lies and tools of the standard template for these type deep fake videos.
I also saw one that has a deep fake of Donald Trump introducing a video of RFKjr, a double deep fake, also pushing Diabetes 2 treatment. Of course, each video says there's a different cause, and offers the "only" solution, but likely NONE of the offered treatments can or will work as claimed.
https://www.facebook.com/reel/4348797768774812 is the link to the Trump video. I accidentally closed the Bezoz video before I could copy the link. Of course I reported the Bezos ad as fraud and scam, but I'm sure that Fakebook won't remove it because they are addicted to the money they get for letting these ads continue.
IF any of these ads appear again to me, and I can catch their links before they vanish, I will post examples here so you can see for yourself.
Good! Because I have no idea of what you’re talking about. I don’t watch tv. I haven’t bothered with one in years. I never watch any network anything. Nor do I watch any newscaster’s interviews. Nor do I watch the big white house’s bs. Nor am I on FakeBook. Because all of the above is fake or contrived.
So I’m definitely curious.....
This has nothing to do with TV or networks, real newscasters, real interviews, or the White House press room, that I'm aware of. These are ONLINE on FACEBOOK, usually popping up as ads when you look at a short reel or video, and they have HIJACKED the images and voices of those persons FROM TV for ONLINE scams. Be careful with "ALL" absolutist language; things are rarely "all" anything.
I saw the fake "Musk" ad again today after a reel about the future as seen from the past. It wasn't a news anchor, but White House Press Secretary Karoline Leavitt, standing behind her lectern, in front of the White House logo, saying they had a "leaked" video of Musk warning about the dangers of metformin. When "Musk" started what sounded like a typical online ad, including mentioning a "30-second kitchen trick" and "30-second tea trick" I knew it was fake.
I can't seem to save the intro, but I saved the link it went to, which has an Ai "Sean Hannity" (under a non-linkable "FOX NEWS logo, making it seem like this was a NEWS piece) introduce an Ai "Musk" at a "MAHA conference" (there's no such thing), who then introduces this British-accented (actually, she's Australian, it seems) female "doctor" (not an MD, it seems) I've seen in many similar online ads (turns out, she too, is not really part of this, but also was hijacked by the scammers). And after the buildup, and following the standard ad template to the letter, it's all about selling pills. (And "the next nine minutes" turns into more than a half hour!)
https://skadiguava.top/hDwxEmTt if you want to see the "Hannity/Musk" deep fake.
All I could do was report this fake misrepresentation to Fecesbook, as a "fake celebrity impersonation" but, having reported frauds to FB in the past (like counterfeit US postage stamps that the USPS has declared as counterfeit) I know Farcebook will do NOTHING to stop such frauds, which they claim "does not violate our Community Standards" because they will do nothing to stop any flow of income to them, even if fraudulent.
That’s true!
I just found this video and article CONFIRMING what I suspected... the Al Roker video selling some hypertension cure was A DEEP FAKE!!! Meta (Fraudbook's parent company) claims it took the video down, but only likely because the high-profile celebrity it faked caught it, and Meta's lawyers could see a big lawsuit coming if they didn't. Until RFK and Musk threaten to sue Meta, I bet those fakes will remain up, because, even though it IS fraud, and IS illegal, Fartbook will NOT give up a single dollar they can generate until then.
https://www.today.com/news/al-roker-deepfake-scam-rcna198136
And here's an article from Engadget (a subsidiary of Yahoo!) that has also spotted these deepfake Musk ads and has some examples of parts of them:
https://www.engadget.com/social-media/facebook-scammers-want-you-to-think-elon-musk-can-cure-diabetes-153042842.html
A Snopes editor also spotted the deepfake scams and comments on them:
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=21BR6hnaW7c
I saw a new ad today, on Fecesbook, that I knew was of the same ilk, because it started with "ABC World News Tonight with David Muir" (clearly a deep fake heist of Muir) "reporting on" a "30-second ritual"! That was all I needed to hear to know it was FAKE, FAKE, FAKE!!!
Then the chyron blurts out "BREAKING NEWS/ VIRAL RITUAL STUNS EXPERTS" "Dubbed the Third-Eye Awakening" and "THIRD EYE HACK CHANGES ALL"! And, fortunately for us all, ABC News has obtained a "copy" of the "documentary" which "you must watch" before it's taken down "again."
Of course, the "brief" documentary "banned in 65 countries" is almost an hour long!
It follows EVERY trope that EVERY other such deep fake AD for PILLS (not revealed as such until near the end) utilizes, which you can, of course, buy in lots of 1, 3, or 6 --"for the best price!"-- with a mixture of real facts, made-up BS backstory, a narrator who "chooses not to reveal his face for fear of retribution by those powers who would silence him," and much mumbo jumbo that combines known facts (and some esoteric reveals) about the pineal gland and some blather about ancient Egyptian tombs and secret texts found there that detailed a secret formula to decalcify and activate the powers hidden in that mid-brain organ. (Turns out I take most of the ingredients in their formula, because I know of their value).
But what irks me is that this is so much like every other similar ad that uses deceptive deep fake intros to hook you into believing it's more than just an ad for pills, which it invariably turns out to be, complete with every other trope that must have been group-tested and proven to work to sucker the gullible into buying whatever they're selling.
Here's the URL the Farcebook link leads to. I don't expect you to waste an hour watching it all, though it does have some interesting material about the pineal gland that more persons should know about, particularly how it is negatively impacted by fluoride and other toxins, and, yes, studies have shown that certain mushrooms and other natural remedies, like chlorella and amla, CAN reverse such damage and improve pineal function. BUT, as this ad is so full of deception and hokum, I would strongly advise NOT dealing with such unscrupulous characters:
https://ancientmindelixir.com/news6j-c1/
The latest example I just saw uses deep fakes of RFKjr. and Dr. Oz instead of Elon Musk to introduce Barbara O'Neill (from the same non-existent "MAHA rally" Musk did!). There are also deep fakes of Jane Fonda and Mel Gibson. And it is all to sell the same pills under a different name!
Here's a comment I posted on the link to this hoax:
https://uzruf.top/Productfeed?media_type=video
"Deep fake fraud. Stealing the images of famous persons and putting lies in their mouths should have these liars arrested. NONE of the individuals shown have anything to do with this hoax. Before it was Elon Musk saying this stuff, so now it's RFKjr. And Barbara O'Neill has nothing to do with this either. Don't buy anything from these crooks."
Also a deep fake of Oprah Winfrey (and other deep fakes of famous persons, that I was linked to by a deep fake of Dolly Parton revealing "the Pink Salt Trick" (once there's a "trick" involved, you know it's a sham) at https://tranquilodyssey.com/prznt/cpda/vsl/l1/?cid=1398372096
Here, the bogeyman from Big Pharma is mounjaro pens, which this "trick" is supposed to be better than.
She interviews either fake doctors or deep fakes of real doctors, name-dropping several famous universities that likely also had nothing to do with this scam. Ostensibly, it's a formula you can make yourself from pink salt, green tea extract, berberine, resveratrol. (I have taken ALL those supplements on a regular basis for years, and I NEVER had the huge weight loss they claim in mere weeks!)
But where would be the profit in just telling you to make the formula at home? Yep, as usual, after the looooong intro, the usual finale comes into view... IT"S A BOTTLE OF PILLS! Same as always! I doubt that a single person on this hoax is real! Fake! Fake! Fake!
I'm surprised Oprah hasn't sued yet! (Or maybe she has) OH, and when they show the bottle name, it's clear that they have overdubbed the words, because I'll bet it was originally sold under another name. And of course you get the best deal when you BUY SIX BOTTLES! Same playbook as all the other frauds!
https://malwaretips.com/blogs/prozenith-scam-exposed/
https://search.brave.com/search?q=prozenith+hoax&summary=1&conversation=9fab3e1cc17598757802c7
And here's another playbook example, "Weird Tea Hack Dissolves Stubborn Fat": Even at 6x speed I could see all the classic tropes and formulas. Fake people, fake stories, fake formula, fake science, fake endorsements, fake doctors. After all the hype, you guessed it... IT'S A PILL you take with your morning tea!!! A "bizarre five-second tea hack simple morning ritual"! Buy six bottles to save!
https://newbodylife.us/
And here's a "Bizarre Ice Water Hack"! A fake person with the same exact formula of personal history, fake doctor's formula, fake breakthrough, fake results, fake science, fake trials, fake university endorsements. And the supposed ingredients are supplements I again have taken for years, with NONE of the fast results they claim. If you've seen all the other fake ads, you've seen this one. IT'S A PILL! Buy six bottles and save!
https://getaquasculptnow.net/video/
Snopes gives some more details on this particular scam:
https://www.snopes.com/fact-check/oprah-pink-salt-weight-loss/
Today I saw two deep fake ads for questionable Diabetes 2 treatments. One which had the temerity to refer to OTHER scam ads AS scams, including the Oprah ad, but not why. This one has Jeff Bezos selling some liquid supplements in a looooong video that uses nearly all the lies and tools of the standard template for these type deep fake videos.
I also saw one that has a deep fake of Donald Trump introducing a video of RFKjr, a double deep fake, also pushing Diabetes 2 treatment. Of course, each video says there's a different cause, and offers the "only" solution, but likely NONE of the offered treatments can or will work as claimed.
https://www.facebook.com/reel/4348797768774812 is the link to the Trump video. I accidentally closed the Bezoz video before I could copy the link. Of course I reported the Bezos ad as fraud and scam, but I'm sure that Fakebook won't remove it because they are addicted to the money they get for letting these ads continue.