Monday 7 March 2016

Yeah. Really.


Jenny seriously wants you to believe that this lady lost weight by doing nothing but taking premium capsules every morning. In other words, to lose weight, all you need to do is take those capsules and BOOM, you become thin.

Of course, the red flags are:

1) JP themselves do not market their products as weight loss aids. These claims are made up out of thin air by the distributors.

2) Jenny does not explain the content of the capsules and how this works. As already discovered, these capsules contain four vitamins. That's it. I take multi-vitamins with 24 vitamins so by Jenny's logic alone I stand to lose weight by just taking them.

3) No statistics are given for this woman. No weight, no information about her diet, no information about her lifestyle.

4) Without the above information the likelihood of this claim being true is simply non-existent. It is impossible to lose weight if you do not change your diet; if this lady continued to eat the same diet as she had in the first photo then she would stay the exact same weight. This is called calories-in-calories-out (CICO). A magic pill that allows you to lose weight and continue to eat the same diet defies the laws of physics.

5) That lady isn't Jenny.

Jenny is quick to use before and after photos of random strangers but is yet to show us anything from her own weight loss journey. She has been selling these products since May 2015, 9 months ago. That is more than enough time to see a substantial change in your weight, yet funnily enough, in Jenny's recent pictures she is still as obese as ever. So, why is that? How can JP products work so amazingly for some people, but not for others?

Hint: maybe it's because there's more to this lady's weight loss story than taking a second rate multi-vitamin every morning.

Latest Facebook tally: 509. It's still dropping.

3 comments:

  1. What is your problem? You clearly know nothing as these premium capsules are not "multivitamins". If you knew anything about the products, you may not critisize them so much. Or poor Jenny, who's at least gine out there and tried to make a business for herself. You've clearly got nothing better to do that mock others.

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  3. Tanya,

    "What is your problem?"

    My problem is Juice Plus is nothing more than a barely legal pyramid scheme that hoodwinks people into thinking this business can change their lives. These people in turn become over-night nutrition experts and completely overhype what these products can do.

    "You clearly know nothing as these premium capsules are not "multivitamins". If you knew anything about the products, you may not critisize them so much."

    That's all the capsules contain: four vitamins. I have a 500 tablet container from Costco with about 16 vitamins and cost me less than £15. That's why I am critical of these products.

    "Or poor Jenny, who's at least gine out there and tried to make a business for herself."

    See my most recent post: Jenny has packed in. She unfortunately came to realise that the claims behind the power of these products and wealth-making opportunities with Juice Plus are fantasy. I am saddened that she was hoodwinked into the scheme and hope she learns from this.

    "You've clearly got nothing better to do that mock others."

    I mock the products and the business model. The irony with Jenny (not her real name by the way) is that she is morbidly obese yet thought she could coach people on making healthy life choices. And I make that point specifically to show how awfully-regulated companies like Juice Plus are as the vast majority of their ditributors know zilch about health and nutrition.

    If you come back Tanya, why not take the opportunity to defend the products and the business model instead of trying to portray me as a nasty-pants boogeyman?

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