Previously, an post was written by this writer around the Acai Berry promoting scam that claimed endorsements from Brad PItt and
Angelina Jolie at the Golden World awards. The alleged endorsements from these celebrities have been posted by the marketers of the Acai Berry product via an online web enticement to try the Acai Berry via a "free trial. " The celebrities, Pitt and Jolie, had been merely pictured as they appeared at the Golden Globes, but the ad for Acai Berry did not contain any quotes, indirect or otherwise, stating how the onstage Mr. and Mrs. Smith team either utilized the Acai Berry products and solutions or had some thing certain to say about them.
Now the marketers in the Acai Berry are back, teaming up with one more merchandise known as Colon Cleanse, and promising to "lose many pounds by replacing coffee and soda as my drink of choice" in the Acai Berry product, and to "lose quite a few inches off my waist, within a few days," with Colon Cleanse.
Before reviewing this newest double advertising ploy, let's review what happened with just the Acai Berry product. Although there may be practically nothing wrong of the Acai Berry product itself, it's clear how the marketers in the Acai Berry had no intentions of helping anyone lose weight. Numerous comments had been sent to this writer in response towards the warnings against purchasing the Acai Berry product, sold in pill form, not due to the fact the solution was bad, but due to the fact the way wherever the Acai Berry pills had been being sold was fraudulent. Comments to this writer included "I had to close my charge card account, due to the fact they (the merchants) kept charging amounts to my card and not sending me any product. " In addition, many frustrated consumers reported by e-mail, that attempts to cancel the monthly automatic shipment in the Acai Berry pills by calling the toll-free consumer program amount resulted in either a disconnected phone or no answer. So it looks the only effect the Acai Berry diet had after a client placed an order to your no cost trial of the Acai Berry pills was the rapid depletion of obtainable credit history on a customer's credit ratings card.
Through sponsorship on the free of charge Weather Bug software, the marketers on the Acai Berry merchandise are back in the exact same scam again, this time and also a product or service named Colon Cleanse. They are showing logos with the
Wall Street Journal and also the TV stations, CBS and CNN. In trying to market the "First Step" of this two-step diet plan, the sellers claim how the Acai Berry products and solutions have "health rewards that tons of news sources like Oprah and CNN have covered." Really! Is Oprah a "news source?" The sellers of Acai Berry insist that you simply "try it for free." However, you ought to pay at least "$3.95 or $5.95" for shipping and handling. The net website where you order the product claims for getting a toll-free number that is "answered twenty-four hours a day, seven days a week." Since absolutely nothing was said under the terms and conditions section with the internet site mentioning a monthly cost, this writer decided to call the buyer assistance number to find out the monthly cost, due to the fact "you are going to be automatically billed at the end on the 15-day trial period," after which "charged following thirty days during the date you first placed your order. " In other words, you'll be charged for two months' worth of item within thirty days of starting up your "free trial of fifteen days." Written into the terms and conditions stands out as the explanation that "your product or service is shipped inside three to five days right after placing your order," meaning that on the length of time it takes the postal assistance to deliver your product, your "free trial may well already be up." Which creates this whole attempt at losing pounds by a customer purchasing Acai Berry solutions seem as a waste of time under essentially the most of circumstances, as it is inevitable that the no cost trial period out there by the sellers in the Acai Berry will expire by the time the end user even receives the product.