There’s a real book just like Milla’s From Hell to Well guide in Apple Cider Vinegar
Jess Ainscough wrote a book about her experiences called Make Peace with Your Plate: Change Your Life One Meal at a Time. this is very similar to how Milla publishes a book in Apple Cider Vinegar called From Hell to Well.
ELLE · 8d
The True Stories (and Blatant Lies) Behind Netflix’s Apple Cider Vinegar
“This is a true story based on a lie,” are the first words you hear in each episode of Netflix’s new limited series Apple Cider Vinegar. The lie is one told by Belle Gibson, a real-life Australian wellness influencer who built an empire in the 2010s based on the fib that she had cured her terminal brain cancer with healthy eating.
The Daily Telegraph · 9d
Apple Cider Vinegar, review: superb depiction of a wellness blogger who faked her cancer
Then, the subject of that drama quickly took Netflix to court, with claims the true story wasn’t entirely true. Apple Cider Vinegar, by contrast, makes truth, lies, fraud, dissembling and misinformation its very subjects. This is a true story based on a lie that is based on a truth that wasn’t true.
Jewish Telegraphic Agency · 18h
Netflix’s ‘Apple Cider Vinegar’ features a Jewish-run ‘cancer clinic.’ What is it?
This story contains spoilers for “Apple Cider Vinegar.” Early in the new Netflix miniseries “Apple Cider Vinegar,” the central character of Millie Blake is diagnosed with a rare cancer and told she must amputate her arm.
In "Apple Cider Vinegar," Milla visits the Hirsch Institute, inspired by Max Gerson's pseudoscientific cancer treatment.
His daughter continued his work and founded the Gerson Institute. The organisation refers people to clinics, not unlike the ...
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