Gwyneth Paltrow’s lifestyle website Goop offers everything from wellness advice from doctors and experts to recipes on how to make Thai street food and a curated shop that sells products designed to ...
In a biting report, Gizmodo interviewed not only the people at Goop and Body Vibes, but also, you know, actual scientists, to learn if the stickers are legit. Mark Shelhamer, former chief scientist at ...
Sometimes you see something that makes you irrationally angry. Toilet roll that hangs the wrong way, for instance. People giving bread to ducks. The ending of Lost. The rest of this article is behind ...
Actress Gwyneth Paltrow's "Goop" lifestyle brand — which sells everything from handbags to $75 monthly pill subscriptions — has no problem hawking products with sensationalized marketing claims. In ...
It’s safe to assume that most things Gwyneth Paltrow’s “lifestyle brand” Goop promotes under the topic of “health” is a rip-off. This is a woman who has an uncomfortable obsession with getting fans to ...
NEW YORK — Gwyneth Paltrow, we have a problem. NASA just called out Goop, the movie star’s lifestyle brand, over wearable healing stickers that it promoted on its website. In a post on Thursday, Goop ...
A NASA scientist is criticizing Gwyneth Paltrow’s lifestyle and wellness website for promoting bogus $120 stickers that allegedly contain materials used in spacesuits. “Body Vibes” stickers, according ...
You're probably used to ignoring all those overpriced New Age-y therapies and miracle cures Gwyneth Paltrow's website Goop tends to promote. Remember that time when it suggested inserting jade eggs ...
Goop promotes a lot of baffling stuff. Most recently, Goop published an article titled ‘Wearable stickers that promote healing (Really!)’, which promotes ‘healing stickers’ from Body Vibes. ‘It’s no ...
Gwyneth Paltrow’s lifestyle and wellness website really may have stuck their foot in it this time. People love taking Goop down for their pseudoscience and tenuous claims, but the latest organisation ...
NASA isn’t standing behind that claim for one second. A representative for the administration told Vanity Fair that NASA “does not line its spacesuits with conductive carbon material.” When Gizmodo ...
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