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Social media users claim that drinking supplement-infused coffee within seven seconds of feeling hungry can help curb your appetite, making you feel full when you actually aren’t. The end result,...
The 7-second coffee loophole is a trending weight loss technique that has taken social media by storm. The premise behind it is that you need to consume black coffee, sometimes with additional ingredients, within a very specific timeframe — ideally within seven seconds of feeling hunger pangs.
One such product, FitSpresso, markets itself as a “coffee loophole” for easy weight loss. However, behind the hype FitSpresso appears to be an ineffective supplement scam using exaggerated claims, fake celebrity endorsements, and deceptive tactics to promote an unproven product.
Too often, new weight-loss fads take over our social media feeds, claiming that just one simple step can power off dozens of pounds in weeks — or even days. The latest trend we can’t seem to escape: the coffee loophole.
No real customer reviews showing Java Burn achieved drastic weight loss results could be found. The product has multiple red flags indicating it is a scam. The ads leveraging fake celebrity endorsements to promote Java Burn as a “coffee trick” for effortless weight loss are deceptive.
The coffee diet for weight loss claims drinking three cups per day increases metabolism, decreases appetite and burns fat. Here's whether it actually works.
Yikes. We’ve seen some not-so-honest coffee marketing schemes over the years, but this new “weight loss coffee” making waves on social media really stands out as one that deserves some fact-checking. We’ll just come out and say it. So you're about to learn: Why weight loss coffee is a scam
Videos of Mehmet Oz, a celebrity doctor and former U.S. Senate candidate, have again been altered to sell weight loss products. A Facebook post about an "odd coffee loophole" includes a video...
Did Dr. Oz promote a weight-loss "coffee trick" endorsed by Adele? No, that's not true: A viral video making the claim utilized AI-generated sound. Lead Stories found no evidence confirming that Dr. Oz ever promoted this "coffee trick" or that Adele ever endorsed it.
Recently, the term “7-second loophole” has been used to advertise coffee-based weight loss supplements. Champions of the method claim that rapid coffee intake fools the body into feeling...