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Gibson reportedly told a prospective business partner in 2014 that she had "several names" that she went under. [9] In an interview with The Australian Women's Weekly she said that "her mother changed her [Gibson's] name five times". [10] Gibson's corporate filings indicate that she is three years younger than she has publicly claimed to be. [1]
Belle Gibson, an influencer who promoted her wellness app by lying about having cancer, is the inspiration for "Apple Cider Vinegar." ... In an April 2015 interview with Australian Women's Weekly ...
However, Gibson's story differed in each interview, leaving many questions unanswered. When speaking to Women’s Weekly , Gibson admitted she never had and did not currently have cancer. “None ...
Gibson first gained acclaim in May 2013, when she launched her Instagram account @healing_belle. Her account documented how she had allegedly shunned chemotherapy and traditional medicine, and ...
The real-life journalists who caught Belle Gibson. As in “Apple Cider Vinegar,” reporters Nick Toscano and Beau Donelly received a tip in 2015 that Gibson might be a fraudster, they recently ...
Like many in her home country, Strauss became aware of Gibson around the time she granted a disastrous, laughably evasive interview to Australia's “60 Minutes” in 2015. (When asked her age ...
Even as the show addresses the most salient details of Gibson’s story—including, of course, her infamous 60 Minutes interview—it attempts to depict the scope of her damage more than the ...
Belle Gibson duped millions of people into thinking she managed terminal cancer with a healthy lifestyle (60 minutes/ 9 News) ... When Guillatt met Gibson for an interview, she claimed her doctor ...