Kirstie Alley Forced To Pay $130K Because Of Her Diet Program
Well, that is $130K that Scientology won't be getting. Kirstie Alley was forced to pay $130K to a customer of her diet program Organic Liaison, who sued Kirstie because Kirstie had claimed that her products were proven to help lose weight. They weren't. Not only does Kirstie have to pay the money, but according to The National Enquirer, Kirstie also has to change all the information on her website and state that her weight loss program is calorie based. Huh, so eat fewer calories and lose weight? No need to buy something from Kirstie Alley and line her pockets. Just eat less food. I love that she had to pay this money. It makes me feel so warm and tingly inside. I love that a judge found her program misleading. I wonder what would happen if Kirstie Alley ever ran out of money. Do you think Scientology would be so good to her then?
You sound like a young bitter woman.
ReplyDeleteThe writer doesn't even try to hide it.
DeleteJax must be writing today.
Delete+1 Grape
DeleteThis stuffs boorrrriinnng...
DeleteEnty this writer sucks ! I am goin to dlisted at least his guest writters are hilarious.
DeleteIt's beyond me how anyone gives that cult money....
ReplyDeleteI don't understand how anyone gives any cult their money. Love the recent expose on charities that are also a scam. It's a Get the Money culture. Get the Money at all costs!
ReplyDeleteI don't know why anyone would take diet advice from Kirstie in the first place.
ReplyDelete@greenmountaingal
ReplyDeleteYou said it !
This broad just doesn't seem to be too bright. Even Teresa Giudice has a disclaimer in her Skinny Italian cookbook that it is not proven to help you lose weight.
ReplyDeleteScientology=scam diet programs like this=scam. Don't tell me scientology doesn't teach people how to do thingys.
ReplyDeleteIs this Canadian guest writer week?
ReplyDeleteIf so, thumbs up for that bear video yesterday. That was pretty cool.
2scams here: cos, and weight loss scam. Glad she got busted. But you know what? Whenever i read those full page diet secret ads, i think, if this really worked, everyone wld be doing it. They're not, ergo, bogus. (I just like the heartfelt tragic bios, lol)
ReplyDeleteEvery diet is a scam. There's no substitution for change of lifetime habits.
ReplyDeleteI've been reading that Going Clear book. COS is scary, and in absolutley no way is it a religion. How on earth is this company not taxed, when it charges money to belong to it. That isn't a church, it's a club.
ReplyDeleteall $cientology is, is a religion for narcissists (see Tom Cruise) who want to think they can move time and matter at will. And justify why they have so much money for no reason at all.
ReplyDelete$150k is gone?! My husband David will be very upset. I guess I should make room in my cell for Kirstie.
ReplyDeleteLove that you get wifi in the dungeon
DeleteIf you're looking to Kirstie Alley for diet help, you should be more concerned with being a dumbass than your weight.
ReplyDeletein my lifetime i hope to see scientology exposed for the criminal/abusive $$$ money whoring cult that it is...
ReplyDeleteand...because i wanna see tom cruises face when it does happen!!
Yeah, I'm gonna take diet pills and god knows what from this fat sow. That'll be the day! God forbid a person eat right and exercise instead of resorting to stupid gimmicky crap that's probably made out of Chinese cardboard and poison! Organic liason is such a retarded name, even if it wasn't crap I would be embarrassed to buy it because of the name.
ReplyDeleteIs Chinese cardboard different from American cardboard?
DeleteIt has more MSG.
ReplyDeleteI went to one of those seminars for a sell-on diet system, you know the ones is a function room next to an airport, and all the stuff did was make you piss like an elephant. It's all wank.
ReplyDeleteThere was a great documentary on UK Channel 4 the other day which you'd all enjoy, find a UK proxy for this http://www.channel4.com/programmes/scientologists-at-war/4od