The life of wellness guru Belle Gibson, who had a large social media following, where she pretended to be suffering from cancer but keeping the disease under control using self-care therapie... Read allThe life of wellness guru Belle Gibson, who had a large social media following, where she pretended to be suffering from cancer but keeping the disease under control using self-care therapies. She confessed that none of it was true.The life of wellness guru Belle Gibson, who had a large social media following, where she pretended to be suffering from cancer but keeping the disease under control using self-care therapies. She confessed that none of it was true.
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Summary
Reviewers say 'Apple Cider Vinegar' is a thought-provoking miniseries examining social media influence and health misinformation, featuring strong performances, especially Kaitlyn Dever as Belle Gibson. The series is lauded for its narrative and production quality but criticized for uneven pacing, confusing timelines, and Belle's sympathetic portrayal. Its depiction of alternative treatments and impact on cancer patients is contentious, yet many appreciate its focus on misinformation dangers and influencer ethics.
Featured reviews
I have 2 more episodes to finish so this review might change but wow this series gripped me.
I wish, that other series about con was like this. Gripping and great storytelling.
You see how dangerous it is to pry on vulnerable minds... people who just tired of having to go through tests and procedures and saw no changes on their bodies.
Having put in time and money to all these treatments. Time that they could not get back. But also time that they ended up trading for those optional treatments that could have been used for actual treatments.
Cancer is a fickle thing... your body sure betrayed you. It is a disaster on one self and family and friends...
I think the whole series is a good reminder of that. Don't take time and health for granted.
Kaitlyn Dever is amazing. I grew up in Australia and still visit it time to time, her accent is Australian. I totally forgot she is an american actress. I really can't wait to see her as Abby in the Last of Us.
The screenwriting is interesting. I like the opening bits and pieces that they did. The other actor and actress are good. They all fit their characters. I really do feel sorry for Clive (plus he is very easy on the eyes). Just sad to see someone like him get taken advantage of everytime...
I'm sad that I only have 2 episodes to go. This series just tick the boxes for me. Interesting story / premise, good execution, tight editing. I love it.
I wish, that other series about con was like this. Gripping and great storytelling.
You see how dangerous it is to pry on vulnerable minds... people who just tired of having to go through tests and procedures and saw no changes on their bodies.
Having put in time and money to all these treatments. Time that they could not get back. But also time that they ended up trading for those optional treatments that could have been used for actual treatments.
Cancer is a fickle thing... your body sure betrayed you. It is a disaster on one self and family and friends...
I think the whole series is a good reminder of that. Don't take time and health for granted.
Kaitlyn Dever is amazing. I grew up in Australia and still visit it time to time, her accent is Australian. I totally forgot she is an american actress. I really can't wait to see her as Abby in the Last of Us.
The screenwriting is interesting. I like the opening bits and pieces that they did. The other actor and actress are good. They all fit their characters. I really do feel sorry for Clive (plus he is very easy on the eyes). Just sad to see someone like him get taken advantage of everytime...
I'm sad that I only have 2 episodes to go. This series just tick the boxes for me. Interesting story / premise, good execution, tight editing. I love it.
Enthralling recap of a story many of us Aussies know well, but made none the less enticing, I was totally gripped from start to finish.
I'm Australian and didn't even realise the actress playing Belle was American!!
Even if you know the story, there's still plenty of detail and character building that really builds on the nuances of those involved.
Great acting, great cast, loved the direction and cinematography. Also really great depiction of the so-called wellness industry, the slow build of Instagram and influencer culture. Part of you wonders if it had been successful without the lies.
Really proud the Aussie TV industry did the story so well - I binged it in a day!!
I'm Australian and didn't even realise the actress playing Belle was American!!
Even if you know the story, there's still plenty of detail and character building that really builds on the nuances of those involved.
Great acting, great cast, loved the direction and cinematography. Also really great depiction of the so-called wellness industry, the slow build of Instagram and influencer culture. Part of you wonders if it had been successful without the lies.
Really proud the Aussie TV industry did the story so well - I binged it in a day!!
This is a hard watch. Watching the mastectomy specifically had me in tears.
I not only have MS, but I am a breast cancer survivor.
"Natural" and "holistic" treatments can be a great companion to medical treatment, but it should never replace it.
I have dealt with this in both the cancer and MS communities. I have watched needless suffering and degrading of health and function as a result of these dangerous narratives.
And that's what makes this a good, yet infuriating and frustrating watch.
These people exist.
The fraud itself is frustrating enough, but those who have these diseases and encourage the same can be just as dangerous.
Good story telling, cringe main character well played.
Worth the time.
I not only have MS, but I am a breast cancer survivor.
"Natural" and "holistic" treatments can be a great companion to medical treatment, but it should never replace it.
I have dealt with this in both the cancer and MS communities. I have watched needless suffering and degrading of health and function as a result of these dangerous narratives.
And that's what makes this a good, yet infuriating and frustrating watch.
These people exist.
The fraud itself is frustrating enough, but those who have these diseases and encourage the same can be just as dangerous.
Good story telling, cringe main character well played.
Worth the time.
What a line that encapsulates the human parasites that walk amongst us wearing a veneer of normality. A tale as old as time is that of the snake oil salesperson and its numerous iterations across history, culminating in the 21st century in individuals, such as Belle Gibson, Anna Delvey (Inventing Anna) and Christopher Duntsch (Dr Death), to name a few whose notoriety resulted in their own Netflix series.
Do people learn from such examples of sociopathic creatures and the havoc they wreak, or are we helpless against the sweet empty promises of the cunning and beguiling? The one common thing about snake oil salespeople is that they target people's weaknesses and manipulate these insecurities to their advantage. The defense against them is knowing ourselves better than they do, but not everyone has that level of self-awareness.
Unlike the other two series, it can be difficult to discern in Apple Cider Vinegar what is real and what is derived from imagination of the writers, who deftly filled in the blanks to create a cohesive story about Gibson, who she was, how she came to be, and the unfortunate consequences of her ambition. What is certain is that she feigned brain cancer to garner sympathy and attention, fraudulently promoted herself as a survivor through natural remedies, leading her to provide false hope to countless cancer sufferers, some of whom could have survived if it weren't for her lies.
The story crosses between three main couples - Belle and her codependent partner, Clive; Milla, a fictitious social media influencer/cancer warrior and her friend/business partner/whistle blower, Chanelle; and Lucy, another fictitious cancer patient who is swayed by the ideas of Milla and Belle, to the dismay of her journalist partner, Justin. Milla represents the misguided social media types who reject expert advice they don't agree with, and end up deceiving themselves and others in the attempt to minimise their cognitive dissonance. Lucy represents those that fall prey to types like Milla and Belle because they are facing abject despair and desperately clinging onto hope.
The series explores the origin of Belle's personality disorder as a combination of innate vulnerabilities and environmental factors, including her dismissive and self-serving mother, which probably isn't far from the truth. People aren't born with narcissistic and antisocial personality disorders, which Belle Gibson would most likely qualify for. Those like her often believe the lies they tell themselves to escape the excruciating shame they feel as a result of their upbringing and actions, and usually have no conscious awareness of their shame.
ACV is a thoughtful examination of desperation and hope, of opportunists and their unwitting prey, of broken children and their dysfunctional childhood, of anecdotal evidence vs scientific reasoning borne out of many years of arduous study and specialist training. Still it could have benefitted from sharper editing and storytelling; six episodes each spanning a full hour seemed overlong. But it does have a killer soundtrack.
Do people learn from such examples of sociopathic creatures and the havoc they wreak, or are we helpless against the sweet empty promises of the cunning and beguiling? The one common thing about snake oil salespeople is that they target people's weaknesses and manipulate these insecurities to their advantage. The defense against them is knowing ourselves better than they do, but not everyone has that level of self-awareness.
Unlike the other two series, it can be difficult to discern in Apple Cider Vinegar what is real and what is derived from imagination of the writers, who deftly filled in the blanks to create a cohesive story about Gibson, who she was, how she came to be, and the unfortunate consequences of her ambition. What is certain is that she feigned brain cancer to garner sympathy and attention, fraudulently promoted herself as a survivor through natural remedies, leading her to provide false hope to countless cancer sufferers, some of whom could have survived if it weren't for her lies.
The story crosses between three main couples - Belle and her codependent partner, Clive; Milla, a fictitious social media influencer/cancer warrior and her friend/business partner/whistle blower, Chanelle; and Lucy, another fictitious cancer patient who is swayed by the ideas of Milla and Belle, to the dismay of her journalist partner, Justin. Milla represents the misguided social media types who reject expert advice they don't agree with, and end up deceiving themselves and others in the attempt to minimise their cognitive dissonance. Lucy represents those that fall prey to types like Milla and Belle because they are facing abject despair and desperately clinging onto hope.
The series explores the origin of Belle's personality disorder as a combination of innate vulnerabilities and environmental factors, including her dismissive and self-serving mother, which probably isn't far from the truth. People aren't born with narcissistic and antisocial personality disorders, which Belle Gibson would most likely qualify for. Those like her often believe the lies they tell themselves to escape the excruciating shame they feel as a result of their upbringing and actions, and usually have no conscious awareness of their shame.
ACV is a thoughtful examination of desperation and hope, of opportunists and their unwitting prey, of broken children and their dysfunctional childhood, of anecdotal evidence vs scientific reasoning borne out of many years of arduous study and specialist training. Still it could have benefitted from sharper editing and storytelling; six episodes each spanning a full hour seemed overlong. But it does have a killer soundtrack.
All true stories have different versions depending on the teller. Apple Cider Vinegar clearly states at the start of each episode that certain characters & events have been changed or fictionalised. And all that is true in this series, was best told in this provocative manner. This account is a reminder of how some swindles are driven by a need for recognition and greed but may also be driven by deep rooted trauma and mental illness. Fantastic screenplay and editing. The characters are thorny and convincing. This poignant story is about deception, delusion, desperation, relationships and hope. It hits hard leaving you choked with a sour taste in your mouth. Bravo production team and Netflix. You done a great job with this one. Time to google the actual true story.
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Did you know
- TriviaA book has been written by the two journalists who uncovered the true case of Belle Gibson; "The Woman Who Fooled The World: the true story of fake wellness guru Belle Gibson".
- Quotes
Milla Blake: I want another option.
Dr. Xiu: Death. Death is another option.
- ConnectionsFeatured in WatchMojo: Top 10 TV Shows of 2025 So Far (2025)
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