In "Apple Cider Vinegar," Milla visits the Hirsch Institute, inspired by Max Gerson's pseudoscientific cancer treatment.
Chanelle in "Apple Cider Vinegar" is similar to Chanelle McAuliffe, one of Belle Gibson's friends who tipped off reporters ...
In 2015, two young Australian reporters named Beau Donelly and Nick Toscano broke the story that would become Netflix's ...
Drama series "Apple Cider Vinegar" shows how influencer Belle Gibson falsely claimed to have terminal brain cancer.
A show like “Apple Cider Vinegar,” based on “The Woman Who Fooled the World,” by the journalists who eventually punctured ...
Netflix's latest binge is a semi-true depiction of Instagram influencer Belle Gibson (Kaitlyn Dever), who lied about having ...
Netflix’s new series Apple Cider Vinegar tells the shocking story of a woman named Belle Gibson, who pretends to have cancer ...
Wellness influencer Belle Gibson claimed for years that she had cured her brain cancer through nutrition and holistic ...
Milla's story is eerily similar to that of Jessica Ainscough, the so-called Australian "Wellness Warrior"—but series creator ...
BOTTOM LINE: Smart and compelling, with great performances, "Apple Cider Vinegar" also has a lot to say about human nature.
Netflix’s "Apple Cider Vinegar" tells the story of an Australian woman who fakes brain cancer and builds a massive wellness ...
Throughout Apple Cider Vinegar, journalists are investigating Belle. One of them, a journalist named Justin (Mark Coles Smith ...