Who is Belle Gibson, the Australian scammer who inspired Netflix’s Apple Cider Vinegar?

By Abby Amoakuh

Published Jan 16, 2025 at 12:30 PM

Reading time: 2 minutes

65152

In our shattered meritocracy, there is nothing more tantalising than stories about successful scammers; they act as anti-heroes who are able to exploit a broken system for their own gain and expose the dark reality that getting ahead often has nothing to do with work ethic, merit, and talent. So, after the huge success of Hustlers, The Dropout, and Inventing Anna, Netflix is serving up the next highly-anticipated adaptation of a real-life fraudster story: Apple Cider Vinegar.

Over the course of its six episode arc, the series covers the journey of Belle Gibson, an influencer and wellness guru, who claimed that she was managing multiple cancer diagnoses through diet, exercise, and holistic medicine. The only issue was that Gibson never actually had cancer… Here’s everything you need to know about her fall from grace.

Who is Belle Gibson?

Annabelle Natalie Gibson, is an Australian influencer who rose to fame in 2013, after she claimed to have been diagnosed with terminal cancer four years earlier and given only four months to live. In fact, Gibson announced that she was burdened with multiple cancers in her “blood, spleen, brain and uterus” and that she was tackling this through an unconventional approach: no drugs.

Instead, Gibson advocated for clean eating and natural therapies. The Australian’s philosophy quickly turned her into the high-priestess of the online wellness community and the influencer leveraged this and her large following of faithful acolytes into a cookbook deal with Penguin and an app project with Apple.

Both of these ventures were ultimately called ‘The Whole Pantry’ and helped Gibson to firmly cement her wellness empire. On Google Play, the app has been installed between 10,000 to 50,000 times. While on Apple’s iTunes, it has been downloaded 300,000 times, although apparently 200,000 of those were in the first month. By early 2015, it was estimated that over $1 million in sales of ‘The Whole Pantry’ app and book. So in other words, Gibson was very successful.

The influencer claimed that a portion of each app sale would go to charity but unfortunately, that was as true as her cancer diagnosis.

Her empire started to crumble when fans and critics alike raised questions about her lavish lifestyle, consisting of a posh townhouse, a luxury car and office space, cosmetic procedures, designer clothing and international holidays.

After it was uncovered that Gibson used the money she claimed to have donated to charity, the entrepreneur admitted that her claims of having multiple cancers were fabricated, confirming that “none of it’s true” in April 2015 during an interview with Australia’s Women’s Weekly magazine.

Two years later, in 2017, the Federal Court found the influencer guilty of engaging in misleading and deceptive conduct, subsequently serving her with a $410,000 fine.

You can probably imagine how the rest of the story played out: The content creator set all her accounts on private mode, as her book was taken off the shelves, and her app removed from all app stores.

“I don’t want forgiveness. I just think [speaking out] was the responsible thing to do. Above anything, I would like people to say, ‘OK, she’s human’,” Gibson confessed during her interview.

Needless to say, this response was slammed as humiliating and out of touch, especially by her loyal followers who were struggling with real cancer pathologies.

Why do we love female scammers?

Some of the most prominent stories about scammers feature women, as the various documentaries about Anna Delvey and Elizabeth Homes reflect. According to LSE PhD researcher Kat Higgins, this is because women are associated with care and propriety meaning that fraudulent and deceptive behaviour is seen as a larger moral transgression on them. So the answer is basically sexism.

 

View this post on Instagram

 

A post shared by London School of Economics (@londonschoolofeconomics)

When is ‘Apple Cider Vinegar’ coming out on Netflix?

Netflix’s Apple Cider Vinegar is set to grace our screens on 6 February 2025. The show will see American actor Kaitlyn Dever take on the role of Gibson, having previously received acclaim for her performance in the 2019 drama Unbelievable.

Keep On Reading

By Abby Amoakuh

Sydney Sweeney claps back at TikTok scammer who pretended to be her dietitian

By Deanna Pearce

Rihanna’s Savage X Fenty settles $1.2 million lawsuit for defrauding customers

By Fatou Ferraro Mboup

Is the Ask for Angela scheme a fraud? New shocking investigation exposes dangerous failings

By Fatou Ferraro Mboup

Could the next pope be Black? Peter Turkson’s papal bid could rewrite over 1,500 years of Vatican history

By Eliza Frost

How Jet2holidays and Jess Glynne became the sound of the summer

By Charlie Sawyer

The #MeToo movement is at risk. How the Harvey Weinstein retrial risks doing unimaginable damage 

By Eliza Frost

Taylor Swift is engaged to the boy on the football team, Travis Kelce 

By Fatou Ferraro Mboup

How incel TikTok accounts are rebranding to avoid getting banned

By Charlie Sawyer

Is Brooklyn Beckham feuding with his family? Rumours circulate after the chef skips his dad David Beckham’s 50th birthday

By Charlie Sawyer

Gen Zers are taking out travel insurance policies for their Labubus ahead of summer

By Eliza Frost

It now takes 20 hours of work a week to survive as a UK university student

By Fatou Ferraro Mboup

MrBeast hunts for volunteers to test the viral question: who would win between 100 men and one gorilla?

By Alma Fabiani

The disturbing TikTok trend sexualising fake Down syndrome faces using AI filters

By Charlie Sawyer

Harry Potter TV series crew bewildered over production’s strange decision on location to film iconic scene

By Abby Amoakuh

Right-wing Christian podcaster claims that airport body scanners can turn you gay

By Charlie Sawyer

Meghan Trainor is not responsible for eradicating fatphobia. But her fans also have a right to be upset

By Abby Amoakuh

Francesca Farago reveals that influencers are being paid to participate in trend mocking Hailey Bieber

By Charlie Sawyer

What is Mar-a-Lago face? Unpacking the beauty trend prompted by Donald Trump’s second term

By Eliza Frost

Why is Taylor not Team Conrad in The Summer I Turned Pretty?

By Fatou Ferraro Mboup

Keke Palmer’s past resurfaces amid backlash over Jonathan Majors podcast interview