Ultimate Acai is another of those acai products that is produced with no thought at about the customer. The powdered acai used is heat-dried, which means it has lost most of its goodness. Any goodness that remains is then diluted by the additional of worthless, cheap, ‘filler’ material. All of this means a very cheap product to produce. Unfortunately this isn’t passed onto the customer: quite the opposite.

What makes Ultimate Acai even worse is that it is marketed in an underhand and entirely misleading way. There are loads of “fake news” sites around (see the graphic below for lots more example) which pretend to be an authoritative voice on acai. In fact these are sites that are made purely for the purpose of peddling garbage products like Ultimate Acai.

One of the fake news site that sells Ultimate Acai is called www.weeklyhealthusa.org. This, and the alleged news reader Karen Simpson who fronts the site, and nothing less than a blatant confidence scam. These scams are easy to setup: once Ultimate Acai is shut down the site will change its name, the reporter will change her name, and the product will change its label. Simple and quick.

On the site the main feature offer is the “free trial” of acai. This free trial is no such thing, and is actually just a front to get you to sign up to a subscription-based service that you didn’t know about. Once entrapped, you will be paying up to $100 a month to receive the Ultimate Acai crap. The solution is simple: stay well clear of Acai Ultimate, www.weeklyhealthusa.com and Karen Simpson.

To learn more about acai scams you might want to visit our acai free trial scams page. You will see there that this is a common scam which many people fall foul of.

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