Belle Gibson: Instagram’s worst con artist or the most infuriating?

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Belle Gibson surrounded by reporters
Belle Gibson surrounded by reporters in The Search for Instagram’s Worst Con Artist. | Netflix

Netflix is usually pretty good about including trigger warnings on its content. However, it failed miserably with two of its February releases: Apple Cider Vinegar and The Search for Instagram’s Worst Con Artist. The first is a limited series inspired by con artist Belle Gibson, and the second is a documentary about the fake wellness blogger.

Both should have cautioned viewers that the content they were about to witness could be very upsetting. Especially for cancer survivors or those who’ve lost anyone to the disease or helped them battle it. Or really anyone with a heart.

Which was a shame. I knew very little about either Apple Cider Vinegar or The Search for Instagram’s Worst Con Artist, except that both were about one of my favorite true crime genres: con artists. I also knew that they involved someone who faked having cancer.

Apple Cider Vinegar Left a Particularly Bad Taste

In the case of Apple Cider Vinegar, I was also psyched to see Kaitlyn Dever (Booksmart, The Last of Us) and Alycia Debnam-Carey (Fear the Walking Dead, Saint X, The Lost Flowers of Alice Hart). While we were enjoying Dever and Debnam-Carey’s performances, my husband and I were ultimately so disgusted by the storyline that we couldn’t finish the series.

Not that it was any fault of the writers. It was as well written as it was performed. We just couldn’t stomach our rage.

My husband also couldn’t take my tears anymore. Debnam-Carey’s character particularly touched my heart. The scene with her and Mark Coles Smith (who played Justin Guthrie) in the pool at the wellness center annihilated me into a blubbering mess. That’s when my husband requested, “Let’s pass on this series, babe. My heart can’t stand to see you like this.”

Would a trigger warning have helped? I don’t know. I just know that I failed to appreciate how viscerally this story would affect me.

What did Belle Gibson do so wrong?

The Search for Instagram’s Worst Con Artist documents Gibson’s meteoric rise and spectacular fall. She started as a wellness blogger, claiming to have been diagnosed with terminal brain cancer. Doctors allegedly gave her four months to live. Yet, through healthy lifestyle choices, four years later, she was not only still alive but thriving.

She capitalized on her success by creating a popular app, The Whole Pantry, which also manifested into a cookbook of the same name.

However, while she dazzled some to the point of blind allegiance, her story smelled fishy to others. Thank goodness for the critical thinkers of the world. In this case, journalists Richard Guilliatt and Clair Weaver. Guillat outed Gibson with his reporting in The Australian. Weaver did the same in The Australian Women’s Weekly

Both rooted out the truth from similar, yet slightly different, angles. Before she knew it, they’d revealed Gibson’s deception to the world. Which, quite simply, was that she’d never had cancer. But that didn’t stop her from trying to profit off of her story.

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Cancer Scammers

As a cancer survivor myself, who also lost both parents to the disease, I was beyond offended by Gibson’s heinousness.

Yet, we ended up devouring The Search for Instagram’s Worst Con Artist as soon as it was released. Although, the whole time, I was absolutely spitting at the screen in fury.

To some extent, I can understand people being intoxicated by the sympathy spotlight. Personally, I shy away from it. I appreciated every single call, card, or visit while I battled my hitchhiker. Seeing the outpouring of love and concern helped power me through some of the darkest, hardest days.

However, the majority of the time, I found it exhausting. Physically, emotionally, and mentally. People meant well, but it got to the point where if I heard, “Hang in there,” one more time, I was ready to punch someone.

In The Search for Instagram’s Worst Con Artist, there was a clip of her giggling after being complimented for how healthy she looked despite what she was going through. That should’ve been everyone’s biggest clue.

If she or Amanda Riley, another cancer scammer who’s the subject of ABC’s Scamanda docuseries (which started airing January 30), ever really had to endure cancer and its treatments, they’d know just how infuriating their lies are to those of us who have really been through it. And why they better hope they never truly get it.

Which, speaking of, always boggles me. People who fake cancer are a special breed of arrogant. Do they think it could never happen to them? Don’t they worry they’ll jinx themselves with their lies?

That’s what I don’t get at all. They’ve clearly never watched someone battling the disease. Normally it’s something I’d never want to wish on my worst enemy, but in these cases, I can think of no more fitting punishment.

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What do you think should happen to cancer scammers? Besides restitution to people they may have swindled money from, what punishment should they be subjected to?

2 Comments

  1. Those sort of people deserve karma to steamroll over them.
    I had a run in with cancer back in 2010. I was lucky they caught it early, but the radiation therapy kicked my ass.
    I refused to wear pink though. Instead I bought this really badass t-shirt from November Fire: a copy of a Durer woodprint depicting the Archangel Michael (and other angels) beating the snot out of some demons. I felt it suited the struggle and my attitude toward it.
    Cancer is a monster. I am sorry you lost your parents to it.

  2. Cancer scamming is just downright evil. What a TERRIBLE thing to do to others. It’s so much more than a little white lie. Huge fines and prison.

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