Scammers marketed misleading BurnJaro reviews regarding a purported pink salt trick recipe allegedly endorsed by Dr. Casey Means.
Scammers marketed misleading BurnJaro reviews and videos regarding a purported pink salt trick recipe allegedly endorsed by Dr. Casey Means.

A growing number of people are searching for BurnJaro reviews, hoping to find real results about advertisements promoting ingredients for a so-called “pink salt trick recipe” that can allegedly help people lose weight fast. These ads use deepfake visuals and AI-generated audio to falsely suggest that Dr. Casey Means and Dr. Steven Gundry endorse the product—but they do not. The same videos also feature manipulated clips of Adele, Kim Kardashian, and Rebel Wilson, falsely implying they support the “pink salt trick recipe” as a natural alternative to prescription medications. None of these celebrities or doctors have ever endorsed BurnJaro, SlimJaro or any pink salt-based method for weight loss.

There is no actual pink salt trick recipe. Despite the endless promises in YouTube ads and scammy websites, there is no special mixture, no proven method and certainly no safe shortcut to dropping “27 pounds in 15 days” or “52 pounds in 90 days,” as some of the misleading promotions falsely claim. Every part of this scam, from the fake recipe presentation to the AI-generated doctor endorsements, is manufactured to build trust and steal money.

First, here’s a YouTube video I created in late March 2025 about a previous iteration of the BurnJaro and pink salt trick recipe scam:

The Lie About the Pink Salt Trick Recipe

One of the first traps is the alluring phrase: pink salt trick recipe. These four words appear again and again across the promotion for the product, including in YouTube ads and pop-up websites. They’re designed to bait viewers with the promise of a secret weight loss solution that sounds natural, simple and science-backed. In reality, there is no such thing as a pink salt trick recipe. It’s a phrase made up by marketers behind BurnJaro and SlimJaro to generate curiosity and keep viewers watching long enough to get reeled into purchasing a bottle of unproven pills.

Early in the scam’s funnel, a woman calling herself Katie Harvey appears in a static YouTube ad. She stands in a kitchen, surrounded by household ingredients like lemons, baking soda and apple cider vinegar. She pretends to be mixing a homemade remedy while referencing pink Himalayan salt, implying it’s part of some secret breakthrough. But this performance leads nowhere. There’s no real recipe—just a sales tactic.

Anyone expecting to receive a full instructional guide or medically sound method never gets what they were promised. Instead, at the end of the sales funnel, viewers are eventually redirected to order BurnJaro pills—nothing more than an unbranded supplement with no publicly listed company, no clinical trials and no valid endorsements.

Deepfake Doctors and False Authority

After the static YouTube ad, things take a darker turn. One of the most manipulative tools used in the BurnJaro scam is the misuse of doctors’ names and likenesses. The marketing video features a deepfake of Dr. Casey Means, a real medical professional who has never endorsed BurnJaro, SlimJaro or anything remotely related to a pink salt trick recipe. Her image is animated using AI deepfake visuals and her voice is faked using AI-generated narration. She is falsely shown saying:

“Put a pinch of this pink salt trick under your tongue every night and watch your body burn 27 pounds in just 15 days, and 52 pounds in 90 days.”

This is completely fabricated. The real Dr. Casey Means has no involvement in BurnJaro or any related product. Likewise, Dr. Steven Gundry—another name falsely used in connection with this scam—has never backed BurnJaro, promoted a pink salt trick recipe or claimed any such weight loss method to be effective. These respected names are simply dragged into the scam without consent to give the fake presentation a veneer of scientific legitimacy.

This abuse of identity and use of deepfake technology is not just unethical—it’s dangerous. It misleads consumers into believing that real doctors endorse the product when they absolutely do not.

Fake Celebrity Endorsements Add Fuel to the Fire

The lies don’t stop with medical professionals. The BurnJaro marketing video also includes fabricated footage and audio from celebrities like Adele, Kim Kardashian and Rebel Wilson, falsely claiming they used the pink salt trick recipe as a “natural Mounjaro.”

None of these celebrities have endorsed BurnJaro, SlimJaro or the fake pink salt trick recipe. Their names and images are used without permission, edited to appear as if they’re speaking positively about a product they’ve likely never heard of. There’s no connection between these women and this scam, but their presence in the marketing video is meant to falsely boost credibility and prey on trust.

Deceptive YouTube Ads and Fake Websites

Again, the scam begins where many unsuspecting consumers spend their time—YouTube. Ads begin with a friendly, relatable woman who appears to be offering a DIY home remedy. She introduces the idea of the pink salt trick recipe, showing basic kitchen items and hinting at a transformative secret.

After watching for a minute or two, users are led to a website like bellemuse.site, where they’re asked to fill out a quick survey about their weight loss goals. This survey is a smokescreen—no answers matter, and it’s only there to simulate personalization. After completion, users are shown a long video featuring the deepfake doctors, AI narration and fake testimonials—all leading toward a single product pitch for BurnJaro on angelcurve.site.

The website where the video plays may look polished, but its design is not an indication of legitimacy. The site hides ownership information, offers no customer support and fails to list a company name, founder or any real-world contact information. These are all red flags of a digital scam.

Google Ads Reveal Foreign Origins

A quick search for ”BurnJaro” or ”SlimJaro” on Google reveals something even more alarming. The ads promoting the product often originate from outside the United States, with ad origins listed as Brazil or Hong Kong. Yet the content of the ads never mentions these locations—likely because the people behind them know it would raise suspicion among U.S. consumers.

This mismatch between ad origin and target audience is a common tactic in scams. Marketers based overseas launch English-language ad campaigns and use remote hosting services and cloaking techniques to appear local and trustworthy. But the trail of foreign activity exposes the truth—this is not a domestic product backed by real medical research or regulatory oversight.

Manipulation of Reputable Platforms

Scammers promoting BurnJaro have also gone to great lengths to pollute search engine results. Multiple domains have been infiltrated to create the illusion of legitimacy. For example, content has appeared on the University of Oregon website—redirecting viewers to shady third-party supplement sites. This appears to be the result of an exploit or unauthorized content injection, not any real endorsement from the university.

Similar tactics are used on platforms like FilmFreeway, Backstage.com, and even Chess.com, where scammers sneak in fake blog posts or articles with keyword-stuffed titles. These aren’t meaningful reviews—they’re spam designed to occupy top spots in search results.

In another case, a supposed press release appeared on Yahoo Finance, claiming BurnJaro is based in Monterey, California, with contact information in Florida—but missing key details like a full street address or a verifiable company name. The phone number provided leads nowhere meaningful. These efforts are all designed to impersonate trustworthy sources while offering no real proof of legitimacy.

BurnJaro on Retail Sites: Still Not Trustworthy

Search results also bring up listings on Amazon, eBay, Walmart and other major retailers. However, just because a product appears on a known platform doesn’t make it safe. One listing for BurnJaro Max from SYVOR had zero reviews, no product details and was published under a brand name with no background. Other listings on Walmart show similar patterns—single-star ratings with no written reviews or evidence of real customers.

Some of the names linked to BurnJaro, like GlycoBoost and Mitolyn, have been part of past scams, raising even more suspicion. The same recycled brand names appear across multiple fake product promotions. This tactic allows scammers to quickly repackage the same pills under a new label and re-launch the scam every few months.

No Medical Backing, No Clinical Studies, No Proof

Perhaps the most damning fact of all—there is no medical validation whatsoever for BurnJaro or SlimJaro, including no clinical studies, no hospital endorsements and no support from leading universities. The pill’s ingredients, sourcing and formulation are all kept in the dark. Nothing about the product is transparent or independently verified.

Despite the heavy claims, BurnJaro isn’t featured in scientific publications or even backed by any real medical experts. It’s simply a bottle of pills promoted with false hope and slick marketing. And while comparisons to Mounjaro (a real medication for diabetes and weight loss) are frequently made in the ad videos, the two products have nothing in common.

BurnJaro Reviews: Why You Should Stay Skeptical

Anyone searching for BurnJaro reviews should know the truth—most positive reviews found online are fake, fabricated or possibly created by affiliates trying to earn a commission. Some users post reviews for similar products on sites like Trustpilot, but the entries are often vague, overly positive and potentially paid for. Other sources like the BBB or Consumer Reports offer no official listings or investigations into BurnJaro, which should be a red flag in itself.

Complaints are likely to surface from people who were misled by the fake video presentations or false endorsements. If refund issues, side effects or scam experiences are reported, they may never reach public view due to the fly-by-night nature of these marketing campaigns. The scammers often shut down one product and relaunch under a new name, like SlimJaro, before any watchdog agency can catch up.

Final Thoughts

The BurnJaro scam—as well as SlimJaro and the fictional pink salt trick recipe—represents a troubling evolution of digital marketing fraud. By combining YouTube ads, deepfake technology, fake doctor and celebrity endorsements, and false listings across legitimate websites, the campaign appears believable at first glance. But it all falls apart under scrutiny.

There is no magic shortcut to weight loss. The pink salt trick recipe is not real. BurnJaro is not a miracle pill. And every so-called review or endorsement tied to it is part of a manipulative scam that exploits consumer trust.

Anyone searching for BurnJaro reviews, information about SlimJaro or the pink salt trick recipe, or answers about this sketchy product should know: the only real protection is skepticism, awareness and guidance from a licensed medical professional—not a deepfake doctor in a YouTube ad.

Editor’s Note: I utilized ChatGPT to help write this article. However, ChatGPT used the transcript from a well-researched YouTube video I created about this subject, meaning hard work went into the creation of this scam-busting effort. Scammers use AI to scam people. It’s time we use AI to bust their scams.

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L L

😭What happens if I or others have purchased it already? Lawsuit anyone? Mine was on impulse (May 2025) and they won’t refund, told me I can have 30% discount, now they Stopped responding to my emails? i have yet to Call these People as I am so frustrated! Guessing I just lost $300.00. Thank you for your article though! I hope it helps many others!
Yes, I know, trust me I know, it was temporary insanity on my part to buy at 2am and not fully coherent. Thank you for your work, I would appreciate your reply.

Susan Wells Vaughan

this happened to me because I know who Dr Means is and trusted her — I can’t believe i fell for this. it was sold as lipobound with Dr Means supposedly endorsing it and supposedly introduced by Oprah. they charge you via CartPanda, another shady company facilitating this fraud. They refuse to cancel before it’s shipped when you learn from Dr Means about the scam. If you go to the liposome website they allege a 90-day full refund – -just write them it says. But there is no info on the site to say where or how to write them. I had to research to find contact info and called and was hung up on when I expressed my anger about the fraud. I refused the package –one bax that came with THREE LARGE CHARGES to my credit card. I have disputed these charges and I suggest everyone do the same. I would like to know if there is a gov’t agency that will investigate this fraud and shut down these companies. I was trying to help someone who tried Wegovy and threw up and was very sick from it. I am a forme grad student of public health and I can’t believe I fell for this, but I simple did not know AI could fake something this well. these people need to be SUED AND SHUT DOWN.

Paula

Thanks for the truth. Didn’t buy it, but still wanted to know about it. Too good to be true. Thanks for the truth