Ron Jeremy’s SexPillGuru.com Scam

Ron Jeremy, who is a legend in the pornography industry, has recently been seen all over the web touting what he calls the best male enhancement pill on the market today. His advertisements are everywhere these days, he is featured on his very own website, and he has even been on the airwaves promoting these little magic pills that will make any man’s penis longer, bigger, and thicker.

Lately, Mr. Jeremy has been focused on his own website, SexPillGuru.com, where he himself lays out what he promises to be all the best and most conclusive information about sex pills. He swears by the products and not only rates some of the top names in his “guru” opinion, but he also exposes other products as scams.

Mr. Jeremy would seem the ideal person to turn to when looking for information about male enhancement. After all he has been in 2,098 (and counting) adult films and has directed another 281 (and counting). Additionally, anyone who has ever seen one of Mr. Jeremy’s adult films knows he is known for being very well endowed.  But does he really know what’s best in the male enhancement field?

We decided to delve into the realm of the “sex pill guru” to see if he really knew his stuff. Unfortunately, what we uncovered was nothing more than traditional smoke and mirrors and lots of manipulation. While Mr. Jeremy might be a legend in the pornography industry, he is not the sex pill guru he claims to be. This special one-part investigative report lays it all out on the table and exposes it for what it is; A COMPLETE SCAM.

SCAM ALERT #1: The Same Web Hosting Company?!

Everyone knows of the web hosting company GoDaddy.com. While they are indeed a very popular place to have websites hosted, it has become a place where more lower to middle-tier businesses host their websites. Therefore, it is highly unlikely that the top five brands of sex pills that Mr. Jeremy himself touts on his own website would all have their websites hosted there. Yet there it is in black and white, NATURALLY HUGE, LONGINEXX, ZYREXIN, DAPOVAR, and STAMINA-RX, all hosted at GoDaddy.com

The male enhancement business is a multi-billion dollar per year business and the real top brands would be considered anything but lower to middle-tier companies. This goes beyond mere coincidence and is an obvious red flag when it comes to the validity of Mr. Jeremy’s information.

Having the same web hosting company even implies something more sinister. Could it be that these companies are all collectively plotting to help one another sell products? Talk about unethical.

SCAM ALERT #2: True Identity Hidden from Public

In yet another coincidence that is too blatant to take as anything but malicious intent, NATURALLY HUGE, LONGINEXX, ZYREXIN, DAPOVAR, and STAMINA-RX all hide their true identity using a proxy registration with GoDaddy.com. This means that they all pay extra money to GoDaddy.com in order to keep their identity secret from the public eye. This means that nobody in the private sector can view the company name, company phone number, or any other important company information.

Why would a top-tier male enhancement company want to hide from the public? Could it be that they have something to hide?

SCAM ALERT #3: Same Website Designer for Supposed Independent Companies?

Of the top five brands that Mr. Jeremy pushes on his website, NATURALLY HUGE, LONGINEXX, and ZYREXIN all have their websites designed by the same web designer and/or company yet all three are supposed to be independently owned. This is easy to see by looking at the telltale signs that were left behind in the source code by the not so careful designer. Now, either this designer is top of the line, which it is easy to see that he isn’t, or there is a shortage of web designers willing to work on male enhancement websites.

The more likely scenario is that all three of these “independent” male enhancement companies are working in conjunction with each other and likely tied in by ownership. While there wouldn’t be anything wrong with that, the fact is that Mr. Jeremy’s website is touting these three companies as independent from one another when clearly they are not, which makes the scam bells go off loudly.

SCAM ALERT #4: Vague Videos Fail to Mention Advertised Products

In the initial video that Mr. Jeremy has on his website he says that he will share with everyone which sex pills are the best and which ones are in fact nothing more than scams. He even says how many of the big sex pill “rip-off” artists are upset about how he is “spilling the beans,” but he maintains that he doesn’t care and wants to “tell it like it is.”

However, this vague video fails to actually mention how it is. For that matter, in his video, Mr. Jeremy doesn’t mention one of the top products that his website touts. Not one! This leads to the belief that Mr. Jeremy has no idea what is being put on his own website and was only reading off some script when he was making the video.

SCAM ALERT #5: Putting Focus on Other “Scams” to Gain Credibility

What’s the easiest way to position yourself as a guru while making all others look like a scam? Simple; declare it to be so. In Mr. Jeremy’s videos he conveniently used some smoke and mirrors to call out other companies as “scams” yet he never really says that any of the products listed on his website work or don’t work.

This is actually a brilliant tactic used by some of the best scammers in marketing. What he is doing is taking all the attention off of what he is peddling and putting it all on other products in the marketplace. This gets viewers so wrapped up in the other products and how they are all scams and totally diverts their attention away from the actual products that are being offered for sale.

SCAM ALERT #6: Scam Section More of a Scare Tactic

On Mr. Jeremy’s website there is even a section devoted to exposing other sex pill products as scams. Once you find your way there a new video of Mr. Jeremy pops up in which he says how he hates scams. He goes on for awhile blasting scam companies and scam sex pills, but again, he never says anything about the actual products being pushed on his website.

More smoke and mirrors! He again takes all the focus off of what he is selling and puts it right on other products that he isn’t selling. In fact, this scam section of the website is nothing more than a bunch of scare tactics designed to make the readers distrust all other sex pills and feel comfortable with the ones for sale on Mr. Jeremy’s website.

SCAM ALERT #7: Questionable Credibility

When looking all the way at the bottom of Mr. Jeremy’s website a seal of approval from the National Health Federation can be found. Now, this sounds like a great endorsement and it even has a link that takes you right to the website of the “NHF.” However, this is nothing more than either a paid endorsement or an endorsement without permission meant to make the website look legit.

Upon closer inspection, anyone can easily determine that the products featured on Mr. Jeremy’s website have nothing to do with the National Health Federation or their website. So, how come they can use the organization’s seal? As stated earlier, they either paid for it or didn’t get it.

While the NHF is a real business, such paid promotion can be traced back to as early as 1993. In fact in 1993, Quackwatch.com exposed the quasi-federation for such practices in an article written by Stephen Barrett, M.D. (Read the story here: http://www.quackwatch.com/04ConsumerEducation/Nonrecorg/nhf.html).

So, it isn’t as if any of the products on SexPillGuru.com were so great that they “earned” this seal of approval, someone either paid for the right to put the seal there or simply took it.

This type of paid or “stolen” credibility is just another parlor trick. It’s not like the company received a seal of approval from the FDA, but the logo looks great to the common viewer making it seem that Mr. Jeremy’s website and the products endorsed carry some level of clout.

SCAM ALERT #8: Not Doing Well With the Better Business Bureau

For all the hype that Mr. Jeremy creates with his videos there is one key factor he again fails to mention; the horrible reputation of the products on his website. In fact, most of the products on SexPillGuru.com are keeping the Better Business Bureau plenty busy:

NATURALLY HUGE put out by Bio Vita Labs in California – F Rating with the Better Business Bureau. (Read the report: http://sanjose.bbb.org/business-reviews/Health-Food/Bio-Vita-Labs-in-Palo-Alto-CA-219135)

STAMINA-RX put out by Nutrasource LLCF Rating with the Better Business Bureau. (Read the report: http://www.bbb.org/boise/business-reviews/nutritionists/nutrasource-llc-in-boise-id-5005820/)

ZYREXIN put out by Superbalife International LLC in California – F Rating with the Better Business Bureau with 35 complaints and an ALERT issued on the company. (Read the report: http://www.la.bbb.org/business-reviews/Weight-Control-Preparations-Retail/Superbalife-International-LLC-in-Los-Angeles-CA-100071824)

Add to that another complaint reported to RipoffReport.com about a featured product, LONGINEXX, produced by Dartford Kent Laboratories in California. Here, further proof of the scam is revealed as quoted, “Dartford Kent Laboratories and Smart Health rip-off dishonest fraudulent billing can’t get out of automatic bill internet…”

SCAM ALERT #9: No Legal Disclaimers Included

No matter where you look on Mr. Jeremy’s website you will not successfully find a disclaimer of any kind anywhere. No “results may vary” statement or even a legal disclaimer. This leads any viewer to believe that the male enhancement pills featured on the website all work without question.

But the troubling fact is that there is no mention that Mr. Jeremy or his website are being paid to feature the products that they do. This is in clear violation of the Federal Trade Commission. In fact, Endorsement Guidelines have been around since 1980 and have always required that endorsers disclose their relationship with advertisers, something that Mr. Jeremy’s website does not do.

Unfortunately this is simply another in a long list of examples of smoke and mirrors that SexPillGuru.com features. The mere fact that this website is clearly operating in a manner that is not consistent with the law is a huge concern and should be the largest red flag that is flying on this website.

SCAM ALERT #10: Deceptive Lab Report Results

Lab results are a great way to back up any medicinal claim, but this comes with a caveat; the lab results have to be legit. The lab results featured on SexPillGuru.com are very deceptive and full of misinformation.

For example, according to the lab reports on Mr. Jeremy’s website, L-Arginine is the sole ingredient that makes or breaks the ratings of the products. While a study conducted by the journal BJU International back in 1999 did show promise for the drug in regards to male enhancement, the results were nothing to write home about. In fact, of the 50 men who took five grams of L-Arginine each day, few had better results than the ones who just took the placebo. Yet, SexPillGuru.com claims that this is the most important factor when rating a sex pill.

Here’s what they don’t tell you. L-Arginine is in virtually every male enhancement product on the market today, sometimes in greater amounts than the products featured on SexPillGuru.com. Additionally, L-Arginine is found in a number of nutritional supplements for both men and women. While men may sometimes need help with their “male” enhancement, women have yet to have such a dilemma.

There is also the “ND” (not detected) ingredients situation. Because these products said they worked within an hour, all the “testing” that was done was to look and see if any of the products contained ingredients similar to Viagra (Sildenafil), Levitra (Vardenafil), or Cialis (Tadalafil). So, instead of proper testing, 18 products got the same poor rating based on them containing or not containing these specific ingredients. This is yet another example of manipulation and is far from anything scientific.

SCAM ALERT #11: No Top Brands Tested

Besides lab results that seem clearly doctored to be what Mr. Jeremy and company want them to be there is another problem. Namely, SexPillGuru.com does not test any of the most popular brands of male enhancement pills. So, the products on the page are supposed to be the best available, yet there is no mention one way or the other regarding such popular brands as VigRX Plus, Posolution, Male Extra, Vimax, or any other brand that is widely seen in advertisements nowadays.

SCAM ALERT #12: Websites with Uncanny Similarities

While conducting our investigation we were shocked to find another male enhancement website that was nearly identical to Mr. Jeremy’s. Though the domain name is different, http://www.sexpillscams.com, the content is nearly identical except for the fact that there are no videos of Mr. Jeremy and the website features a totally different top five product lineup.

While it is not immediately known if Mr. Jeremy is involved with this near identical website, if he is then he shows that he truly has no integrity. Involvement in both websites would simply prove that Mr. Jeremy is interested in pushing whatever product or products pay him the most.

SCAM ALERT #13: Both Promotes a Product and Calls it a Scam

In one of the most obvious signs of a scam, Mr. Jeremy both promotes a product at a convention, as seen on YouTube, and then calls it a scam on his own website. Well, which one is it? You decide:


While Mr. Jeremy doesn’t come right out and say it is a “scam” as is his trademark, there is his video talking about how he hates scams right on the page claiming that ExtenZE is a huge scam. So again, which one is it?

In Conclusion

Ron Jeremy may know all about the pornography industry, but it seems like he doesn’t even know what is on his own website. With all the contradictions and blatant smoke and mirrors, SexPillGuru.com doesn’t contain much more than a bunch of promoted garbage.

The site is not without some accomplishments. The products “exposed” as scams are truly scams, but so too are the products that are being peddled. The bottom line is that consumers looking for male enhancement solutions should steer clear of Mr. Jeremy’s website and anything else he has to say on the subject.

Instead of taking the word of a pornography star, why not take the word of other consumers? You know, real men who had the exact same problem and found real, viable solutions. This is where the real information is! But where do you find this?

Real, non-bias, non-compensated male enhancement information does exist. That’s what sizemd.com is all about. By allowing consumers to write honest reviews on the various male enhancement products available today, all consumers can finally get the real scoop on what works and what doesn’t.

Comments { 0 }

Fake Male Enhancement Review Websites

You probably wonder why on almost every single male enhancement review site different products are featured. And almost in every case number one recommended product is also different. This is actually very easy question.

We’ve done our investigation, tracked the leads and what we’ve found simply shocked us. Behind almost every single review site was either the recommended product owner or an affiliate who’s getting compensated generously for recommending particular product.

Their only goal is not to inform the consumer but exactly the opposite, to misinform having the only goal in mind, which is to sell their sawdust product to get a commission.

We’re not okay with that therefore we’ve created a growing database of fake review sites you should stay away from. If you find a review site you believes is fake or want us to check it for credibility don’t hesitate to contact us.

 

Comments { 0 }

FDA Crackdown on Viagra-Like Supplements – The Washington Post

Comments { 0 }