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Michigan Dem Senate front-runner Dr. Abdul El-Sayed flogged wacky wares after saying Dr. Oz tries to ‘sell people s— they didn’t need’

michigan-dem-senate-front-runner-dr-abdul-el-sayed-flogged-wacky-wares-after-saying-dr.-oz-tries-to-‘sell-people-s—-they-didn’t-need’
Michigan Dem Senate front-runner Dr. Abdul El-Sayed flogged wacky wares after saying Dr. Oz tries to ‘sell people s— they didn’t need’

WASHINGTON — Democratic Senate candidate Dr. Abdul El-Sayed has a history of promoting questionable health products on his podcast while accusing other health gurus of hawking similar gimmicks.

El-Sayed — who polls show leading Michigan’s primary race ahead of state Sen. Mallory McMorrow and Rep. Haley Stevens — made a stink about Dr. Mehmet Oz during the latter’s Senate run in 2022, accusing him of trying to “sell people s— they didn’t need.”

“He hasn’t been telling it like it is, he’s been telling it like some companies pay him to tell it like it is,” El-Sayed vented about Oz on the “Bad Faith” podcast in 2021.

“He is, in fact, part of the same kind of medical industrial complex that exists to sell you things that you don’t need that are not actually based in any level of science,” he added. “Yet he can … say, ‘Well, I’m a doctor, so you should trust what I have to say.’”

Around that same time, El-Sayed — a trained epidemiologist and future director of the Department of Health, Human, and Veterans Services in Wayne County, Mich. — hosted a healthcare and politics-focused podcast titled “America Dissected,” which featured ads from at least 35 sponsors across 316 episodes.

Collage of two images, featuring a man speaking in front of a bookshelf with promotional text for One Skin skincare products.

Dr. Abdul El-Sayed attacked Dr.Mehmet Oz for promoting health products, while doing the same on his own podcast.

Tweet by Dr. Abdul El-Sayed responding to criticism about Magic Spoon ads on his podcast, explaining he only promotes products that don't make unsubstantiated health claims.

The Michigan Senate hopeful insisted he rejects ads for products that make claims about health.

In March 2022, months after dissing Oz, El-Sayed was called out on social media for promoting Magic Spoon Cereal, a brand that advertises heavily on social media and podcasts.

“I broadly reject any advertisements that are for products making claims about health,” El-Sayed replied in a since-deleted post on X. “Magic spoon [sic] is simply a high-protein, low-carb cereal. They’re not claiming to improve your sleep or add years to your life, which is why I read them.”

Illustration of four Magic Spoon cereal boxes, with Cocoa, Frosted, Peanut Butter, and Fruity flavors.

Dr. Abdul El-Sayed took heat from a social media user for promoting Magic Spoon cereal. Magic Spoon

Despite vowing not to push products “making claims about health,” El-Sayed willingly read ads from companies whose sweeping claims have drawn skepticism from medical experts.

On multiple episodes, El-Sayed touted the Lumen metabolic coach, a breathalyzer-style device that claims to tell users whether they’re burning fats or carbs when exercising before giving advice on nutrition.

“[T]o maximize what it was I was going to eat, or when I was going to work out, I really wanted to know what it was that my body was using for fuel. And that’s why I turned to Lumen,” he explained in one ad read in 2024.

Some health experts have dismissed the device as “quintessential marketing over science,” pointing out that it only measures carbon dioxide output while Respiratory Exchange Ratio (RER) metabolism readers examine other gases.

“If you’re more than three hours without eating, you’ll burn more fat. If you’ve recently consumed some carbohydrates, you’ll burn less fat,” Harbor-UCLA Medical Center researcher Nicholas Tiller told Outside Magazine in May 2022.

“Do you really need an expensive gadget to measure your carbon-dioxide output and tell you this? I just don’t see a practical use for the product in helping people achieve their weight-loss goals.”

El-Sayed also promoted Thrive Market, which sells organic food products and various supplements, hailing it as a way to get all “my healthy essentials delivered.”

Beekeeper's Naturals Royal Jelly Brain Fuel dietary supplement box.

Royal Jelly Brain Fuel purports to counter brain fog and boost mental clarity, Thrive Market

The company boasts products such as “Moon Juice Brain Dust” and “Royal Jelly Brain Fuel,” claiming they boost cognitive function and focus. Many of those types of brain supplements have been widely panned by health experts and El-Sayed did not endorse specific Thrive products on his podcast.

“There’s no evidence to suggest there’s an ingredient in supplements that can improve brain health,” Dr. Pieter Cohen, an internist with Harvard-affiliated Cambridge Health Alliance who has researched dietary supplements, warned this past February.

“Nothing legally contained in supplements has been proven to improve your thinking or prevent memory loss.”

A jar of Moon Juice Brain Dust adaptogens for focus.

Moon Juice Brain Dust claims to enhance one’s focus, alertness, and concentration. Moon Juice

In 2024, Thrive settled a lawsuit for $1.4 million for allegedly hoodwinking customers into automatic subscription renewals and making false claims about its subscription terms.

Collage of an advertisement for Calm with a 40% discount and a man in a video sponsored by Calm.

Dr. Abdul El-Sayed is the frontrunner among Democrats in the Michigan Senate race.

El-Sayed maintained his health podcast from 2019 through 2025, when he launched his Senate bid. The podcast was initially launched with Crooked Media, but the host formed his own company for it in 2024.

Financial disclosures indicate that he made over $100,000 from the production company he formed and that the firm’s value was up to $250,000. Most of that revenue appears to come from sponsorships.

Recently, El-Sayed accused his top primary foe, Stevens, of selling out to “corporations and special interests” despite his own history of shilling for questionable health and wellness companies.

El-Sayed’s campaign did not respond to repeated requests for comment.

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