Gwyneth Paltrow's Goop gets called out by NASA over healing stickers

Authored by money.cnn.com and submitted by The_Councillor

NASA just called out Goop, the movie star's lifestyle brand, over wearable healing stickers that it promoted on its website.

In a post on Thursday, Goop said that the stickers, which are sold by a group called Body Vibes, are "made with the same conductive carbon material NASA uses to line space suits so they can monitor an astronaut's vitals during wear."

The wearables, which cost about $60 for a pack of 10, come "pre-programmed to an ideal frequency" and "promote healing" by tackling "imbalances," the website claimed.

Related: Gwyneth Paltrow lives clean but likes her humor dirty

But NASA told CNNMoney it doesn't use carbon material to line its suits, and its current spacesuit has no carbon fibers in it at all.

Gizmodo was the first to take on Goop's NASA claims about the stickers. Goop removed the NASA mention from its post after the outlet's story went up.

In a statement, Goop said its advice and recommendations do not constitute "formal endorsements."

"The opinions expressed by the experts and companies we profile do not necessarily represent the views of [Goop]," the brand said. "Based on the statement from NASA, we've gone back to the company to inquire about the claim and removed the claim from our site until we get additional verification."

Body Vibes said it plans to issue a statement but has not yet commented on the matter.

Related: Gwyneth Paltrow reflects on the term 'consciously uncouple'

Earlier this month, Jimmy Kimmel asked Paltrow to walk him through another healthy living claim Goop had made. This one was "earthing," or walking around barefoot for its therapeutic benefits. On its site, Goop said it can help "everything from inflammation and arthritis to insomnia and depression."

There's "some sort of electromagnetic thing" that goes on, Paltrow explained.

"I don't know what the f--- we talk about," she laughed.

grr on June 23rd, 2017 at 06:19 UTC »

The same logic used as those idiots wearing the magnetic bracelets for improved circulation... the iron found in blood is not ferromagnetic. (If it was people would be exploding every time they had a MRI scan).

richardec on June 23rd, 2017 at 06:04 UTC »

"Wearable healing stickers"

Bandages?

HandRailSuicide1 on June 23rd, 2017 at 02:39 UTC »

I want to get rid of all the electrons in my body. Just positive subatomic particles for me, please