Apple Cider Vinegar, the true story of Belle Gibson starring The Last of Us star Kaitlyn Dever, is one of the biggest shows of the week on Netflix.
Netflix's "Apple Cider Vinegar" tells a fictionalized account of former wellness guru Belle Gibson's story.
Apple Cider Vinegar, the story based on scammer Belle Gibson, has topped Netflix charts world-wide. Here’s a guide to the key players.
I binged the new Netflix show “Apple Cider Vinegar.” It’s mainly about two “wellness” influencers, who both claim you can cure cancer with healthy eating, and without chemo or surgery. The thing is, one of them doesn’t actually have cancer.
Netflix's Apple Cider Vinegar, the Australian drama limited series, which debuted on the platform on February 6, 2025, is based on a real-life scammer, Belle Gibson, a pseudoscience advocate.
Dever has won widespread praise for her virtuosic performance in Netflix's latest true-crime hit, which tells the story of disgraced wellness guru Belle Gibson.
True crime and scammer stories are rife with shocking details ideal for dramatization. That’s no more true than with Netflix’s latest limited series, “Apple Cider Vinegar. F
10 years after she admitted "none of it was true" Belle Gibson's story is now being retold and dramatized in Netflix's newest drama series Apple Cider Vinegar.
In Apple Cider Vinegar, Hek is the PR crisis manager Belle hires after her fraud is exposed. In real life, Belle Gibson was helped by crisis manager Alex Twomey (now known as Titus O'Reily), although he worked pro bono — and doesn't appear to have anything else in common with the fictional character Hek.