What Is This “Acai Berry” People Have Been Talking About?
Question by Jazzie: What is this “Acai berry” People have been talking about?
Well i’ve been seeing things about a thing called “Acai Berry”. What is it? Does it help you lose weight?
Is it yummy? Explain please (=
Best answer:
Answer by ur awesome. if u agree send
DON’T FALL FOR THIS NEW FRUIT FAD. it’s just like any other fruit but it has a higher concentration of antioxidants than a lot of fruit and greens but you can blend fresh spinach or blueberries for a LOT LESS MONEY and get the same antioxidants.
it’s already been said that this is the new MARKETING HYPE FAD FRUIT. don’t waste your money please. educate yourself before you buy anything with this.
Know better? Leave your own answer in the comments!

























Acai berries, like blueberries, are high in antioxidants and other healthy nutrients. However, there are lot of scams right now on the internet. Usually, acai berry sites want to give you a free trial if you pay a small shipping fee, like $ 3 or so. But the fine print says they’ll bill your card for $ 80-$ 150 within days after the trial ends and then bill your card every month or so afterwards. You end up having to cancel your card in order to get the charges to stop. The scammers are usually foreign so calling, asking, emailing them to stop charging you won’t work. They just keep charging you.
Buy your berries locally at GNC in your nearby mall or at a local health foods grocer. Avoid the internet scams which are widespread these days.
Honestly I havent tried any of the berry programs but Im thinking about it. While I decide I am just sticking with strawberries.
A scam and a misinterpretation of fact to make money.
Best advice, don’t buy acai stuff anywhere.
In truth, açai juice has only middling levels of antioxidants—less than that of Concord grape, blueberry, and black cherry juices.
Oprah Winfrey, Mehmet Oz, and Rachael Ray have all publicly disassociated themselves from the açai sites that make unauthorized use their names.
There are no magical berries from the Brazilian rainforest that cure obesity. Claims are unproven, evidence is anecdotal, antioxidants are beneficial, but do not aid weight loss.
“These diet ‘bloggers’ are just a mirage,” Schardt said. “Their weight loss is courtesy of Photoshop, not açai.”