Backstory (first video)
The whole fanfare started when Vishen Lakhiani read an article from the New York Times, labelling our country (Malaysia) as Asia fattest country.
He felt sick to the stomach after reading the article and made the viral video exposing Nestlé.
His accusation is mainly revolve around Nestlé’s role in launching false advertising with one of their most popular product in Malaysia — Milo
Note: Milo is EXTREMELY popular in Malaysia.
That Facebook video, naturally caused a tremendous uproar among the Malaysians.
In fact, around one million people watched the video with 17,000 people shared it.
That caused Nestlé responded back with this press release published in their Facebook page:
Vishen hits back with a follow-up video (watch below), citing multiple evidences against Nestlé false advertisement campaigns
- Milo is not a health drink; despite what Nestlé claimed it to be in various ads
- How sugar is bad for our kids’ health
- How Nestlé is screwing milk
- How Nestlé is screwing breakfast
- How Nestlé used sugar to get their customer addicted, and eventually buy more
- How Nestlé other products are not actually environmental-friendly
- Brought out Nestlé mission statement and scrutinisez it
What do you think Steemians?
Please share me your thoughts on the comments below
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