Monday, June 11, 2012

Extenze Reviews: Can You Trust Them?


Extenze reviews are all over the World Wide Web because Extenze is one of the most heavily marketed male enhancement supplements. Armed with a half hour infomercial, magazine articles, and celebrity endorsers like former Dallas Cowboys head coach Jimmy Johnson and NASCAR driver Kevin Conway, the pill quickly became popular. It even received added publicity when American runner LaShawn Merritt, the 2008 Beijing Olympics 400 meter champion, was banned from the sport for two years after testing positive for dehydroepiandrosterone or DHEA, an ingredient in Extenze. DHEA is a legally available steroid that is banned for athletic competitions.

Those who bought the product after seeing the 30-minute infomercial featuring a certain Dr. Daniel Stein and men who have given positive Extenze reviews were unaware that the participants were all paid actors. In short, the whole thing was a scam. The Orange Country District Attorney’s office fined the manufacturer, Dish Direct, Inc., 300,000 dollars in July 2006 for false advertising. The manufacturer was begging to be fined because it claimed that the product can increase penis size by as much as 27 percent without providing scientific evidence. The pills were also found to contain high levels of lead, which is dangerous to your health. The company settled with the authorities and was supposed to modify the claims to avoid any misleading information. However, Dish Direct, Inc. violated the settlement agreement and still distributed flyers stating the taking the tablets will result in penis growth of up to 25 percent.

More Reasons Why You Should Not Believe Positive Extenze Reviews

Dr. Stein, the so-called expert who recommended the product, supposedly wrote an article that appeared as a full-page advertisement in Stuff magazine. He claimed that he endorsed the pills for free because he truly believed that they were effective, and that he had not recommended any similar products in the past. This is a blatant lie because Stein in fact had recommended Alzare, another scam product. The authorities quickly shut down the Alzare operation after discovering that it was a fraud.

The manufacturer of Extenze, knowing that its pills have been exposed as snake oil, continued to plant positive as well as negative Extenze reviews online. Negative ones are posted supposedly to discredit the product but will actually encourage consumers to buy the pills. Like other scam products, free trials and money back guarantees were offered. However, many users have complained about their credit cards being used without authorization, not getting a refund when they returned the product, getting pills that they did not order, and not receiving the product at all.

Despite being exposed as professional scammers and all the complaints that it has received, the manufacturer continues to proclaim that Extenze is the best product of its kind. These practices give the entire industry a bad name. To avoid getting ripped off, do your research before buying penis pills.

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