
The Goop-ification of wellness is on the way out (you can thank Gen Z)
Rina Raphael, Los Angeles Times
July 2016: This case was voluntarily dismissed When a complaint is dismissed with prejudice, it cannot be refiled..
June 2016: The parties to this lawsuit reached a settlement agreement and notified the court that they will file a dismissal within 30 days. The terms of the agreement have not been disclosed.
November 2014: A class-action lawsuit was filed against I A Nutrition, Inc. for allegedly misrepresenting the amount of whey protein contained in Inner Armour dietary supplements, including Mass Peak Whey Hydrolysate Enhanced and Nitro Peak Whey Hydrolysate Enhanced. According to the complaint, the company uses a practice called “protein spiking” (i.e., adding cheaper non-protein ingredients, such as amino acids, to increase the nitrogen content, which then makes it appear as if the product has more protein than it actually has). As a result, the product labels misleadingly represent that the supplements contain more than twice the amount of protein they actually have.
The plaintiffs also claim that the product labels do not list alanine and tryptophan as ingredients when, in fact, the supplements contain both, and instead list L-Leucine, L-Valine, and L-Isoleucin (“BCAA’s) as ingredients when the supplements actually do not contain any of these free form amino acids.
(Mee et al v. I A Nutrition, Inc., Case No. 14-cv-5006, N. D. CA.).
For more information about class-action lawsuits regarding the use of “protein-spiking” and TINA.org’s coverage of the issue, click here.
Rina Raphael, Los Angeles Times
Organization reportedly shared information with tech companies for marketing purposes.
Are these gaming glasses really ‘clinically proven’ to improve sleep?
MADISON, CONN. August 9, 2022 — An increasing number of celebrities are jumping on the NFT bandwagon, showcasing their digital assets on social media for the world to see. But are…
Katie Notopoulos, BuzzFeed News