Caterina Balivo and the tisanoreica

Caterina Balivo and the tisanoreica

Before talking to you about the news that Caterina Balivo, who does not need to go on a diet, strangely goes on a diet and he lets everyone know, and strangely he chooses the Tisanoreica diet, taking photos of the products of Gianluca Mech’s company and filling his posts with hashtags that suggest that she has become a testimonial (and that she is therefore paid by Tisanoreica), I want tell you about a little thing that happened in this blog some time ago, when I published the SDM protein diet, meal replacement diet that was followed by Laura Pausini. Which, she mentioned the diet in an interview. A Pausini fan wrote to me saying that it was not true that the singer was a testimonial of her: I reminded her of the interview, and the fact that the news had gone around the network a bit. That Pausini had lost weight with the SDM protein diet was in short true, or so it was said, based on the statements of the singer herself. Indirect testimonial? Yes sure,

Now, however, the case of Caterina Balivo makes it much more evident how using a famous person as a testimonial for a diet on social media can no longer be silenced, with the risk that it becomes a case of hidden or indirect advertising. If Caterina Balivo goes on a diet, in short, it will be her business even if she obviously does not need it, being very thin. If you say you are on a diet, as you actually said (“I’m on a super controlled diet”, we read in the post of November 3, in which you talk about Tisanoreica. In that of October 27, we read: as you know, my green journey has begun, inside and out, so here I am at the test of # tisanoreica @gianlucamech: a multivitamin concentrate with natural extracts “), the negative message is there for everyone those fans who seeing a thin woman on a diet may tend to emulate her.

In short, if you are a show character and you want to go on a diet while being thin, I think maybe you could keep the news to yourself.
If you talk about it on social media, the risk of influencing your fans or admirers does exist, especially if you are a face of television, and they are teenagers or people with weight problems.

But if you also claim to use  substitute meals promoted by a specific company or other kind of product, and post a photo of a product , and use a social network to formulate a message that encourages you to buy (“… who said that Do I have to give up pasta? Here is @gianlucamech’s pasta that will help me both for #tisanoreica and for a more regular diet that does not make me say goodbye to more decisive tastes … Just like these penne here! … “), arousing curiosity of those who follow you, well, this could be seen as hidden advertising .

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