Scientists and medical professionals did not take kindly to
the announcement. Netflix recently raised its subscription price, and many people are miffed
that this revenue is going to support pseudoscience.
Here is a small sampling of recent tweets written in response to the news:
Really? Goop on @Netflix? Are we out of qualified health professionals who provide #credible advice? I know popularity matters but maybe we can make real science popular instead?— Natalia Stasenko, RD (@NataliaStasenko) February 5, 2019
A bleak development. I'm not naive. Money talks. But giving bunk a platform makes the battle for science more difficult. #StreamingThePostModernDarkAge— Timothy Caulfield (@CaulfieldTim) February 5, 2019
And @netflix screws up, badly. https://t.co/ld5B8a0MPm— David Gorski, MD, PhD (@gorskon) February 5, 2019
So more women will be "enlighten" about putting stones in their vaginas and other idiot stuff?!#Netflix #goop pic.twitter.com/MggkPNsEhd— Dr Earthπππ (@angelovalidiya) February 5, 2019
This sort of shit should be against the law. https://t.co/vskDcumWkC— Dr Siouxsie Wiles (@SiouxsieW) February 5, 2019
There may be some help on the horizon for those concerned about the reckless dissemination of unfounded claims and outright falsehoods. OB/GYN and pain medicine physician, Dr. Jen Gunter, just wrapped production on a new show that promises to provide an antidote against Goop:
It’s ok, she can have her fantasy and fear mongering. I just finished shooting the first season of my fun, factual health show! It will be aspirational vs. authentic— Jennifer Gunter (@DrJenGunter) February 4, 2019
Like it or not, Netflix is enabling the spread of Goop. As Goop oozes more into the mainstream, many argue that Netflix should be held accountable for spreading pseudoscientific nonsense that will, at best, have people wasting money, and at worst could be discouraging people from seeking medical care that actually works.
BILL SULLIVAN is the author of Pleased to Meet Me: How Genes, Germs, and the Environment Make Us Who
We Are (coming August 6, 2019 from National Geographic Books). Sullivan is a professor at the Indiana
University School of Medicine in Indianapolis, where he studies genetics and
infectious disease.