âšď¸ Skipped - page is already crawled
| Filter | Status | Condition | Details |
|---|---|---|---|
| HTTP status | PASS | download_http_code = 200 | HTTP 200 |
| Age cutoff | PASS | download_stamp > now() - 6 MONTH | 1.2 months ago |
| History drop | PASS | isNull(history_drop_reason) | No drop reason |
| Spam/ban | PASS | fh_dont_index != 1 AND ml_spam_score = 0 | ml_spam_score=0 |
| Canonical | PASS | meta_canonical IS NULL OR = '' OR = src_unparsed | Not set |
| Property | Value |
|---|---|
| URL | https://www.edmontonscene.com/2021/01/02/un-well-netflix-docuseries-review/ |
| Last Crawled | 2026-03-11 01:10:56 (1 month ago) |
| First Indexed | 2022-10-31 06:09:31 (3 years ago) |
| HTTP Status Code | 200 |
| Meta Title | (Un) Well Netflix docuseries review | Edmonton Scene |
| Meta Description | null |
| Meta Canonical | null |
| Boilerpipe Text | Wellness. A global industry worth trillions of dollars. Does it bring health and healing? Or are falling victim to false promises? Are we really gettingâŚwell?
Review by Vivian Poon
After watching every episode of the Netflix Docuseries,
(Un)Well
, I wonder if
Iâve
fallen victim to false promises.
I originally found this series while looking for some anti-multi-level marketing videos on YouTube to watch. (Yeah, I know I have weird hobbies.) A YouTuber that I liked, Cruel World Happy Mind, reviewed the first episode of the series that discussed Essential Oils (FYI, that episode caused essential oil MLMs like DoTerra and Young Living to make statements against the Docuseries. Young Living even told their distributors not to watch it.)
From there, I watched a trailer for the entire show and it seemed like something I would really like.
From what I could tell, the show was meant to expose the alternative health industry and how itâs often used by scam artists to con desperate people and spread misinformation.
Each episode of the Docuseries explores a specific alternative medicine. Here are the episode titles in order:
Essential Oils;
Tantric Sex;
Bulking up with Breast Milk;
Fasting;
Ayahuasca; and
Bee Sting Therapy.
However, after watching more and more episodes of the series, I slowly began to realize that it was not living up to my expectations. Iâll explain why in a minute â I hope youâre ready for my rant â but before I can do that, I need to talk about how each episode is structured first.
Every episode starts off with dramatic and ominous music along with voice-overs of different people talking about the featured alternative treatment.
For example, in episode one, a woman states that âPeople talk about aromatherapy as if itâs got some, sort of mystical property. Itâs touted as an alternative to mainstream medicine.â
A man, who will be later introduced as Eric Zielinski, states âIâve had people tell me, âMedicine has failed me.â They had cancer, they used essential oils. Now they donât have cancer.â
Another woman talks about how essential oils are a part of her identity and itâs a lifestyle for her.
âItâs like a cult,â says a different woman. â[MLMs] prey on housewives and mothers.â
The introductory section seems rather foreboding, as if the Docuseries intended to make harsh critiques against the Wellness Industry.
And it does (kind of) do that for the first forty to maybe forty-five minutes. Each episode of the show draws from a variety of experiences and opinions, both reputable and not so reputable. For example, episode one features professionals like Amy Quarberg (a holistic nurse and clinical aromatherapist from the St. Johnâs Hospital from Maplewood, Minnesota) and Dr. E. Joy Bowles (a researcher and author whoâs written books such as
The Chemistry of Aromatherapeutic Oils
and
Dr. Joyâs Aromatherapy.)
It also shows opinions from people like Eric Zielinski, an entrepreneur and licenced chiropractor, who runs a blog about essential oils and sells courses on how to use them. Usually, my favourite part of the show is when crackpots like Zielinski talk because they often say some pretty crazy things that make your jaw drop.
For example, when Zielinski explains how much the digital courses he sells are, he says, âWe keep our prices so affordable. I mean, our most expensive master class is $77 for digital access. Like anyone can afford that, even if youâre on food stamps, government assistance. Hey, stop drinking Starbucks for two weeks in a row, and thereâs $75, right? Thatâs our master class!â
This comment illustrates just how privileged Zielinski is and shows how out of touch he is with people who struggle financially. As well, he states outright that essential oils can cure cancer. Yikes.
Episode One isnât the only one with ridiculous quotes, though. For instance, in Episode Four, Geoffrey Woo (CEO/Co-founder of HVMN, a keto supplement company), has a lot of interesting things to say about fasting.
When describing how he found out about fasting, he claims, âLooking at the research and the data, it seemed very compelling. And that got me thinking, who invented breakfast, lunch, and dinner? Did God tell us to eat three meals a day? I havenât seen that in any holy book. My perspective is that the default state of humanity is not constantly consuming. The default state of humans is not eating.â
He then goes onto explain how intermittent fasting is a âthoughtful pause in the consumption of food.â This sounds fine at first until he says that he fasts for one a half to three days every week. He also goes on seven-day fasts in addition to the short ones. To me, Woo sounds like someone with an eating disorder. Not to mention that his beliefs about fasting are dangerous. Heâs encouraging people not to eat for as long as possible.
In the same episode, Loren Lockman (Director of the Tanglewood Wellness Center), comments that âI truly believe that the body can heal itself from anything if they fast long enoughâ. Later in the episode, Lockman admits that the youngest client admitted to the Center was only two years old. Yeah, they made a two-year-old fast.
Let that sink in for a minute.
Elisabeth Anderson-Sienna (mother and breast milk donor in Beaverton, Oregon) in Episode Three says that âI personally have no problem selling breast milk to adults . . . breast milk is incredible. It is, in my opinion, like, the most organic, the most pure, naturally-made substance for humans.â Which, in my opinion, is a pretty unsubstantiated claim to say about breast milk. Common sense (youâd think) would dictate that yes, breast milk is a pure naturally-made substance for human BABIES, not adults.
Admittedly, there are some things that I like about the show. Itâs great to see that
(Un)Well
doesnât always show people like Zielinski, Woo, Lockman, and Anderson-Sienna in the best light. These people not only profit from selling their alternative health treatments, but they also make unsubstantiated health claims which can be dangerous and mislead people who are desperately seeking relief or a cure for a terminal illness.
I also liked how the docuseries is educational and teaches the audience to think twice about the information that they may find on the internet. It also lists the dangers that alternative health treatments can cause.
For example, direct sales distributors like Allison Huish tell their customers that ingesting essential oils is not only a safe thing to do but itâs also beneficial. Thereâs even a cringy close-up shot of Huish putting a few undiluted drops straight into her mouth. Later on in the episode, we meet a former essential oils distributor named Stacy Haluka. She discusses at length how ingesting these oils has caused painful rashes to form all over her body. And sheâs not alone, the episode points out a database where hundreds of people report the side effects that they experienced from essential oils. One person even had a severe asthma attack that eventually led to pneumonitis and hospitalization.
However, the narrative of the show is surprisingly neutral, and I find this commitment to neutrality incredibly disappointing. During the last fifteen minutes, the show always takes an unfortunate turn and demonstrates some positive testimonials and benefits of an alternative treatment.
For instance, even with its warnings against essential oils, I canât help but suspect that the show also raises the point that essential oils can be beneficial in smaller doses, with inhalation only, and used with the mindset of coping with rather than curing a health issue.
The majority of Episode One focuses on a woman named Julie Marshall and her autistic daughter, Sarah. Julie hopes to find some oils that will help Sarah sleep and calm down when sheâs feeling overly energetic or overwhelmed. The experience that Julie has with essential oils is overall positive. She follows the advice of a registered clinical aromatherapist who argues that aromatherapy can help autistic children deal with overstimulation and lack of sleep.
Julie is one of those moms who advocate for natural and plant-based treatments when it comes to autistic children. While the show argues that essential oils in conjunction with medication can be beneficial, Julie doesnât even let her daughter take melatonin, even though Sarah has difficulties sleeping and Julie acknowledges that sleep could help with her daughterâs physical and mental wellbeing. It makes me wonder if Julie will rely heavily on essential oils to help with Sarahâs insomnia and hyperactivity.
At the end of the episode, Julie happily reports that Sarah sleeps better now because of the oils and sheâs a lot less fussy during the day. Sheâs also using âandâ in sentences, which Julie attributes to good sleep.
I find that ending the episodes in such a positive way negates the warnings the episode had tried to provide beforehand. I think that the show does this to display neutrality or evenhandedness on a controversial subject.
In my opinion, the worst episode in terms of neutrality is the fourth one (âFastingâ). The first three-quarters of the episode points out how fasting isnât too different from an eating disorder. It also mentions the experience of a young man named Jonathon Chambers who died while doing an extended water fast at the Tanglewood Health Centre. It illustrated how medical and non-medical centers that offer supervised fasts can still be incredibly dangerous. And it feels like thatâs the moral of the story, right? Extended fasts can cause a myriad of health problems, and even death.
However, in the last fifteen minutes, the episode shifts and focuses on the benefits of fasting, Suddenly, the non-diegetic music is soft, cheerful, and inspiring as Mike Maser (an entrepreneur and cancer survivor) explains how fasting for five days during every round of chemo helped him to overcome cancer. Maser only had to do two out of six rounds of chemo, which he attributes entirely to fasting. And to this day, he continues to do a five day fast every so often.
Afterwards, a researcher named Dr. Valter Longo, who does fasting experiments with lab mice, explained that his research showed that fasting cured mice with type two diabetes, type one diabetes, and multiple sclerosis. Fasting also helped mice with cancer survive through chemotherapy treatments.
Finally, the episode ends with a woman named Wanda who maintains that her twenty-eight-day water-only fast cleansed her system. She felt that a combination of healthy eating and fasting will prevent her breast cancer from coming back. âI just feel like Iâve done something for me to help take care of myself for the future,â Wanda says with a teary smile. And then the episode ends. It felt like the show was trying to encourage the viewer to try fasting. I can say this because
I
seriously considered trying intermittent fasting once the episode was over.
I take issue with the episode structure that spends forty minutes explaining the dangers of alternative treatments and the last fifteen minutes discussing the benefits. The last fifteen minutes of positivity is what is going to stick into the viewerâs mind the most.
I find that (Un)Well is too positive and too lenient towards alternative medicine. We donât need that right now in our society where COVID-19 continues to kill people on a daily basis, where there are anti maskers, anti-vaxxers, and people who profit from these alternative treatments running rampant and spreading misleading information. What we need is for people to be on the same page and listen to doctors and medical health professionals.
Because letâs face it, the alternative health treatments mentioned in this docuseries are useless at their best â medication can work just as well if not even better. At their worst, theyâre dangerous. These treatments could cause someone permanent damage, leave them financially destitute, mentally traumatized, or even kill them.
This series was so disappointing and I hated the journalistic evenhandedness it tried to keep throughout the series. Giving scientific research and anecdotes from crackpots equal weight is both dangerous and bad journalism. Also, I thought that the showâs neutrality gave too much legitimacy to people who make unsubstantiated claims. They shouldnât have a platform anywhere, especially on Netflix. This is even more true with a world-wide pandemic happening.
I would also like to point out that only three of the six episodes have a director credit. It makes me wonder if the directors took their names off due to being unhappy with the end product or something sketchy is going on behind the scenes.
If youâre someone who is neutral on the topic of alternative health treatments or donât really have much of an opinion on them, this show is for you. Itâs well-produced and fascinating to watch. Itâs best to watch this show in several sittings, though, as every episode is nearly an hour long.
However, if youâre someone like me who sees the wellness industry for what it is â a scam â then it might be best to sit this one out.
(Un)Well
streaming on Netflix (six episodes)
official website |
| Markdown | [](https://www.edmontonscene.com/)
- [Ballet](https://www.edmontonscene.com/category/ballet/)
- [Classical music](https://www.edmontonscene.com/category/classical-music/)
- [Food](https://www.edmontonscene.com/category/food/)
- [Opera](https://www.edmontonscene.com/category/opera/)
- [Popular music](https://www.edmontonscene.com/category/popular-music/)
- [Theatre](https://www.edmontonscene.com/category/theatre/)
- [Visual arts](https://www.edmontonscene.com/category/visual-arts/)
- [Books](https://www.edmontonscene.com/category/books/)
- [Comedy](https://www.edmontonscene.com/category/comedy/)
- [Movies](https://www.edmontonscene.com/category/movies/)
- [Writer Resources](https://www.edmontonscene.com/writer-resources/)
- [About Us](https://www.edmontonscene.com/about-us/)
Select Page
# (Un) Well Netflix docuseries review
Posted by [admin](https://www.edmontonscene.com/author/admin/ "Posts by admin") \| Jan 2, 2021 \| [Movies](https://www.edmontonscene.com/category/movies/), [Review](https://www.edmontonscene.com/category/review/)
**Wellness. A global industry worth trillions of dollars. Does it bring health and healing? Or are falling victim to false promises? Are we really gettingâŚwell?**

Review by Vivian Poon
***
After watching every episode of the Netflix Docuseries, *(Un)Well*, I wonder if *Iâve* fallen victim to false promises.
I originally found this series while looking for some anti-multi-level marketing videos on YouTube to watch. (Yeah, I know I have weird hobbies.) A YouTuber that I liked, Cruel World Happy Mind, reviewed the first episode of the series that discussed Essential Oils (FYI, that episode caused essential oil MLMs like DoTerra and Young Living to make statements against the Docuseries. Young Living even told their distributors not to watch it.)
From there, I watched a trailer for the entire show and it seemed like something I would really like.
From what I could tell, the show was meant to expose the alternative health industry and how itâs often used by scam artists to con desperate people and spread misinformation.
Each episode of the Docuseries explores a specific alternative medicine. Here are the episode titles in order:
- Essential Oils;
- Tantric Sex;
- Bulking up with Breast Milk;
- Fasting;
- Ayahuasca; and
- Bee Sting Therapy.
However, after watching more and more episodes of the series, I slowly began to realize that it was not living up to my expectations. Iâll explain why in a minute â I hope youâre ready for my rant â but before I can do that, I need to talk about how each episode is structured first.
Every episode starts off with dramatic and ominous music along with voice-overs of different people talking about the featured alternative treatment.
For example, in episode one, a woman states that âPeople talk about aromatherapy as if itâs got some, sort of mystical property. Itâs touted as an alternative to mainstream medicine.â
A man, who will be later introduced as Eric Zielinski, states âIâve had people tell me, âMedicine has failed me.â They had cancer, they used essential oils. Now they donât have cancer.â
Another woman talks about how essential oils are a part of her identity and itâs a lifestyle for her.
âItâs like a cult,â says a different woman. â\[MLMs\] prey on housewives and mothers.â
The introductory section seems rather foreboding, as if the Docuseries intended to make harsh critiques against the Wellness Industry.
And it does (kind of) do that for the first forty to maybe forty-five minutes. Each episode of the show draws from a variety of experiences and opinions, both reputable and not so reputable. For example, episode one features professionals like Amy Quarberg (a holistic nurse and clinical aromatherapist from the St. Johnâs Hospital from Maplewood, Minnesota) and Dr. E. Joy Bowles (a researcher and author whoâs written books such as *The Chemistry of Aromatherapeutic Oils* and *Dr. Joyâs Aromatherapy.)*
It also shows opinions from people like Eric Zielinski, an entrepreneur and licenced chiropractor, who runs a blog about essential oils and sells courses on how to use them. Usually, my favourite part of the show is when crackpots like Zielinski talk because they often say some pretty crazy things that make your jaw drop.
For example, when Zielinski explains how much the digital courses he sells are, he says, âWe keep our prices so affordable. I mean, our most expensive master class is \$77 for digital access. Like anyone can afford that, even if youâre on food stamps, government assistance. Hey, stop drinking Starbucks for two weeks in a row, and thereâs \$75, right? Thatâs our master class!â
This comment illustrates just how privileged Zielinski is and shows how out of touch he is with people who struggle financially. As well, he states outright that essential oils can cure cancer. Yikes.
Episode One isnât the only one with ridiculous quotes, though. For instance, in Episode Four, Geoffrey Woo (CEO/Co-founder of HVMN, a keto supplement company), has a lot of interesting things to say about fasting.
When describing how he found out about fasting, he claims, âLooking at the research and the data, it seemed very compelling. And that got me thinking, who invented breakfast, lunch, and dinner? Did God tell us to eat three meals a day? I havenât seen that in any holy book. My perspective is that the default state of humanity is not constantly consuming. The default state of humans is not eating.â
He then goes onto explain how intermittent fasting is a âthoughtful pause in the consumption of food.â This sounds fine at first until he says that he fasts for one a half to three days every week. He also goes on seven-day fasts in addition to the short ones. To me, Woo sounds like someone with an eating disorder. Not to mention that his beliefs about fasting are dangerous. Heâs encouraging people not to eat for as long as possible.
In the same episode, Loren Lockman (Director of the Tanglewood Wellness Center), comments that âI truly believe that the body can heal itself from anything if they fast long enoughâ. Later in the episode, Lockman admits that the youngest client admitted to the Center was only two years old. Yeah, they made a two-year-old fast.
Let that sink in for a minute.
Elisabeth Anderson-Sienna (mother and breast milk donor in Beaverton, Oregon) in Episode Three says that âI personally have no problem selling breast milk to adults . . . breast milk is incredible. It is, in my opinion, like, the most organic, the most pure, naturally-made substance for humans.â Which, in my opinion, is a pretty unsubstantiated claim to say about breast milk. Common sense (youâd think) would dictate that yes, breast milk is a pure naturally-made substance for human BABIES, not adults.
Admittedly, there are some things that I like about the show. Itâs great to see that *(Un)Well* doesnât always show people like Zielinski, Woo, Lockman, and Anderson-Sienna in the best light. These people not only profit from selling their alternative health treatments, but they also make unsubstantiated health claims which can be dangerous and mislead people who are desperately seeking relief or a cure for a terminal illness.
I also liked how the docuseries is educational and teaches the audience to think twice about the information that they may find on the internet. It also lists the dangers that alternative health treatments can cause.
For example, direct sales distributors like Allison Huish tell their customers that ingesting essential oils is not only a safe thing to do but itâs also beneficial. Thereâs even a cringy close-up shot of Huish putting a few undiluted drops straight into her mouth. Later on in the episode, we meet a former essential oils distributor named Stacy Haluka. She discusses at length how ingesting these oils has caused painful rashes to form all over her body. And sheâs not alone, the episode points out a database where hundreds of people report the side effects that they experienced from essential oils. One person even had a severe asthma attack that eventually led to pneumonitis and hospitalization.
However, the narrative of the show is surprisingly neutral, and I find this commitment to neutrality incredibly disappointing. During the last fifteen minutes, the show always takes an unfortunate turn and demonstrates some positive testimonials and benefits of an alternative treatment.
For instance, even with its warnings against essential oils, I canât help but suspect that the show also raises the point that essential oils can be beneficial in smaller doses, with inhalation only, and used with the mindset of coping with rather than curing a health issue.
The majority of Episode One focuses on a woman named Julie Marshall and her autistic daughter, Sarah. Julie hopes to find some oils that will help Sarah sleep and calm down when sheâs feeling overly energetic or overwhelmed. The experience that Julie has with essential oils is overall positive. She follows the advice of a registered clinical aromatherapist who argues that aromatherapy can help autistic children deal with overstimulation and lack of sleep.
Julie is one of those moms who advocate for natural and plant-based treatments when it comes to autistic children. While the show argues that essential oils in conjunction with medication can be beneficial, Julie doesnât even let her daughter take melatonin, even though Sarah has difficulties sleeping and Julie acknowledges that sleep could help with her daughterâs physical and mental wellbeing. It makes me wonder if Julie will rely heavily on essential oils to help with Sarahâs insomnia and hyperactivity.
At the end of the episode, Julie happily reports that Sarah sleeps better now because of the oils and sheâs a lot less fussy during the day. Sheâs also using âandâ in sentences, which Julie attributes to good sleep.
I find that ending the episodes in such a positive way negates the warnings the episode had tried to provide beforehand. I think that the show does this to display neutrality or evenhandedness on a controversial subject.
In my opinion, the worst episode in terms of neutrality is the fourth one (âFastingâ). The first three-quarters of the episode points out how fasting isnât too different from an eating disorder. It also mentions the experience of a young man named Jonathon Chambers who died while doing an extended water fast at the Tanglewood Health Centre. It illustrated how medical and non-medical centers that offer supervised fasts can still be incredibly dangerous. And it feels like thatâs the moral of the story, right? Extended fasts can cause a myriad of health problems, and even death.
However, in the last fifteen minutes, the episode shifts and focuses on the benefits of fasting, Suddenly, the non-diegetic music is soft, cheerful, and inspiring as Mike Maser (an entrepreneur and cancer survivor) explains how fasting for five days during every round of chemo helped him to overcome cancer. Maser only had to do two out of six rounds of chemo, which he attributes entirely to fasting. And to this day, he continues to do a five day fast every so often.
Afterwards, a researcher named Dr. Valter Longo, who does fasting experiments with lab mice, explained that his research showed that fasting cured mice with type two diabetes, type one diabetes, and multiple sclerosis. Fasting also helped mice with cancer survive through chemotherapy treatments.
Finally, the episode ends with a woman named Wanda who maintains that her twenty-eight-day water-only fast cleansed her system. She felt that a combination of healthy eating and fasting will prevent her breast cancer from coming back. âI just feel like Iâve done something for me to help take care of myself for the future,â Wanda says with a teary smile. And then the episode ends. It felt like the show was trying to encourage the viewer to try fasting. I can say this because *I* seriously considered trying intermittent fasting once the episode was over.
I take issue with the episode structure that spends forty minutes explaining the dangers of alternative treatments and the last fifteen minutes discussing the benefits. The last fifteen minutes of positivity is what is going to stick into the viewerâs mind the most.
I find that (Un)Well is too positive and too lenient towards alternative medicine. We donât need that right now in our society where COVID-19 continues to kill people on a daily basis, where there are anti maskers, anti-vaxxers, and people who profit from these alternative treatments running rampant and spreading misleading information. What we need is for people to be on the same page and listen to doctors and medical health professionals.
Because letâs face it, the alternative health treatments mentioned in this docuseries are useless at their best â medication can work just as well if not even better. At their worst, theyâre dangerous. These treatments could cause someone permanent damage, leave them financially destitute, mentally traumatized, or even kill them.
This series was so disappointing and I hated the journalistic evenhandedness it tried to keep throughout the series. Giving scientific research and anecdotes from crackpots equal weight is both dangerous and bad journalism. Also, I thought that the showâs neutrality gave too much legitimacy to people who make unsubstantiated claims. They shouldnât have a platform anywhere, especially on Netflix. This is even more true with a world-wide pandemic happening.
I would also like to point out that only three of the six episodes have a director credit. It makes me wonder if the directors took their names off due to being unhappy with the end product or something sketchy is going on behind the scenes.
If youâre someone who is neutral on the topic of alternative health treatments or donât really have much of an opinion on them, this show is for you. Itâs well-produced and fascinating to watch. Itâs best to watch this show in several sittings, though, as every episode is nearly an hour long.
However, if youâre someone like me who sees the wellness industry for what it is â a scam â then it might be best to sit this one out.
***
*(Un)Well*
streaming on Netflix (six episodes)
[official website](https://www.netflix.com/ca/title/81044208)
***
Share:
[PreviousMai Vietnamese Fusion restaurant review](https://www.edmontonscene.com/2021/01/02/mai-vietnamese-fusion-restaurant-review/)
[NextInterview with Tyler Copland of PolyHobby](https://www.edmontonscene.com/2021/01/02/interview-with-tyler-copland-of-polyhobby/)
### About The Author

#### [admin](https://www.edmontonscene.com/author/admin/ "View all posts by admin")
### Related Posts
[](https://www.edmontonscene.com/2021/04/25/dvoraks-rusalka-metropolitan-opera-stream-review/ "DvoĹĂĄkâs Rusalka: Metropolitan Opera stream review")
#### [DvoĹĂĄkâs Rusalka: Metropolitan Opera stream review](https://www.edmontonscene.com/2021/04/25/dvoraks-rusalka-metropolitan-opera-stream-review/)
April 25, 2021
[](https://www.edmontonscene.com/2025/03/13/review-bernadettes-eager-service-and-exceptional-cuisine/ "Review: Bernadetteâs Eager Service and Exceptional Cuisine")
#### [Review: Bernadetteâs Eager Service and Exceptional Cuisine](https://www.edmontonscene.com/2025/03/13/review-bernadettes-eager-service-and-exceptional-cuisine/)
March 13, 2025
[](https://www.edmontonscene.com/2023/11/30/just-another-party-or-a-mock-wedding/ "Just Another Party or A Mock Wedding?")
#### [Just Another Party or A Mock Wedding?](https://www.edmontonscene.com/2023/11/30/just-another-party-or-a-mock-wedding/)
November 30, 2023
[](https://www.edmontonscene.com/2020/12/28/over-the-moon-movie-review/ "Over the Moon movie review")
#### [Over the Moon movie review](https://www.edmontonscene.com/2020/12/28/over-the-moon-movie-review/)
December 28, 2020
####
**NEW! [Classical Music Calendar](https://www.edmontonscene.com/5637-2/)**
#### Recent Posts
- [Pop Goes The Opera Celebrates with The Merry Widow](https://www.edmontonscene.com/2026/02/15/pop-goes-the-opera-celebrates-with-the-merry-widow/)
- [Calgary operaâs Hansel and Gretel: review](https://www.edmontonscene.com/2026/02/10/calgary-operas-hansel-and-gretel-review/)
- [Sun, Moon, and Stars: Ben Butterfield recital review](https://www.edmontonscene.com/2026/01/25/sun-moon-and-stars-ben-butterfield-recital-review/)
- [Calgary Opera Madama Butterfly review](https://www.edmontonscene.com/2025/11/22/calgary-opera-madama-butterfly-review/)
- [94th St Extravaganza street photos](https://www.edmontonscene.com/2025/08/30/94th-st-extravaganza-street-photos/)
#### Categories
#### Archives
Archives
Designed by [Elegant Themes](http://www.elegantthemes.com/ "Premium WordPress Themes") \| Powered by [WordPress](http://www.wordpress.org/)
2158 |
| Readable Markdown | **Wellness. A global industry worth trillions of dollars. Does it bring health and healing? Or are falling victim to false promises? Are we really gettingâŚwell?**

Review by Vivian Poon
***
After watching every episode of the Netflix Docuseries, *(Un)Well*, I wonder if *Iâve* fallen victim to false promises.
I originally found this series while looking for some anti-multi-level marketing videos on YouTube to watch. (Yeah, I know I have weird hobbies.) A YouTuber that I liked, Cruel World Happy Mind, reviewed the first episode of the series that discussed Essential Oils (FYI, that episode caused essential oil MLMs like DoTerra and Young Living to make statements against the Docuseries. Young Living even told their distributors not to watch it.)
From there, I watched a trailer for the entire show and it seemed like something I would really like.
From what I could tell, the show was meant to expose the alternative health industry and how itâs often used by scam artists to con desperate people and spread misinformation.
Each episode of the Docuseries explores a specific alternative medicine. Here are the episode titles in order:
- Essential Oils;
- Tantric Sex;
- Bulking up with Breast Milk;
- Fasting;
- Ayahuasca; and
- Bee Sting Therapy.
However, after watching more and more episodes of the series, I slowly began to realize that it was not living up to my expectations. Iâll explain why in a minute â I hope youâre ready for my rant â but before I can do that, I need to talk about how each episode is structured first.
Every episode starts off with dramatic and ominous music along with voice-overs of different people talking about the featured alternative treatment.
For example, in episode one, a woman states that âPeople talk about aromatherapy as if itâs got some, sort of mystical property. Itâs touted as an alternative to mainstream medicine.â
A man, who will be later introduced as Eric Zielinski, states âIâve had people tell me, âMedicine has failed me.â They had cancer, they used essential oils. Now they donât have cancer.â
Another woman talks about how essential oils are a part of her identity and itâs a lifestyle for her.
âItâs like a cult,â says a different woman. â\[MLMs\] prey on housewives and mothers.â
The introductory section seems rather foreboding, as if the Docuseries intended to make harsh critiques against the Wellness Industry.
And it does (kind of) do that for the first forty to maybe forty-five minutes. Each episode of the show draws from a variety of experiences and opinions, both reputable and not so reputable. For example, episode one features professionals like Amy Quarberg (a holistic nurse and clinical aromatherapist from the St. Johnâs Hospital from Maplewood, Minnesota) and Dr. E. Joy Bowles (a researcher and author whoâs written books such as *The Chemistry of Aromatherapeutic Oils* and *Dr. Joyâs Aromatherapy.)*
It also shows opinions from people like Eric Zielinski, an entrepreneur and licenced chiropractor, who runs a blog about essential oils and sells courses on how to use them. Usually, my favourite part of the show is when crackpots like Zielinski talk because they often say some pretty crazy things that make your jaw drop.
For example, when Zielinski explains how much the digital courses he sells are, he says, âWe keep our prices so affordable. I mean, our most expensive master class is \$77 for digital access. Like anyone can afford that, even if youâre on food stamps, government assistance. Hey, stop drinking Starbucks for two weeks in a row, and thereâs \$75, right? Thatâs our master class!â
This comment illustrates just how privileged Zielinski is and shows how out of touch he is with people who struggle financially. As well, he states outright that essential oils can cure cancer. Yikes.
Episode One isnât the only one with ridiculous quotes, though. For instance, in Episode Four, Geoffrey Woo (CEO/Co-founder of HVMN, a keto supplement company), has a lot of interesting things to say about fasting.
When describing how he found out about fasting, he claims, âLooking at the research and the data, it seemed very compelling. And that got me thinking, who invented breakfast, lunch, and dinner? Did God tell us to eat three meals a day? I havenât seen that in any holy book. My perspective is that the default state of humanity is not constantly consuming. The default state of humans is not eating.â
He then goes onto explain how intermittent fasting is a âthoughtful pause in the consumption of food.â This sounds fine at first until he says that he fasts for one a half to three days every week. He also goes on seven-day fasts in addition to the short ones. To me, Woo sounds like someone with an eating disorder. Not to mention that his beliefs about fasting are dangerous. Heâs encouraging people not to eat for as long as possible.
In the same episode, Loren Lockman (Director of the Tanglewood Wellness Center), comments that âI truly believe that the body can heal itself from anything if they fast long enoughâ. Later in the episode, Lockman admits that the youngest client admitted to the Center was only two years old. Yeah, they made a two-year-old fast.
Let that sink in for a minute.
Elisabeth Anderson-Sienna (mother and breast milk donor in Beaverton, Oregon) in Episode Three says that âI personally have no problem selling breast milk to adults . . . breast milk is incredible. It is, in my opinion, like, the most organic, the most pure, naturally-made substance for humans.â Which, in my opinion, is a pretty unsubstantiated claim to say about breast milk. Common sense (youâd think) would dictate that yes, breast milk is a pure naturally-made substance for human BABIES, not adults.
Admittedly, there are some things that I like about the show. Itâs great to see that *(Un)Well* doesnât always show people like Zielinski, Woo, Lockman, and Anderson-Sienna in the best light. These people not only profit from selling their alternative health treatments, but they also make unsubstantiated health claims which can be dangerous and mislead people who are desperately seeking relief or a cure for a terminal illness.
I also liked how the docuseries is educational and teaches the audience to think twice about the information that they may find on the internet. It also lists the dangers that alternative health treatments can cause.
For example, direct sales distributors like Allison Huish tell their customers that ingesting essential oils is not only a safe thing to do but itâs also beneficial. Thereâs even a cringy close-up shot of Huish putting a few undiluted drops straight into her mouth. Later on in the episode, we meet a former essential oils distributor named Stacy Haluka. She discusses at length how ingesting these oils has caused painful rashes to form all over her body. And sheâs not alone, the episode points out a database where hundreds of people report the side effects that they experienced from essential oils. One person even had a severe asthma attack that eventually led to pneumonitis and hospitalization.
However, the narrative of the show is surprisingly neutral, and I find this commitment to neutrality incredibly disappointing. During the last fifteen minutes, the show always takes an unfortunate turn and demonstrates some positive testimonials and benefits of an alternative treatment.
For instance, even with its warnings against essential oils, I canât help but suspect that the show also raises the point that essential oils can be beneficial in smaller doses, with inhalation only, and used with the mindset of coping with rather than curing a health issue.
The majority of Episode One focuses on a woman named Julie Marshall and her autistic daughter, Sarah. Julie hopes to find some oils that will help Sarah sleep and calm down when sheâs feeling overly energetic or overwhelmed. The experience that Julie has with essential oils is overall positive. She follows the advice of a registered clinical aromatherapist who argues that aromatherapy can help autistic children deal with overstimulation and lack of sleep.
Julie is one of those moms who advocate for natural and plant-based treatments when it comes to autistic children. While the show argues that essential oils in conjunction with medication can be beneficial, Julie doesnât even let her daughter take melatonin, even though Sarah has difficulties sleeping and Julie acknowledges that sleep could help with her daughterâs physical and mental wellbeing. It makes me wonder if Julie will rely heavily on essential oils to help with Sarahâs insomnia and hyperactivity.
At the end of the episode, Julie happily reports that Sarah sleeps better now because of the oils and sheâs a lot less fussy during the day. Sheâs also using âandâ in sentences, which Julie attributes to good sleep.
I find that ending the episodes in such a positive way negates the warnings the episode had tried to provide beforehand. I think that the show does this to display neutrality or evenhandedness on a controversial subject.
In my opinion, the worst episode in terms of neutrality is the fourth one (âFastingâ). The first three-quarters of the episode points out how fasting isnât too different from an eating disorder. It also mentions the experience of a young man named Jonathon Chambers who died while doing an extended water fast at the Tanglewood Health Centre. It illustrated how medical and non-medical centers that offer supervised fasts can still be incredibly dangerous. And it feels like thatâs the moral of the story, right? Extended fasts can cause a myriad of health problems, and even death.
However, in the last fifteen minutes, the episode shifts and focuses on the benefits of fasting, Suddenly, the non-diegetic music is soft, cheerful, and inspiring as Mike Maser (an entrepreneur and cancer survivor) explains how fasting for five days during every round of chemo helped him to overcome cancer. Maser only had to do two out of six rounds of chemo, which he attributes entirely to fasting. And to this day, he continues to do a five day fast every so often.
Afterwards, a researcher named Dr. Valter Longo, who does fasting experiments with lab mice, explained that his research showed that fasting cured mice with type two diabetes, type one diabetes, and multiple sclerosis. Fasting also helped mice with cancer survive through chemotherapy treatments.
Finally, the episode ends with a woman named Wanda who maintains that her twenty-eight-day water-only fast cleansed her system. She felt that a combination of healthy eating and fasting will prevent her breast cancer from coming back. âI just feel like Iâve done something for me to help take care of myself for the future,â Wanda says with a teary smile. And then the episode ends. It felt like the show was trying to encourage the viewer to try fasting. I can say this because *I* seriously considered trying intermittent fasting once the episode was over.
I take issue with the episode structure that spends forty minutes explaining the dangers of alternative treatments and the last fifteen minutes discussing the benefits. The last fifteen minutes of positivity is what is going to stick into the viewerâs mind the most.
I find that (Un)Well is too positive and too lenient towards alternative medicine. We donât need that right now in our society where COVID-19 continues to kill people on a daily basis, where there are anti maskers, anti-vaxxers, and people who profit from these alternative treatments running rampant and spreading misleading information. What we need is for people to be on the same page and listen to doctors and medical health professionals.
Because letâs face it, the alternative health treatments mentioned in this docuseries are useless at their best â medication can work just as well if not even better. At their worst, theyâre dangerous. These treatments could cause someone permanent damage, leave them financially destitute, mentally traumatized, or even kill them.
This series was so disappointing and I hated the journalistic evenhandedness it tried to keep throughout the series. Giving scientific research and anecdotes from crackpots equal weight is both dangerous and bad journalism. Also, I thought that the showâs neutrality gave too much legitimacy to people who make unsubstantiated claims. They shouldnât have a platform anywhere, especially on Netflix. This is even more true with a world-wide pandemic happening.
I would also like to point out that only three of the six episodes have a director credit. It makes me wonder if the directors took their names off due to being unhappy with the end product or something sketchy is going on behind the scenes.
If youâre someone who is neutral on the topic of alternative health treatments or donât really have much of an opinion on them, this show is for you. Itâs well-produced and fascinating to watch. Itâs best to watch this show in several sittings, though, as every episode is nearly an hour long.
However, if youâre someone like me who sees the wellness industry for what it is â a scam â then it might be best to sit this one out.
***
*(Un)Well*
streaming on Netflix (six episodes)
[official website](https://www.netflix.com/ca/title/81044208)
*** |
| Shard | 53 (laksa) |
| Root Hash | 10551362775527380853 |
| Unparsed URL | com,edmontonscene!www,/2021/01/02/un-well-netflix-docuseries-review/ s443 |