The still wife of this DJ/actor/sometime p.orn star from an acting family is facing a several hundred thousand dollar fine for shilling for companies that lie about their products.

Plus, the wife doesn’t mention her posts are ads.

Princess Love

Ray J

L&HHH’s Princess Love Promoted Weight-Loss Cream She Doesn’t Even Use And People Are Mad

Princess Love is coming under fire for being yet another celebrity who’s been caught promoting a product on Instagram that clearly isn’t legit. User @igfamousbydana took to her own page to expose Love’s problematic post, saying, “we have to start holding influencers accountable for promoting trash products and snake oil cures.”

Yesterday, the Love & Hip Hop Hollywood star made a post on her Instagram page promoting a weight-loss cream brand. The post, which features the before and after snapshots of an unidentified woman, encourages Love’s followers to get the results they’ve been “wanting forever” by buying the brand’s creams, which are marketed as having the power to slim one’s waist, remove cellulite, and treat stretch marks.

She said in the caption that their product could “Get You Those Results You Been Wanting Forever!!” and that they “Will give you Results That Will Have You Coming Back !!” She posted that with a before and after image of a woman whose “after” appeared either heavily photoshopped or brought about through means which a cream can’t provide. People took to the image to criticize its alleged results.

But an Instagram user @igfamousbydana, who says her specialty is in cosmetic procedures and skincare, made her own post where she criticized Princess. She called her out for promoting the “snake oil” brand to her over 3.3 million followers.

Dana wrote, “#PrincessLove was paid to advertise this cream to her 3.3 million followers. Besides the fact that the idea that a cream can completely change your body fat content is laughable, check out the awful photoshop (curved lines everywhere & someone forgot to make her arms thinner?) and she forgot to take the quotes out from the caption they told her to post.”

“There’s nothing wrong with being paid to post and promoting products you believe in – but this snake oil product?? This is insulting and demeaning to every one of her 3+ million followers,” she said. “Please don’t buy this crap. Don’t even go to the elixir page.”

In the comments of Dana’s post, user @takarathekoala shared her own experience with promoting weight-loss products as an influencer. Getting “called out” herself, Takara said she gained perspective on what she was really doing, which she describes as “feeding off of the insecurities of people to make a quick buck.”

“Fun fact,” Takara started, “I used to promote flat tummy tea and sh-t thinking ‘well I’m just trying to pay my rent, what’s the problem’ until eventually someone called me out and I saw what I was doing from another perspective. I know some people say ‘well people are dumb enough to buy it’ but really, in our current society, you’re feeding off of the insecurities of people to make a quick buck, and you’re usually lying while you do it.” – Source

 

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She started mentioning #ad.. see below post from 2 days ago:

 

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