Enzyte

April 8th, 2010 by Action Chiropractic Leave a reply »

Who hasn’t heard of Enzyte? Maybe you don’t remember the name, but almost everybody has seen the commercials with the main character Bob, who’s smiling broadly with the whistling theme in the background, women looking at him lustfully and men looking at him with envy. That should spark some memories, especially since most of those commercials are off TV at this time.

Enzyte promised something different than Viagra, which many people thought it was. Enzyte promised permanent male enhancement of one’s penis. The penis was supposed to be larger, thicker, and harder whenever the participant needed it to be. The commercials were funny; it’s just that none of the claims were true.

Enzyte was never Viagra. There isn’t a single pharmaceutical in Enzyte. There are things such as ginkgo biloba zinc oxide , saw palmetto and niacin (Vitamin B3 for most of us). It’s got a number of other things in it as well, some of them herbal, some of them just additives. It was initially marketed as a medication, although to be truthful more alluded to than actually specified, until the FTC got involved and made them change some of their wording.

One of the problems with Enzyte off the top is that there was never any proof that it did anything for anybody. Whereas studies have been shown that says zinc supposedly can help some men with erectile dysfunction, usually it’s men who zinc level is extremely low. Too much zinc in one system isn’t a good thing. The company itself has never been able to produce any studies showing that Enzyte really works, and really hasn’t tried to.

It didn’t help the company any when its creator, Steven Warshak, was convicted and sent to jail on charges of fraud, conspiracy and money laundering. It seems that there was this guarantee that said if there were any men who found that the product didn’t work that they would get double their money back. Not only did that not happen, but in many cases consumers continued to get charged on a monthly basis even when they canceled their subscriptions. It was also stated during the trial that most of the people who worked for Enzyte knew that the claims it made were false.

This product is still on the market, although it’s starting to dwindle. The company has changed its name to Vianda LLC, and been taken over by a new owner. The new organization says that it will continue to market Enzyte as an herbal supplement, and that it has no plans for any new commercials at this time. Truthfully, it’s probably best to move on.

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