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29 Responses

  1. Died at the RAM stick 😂 So perfect – and sadly it honestly probably works as well. Anyway, I saw the Kailo ad immediately searched for vids like this. How people believe this stuff? At a maximum its placebo (which, to be fair, is scientifically valid and people experience good from – and often experience bad, too (otherwise known as "nocebo")). I mean, listen to the chick who says "I can feel it heating up" – she had no clue what the product was and assumed it was just another heat patch, or icy hot patch. Her brain was using past experience to fill in the gaps in her knowledge about the new product. I agree with you, "scam" is the right word…

  2. They were all paid actors. That was the first thing I noticed when I saw the ad 15 minutes ago. As a person who lives in constant debilitating pain and have been for many yrs and being a person who is open minded to things that make at least some sense this ad makes me angry. How many people who can’t work because of the pain and if they are lucky they’re at least on a fixed income are going to lose money they cannot afford to lose just to find out they should’ve given the money to some homeless person who actually needed it! That’s how I felt after the supposed pain relief creams…maybe if your skin hurts but that’s not going to make it to the joint! And now look how many scammers are making money on all those creams! Too many people are making money off of the desperation of the sick and poor who can’t afford to be scammed! Why hasn’t the FDA stepped in? They regulate the meds that do work, why aren’t they shutting down those that don’t?!!

  3. There are legitimate pain management devices that work by messing with the electrical nerve impulses in your body. I don't know if this is one. The only one I'm familiar with has to be implanted by a doctor, but it would be wonderful if this thing works. Agree with you there's some fishy stuff going on with the campaign.

  4. Ahaha so the guy in the ad (the one that got me searchin) wasnt even the guy that made it?? Hes an actor??? In FUCKING HIGH SCHOOL MUSICAL??

    Is it supposed to tingle??? It does for some people… STFU!!!

    This screams scam product…..

    I'm subbed 👍

  5. Hallelujah, a person, young even, who actually has the ability to think and reason!! Unaffected by the world of bull hockey and nonsense surrounding us!! Lol. Loved the video! Great job separating truth from fiction…sadly I bet they've sold $$ of those woolen sheathed patches…

  6. I was thinking about the same when I read that these nano capacitors act like an antenna to comunĂ­cate to the brain. Last time I checked I need a radio to tune into those frequencies. BTW, capacitors hold electric charge.

  7. I want to know what is actually in the patch, is it just a bunch of copper or what? I actually don't know weather to think this is a scam or if it actually does anything. The nerve system has lots of nerves that go everywhere in the body, It does make me wonder with the separated regions on the patch if a nerve under that area of skin terminates there and another ends in another zone if that zone of what I assume is electrically conductive material acts like a grounding rod to that nerve and having the separate zones mean difrent nerves become more isolated from each other and efectivly scramble the signal going to the brain so maybe it doesn't lessen the pain at the injury or point, but it just sends such a scrambled confusing message up your nerves that by the time it gets to the brain it has no idea what the hell the nerve is trying to say, drowning out the signal. But saying it's NANO TEC is BS. I would love to test this but how do you test a pain device without letting the people your testing it on know what it's for so you're not just fishing for reactions. I would say even if it's a placebo maybe it's worth it, but $120 seems like a lot for a placebo, I'll offer to sell you some magic rocks for $5 they cure pain too, and every week it gives you one wish. So I don't know what to make of it. Would like to hear any scientific trials of it.

  8. Just got an ad for this on YouTube. I actually work in the medical field and have extensively studied anatomy and physiology and can 100% confirm this will do nothing to you besides placebo. Placebo is hugely influential over pain so that’s where uninformed NPCs will believe this product does anything. What a pos company selling bs to boomers.

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