Glykonex Gluco Capsules Review: The Denzel Washington and Elon Musk Ads Are Deepfakes – Here’s the Proof

Verdict: CONFIRMED SCAM. Glykonex Gluco Capsules is being promoted through deepfake AI videos falsely depicting Denzel Washington and Elon Musk endorsing the product. Neither person has any connection to Glykonex. The checkout funnel hides a recurring monthly subscription in fine print that most buyers never see. Do not purchase this product.


If you found this article because you saw a video of Denzel Washington talking about neuropathy treatment, Elon Musk leaking secrets about blood sugar cures, or a headline claiming “Big Pharma Offered $10,000,000 So You Wouldn’t See This” — stop. I need to tell you something important before you go any further: none of that was real. Denzel Washington said none of those words. Elon Musk has no connection to this product. The video you watched was a deepfake, built using AI to manipulate real footage of real people into saying things they never said.

I’ve been fact-checking scams like this for years, and Glykonex Gluco Capsules follows one of the most deceptive playbooks I’ve seen in this category. Let me walk you through exactly how the operation works — from the fake news website to the hidden subscription buried in the fine print.


How the Scam Reaches You: A Fake Fox News Page

The Glykonex funnel begins with a social media ad that routes you to what appears to be a Fox News article. It is not. The actual domain is something like spinacholiviavitality.top — a scam website impersonating foxnews.com. The real Fox News is at foxnews.com, full stop. Any domain that isn’t foxnews.com claiming to be Fox News is not Fox News.

The fake page displays a headline designed to trigger two emotional responses simultaneously — excitement and righteous anger:

“Confirmed: Elon Musk in Hot Water for Leaking Neuropathy Treatment Secrets. P.S. Big Pharma Offered $10,000,000 So You Wouldn’t See This.”

I want to be direct about what that “Big Pharma” line is doing. It’s not a fact. It’s an emotional manipulation technique designed to make you feel like you’re outsmarting a corrupt system — like pulling out your credit card is an act of defiance rather than exactly what the scammers want you to do. The “Big Pharma is trying to suppress this” narrative has appeared across hundreds of supplement scams, precisely because it works. People who feel like they’re sticking it to a corrupt industry make purchasing decisions faster and with less scrutiny.


The Deepfake Video: What You’re Actually Watching

The page hosts a lengthy video presentation featuring what appears to be Denzel Washington describing a near-catastrophic personal health experience — losing sensation in his legs, facing potential amputation, being told by doctors he had no options. Then Elon Musk appears, supposedly offering him a secret formula from his lab. The results, the video claims, were miraculous.

Here is what actually happened: scammers took a real interview Denzel Washington gave — most likely about a film role — and used AI to manipulate his lip movements and replace his audio with entirely fabricated dialogue. He is almost certainly talking about a movie character in the original footage. He said none of the words attributed to him in this video. He has not endorsed Glykonex. He has no connection to this product.

This technique — deepfake lip-syncing applied to existing interview footage of trusted public figures — is one of the most sophisticated tools now being used in supplement scam marketing. It’s effective specifically because it’s hard to detect without knowing what you’re looking for. The lip movements look plausible. The emotional delivery feels real. The content is completely fabricated.

The reason scammers use figures like Denzel Washington, Elon Musk, Clint Eastwood, and Tom Selleck specifically is calculated. These are people widely perceived as straight-talking, no-nonsense — people who “tell it like it is.” The scammers are deliberately borrowing that persona. If someone you already trust to be blunt and honest appears to be recommending a product, your skepticism drops. That’s the entire mechanism.

To be absolutely clear: no doctors, hospitals, universities, or famous people have ever endorsed Glykonex, Glyconex, or Gluconex. None of the medical professionals or institutions referenced in these videos are real endorsers of this product.


This Product Has Been Sold Before — Under Different Names

One of the clearest signals that Glykonex is part of a long-running scam operation rather than a new product is that I’ve seen this exact formula before, under different names. Glykonex Gluco Capsules bears a striking resemblance to a previous product called Sweet Restore Glycogen Support, and to other blood sugar support supplements operating under similarly-constructed names. The marketing language, the sales funnel structure, the deepfake celebrity endorsement format, the “Big Pharma suppression” narrative — all of it is recycled.

Scammers in this space don’t build new products. They rename existing ones when complaints pile up against the current name, then run the same campaign under fresh branding to reset the search result landscape. If you find yourself searching for a supplement name you’ve never heard of before and can’t find any independent discussion of it outside of the scam funnel itself, that absence is a signal worth paying attention to.


The Hidden Subscription: What the Fine Print Actually Says

This is the part that I find most infuriating about the Glykonex operation, and the part most buyers never discover until it’s too late.

The final destination in the scam funnel is getglykonex.com, which presents itself as a straightforward supplement sales page. What it does not present obviously — not at the top of the page, not in a visible summary at checkout, not in any place a normal shopper would see before completing a purchase — is that you are not making a one-time purchase.

Buried in the terms and conditions at the bottom of the page is the following language: “This product is sold as a program with the price and product being charged and delivered on the initial sale, and then again monthly (every 32 days after the initial purchase).”

That is a recurring subscription. Every 32 days, your card is charged again. The page does not make this obvious because making it obvious would cost sales. The deepfake video, the fake Fox News page, and the urgency-driven sales funnel are all designed to get you to a checkout moment where you’re emotionally engaged, feeling the pressure of a limited-time offer, and moving fast — specifically so you don’t stop to read the fine print at the bottom of the page.

Contact information found on the site, if you need it for a dispute: phone number (877) 272-4181, email [email protected]. The site lists a Sheridan, Wyoming address — 1309 Coffeen Avenue STE 1200, Sheridan, Wyoming 82801 — which I recognized immediately as the type of address associated with anonymous virtual mailbox and LLC registration services widely used to obscure the real location of scam operations. The return address for Glykonex Nutrients is listed as PO Box 227631, Doral, FL 33222 — a separate address that is itself a PO Box.


What Glykonex Actually Is — At Best

I want to be honest about one nuance here, because I think it matters: the video making the miracle claims and the checkout page are sometimes presented separately, without a clean, obvious link between them. In those cases, there’s no verified proof the company behind the product directly produced the deepfake ads rather than affiliates acting independently.

What I can tell you with confidence is this: at best, Glykonex Gluco Capsules is a standard blood sugar support supplement. There is no credible independent evidence it does anything special for neuropathy, nerve pain, blood glucose, or weight loss beyond what any comparable supplement might do. The deepfake Denzel Washington video claiming miraculous results is not evidence of anything except that scammers are willing to fabricate celebrity endorsements to sell ordinary products at a premium.

If you have genuine concerns about blood sugar, neuropathy, or nerve health — and especially if you’re facing symptoms serious enough that the premise of this ad felt personally relevant — please see a doctor. A real physician can run real tests, identify what’s actually happening, and recommend evidence-based treatment. A supplement you found through a deepfake ad cannot.


Key Red Flags at a Glance

Red FlagWhat It Means
Fake Fox News page (spinacholiviavitality.top)Impersonating a legitimate news outlet to manufacture credibility
Deepfake Denzel Washington videoAI-manipulated footage of a real person saying fabricated things
“Big Pharma offered $10M to suppress this”Emotional manipulation designed to bypass skepticism
Elon Musk endorsementCompletely fabricated — he has no connection to this product
Same formula sold as “Sweet Restore Glycogen Support”Scam operation rebranding to outrun complaints
Hidden monthly subscription every 32 daysBuried in fine print, never shown prominently at checkout
Sheridan, Wyoming virtual mailbox addressCommon tactic to obscure real operator location
No independent clinical evidenceNo verified testing of the finished product

If You Were Victimized by This Scam

Act quickly — the longer a hidden subscription runs unchallenged, the harder recovery becomes.

Step one: Report the fraud to your bank or credit card company immediately. Explain that you were enrolled in a recurring subscription without clear disclosure at checkout. Request the charge be disputed, and ask for your card number to be canceled and reissued so future charges cannot process.

Step two: File a complaint with the FBI’s Internet Crime Complaint Center at IC3.gov. Include every piece of identifying information you have — company names, phone numbers, mailing addresses, and email addresses from your correspondence or bank statement. Include the URLs of every website you were taken to, how you originally found the ad (Facebook, YouTube, etc.), and any emails or physical packages you received. Every detail strengthens the investigation record.

Step three: Document everything before it disappears. Screenshot the website, the terms and conditions, and any email confirmations you received. Scam operations like this frequently change domains and disappear when complaints accumulate.


Final Verdict: Is Glykonex Legit?

No. Glykonex Gluco Capsules is being sold through a scam funnel built on deepfake celebrity impersonation, a fake news website, fabricated medical endorsements, and a hidden monthly subscription designed to be invisible at checkout. Denzel Washington and Elon Musk have no connection to this product. No doctors, hospitals, or medical institutions have endorsed it. And the miracle neuropathy cure being described in the video does not exist in a $60 supplement bottle — or any supplement bottle.

Don’t buy it. If you already did, act now.


Have you seen the Glykonex deepfake ads, or have you purchased the product? Share what you encountered in the comments — especially any additional website URLs, phone numbers, or company names you found on your bank statement that aren’t listed here. Your information helps build the record and protects other people from the same trap.

Ibson Bay

With almost a decade of experience blogging, Ibson is a passionate and highly skilled individual who loves writing about statistics, technology, banking and finance.

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