Chattanooga Times Free Press

Inside one network CASHING IN on vaccine disinforma­tion

- MICHELLE R. SMITH AND JOHNATAN REISS

The couple in the website videos could be hawking any number of products.

“You’re going to love owning the platinum package,” Charlene Bollinger tells viewers, as a picture of a DVD set, booklets and other products flashes on screen. Her husband, Ty, promises a “director’s cut edition,” and over 100 hours of additional footage.

Click the orange button, his wife says, “to join in the fight for health freedom” — or more specifical­ly, to pay $199 to $499 for the Bollingers’ video series, “The Truth About Vaccines 2020.”

The Bollingers are part of an ecosystem of for-profit companies, nonprofit groups, YouTube channels and other social media accounts stoking fear and distrust of covid-19 vaccines, resorting to what medical experts say is often misleading and false informatio­n.

An investigat­ion by The Associated Press has found the couple works closely with others prominent in the anti-vaccine movement — including Robert F. Kennedy Jr. and his Children’s Health Defense — to drive sales through affiliate marketing relationsh­ips.

According to the Bollingers, there’s big money involved. They have said they have sold tens of millions of dollars of products through various ventures and paid out $12 million to affiliates. Tens of thousands of people ponied up cash for an earlier version of their vaccine video series, they said.

“This is a disinforma­tion industry,” said Dorit Reiss, a professor at the University of California Hastings College of the Law, who specialize­s in vaccine policy. Reiss said unlike other multi-level marketing businesses, in which products are sold through low-level sub-sellers, the anti-vaccinatio­n industry is sustained by grassroots activists.

“They have many, many passionate believers that serve as salespeopl­e of the misinforma­tion on the ground,” she said. “For the top, it’s a product. For the people below, they passionate­ly believe it. They’re very sincere. And it comes across.”

The Bollingers and others were already in the business of selling vaccine disinforma­tion before the coronaviru­s began its inexorable march across the globe. But the pandemic presented the couple and others a huge opportunit­y to expand their reach.

The Bollingers aligned themselves with right-wing supporters of former President Donald Trump — establishi­ng a Super PAC to push what they call “medical freedom,” participat­ing in the insurrecti­on at the U.S. Capitol and promoting lies such as the assertion the election was stolen from Trump.

On the afternoon of Jan. 6, the Bollingers held a rally a few blocks from the Capitol. As emergency vehicles screamed past, responding to the invasion and the ransacking of the building, Charlene Bollinger celebrated from the stage. She called it an “amazing day” and led a prayer for the people she called “patriots.” Meanwhile, Ty Bollinger stood at the doors of the Capitol, waiting to get in.

The couple’s social media accounts have been identified as among the top vaccine misinforma­tion super spreaders by organizati­ons such as NewsGuard, which analyzes the credibilit­y of websites, and The Center for Countering Digital Hate, which monitors online disinforma­tion. They have more than 1 million followers on Facebook, and Charlene Bollinger said in a video conversati­on with Kennedy posted last year on their Super PAC’s website their email list has “a couple million” people on it.

The Center for Countering Digital Hate said from December 2019 to May 2021, five of the Bollingers’ biggest social media accounts gained 117,273 followers.

Public health experts say the spread of such disinforma­tion undermines the effort to immunize enough of the population to stop the pandemic. A recent AP-NORC poll shows about 1 in 5 Americans are hesitant to get vaccinated. U.S. Surgeon General Vivek Murthy said last month misinforma­tion and disinforma­tion circulatin­g online about covid-19 present a “clear and present danger” to people who need to be protected and who could get vaccinated.

The Bollingers declined interview requests and didn’t respond to a list of questions emailed to them about their business and political activities and background­s. Ty Bollinger later complained on an Internet show “journo-terrorists” and “mainstream media whores” were about to release a “hit piece” on him and his wife.

Ty Bollinger began their business several years ago with books and DVDs such as “Cancer: Step Outside the Box” and “The Truth About Cancer,” which medical experts say included unproven informatio­n about alternativ­es to chemothera­py and cancer prevention. The company even sells a series purporting to show “the truth” about pet cancer.

Ty Bollinger describes himself as a “medical researcher” on bios posted on his website and in at least one book. He holds degrees in accounting and taxation from Baylor, but no indication could be found he has any scientific or medical training, and he declined to answer questions about his credential­s.

In 2017, in what Ty Bollinger has called a “natural progressio­n,” the business expanded its work into vaccines. The couple styled themselves as “vaccine safety advocates,” while they simultaneo­usly minimized the threat of diseases such as measles. They also published articles questionin­g whether life-saving vaccines work and claimed unvaccinat­ed children are healthier.

Decades of research has shown the opposite is true.

When coronaviru­s hit, the business pivoted again, producing and marketing false or baseless informatio­n about covid-19.

The Tennessee couple has been promoting “The Truth About Vaccines 2020” at least since April 2020, and updated it in the fall. Their false and unsubstant­iated claims about the virus and its vaccines run the gamut, from assertions covid cases are overreport­ed and adverse reactions to vaccines are underrepor­ted, to theories about 5G wireless signals being linked to the virus, all ideas medical experts said are flat-out wrong.

Among the material they have produced is a 78-page “Coronaviru­s Field Guide” offering unsubstant­iated claims covid-19 is “man-made,” when there’s no data to support that. In addition to books and DVDs, some of which cost hundreds of dollars, they sell an “Insiders Legacy Membership” costing $5 per month, or $47 per year, for a “premium monthly newsletter.”

The Bollingers’ more recent Facebook posts focus on subjects such as ketogenic diets and the nutritiona­l benefits of mangoes, while their most

“We don’t trust these vaccines. We don’t trust the ‘authoritie­s’ who are working so hard to administer hundreds of millions of doses over the next 2 months. And we’re 100% willing to gamble that the vaccine is much more dangerous than the virus.” — From a post on Ty and Charlene Bollinger’s “Truth About Cancer” website

“At the end of the day, you have these activists trying to win over followers. For them, it’s moneymakin­g.” — Richard Carpiano, a professor of public policy and sociology at University of California, Riverside, who studies vaccine disinforma­tion campaigns

“They have many, many passionate believers that serve as salespeopl­e of the misinforma­tion on the ground. For the top, it’s a product. For the people below, they passionate­ly believe it. They’re very sincere. And it comes across.” — Dorit Reiss, a professor at the University of California Hastings College of the Law, who specialize­s in vaccine policy

strident anti-vaccinatio­n content is reserved for the messaging app Telegram or their own website.

On Telegram, they spread misinforma­tion — including the claim the covid-19 vaccine “is a killer” — and link public health efforts to fight covid-19 to the “Deep State.”

On their “Truth About Cancer” website, to which their vaccine website often links, they recently posted an article containing false claims. Among them: “it looks as though the new vaccines are 67% MORE LIKELY to kill you than the virus itself.”

In studies of hundreds of thousands of people the vaccines were proven to be safe and effective at preventing severe disease and death, and those results have been confirmed as tens of millions of vaccines have been administer­ed.

“We don’t trust these vaccines,” they said in the post. “We don’t trust the ‘authoritie­s’ who are working so hard to administer hundreds of millions of doses over the next 2 months. And we’re 100% willing to gamble that the vaccine is much more dangerous than the virus.”

Below the post, commenter after commenter said they were swayed.

“Thank you so much for all the informatio­n you provide us! I will not get the vaccine!” one commenter wrote. Another said she had received the first dose and asked for counsel on how to refuse the second. A third shared she was being treated for cancer and her doctor said she shouldn’t be afraid, but she was “terrified to get the vaccine.”

While the Bollingers describe themselves as “advocates,” they are running a for-profit business. It’s not clear how much money they have made from their vaccine-related marketing efforts, or from their business more broadly, but there are some clues.

The Bollingers’ company, TTAC Publishing LLC, filed a trademark infringeme­nt lawsuit last year in which it stated TTAC had secured over $25 million in customer transactio­ns since 2014. The lawsuit, which calls the company an “industry leader specializi­ng in the marketing of informatio­n relating to health care” and cancer, doesn’t say how much of that was profit.

Dun & Bradstreet, which provides estimates for company revenue, has two listings for TTAC Publishing. The first, at its former address in Nevada, estimates sales and revenue at $2.9 million last year. For the one listed at TTAC’s current address in Tennessee, Dun & Bradstreet estimated $76,000 in sales in 2020. Experian reported in 2020 the company had $179,000 in sales from its Nevada corporate address. In February, Experian reported TTAC’s revenue at $202,000.

On applicatio­ns for government loans during the pandemic, TTAC Publishing said it had 16 employees in May 2020. That number stood at 27 when their second loan was approved in February 2021.

On their website, the Bollingers explained they make some of their money via affiliate marketing. In “The Truth About Vaccines Affiliate Center” page, which was taken down this month after the AP asked about informatio­n posted on it, the couple laid out how they paid people to drive followers, which they refer to as leads, and sales on their site.

Affiliate marketing is a widely used practice in which people are recruited to spread the word about a product. Affiliates are granted unique IDs, which can be used in links to track who referred a customer to a website, and who deserves the commission if the customer buys something.

People who signed up as an affiliate for the “Truth About Vaccines 2020” video series would receive a unique affiliate ID, which could then be used in a link to share in social media posts or mailing lists.

“We recommend sending at least 3 emails to get the highest conversion­s and commission­s,” said the page, which was a part of the Truth About Cancer website as recently as May 7. “The earlier you mail and share on social media, the more you’ll make.”

The AP took screenshot­s before it was taken down, and the page is still available in the Internet Archive.

In an October contest for the launch of new episodes of their vaccine videos, the couple said they were “giving away $40,000+ in prize money!” For one part of the contest, only those who generated at least 2,500 total leads would qualify, while for another, those who generated at least $10,000 in sales qualified. First prize for both was a $5,000 bonus.

According to the page, affiliates “earn 40% commission­s on all digital products and 30% on all physical product sales.”

Several people and groups prominent in the anti-vaccine movement were listed on the page as affiliates. Perhaps best known among them was Kennedy’s nonprofit, Children’s Health Defense. Kennedy himself was listed as an “expert” on the page, and in addition, was listed in a version captured by the Internet Archive in spring 2020 as ranking among the Top 10 for the series’ “Overall Sales Leaderboar­d.”

Kennedy has been working with the Bollingers for several years, said Laura Bono, executive director of Children’s Health Defense. Being an affiliate, she said, meant only the group “shared their materials” and “It doesn’t mean there’s a business relationsh­ip.”

“We shared their informatio­n. Then people can choose to purchase, or not, their videos. So we just shared with our list. Like you would anything else,” Bono said.

Still, the AP examined social media posts made by Children’s Health Defense and found several instances when it posted links to the Bollingers’ site using a unique “affiliate ID” including at least five Facebook posts plugging “The Truth About Vaccines 2020” between April and October 2020.

Arunesh Mathur, a computer science expert at the Center for Informatio­n Technology Policy at Princeton University, who studies affiliate marketing, confirmed the links included codes used in a popular affiliate system, Post Affiliate Pro. The Bollingers’ ‘Affiliate Center’ said they used the platform to track sales.

Bono said the Bollingers donated $10,000 to Children’s Health Defense in December 2019. She denied Kennedy and Children’s Health Defense ever received money from the Bollingers for leads, but also said they received what she called a “negligible” amount in donations from the Bollingers after people followed their links to the site and chose to buy. She estimated the amount at about $1,000 and declined to clarify.

“No. 1, I don’t know it, and No. 2, I don’t think it’s any of your business,” Bono said. “I don’t think it’s against the law if a company gives money if it’s a charitable donation, right?”

She said Kennedy was likely listed as No. 4 on the “Overall Sales Leaderboar­d” because he shared the Bollinger’s link on his Instagram account, which had over 800,000 followers when it was banned in February for spreading misinforma­tion about vaccine safety and covid-19.

“His followers could choose to click on the link and go watch. Afterward, they could choose to purchase,” Bono wrote in an email. The Truth About Vaccines “did provide a small stipend to (Children’s Health Defense), not to Mr. Kennedy, for sharing the link. I am unsure of that total.”

Children’s Health Defense paid Kennedy, its chairman and chief legal counsel, $255,000 in 2019, according to the most recent publicly available IRS filings.

If Children’s Health Defense has received a “negligible” amount on its affiliatio­n with the Bollingers, others have received substantia­l amounts. In a lawsuit brought last year, Jeff Hays, a former affiliate who promoted “The Truth About Cancer,” said he earned around $240,000 in commission­s from 2015 to 2018.

In an archived version of the Truth About Vaccines Affiliate Center web page, captured by the Internet Archive in April 2018, the company states 25,000 people purchased its first iteration of the “The Truth About Vaccines” video series. It said since the company launched in 2014, it paid affiliate partners “more than $12 million for sharing our events with their audiences through email, Facebook, Twitter, etc.,” and “our affiliates have consistent­ly earned an average of over $2 per click.”

Experts say such financial connection­s among anti-vaccinatio­n activists remain largely unknown to people who consume their content, many of whom are simply looking for informatio­n and end up falling down a rabbit hole of misinforma­tion.

Many of the people who push vaccine disinforma­tion emphasize their audience shouldn’t trust pharmaceut­ical companies or “Big Pharma,” because they are making lots of money off vaccines, said Erica DeWald, of the advocacy group Vaccinatey­ourfamily.org. But those purveyors of disinforma­tion are also making money, said DeWald, who has tracked the Bollingers, Kennedy and others in the industry.

“I definitely think people are being misled. They think that folks are doing this out of the goodness of their heart,” she said. “I think there’s an assumption that people are making money, right? If you’re selling products, of course you make money. But I think they don’t realize how much money they’re making.”

Super-spreaders of vaccine disinforma­tion such as the Bollingers and Kennedy have exploited their relationsh­ips with other groups to access new markets, said Imran Ahmed of the Center for Countering Digital Hate.

“Once you start to look at it through the industry lens, it suddenly starts to make sense as to why they’re doing all this stuff,” he said.

For example, Ahmed said, Kennedy has worked to appeal to African Americans, while the Bollingers have targeted the MAGA movement and far right.

“It’s a great market of people that also mistrust the government,” Ahmed said of the MAGA movement. “Once someone follows one conspiracy theory, they’re likely to follow another.”

With covid, a disparate group of radical, fringe conspiracy theorists have come together around the idea government can’t be trusted, is trying to kill you and is using the vaccine to do it, Ahmed said.

The Bollingers last year founded a political action committee called United Medical Freedom Super PAC, which raised more than $60,000 in donations, according to reports Ty Bollinger filed with the Federal Election Commission. A chiropract­or who has been featured as an “expert” in their videos donated multiple times, twice in the amount of $1,776 — a phrase that later became a rallying cry for insurrecti­onists as they stormed the Capitol. Super PACs can raise unlimited money from individual­s and corporatio­ns to spend on independen­t political activities

In a video posted on the Super PAC website 10 months ago, Charlene Bollinger explained to Kennedy anti-vaccine influencer­s have to band together, “Because we know the other side, they’re working together. They’re very efficient. They’ve got their agendas,” she said.

“And we’re going to be supporting specifical­ly you, Children’s Health Defense. We believe in what you’re doing Bobby,” she said. “And so, we’re going to continue to highlight you. Highlight Children’s Health Defense and help you in any way that we can. So that’s how we win.”

Bono declined to say whether Kennedy agrees with the Bollingers’ support of the insurrecti­on or whether he regrets aligning himself with the couple, but said Kennedy has “chosen peaceful and thoughtful methods of providing informatio­n” to lawmakers and others. Children’s Health Defense, she said, “doesn’t condone any lawbreakin­g or violence of any kind.”

Bono told the AP she didn’t think Children’s Health Defense ever received a donation from the United Medical Freedom Super PAC, saying “I’ve never heard of it.”

One person it has supported is Roger Stone. United Medical Freedom paid the conservati­ve political consultant, lobbyist and adviser to then-President Donald Trump more than $11,000 on Dec. 18. Stone said the money was for an appearance he made at a rally in Nashville in October.

Stone also was billed as the keynote speaker for the event the Bollingers held near the U.S. Capitol the afternoon of Jan. 6, promoted as the “MAGA Freedom Rally D.C.,” which blended anti-vaccine “health freedom” activism with “Stop the Steal” rhetoric. Stone said he was supposed to speak at 3:40 p.m. but decided not to go because of the violence at the Capitol that day.

“I had no interest in going up to the capitol under those circumstan­ces,” Stone said, adding he was never supposed to be paid for speaking at the Jan. 6 event.

Video of the event was livestream­ed but has since been made private. However, video posted online in various places shows it lasting for hours. Charlene Bollinger was emcee, calling for Congress to “Stop the Steal” as the rally kicked off following Trump’s speech that day.

Several people prominent in the anti-vaccine movement spoke, including Mikki Willis, who made the conspiracy movie “Plandemic.” He told the crowd he had just left the chaos at the Capitol.

“Our proud patriots just pushed through a line of riot police peacefully, as peacefully as that could happen, and are now at the stairs, at the doors of the Capitol,” Willis said from the stage. “And it was a beautiful thing to see.”

Charlene Bollinger cheered the Capitol breach.

“The Capitol has been stormed by patriots, we’re here for this reason, we are winning.” She added: “We are at war.”

Later that day, Ty Bollinger told the online “Robert Scott Bell Show” he had been “maced” that day and had been among the people who crowded at the doors of the Capitol in an attempt to get inside, though he said he didn’t enter.

He called then-Vice President Mike Pence a “traitor,” called the people who got inside the building “patriots” and said “today, people’s true colors are being made known.”

The Bollingers show the convergenc­e of “right-wing world with anti-vaccine and other sorts of anti-covid, covid conspiracy theory, anti-public health, health freedom all in one,” said Richard Carpiano, a professor of public policy and sociology at University of California, Riverside, who studies vaccine disinforma­tion campaigns.

“At the end of the day, you have these activists trying to win over followers,” he said. “For them, it’s money-making.”

 ?? (AP) ?? This Wednesday image shows a website featuring Ty and Charleen Bollinger advertisin­g their video series, “The Truth About Vaccines 2020.” The Bollingers are part of an ecosystem of for-profit companies, nonprofit groups, YouTube channels and other social media accounts stoking fear and distrust of covid-19 vaccines, resorting to what medical experts say is often misleading and false informatio­n.
(AP) This Wednesday image shows a website featuring Ty and Charleen Bollinger advertisin­g their video series, “The Truth About Vaccines 2020.” The Bollingers are part of an ecosystem of for-profit companies, nonprofit groups, YouTube channels and other social media accounts stoking fear and distrust of covid-19 vaccines, resorting to what medical experts say is often misleading and false informatio­n.
 ?? (File Photo/AP/Mary Altaffer) ?? A Northwell Health registered nurse fills a syringe with the Johnson & Johnson covid-19 vaccine April 8 at a pop-up vaccinatio­n site inside the Albanian Islamic Cultural Center in the Staten Island borough of New York. A recent AP-NORC poll shows about 1 in 5 Americans are hesitant to get vaccinated. U.S. Surgeon General Vivek Murthy said last month misinforma­tion and disinforma­tion circulatin­g online about covid-19 present a “clear and present danger” to people who need to be protected and who could get vaccinated.
(File Photo/AP/Mary Altaffer) A Northwell Health registered nurse fills a syringe with the Johnson & Johnson covid-19 vaccine April 8 at a pop-up vaccinatio­n site inside the Albanian Islamic Cultural Center in the Staten Island borough of New York. A recent AP-NORC poll shows about 1 in 5 Americans are hesitant to get vaccinated. U.S. Surgeon General Vivek Murthy said last month misinforma­tion and disinforma­tion circulatin­g online about covid-19 present a “clear and present danger” to people who need to be protected and who could get vaccinated.

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