By 
Fare la Volpe
 
Welcome back to the cheaters, rapscallions, and assorted flim-flammers 
alike. It’s time once more for the Snake Oil Bulletin! This week we have
 a double dose of dumb-dumbs being extra diddly-dumb about vaccines. Do 
vaccines cause autism? Still nope! But that hasn’t stopped these 
intrepid idjits from spreading their lethal brand of nonsense all over 
this great land of ours. Let’s start off the Bulletin with a feel-good 
story about people finally calling out those anti-vaxxing booger 
weasels.
It’s a Christmas miracle! Tribeca decides not to listen to anti-vaxxing charlatan after all!
After facing a blistering round of criticism from anyone with a 
brain, the Tribeca Film Festival has canceled the screening of a film 
that claims vaccines cause autism and the CDC is covering it up.
The film in question, 
Vaxxed: From Cover-Up to Catastrophe, 
is written and directed by everyone’s favorite charlatan Andrew 
Wakefield. If that name sounds familiar, it’s because Wakefield was the 
original liar who lied in his fake study that purported to show a 
made-up connection between vaccines and autism. Y’know what, let’s have 
Joe Hanson of the fabulous PBS series 
It’s Okay To Be Smart summarize Wakefield’s faux-dentials by adjusting Tribeca’s official description of the flim-flammer:

In a nutshell, Wakefield fraudulently created a study that purported 
to show a link between the MMR vaccine and autism. He did this by 
manipulating data, violating ethical standards of medicine, and 
sometimes just outright lying. He did this because he was being paid by a
 law firm that was attempting a class action suit against a vaccine 
manufacturer, and because Wakefield himself had recently bought stock in
 a competing MMR vaccine. Wakefield was eventually found out, had his 
study retracted, and had his license to practice medicine revoked. He’s 
spent the last few years portraying himself as a martyr to any who would
 listen, and since this is anti-vaxxers we’re talking about, listen they
 did. Now Wakefield has gotten into movies, like all great hacks whose 
work can’t make it into scientific journals.
The claim of the film is the same that Wakefield has been touting on 
the very lucrative anti-vaccine lecture circuit for the past few years: 
Wakefield claims the CDC is engaged in a concentrated cover-up of 
research conducted by supposed whistleblowers Brian Hooker and William 
Thompson. Wakefield says Thompson has documents proving the CDC 
deliberately suppressed data in a study that was supposed to test autism
 rates in the Atlanta area. As veteran quack-debunker Orac 
explains
 at Respectful Insolence, Thompson’s and Hooker’s claims of malfeasance 
seem to indicate less “cover-up” and more “bad science rejected by peer 
review.”
Nevertheless, despite 
even TIME Magazine calling bull
 on Wakefield’s latest raison d’etre, the pompous ass decided to make a 
film out of his claims, because movies don’t need any of that silly 
“peer review” process — just a handicam and enough money to purchase an 
editor off Fiverr.
The 
Vaxxed film got the attention of the Tribeca Film 
Festival’s co-founder, actor/director/your dad’s shifty friend from 
middle school Robert De Niro. 
In a statement responding to complaints about the film’s inclusion in the festival, De Niro said:
Grace [De Niro’s wife] and I have a child with autism and
 we believe it is critical that all of the issues surrounding the causes
 of autism be openly discussed and examined. In the 15 years since the 
Tribeca Film Festival was founded, I have never asked for a film to be 
screened or gotten involved in the programming. However this is very 
personal to me and my family and I want there to be a discussion, which 
is why we will be screening VAXXED. I am not personally endorsing the 
film, nor am I anti-vaccination; I am only providing the opportunity for
 a conversation around the issue.
The best way to have any discussion is to have one side equipped with
 facts while the other side has a bunch of made-up lies that carry equal
 weight. That’s what Fox News calls “fair and balanced.”
De Niro himself pushed for the film to be included in the festival’s lineup, and the reaction was swift. 
Legitimate scientists and journalists implored the board to remove the film. Filmmaker Peggy Lane 
called out Wakefield for being a proven fraud, and claimed that including 
Vaxxed in the Tribeca lineup threatened the credibility of not just the festival but all the festival’s other 
tales of gay cowboys eating puddinghard-hitting pieces of cinema. 
Twitter relentlessly mocked the festival
 with the hashtag #FutureTribecaDocumentary, which imagined other 
idiotic, agenda-driven films like “‘Shutting that whole thing down’: How
 Todd Akin revolutionized the field of reproductive health biology.”
Finally, after mounting pressure and threats of boycotts, 
De Niro himself issued a retraction:
My intent in screening this film was to provide an 
opportunity for conversation around an issue that is deeply personal to 
me and my family. But after reviewing it over the past few days with the
 Tribeca Film Festival team and others from the scientific community, we
 do not believe it contributes to or furthers the discussion I had hoped
 for.
Naturally, Wakefield et al. 
are claiming censorship,
 a word that people still don’t seem to “get.” Censorship means that the
 government is purposely silencing your message. What happened here is 
that a private group decided not to give Wakefield a gallon of their own
 kerosene when they saw he’d come equipped with matches. You do not have
 a right to burn down a building, and you do not have a right to spread 
malicious lies about autistic people and the medicine that has saved so 
many children from deadly diseases. It’s because of people like 
Wakefield that deadly diseases have made a comeback, and 
scientists can now make a causal link between the rise of Wakefield’s anti-vaxxers and the increase in whooping cough and 
measles.
 
Go try out your matches on your film reel, Andrew. Now you’ll have lots of free time on your 
Conspira-Sea cruise lines. You can torch the negatives in between lectures on crop circles and chemtrails, because that is where you actually work now.
Guns don’t kill people, People Magazine kills people
You know what’s the hottest look for summer? Malnourished babies! Or 
at least that seems to be the editorial decision of long-running health 
and nutrition journal 
People Magazine, who featured on their 
website a recipe for homemade baby formula that will kinda sorta kill 
babies. It must have been rejected idea for finally dropping that baby 
weight.
As part of the book tour for her new autobiography, 
Balancing in Heels, apparently famous person Kristin Cavallari (it’s okay, we’ve never heard of her either) 
shared some great parenting insights with 
People, insights she no doubt gained from being an 
amateur immunologist
 and professional wife of a sportsball person named Jay Cutler, which is
 a career now we guess? Okay, sure. If dog psychic is a real career then
 bridal lump can be too.
Cavallari offered her formula for homemade baby formula made of 
goat’s milk in the magazine’s “Great Ideas” section. Hold your giggles. 
According to 
People, Cavallari says her children have 
sensitivities to cow’s milk and thus she feeds them a formula of goat 
milk, cod-liver oil, and organic maple syrup. Nothing babies (and baby 
parents) love more than an oil expressly taken to make children barf.
People published the recipe for Cavallari’s formula, but 
added a disclaimer at the end that, oh, BTW, this could super kill your 
baby. Drink responsibly!
The American Academy of Pediatrics recommends feeding 
infants breast milk or iron-fortified infant formula. Cow’s milk, raw 
goat’s milk and soy milk are not recommended during the first 12 months 
of life. 
“Why would you want to use an alternative formula when there are well
 tested and tried formulas widely available?” Dr. Mark Corkins, a 
pediatric gastroenterologist and member of the American Academy of 
Pediatrics, tells PEOPLE. “These cocktail formulas do not have the 
fortification of the vitamins and minerals that the standard formulas 
have. Commercial formulas are some of the most highly regulated foods 
with strict nutritional standards that the companies have to meet for 
the FDA.”
That actual doctor person saying quite clearly that you should not feed your baby goat’s milk didn’t stop 
People
 from publishing Cavallari’s recipe in full, with the thought process no
 doubt not extending beyond “if we put a disclaimer on it, no one’s 
going to actually use it, right?” It’s the same thinking behind 
publishing the schematics to a pipe bomb and putting a big red sticker 
on the book that says “Don’t build this if you’re a terrorist please 
thx.” Anna Merlan of Jezebel went one step further by pointing out that,
 
according to the journal Pediatrics,
 babies who are fed exclusively goat’s milk suffer from a rash of health
 problems such as metabolic acidosis and anaphylactic shock. We’ve no 
doubt that Ms. Cavallari would rather you use a 
natural alternative for that anaphylaxis instead of using a gross Epipen.
After someone on the janitorial staff (we bet) told the editors at 
People that this was a stupid thing to publish, 
People
 quietly retracted the story from their website, saving all the children
 whose parents read the awful article. Now the only place they can find 
the anaphylactic formula recipe is on internet archives and in 
Cavallari’s book, 
now available on Kindle! And with stellar reviews like these, how could anything go wrong?
“I am obsessed with Kristin Cavallari. Not only is 
‘Balancing In Heels’ such a fun read―her wellness, beauty, and parenting
 advice is perfect for all super mommas!”― Molly Sims
Super.