Affiliation:
1. Virginia Commonwealth University, USA
Abstract
doTERRA and Young Living are multi-level marketing (MLM) companies sustained by distribution networks of women who sell their trademark essential oil products. We argue that women join essential oil MLMs based on an iterative, three-pronged strategy that not only recruits women as oil distributors but also simultaneously indoctrinates them to pastel QAnon conspiracy spaces: digitally driven, feminized realms situated at the nexus of New Age spirituality, wellness, and far-right ideologies. MLM distributors first compel women to look toward essential oils as a viable medical intervention by leveraging potential recruits’ distrust with medical establishments and hardship produced by intersecting structural inequalities (classism, racism, ableism, sexism). Women are then hooked in by promises of essential oils offering silver-bullet solutions to complex problems stemming from inequitable social systems. Finally, women get downlined into pastel QAnon disinformation flows through algorithmic production of confirmation bias. By coding qualitative data of MLM distributors and pastel QAnon influencers for digital content analysis, we identify socio-cultural and gendered trends of disinformation production at the intersections of wellness, pastel QAnon, and structural inequalities. These findings provide insights into the seductive appeal of disinformation beyond the textual content of the message and contribute to our understanding of the larger political economy of incentives and rewards that perpetuate disinformation-for-hire communities.
Reference53 articles.
1. Adam uses doTERRA @ Adam’s Autism Family. (2018, January 18). [YouTube video]. https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=LaFjMa0Z_Ic
2. Argentino M.A. (2021, March 17). Pastel QAnon. Global Network on Extremism and Technology Insights. https://gnet-research.org/2021/03/17/pastel-qanon/
3. Baker S. A. (2020). Tackling misinformation and disinformation in the context of COVID-19. https://openaccess.city.ac.uk/id/eprint/24612/
4. Alt. Health Influencers: how wellness culture and web culture have been weaponised to promote conspiracy theories and far-right extremism during the COVID-19 pandemic
5. Mother-Blame in the Prozac Nation