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Filmed in Melbourne and billed as being “inspired by a true story that was based on a lie”, Apple Cider Vinegar is a six-episode exploration of Gibson’s catastrophic rise and fall.

Kaitlyn Dever plays Australian cancer conwoman Belle Gibson as she rises in the wellness world — and eventually falls. Source: Supplied / Netflix
‘The discomfort is real’
“The character of Belle is our creation,” says show creator and award-winning Australian writer Samantha Strauss (Nine Perfect Strangers; Dance Academy).
I think she had a big hole inside. She wanted to feel love, never felt like she had enough love, yearned for approval.
Samantha Strauss, creator, Apple Cider Vinegar
“That’s why a character like Lucy [a character in the series] is really important to us — whenever you went so far as to forgive and understand Belle, you would remember Lucy and the stakes of the story.”

Tilda Cobham-Hervey plays Lucy, a woman with breast cancer who is drawn to Milla Blake and Belle Gibson’s health claims. Source: Supplied / Netflix
Looking beyond the scam
“You can’t tell Belle’s story without telling the real-life stakes of her story.”
From oncology wards to television sets
“My mum passed away last year from breast cancer and had a 14-15-year long battle with it,” she explains.
This story hits home for me in a deeper way than anything I’ve ever done.
Kaitlyn Dever, actor
“I was really appalled by the lies Belle told from a personal level and also really moved by the Milla storyline with her mother as well. I found it to be important storytelling and it is very personal to me,” Dever says.

For Kaitlyn Dever, her role in Apple Cider Vinegar was personal after losing her mother to breast cancer last year. Source: Supplied / Netflix
Dever says while the story itself is “very heartbreaking and sad”, the series weaves in lighter moments.
“I think it makes the show easy and the darker parts easier to digest.”
‘Really difficult to get doctors to believe you’
According to a comprehensive 2023 study from the United States-based Centre for Global Health, National Cancer Institute, women experience unequal power dynamics in cancer treatment settings, which can impede their access to timely and accurate diagnoses.
“Of course, I’ve lost loved ones and seen a lot of tragedy … [but] as well as being angry and emotional and sad, I also felt this weird sense of comfort in knowing that someone had so perfectly spoken to a feeling that I thought I was alone in.”

Australians Alycia Debnam-Carey and Aisha Dee say the series aims to tackle women’s experiences in the health field. Source: Supplied / Netflix
Two-thirds of Australian women have experienced healthcare-related gender bias or discrimination, according to a 2024 report from the Department of Health and Aged Care.
Along with addressing disparities women face in healthcare, the series also scrutinises the immense social pressure they’re subject to, even in the face of cancer.

“When she got sick, she felt like she did it to herself.”

“This story hits home for me in a deeper way than anything I’ve ever done,” actor Kaitlyn Dever says. Source: Supplied / Netflix
Deadly ramifications
Unsurprisingly, the effects of this can be deadly.
“Belle Gibson sold a web of lies to vulnerable, desperate people — and thought she could get away with it,” Marlene Kairouz, consumer affairs minister at the time, said.
Her [Belle Gibson’s] actions were not only careless but also dangerous. Her book and app were targeted at people who had cancer and were looking for a ray of hope.
Marlene Kairouz, former consumer affairs minister
“It really shows how extraordinary Belle’s rise and fall from grace really is. The reach she had, the scale of destruction she left behind, it’s pretty overwhelming.”