500 ‘Jeopardy!’ Alumni Petition to Remove ‘Dangerous’ Dr. Oz as Guest Host
Five hundred past “Jeopardy!” contestants signed a letter demanding TV Doctor Mehmet Oz be removed as host of the show over his past coronavirus comments.
Five hundred past “Jeopardy!” contestants signed a letter demanding TV Doctor Mehmet Oz be removed as host of the show over his past coronavirus comments.
NEWARK, N.J. — When a traveler became stricken at Newark Liberty International Airport, the police got an assist from a celebrity doctor: Mehmet Oz.
Mehmet Oz, the physician known to audiences of his eponymous TV show as “Dr. Oz,” will be tapped to join President Donald Trump’s new Council on Sports, Fitness, and Nutrition.
Former Major League Baseball star Darryl Strawberry opened up Thursday with Dr. Oz about his sex addiction, confessing to having sex in games between innings. “It was a pretty crazy lifestyle,” Strawberry told Dr. Oz. “In the middle of games, yeah, I would
Donald Trump and his daughter Ivanka will appear on the Dr. Oz Show on Thursday, where the Republican presidential candidate will reveal his personal health regimen in an exclusive one-hour interview with Dr. Mehmet Oz.
In their desperate quest to end the candidacy of Donald Trump, the media, Democrats, and even fellow Republican candidates have gone Full Godwin on the richly-coiffed real estate mogul: they’re saying he’s a Nazi.
A group of renowned physicians petitioned Columbia University this week to fire television personality Dr. Oz from the school’s faculty, characterizing the celebrity doctor’s brand of medicine as being full of “various quack propositions” and “magical mystery cures.”
“The public should be skeptical about recommendations made on medical talk shows.” That was the conclusion of a new study published in the British Medical Journal (BMJ), which found that existing medical research either did not support, or, in some