10 years after she admitted "none of it was true" Belle Gibson's story is now being retold and dramatized in Netflix's newest ...
The is billed as a “true-ish story based on a lie" and is inspired by a 2017 book, “The Woman Who Fooled the World,” by two investigative journalists, Beau Donelly and Nick Toscano, who explored ...
Is Belle Gibson still part of the Ethiopian Oromo community? The bizarre update that isn't included in Netflix's Apple Cider Vinegar. Thankfully, the docuseries The Search For Instagram's Worst ...
It’s all change in Belle Gibson’s life now. Woman’s Day has claimed Belle Gibson was most recently working at a deli counter ...
Belle had affiliated herself with a group representing Ethiopia's Oromo people, changed her name, adopted a headscarf, familiarised herself with African politics, and even began speaking broken ...
Shortly after the raid, it was discovered that Belle Gibson was now living under a different name ("Sabontu"), and had immersed herself into the Ethiopian Oromo community in Melbourne. After Dr ...
In the video, Gibson introduces herself as "Sabontu" while speaking in the Oromo language before switching to English. In October 2020, Belle Gibson was seen in a video for Melbourne's Ethiopian ...
A few months later Belle appeared to have reinvented herself and had joined the Oromo community in Melbourne, who are originally from Ethiopia. It was revealed she now wanted to be known as ...
According to ABC, Gibson has changed her name to Sabontu and learned to speak Oromo and introduced herself as Sabontu. She reportedly said she was "blessed to be adopted" by the community. Essie Davis ...
Her story is being told in the Netflix drama, so what is Belle Gibson up to now? Here's what you need to know.