Yoli: Could The Truth Prevent Aging?
April 14, 2010
Resveratrol, an ingredient in Yoli “Truth”, has been shown to possibly prevent aging and increase vitality!
We all know that obesity is one of the most alarming health issues people across the world are experiencing. Today, resveratrol supplements are used as an effective weight loss tool. As a matter of fact, it’s one amongst the leading weight loss supplements out there in the market. It works by increasing our metabolism rate. Increase in metabolism rate helps an individual to burn fat at a faster rate, thereby leading to weight loss.
Besides weight loss, aging is one of the bothersome issues that we are currently engulfed with. As such, aging is a natural process, but we hate to admit this reality of life, considering the fact that we live in an image conscious world, where everyone wants to look and feel good all the time. Coming to resveratrol, it works as an anti-aging tool as well. This is welcoming news for all those people who are spending a fortune on anti-aging products. CLICK HERE TO SEARCH FOR PUB MED RESULTS
Luckily, Yoli has placed resveratrol into it’s flag ship product “Truth”. Could the truth prevent some effects of aging? Only time will tell.
Several researches have concluded that resveratrol halts the aging process to a great degree, due to its natural health beneficial properties. While these studies were mainly concluded on animals, one can’t defy real life experiences. You will find many individuals out there singing praises about resveratrol. In fact, resveratrol was also discussed in one of the most popular television show featured by Orphan Winfrey.
Only a short time before the conception of Yoli, resveratrol was stumbled upon by scientists looking for a way to activate the anti aging gene. Surprisingly, resveratrol (up until just recently) was known to have high concentrations in red wine. However, in order to receive the benefits of resveratrol from the red wine, you would have to consume up to or around 1,000 glasses of red wine in a single day.
WHO WANTS TO DRINK 1,000 GLASSES OF WINE DAILY?
Now I don’t know about you but thoughts like that could have when mentioned in public, have you skipping and jumping or even stumbling your way to some AA meetings.
One of the recent studies also unveiled the fact that it can boost one’s endurance level. Boost in energy is a certain bonus, even if you are taking the supplement to reduce your body weight.
Let there be no doubt, resveratrol could be a house hold name in the near future. How would you prefer to catch this wave of opportunity? Would you want to be in the front of the wave ready to ride it as your ship comes in, or would you rather say “I saw it coming in and side stepped it”.
Don’t let this be a coulda shoulda woulda kinda moment.
Yoli: What Is The Difference?
April 12, 2010
What Is The Difference?
As expected, Yoli corporate has given us another wonderful tool that will save us some time on the “What is the difference again?” question.
You an locate this inside of your Yoli back office and also order them from the Yolitools website.
“We are excited to share that the much anticipated Yoli Drink Comparison Chart is now available! Now you can easily communicate the huge advantages drinking Yoli has over other liquid beverages both quickly and duplicably, with your prospects and customers.
Download the chart today and start sharing it everywhere including Facebook, Twitter and your contact list. Soon, this chart will also be available at YoliTools.com in printed form in a tear-off type pad that will serve as an extremely cost effective way to share this new powerful resource offline as well!”
-Yoli Blog
Don’t forget to check out our NEW TEAM SITE.
Yoli Truth: Junk food gets air time on kids’ channels
October 29, 2009
Disclaimer: Yoli products are not intended to diagnose, treat, cure or prevent any disease.
As parents we have to keep a close eye on the messages that our kids are getting. Unfortunately, advertisers are taking advantage of our children when watching TV…
There are good kids programming out there that don’t run these types of commercials and some that are commercial free.
Junk food gets air time on kids’ channels
Nearly all the food advertised on leading television channels aimed at toddlers to tweens is unhealthy, newly released research shows.
Brian Cook, a research consultant at Toronto Public Health, analyzed advertisements shown on Teletoon and YTV over four days in January during children’s peak viewing times geared to kids ages two to 11.
The preliminary results, released on Wednesday at a conference about public health nutrition reform hosted by the Centre for Science in the Public Interest, show that food ads made up the single largest category, at 37 percent. And an overwhelming number of them – 95 percent – were for unhealthy foods.
Breakfast cereals with high sugar and low fibre content represented the single largest percentage of unhealthy food ads, representing 28 per cent.
The remaining three categories each represented 24 percent of the ads: fast food restaurants and meals, snack foods, and high-fat, sugary or salty spreads, soups or pastas.
Milk and juice made up the bulk of the five percent of ads for healthy foods.
The sample was based on 41 hours of programming, of which 16 hours had channel promotions in place of product advertising.
The data was collected after Canada’s leading food and beverage companies launched, in April 2007, the Children’s Food and Beverage Advertising Initiative, a voluntary code to promote healthier dietary choices and lifestyles to children under the age of 12.
By February, 11 of the 16 companies had already implemented their commitments; the remaining companies have agreed to have their commitments fully implemented by the end of 2008.
Among the core principles, they have committed to devoting at least 50 per cent of their ads to promote products that represent healthy dietary choices or include healthy lifestyle.
Cook said there are too many gaps in the industry initiative to make it effective.
“The self-regulatory route just doesn’t work,” he said in an interview, pointing to a recent analysis conducted by Dr. David McKeon, medical officer of health at Toronto Public Health.
Cereals defined as “healthier dietary choices” for children include Froot Loops, Reese’s Puffs, Corn Pops, Cinnamon Toast Crunch, Alpha Bits and Kool-Aid Singles.
Janet Feasby is vice-president of standards at Advertising Standards Canada, a national advertising industry self-regulatory body overseeing the initiative. She said the current approach is sound because products that make the cut for a healthier dietary choice must meet established scientific and government standards.
They include foods that meet the standards for participating in the Heart & Stroke Foundation’s Health Check program and foods that meet criteria for nutrient content claims in Canada’s Food Guide, namely those with “free or “low” claims for calories as well as fat, saturated fat, trans fat, sugar and salt.
“This is an industry initiative that they’ve taken on their own to be responsible and to make a difference in the childhood obesity issue,” said Feasby.
The preliminary findings are part of a broader global project coordinated by Australian researchers looking at TV food ads to children in 12 countries.
My Yoli Reason Why…Detailed Video Exposes Why I Really Joined Yoli
October 23, 2009
Disclaimer: Yoli products are not intended to diagnose, treat, cure or prevent any disease.
I’ve been asked by a handful of people why I joined Yoli. It’s a great question and one that each of us needs to answer so we truly understand why we do the things we do in our lives.
I think that before you commit yourself to anything you need to truly understand your “Why”. Above is a detailed video that exposes why I decided after 6 years of being out of network marketing that I got back involved when I saw what Yoli was bringing to the table.
I hope that this video helps you better understand why I joined Yoli and I’m focused on helping others understand the Yoli Blast Cap technology and opportunity. I look forward to your feedback and hearing your Yoli “why”…
Yoli Truth: Advertising Watchdog says Vitamin Water claims are misleading…
October 7, 2009
Disclaimer: Yoli products are not intended to diagnose, treat, cure or prevent any disease.
Publicity for vitamin-enriched water made by Coca-Cola fell flat with the advertising watchdog for “misleading” claims about its nutritional benefits.
Watchdog bans Vitamin Water adverts… Posters and a leaflet for Vitamin Water featured slogans such as “more muscles than brussels” and “keep perky when you’re feeling murky”.
An advert for the “power-c” drink said: “Popeye had it easy. A can of spinach and he bulked up … the nutrients in this bottle won’t enable you to walk on mud, or become a strapping sailor man, but they will help you beat your granny in an arm wrestle.”
Another read: “If you’ve had to use sick days because you’ve actually been sick, then you’re seriously missing out my friend. The trick is to stay perky and use sick days to just, erm, not go in.”
Complaints were made about the implications that the drinks were equivalent to vegetables and had health benefits such as raised energy levels and resistance to illness.
Two people also said that the adverts implied that the drinks were “healthy”, even though they contained 4.6 g of sugar per 100ml.
Coca-Cola insisted the advertising was “humorous and irreverent” and the reference to “brussels” referred to the nickname for action film star Jean Claude Van Damme aka “the Muscles from Brussels”, not sprouts.
The reference to staying “perky” meant mood rather than fighting illness, and consumers would not think that arm-wrestling their granny would need more energy.
But the Advertising Standards Authority upheld the objections.
The ASA also found that the drinks contained nearly a quarter of the recommended daily amount of sugar in 500ml but the publicity made it likely that consumers would think the products were “healthy”. The adverts must not be used again.
Yoli Truth: US Market – Healthy Beverages For Kids To Grow By Billions In Next 2 Years
September 30, 2009
Disclaimer: Yoli products are not intended to diagnose, treat, cure or prevent any disease.
The US market for children’s food and drink will grow in value by 50 percent from $16.4bn in 2007 to $26.8bn within two years, according to a new report from New Nutrition Business.
The report, Marketing Kids’ Healthy Beverages, identifies health drinks as making the biggest gains. Fruit juice, fruit-flavored water and dairy drinks are still the biggest and most dynamic areas of the junior beverage sector as more companies recognize that parents are looking for alternatives to sugary colas and sodas.
“There are a number of factors that give fruit drinks for kids a competitive advantage over other categories,” says the report. “For one thing the “naturally healthy” image of fruit drinks makes them a suitable vehicle for health benefits – as does children’s love of fruit-flavored, sweet drinks. They are also convenient to carry and pack in lunchboxes.”
Appealing to customers
Underpinning a brand with the claim of naturalness is proving to be just as strong and profitable a trend in children’s food as in adult nutrition, according to the report.
“Across all food and beverage categories, the message that a food or food component is naturally and intrinsically healthy is one of the most appealing to consumers in all cultures,” writes the report’s author, food specialist Julian Mellentin.
As almost all of the ten case studies featured in the report illustrate, health-conscious parents are increasingly choosing products that they perceive to be as natural as possible. Increasingly they are shunning ingredients that they see as undesirable or unnatural or potentially harmful, such as added sugar and artificial sweeteners, preservatives, colors, or flavors. - (Yoli is completely natural with NO harmful ingredients)
“Being able to offer one or more of the benefits of being “free-from” dairy or wheat (to take just two examples) is essential for any brand targeting children and health conscious parents,” advises the report. “Kids’ beverages should contain no added sugar – use apple or pear juice concentrates as your sweetener, or perhaps fructose.” - (Yoli fits the bill – no sugar in Yoli)
Although beverage products should be as natural as possible, manufacturers who want to deliver a health benefit from an added ingredient should choose one that mothers accept and understand. That means, in most countries, either a probiotic or an omega-3, said the report. - (Yoli Truth includes live enzymes and probiotics)
Digestive health
Parents’ key concerns for their children’s health focus on immunity and digestive health, according to the report.
“In coming years expect to see an increasing focus on developing brands to meet these needs. Concerns around digestive health suggest an untapped opportunity for fiber and probiotics,” it predicted.
Also important is strong beverage packaging which is equally as important as products’ scientific credentials, research and development, or advertising investment.
The report is available from New Nutrition Business.
What’s great about Yoli is that it is delicious and healthy. Out of 20+ kids that I have personally seen try Yoli Truth, 99% of them liked it and wanted more. My 3 year old daughter, Amaya, loves it and drinks it throughout the day. Finally, we have something that we can drink as adults and the kids can enjoy as well that will improve our health and is simple and convenient to use.
Yoli Truth: Gatorade has gotten completely out of control…(hilarious)
September 24, 2009
Disclaimer: Yoli products are not intended to diagnose, treat, cure or prevent any disease.
I came across this hilarious post this morning and wanted to share it with you. It was written by David over at OurAnnoyingWorld.com. – (David – thanks for the great laugh!)
It’s another reason why Yoli is bringing a natural alternative to the mess out there these days in the beverage marketplace. I think if we can realize how ridiculous some things are in our world, we are then able to see that alternatives like Yoli Truth just make logical sense.
I haven’t been paying much attention lately — say, for the last 20 years — but I’ve just begun to notice that Gatorade has gotten completely out of control.
When I was 10 years old there were two flavors of Gatorade: Green and Orange. It was a huge deal when they added red to the Gatorade cannon. And by red I mean, it was called “red.” Red Gatorade. Because it was the color red and tasted very red. They weren’t getting too fancy with the name branding yet.
Fast forward to 2009: There are now 67,000 flavors of Gatorade (13,000 of them being subtle variations on Purplish/Blue.)
Tiger Woods has his own flavor of Gatorade: Gatorade Tiger, which was recently renamed Gatorade Focus (so as not to upset the 3 vegans who thought it was made from actual tiger). There’s another new flavor called Gatorade: Shine On (which sounds suspiciously like a feminine hygiene product). There is something called Gatorade: No Excuses (which was also a name brand of jeans in the 90’s: “Gatorade with just a hint of denim?”)
Oh, and when I say “flavor” keep in mind I’m using the term very loosely: Shine On. Quiet Storm. Mountain Frost. Are these drink flavors or weather forecasts?
But the scariest one is Tiger Woods’ Gatorade Focus, because it adds an extra amino acid to the party. This is where I draw the line. Adding amino acids to my beverages? Amino acids? The building blocks of life? Doesn’t anyone remember Jurrasic Park? You start adding amino acids to Gatorade, dump a little too much of it on Eli Manning after a big game, next thing you know you’ve got some strange Manning/velocirapter hybrid rampaging the Superbowl.
Okay, maybe I’m just bitter because I feel left out. Why does Tiger Woods get his own flavor and I don’t? Shouldn’t I at least get to name a few? Come on, just a half dozen or so. Who would notice? I’m sure blind people wouldn’t. To them Gatorade comes in one flavor: Corn Syrup.
I’ve already come up with a few good suggestions. And Gatorade, you can have them, free of charge:
- Gatorade: Cloudy, Chance of Sleet (to go with their weather motif)
- Gatorade: Diabetic Coma (100 mg’s of extra fructose)
- Gatorade: Serena (fiery red, with just a hint of soapy water, to wash out her potty mouth)
- Gatorade: Shot of Greatness (a little vodka thrown in for good measure)
- Gatorade: Zoloft (to dump on losing teams, cuz they’re so sad!)
- Gatorade: Plaque Rinse (half sugar, half fluoride. Let ‘em fight it out in your mouth)
- Gatorade: Kevorkian (when you want your last drink to be deadly and purple-ish)
- Gatorachino (coffee, foamy milk, and Gatorade. Should be big in Europe.)
Yep, that last one makes my stomach churn too. But remember 2006, Coke’s ill-advised Coke-coffee drink, Coke-blak? Was that any better any idea?
And for those who’ve blocked it from your mind, I kid you not…
Arnold Palmer had nothing to fear
Yoli Truth Drink vs. Starbucks Grande Vanilla Latte – You do the math…
September 20, 2009
Disclaimer: Yoli products are not intended to diagnose, treat, cure or prevent any disease.
Each of us occasionally, and some times more often than that, enjoys a coffee at Starbucks or another coffee shop. The other day I bought a coffee and the young lady handed me the receipt.
It was at that moment that I realized that I was spending a lot of money for a shot of espresso with hot milk. I thought to myself, “I just dropped almost $4 to get a cup of hot milk with caffeine in it.“ It really didn’t feel right in my gut once I came to this realization.
I think since I’ve been working with Yoli and enjoying the Yoli Truth Health Citrus Blast drink that I have finally realized how much money I have been dumping away on Starbucks coffees and other “fancy” drinks when they really don’t deliver more than a short term boost to the adrenal glands which leaves most of us not feeling all that great after the “boost” wears off.
While drinking Yoli I have regained quite a bit of energy and I tend to eat less throughout the day when I have consumed Yoli Truth early in the day. It seems to be reducing my urges to snack or consume larger meals. I like that.
I’m still trying to figure out how they get so many healthy ingredients into one blast cap without it tasting like a “health” drink. It tastes great. My daughter, who is 3 now, loves it and my wife and I have removed her juice and she now drinks Yoli in its place.
With so much nutrition in one Yoli drink and at the price point of a Starbucks coffee, it makes it a great alternative to our normal routine of being a slave to our morning coffee or our afternoon jump start. If you and I would just replace one of the current beverages we are currently drinking with a Yoli Truth Blast each day we would not only get a lot more value for our money but you and I would also improve our health along the way.
Give Yoli a try and I think you will agree that your money will be much better spent on an all-natural alternative to the many current choices you have to consume your nutrition and to get that “boost” that you need…
Yoli Delivers Truth…America’s Unhealthiest Drinks Exposed!
September 14, 2009
Disclaimer: Yoli products are not intended to diagnose, treat, cure or prevent any disease.
As Yoli brings its new Truth Citrus Health Blast drink to the market I wanted to share with you a few of the “other” drinks that many of us are consuming that is slowly ruining our health and making us fatter and we may not even realize it. This is exactly why Yoli is so focused on exposing the current beverage market for what it really is…
America’s Unhealthiest Drinks Exposed
Americans have a drinking problem, and not the type you might think. After posting a blog a few weeks ago called “Belt-Busting Beverages,” we received hundreds of comments from the Yahoo community claiming they had no idea the stuff they drink could be so hazardous to their waistlines.
Here’s a typical refrain voiced by one disturbed drinker: “I know a lot of people that are battling with their weight, and they tell me all the time, ‘I don’t eat that much, and I still can’t lose weight.’ “
Whether you are a desperate dieter or just someone looking to drop another few pounds in time for beach season, here’s a tough stat to swallow: According to the FDA, the average American takes in 82 grams of added sugars every day. That’s 20 teaspoons, which contribute an empty 317 calories to our already calorie-saturated diets.
Sure, some of that comes from soda, but even if you’ve traded regular Coke for diet, whole milk coffee drinks for low-fat lattes, and you barely touch the booze, you could still be taking in 20 percent or more of your calories from beverages. Add a few of those other indulgences in — or consume one of the liquid disasters listed here — and you can suddenly be sucking in a few days’ worth of calories through a straw!
(You read that last sentence right.)
To give you a better idea of the drinks most responsible for sabotaging your health, fitness, and weight-loss goals, we created a list of America’s Unhealthiest Drinks. Read up, then sip responsibly.
Worst “Healthy” Drink
Glaceau VitaminWater (any flavor; 20 oz bottle)
130 calories
33 grams sugar
Vitamins and water might sound like the ultimate nutritional tag team, but what the label doesn’t say is that a bottle of this stuff carries nearly as much sugar and calories as a can of Coke. Makes sense, though, since this so-called functional beverage is produced by our often-sugar-crazy friends at The Coca-Cola Company.
Worst Juice Imposter
Arizona Kiwi Strawberry (23.5 oz can)
360 calories
84 g of sugar
These hulking calorie cannons (5 percent juice, 95 percent sugar water) are sold at gas stations and convenience stores across America for the low, low price of 99 cents, making this quite possibly the cheapest source of empty calories in the country.
Worst Smoothie
Jamba Juice Peanut Butter Moo’d Power Smoothie (30 oz)
1,170 calories
169 g sugars
30 g fat
Jamba Juice calls it a smoothie; we call it a milkshake, with more sugar than an entire bag of chocolate chips. (Note: We’re pretty sure this is the drink Hollywood actors rely on when looking to put on 20 pounds for the role as a heavy!)
Worst Summer Cocktail
Pina Colada
625 calories
75 g sugars
Made from a blend of sickly-sweet pineapple juice and fat-riddled coconut milk, pina coladas may be this summer’s biggest beach-body saboteurs. In fact, the only redeeming part of this drink is the garnish — that lonely chunk of pineapple hanging from the rim. Try a lime daiquiri or a mojito instead and save up to 400 calories a drink.
The Unhealthiest Drink in America
Baskin Robbin’s Large Heath Bar Shake (32 oz)
2,310 calories
266 g sugar
108 g fat (64 g saturated)
Let’s look at America’s Worst Drink in numbers:
73: The number of ingredients that go into this milkshake.
66: The number of teaspoons of sugar this drink contains.
11: The number of Heath Bars you would have to eat to equal the number of calories found in one Baskin Robbins Large Heath Bar Shake.
8-12: The average number of minutes it takes to consume this drink.
240: The number of minutes you’d need to spend on a treadmill burning it off, running at a moderate pace.
Now look at what Yoli Truth can deliver to you…
Yoli Supporters in New York…new ad campaign says soda is pouring on the fat
September 2, 2009
Disclaimer: Yoli products are not intended to diagnose, treat, cure or prevent any disease.
All across New York, billboards are going up in the subway today show streams of sugary drinks turning into glistening yellow globs of human fat, mottled with blood vessels and served on ice. It’s great to see Yoli supporters popping up all over these days…

It’s disgusting. And that’s the point, say Health Department officials who conceived the campaign to scare New Yorkers away from soda, sports drinks, bottled teas and other drinks with sugar in them.
“Just trying to be positive and encouraging doesn’t always get people’s attention,” said Associate Commissioner Geoff Cowley. “If you get in people’s faces a bit, that does get people’s attention.”
The fat campaign aims to reduce obesity and diabetes by showing New Yorkers just how much sugar is in the drinks they grab off bodega and deli shelves.
A 20-ounce bottle of soda can contain 16.5 teaspoons of sugar, a 20-ounce lemon-flavored iced tea can have 14.5 tablespoons of sugar. Even a 20-ounce bottle of a sports drink can have 7.5 teaspoons, the department says.
Agency officials hope New Yorkers – especially parents of young children and teenagers – will think twice and instead grab lowfat milk, a diet soda or just plain water….(or ditch all of those and just drink Yoli)
“If you thought you were doing well because you weren’t drinking a sugary soda, but you were drinking a lemon-lime drink and it turns out to have the same amount of sugar, that’s shocking,” said Cathy Nonas, the Health Department’s director of physical activity and nutrition.
“These kinds of things are shocking to people,” Nonas said. “In every age group, you see the increase in portion sizes and the number of servings.” Health surveys show between 21% and 29% of city teens drink soda daily, slurping down 360 calories that would take a 70-block walk to burn.
A companion video ad, set to be released in a few months, shows an actor pouring pure fat from a soda can into a glass – and then appearing to drink it.
“Are you pouring on the pounds?” the ad says. “Drinking one can of soda a day can make you 10 pounds fatter a year.”
What New York is doing, as a state, to educate people about creating better habits when consuming drinks is clearly going to drive many New Yorkers and those that see this ad to think about what Yoli’s is bring to market for all of us.
If you are on the fence about getting involved with Yoli’s mission, this should help you understand the impact that Yoli will make on the soda and healthy beverage industry.
Yoli Blast Cap technology and drinks have changed the way we consume our nutrition and changed the network marketing (MLM) business forever. Yoli blast caps bring the truth.












