The Viral Photo of Dr. Oz That's Taking the Internet by Storm Is Not Real

Mar. 15, 2025

The doctored Dr. Oz photo that went viral.Photo: Twitter

Dr. Oz viral photo

Someone doctoredDr. Oz.

Republican Senate hopeful Mehmet Oz received negative press this week when a photo circulated online that appeared to show him posing alongside a person holding his campaign sign sideways, reading “NO” instead of “OZ.”

Internet users had a field day with the picture, calling the sign-holder “brilliant” and writing things like, “Dr. Oz gets trolled everywhere he goes and it makes me so happy.”

While it’s true thatOz has had a tough goduring his campaign to represent Pennsylvania in the U.S. Senate — a majority of the criticism stemming from the fact that prior to entering the race,he lived in New Jersey— multiple fact checkers revealed that this particular scandal has no merit, and was crafted with some deceptive photo editing.

The reality is: The person holding the sign in theoriginal, unedited photoappears to be supporting Oz, as she is holding his sign the proper way that reads “OZ,” not “NO.”

The original, unedited Dr. Oz image.Dr. Oz/Twitter

Dr. Oz viral photo

If someone wants to criticize Oz, there are several ways to do so without veering into “fake news” territory. The celebrity doctor, 62, has made himself an easy target from day one of his political career, when helaunched a campaignin a state that he hasn’t lived in since medical school.

His Democratic opponent, Pennsylvania Lt. Gov.John Fetterman, has routinely gone viral for cleverly challenging theMAGA Republican’s qualifications for office.

Fetterman, 53, has employed a number of internet-savvy tactics, like gettingJersey Shore’sSnookitorecord a videocalling his move to Pennsylvania “temporary,“flying a bannerover the Jersey coastline welcoming Oz “home” when the doctor passed through, and starting a petition to get Oz inducted into the New Jersey Hall of Fame.

John Fetterman, Mehmet Oz.Commonwealth of Pennsylvania, Bonnie Biess/Getty

Lt. Gov. John Fetterman and Dr. Mehmet Oz

But Oz has also placed himself in hot water a number of times on the campaign trail, inadvertently backing up Fetterman’s claims.

A video posted on Oz’s Twitter account in April intended to highlight the effects of inflation in Pennsylvania, but instead came across as pretentious as he was shown shopping for “crudités” in a local Redner’s supermarket — which he erroneously referred to as “Wegner’s.”

Fetterman was quick to tease that Oz was out of touch with voters (“in PA we call this a… veggie tray”), to which Oz’s campaign spokespersonfired backthat Fetterman, whosuffered a strokein May, would not have done so if he’d “ever eaten a vegetable in his life,” prompting widespread backlash.

And when Oz offered an unsure answer about the number of houses he owns, reporters concluded that he has 10 residential properties, including a Palm Beach, Florida, mansion — where locals consider him a “part-time” resident —for which he recently received a hefty tax break.

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Oz became a nationally known name withThe Dr. Oz Show, which launched in 2009 after he made a name for himselfas a frequent guest onThe Oprah Winfrey Show.

While it helped propel the cardiothoracic surgeon’s television career, the show also proved controversial, and Oz has been accused ofpromoting unproven medical treatmentsand making false or misleading scientific claims in the years since it has been on the air. (In response toaNew York Timesarticle last yeardetailing some of the issues, his campaign said he went against the “established grain” but was focused on his patients. Oz himself has said he tries to reach the audience where they are and “empower “them.)

source: people.com