Kirstie Alley has announced her very own weight loss program called “Organic Liaison”. What’s Organic Liaison? Let’s discuss below.

Dieters are encouraged to have an organic liaison by changing their conventional eating habits. By eating less food and drinking more dietary supplements and natural products, one should be able to lose weight. Organic Liaison claimed weight loss will happen.

Organic Liaison requires a person to register and pay a membership fee before supplements are purchased. The membership is $10/ monthly or $89/ annually. The first kit is the Rescue Kit, which costs $139.

As its name suggests, Organic Liaison is about consuming organic foods. At organic food prices, it will be expensive. There would be less bought with the same amount of money in a food budget. You eat less but better.

Critics to Kirstie Alley’s Organic Liaison diet program claim it is a scheme invented by Scientologists to milk dieters. A group of critics, the Anonymous, claimed Organic Liaison channeled funds to the Scientology Church.

Organic Liaison LLC’s accountant, Saul B Lipson, is a Scientologist. Michelle Seward is another Scientologist involved in Organic Liason.

Organic is based on purification, an idea preached by L Ron Hubbard, the founder of Scientologist. Organic is nothing new as it uses vitamins, minerals, amino acids, herbs , green tea and other natural supplements. Many other diet programs use these. Why should there be objections when Scientology is faintly connected to it? The basic concern should be whether the diet works for the individual.

Kirstie Alley claimed the Organic Liaison diet helped to detox her body and wean her off cocaine.

Organic Liaison is for those who can afford the budget.

Visit Kirstie Alley’s Organic Liaison site here. Kirstie Alley has videos to promote her philosophy of Organic Liaison for weight loss.

Kirstie Alley was invited on the Today Show to talk about her weight loss program called Organic Liaison. Meredith Viera asked Alley if Organic Liaison was a front for Scientology. Alley became so angry she said it was a bullsh**. Viera then asked Alley if the Church of Scientology shares in the profits raked in by Organic Liaisons.

Alley denied that and said she was way too cheap to be sharing her profits.

Updated March 20, 2010 – Kirstie Alley claimed Roger Friedman was the one who was spreading lies about her new business, Organic Liaison. Alley said she has asked her lawyer to communicate with Friedman’s attorney.

Kirstie Alley on Today Show video.

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