- A COVID-19 therapeutic drug being hyped by the
MyPillow founder pushedCNN 'sAnderson Cooper to the limits of his patience on Tuesday afternoon. - "Sir, just for our viewers: You have no medical background. You're not a scientist," Cooper told
Mike Lindell , a close ally of President Trump, also known as the "MyPillow guy." - "A guy called you in April and said he had this product. You are now on the board and are going to make money from the sale of this product," Cooper said.
- "The reason he reached out to you is you have the ear of the president ... How do you sleep at night?"
- Lindell has been pushing for FDA approval of
oleandrin — a drug derived from a plant that is toxic when consumed raw — claiming it is a "cure" for COVID-19, despite that there is no evidence of a cure yet.
Anderson Cooper lost patience Tuesday afternoon while interviewing MyPillow founder and CEO Mike Lindell, who has been pushing a
"Sir, just for our viewers: You have no medical background. You're not a scientist," Cooper told Lindell.
—Justin Baragona (@justinbaragona) August 18, 2020
"A guy called you in April and said he had this product," Cooper continued. "You are now on the board and are going to make money from the sale of this product. The reason he reached out to you is you have the ear of the president ... How do you sleep at night?"
"Anderson, that's your narrative," Lindell said, before accusing "the
Lindell met with Trump at the White House in July to push for FDA approval of oleandrin. The meeting was first reported by The Washington Post.
The drug, which is derived from a plant that can be fatally toxic when consumed raw, is being produced by a company called Phoenix.
Lindell sits on the board of the company, and reportedly vouched for the drug to Housing and Urban Development Secretary Dr. Ben Carson.
"If people were left to their own devices, this would be the next hydroxychloroquine," an administration official told The Post regarding oleandrin, referring to the drug pushed by Trump early on in the pandemic despite medical scrutiny over its effectiveness.
Growing in frustration, Cooper asked Lindell, "How are you different than a snake-oil salesman?"
"I think my platform stands by itself," Lindell said. "I have a platform that God gave me of integrity and trust."