Money | false advertising 5 Products That Weren't as Miraculous as Promised POM's deceitful peers include mouthwash, Airborne By Nick McMaster Posted Oct 10, 2010 5:48 PM CDT Copied Displayed is a bottle of POM Wonderful juice in Philadelphia, Monday, Sept. 27, 2010. (AP Photo/Matt Rourke) POM Wonderful pomegranate juice is the latest product to find itself in hot water over its health claims, but it's far from alone. The Week lists 5 other exaggerators: Mouthwash: Johnson and Johnson, CVS, and Walgreens all received reprimands from the FDA last week over unsubstantiated claims that their mouthwash brands could prevent gum disease. Airborne: The cold remedy ("invented by a teacher!") settled a $23.3 million lawsuit rather than attempt to prove in court that it could cure the common cold Activia: Dannon paid $45 million to settle a lawsuit over its "disingenuous" claims that Activia yogurt benefited digestion and boosted the immune system. Rice Krispies: The company sold boxes featuring a hollow claim that its cereal boosted immunity—a claim it dropped in the midst of the swine flu bruhaha last year. Click here for No. 5, which also happens to be a beverage. Read These Next Lily Allen's 'revenge dress' literally has the receipts. Rumors of Iran invasion swirl after Army calls off major drill. After 12-year-old boy's crash on e-motorcycle, his dad is charged. Russia is reportedly helping to guide Iran strikes on US targets. Report an error