<p>One minute Australian "wellness" personality Pete Evans is posting a barbecued prawn recipe to 1.5 million Facebook followers, the next he's claiming the coronavirus pandemic is an elaborate global hoax.</p>.<p>During this year of crisis, the ever-smiling, one-time television chef known as "Paleo Pete" has become a leading purveyor of conspiracy and pseudoscience Down Under.</p>.<p>The pandemic has seen a worldwide explosion of misinformation with anti-vaccination groups, the far right, libertarians, state-backed trolls and anarchists forging a loose coalition of the disgruntled.</p>.<p>An unlikely mix of celebrities, wellness experts and social media influencers like Evans have become a powerful vector in that "infodemic".</p>.<p>While government scientists give earnest daily briefings, Evans turns to social media to question lockdowns and rubbish the use of facemasks.</p>.<p>The content is often up-beat -- appearing in a wetsuit with blue eyes beaming, riffing about the joys of being back surfing after injury. He signs off emails with the signature: "Cook with Love and Laughter!"</p>.<p>But his most popular content is often recycled from US conspiracy theories.</p>.<p>These posts prompt long threads that echo QAnon movement talking points, claiming a "plandemic" manufactured crisis by global elites to enforce lucrative mass vaccinations and control humanity.</p>.<p><strong><a href="https://www.deccanherald.com/national/coronavirus-news-live-updates-india-world-coronavirus-vaccine-karnataka-maharashtra-tamil-nadu-delhi-kerala-gujarat-bengal-bengaluru-mumbai-new-delhi-chennai-kolkata-cases-deaths-recoveries-AstraZeneca-Oxford-898877.html" target="_blank">For live updates on the coronavirus outbreak, click here</a></strong></p>.<p>A post of Anthony Fauci, who has led the US government's response to every epidemic since the 1980s, being questioned over a potential Covid-19 vaccine was a particular hit for Evans.</p>.<p>The post attracted over half a million views and a blizzard of conspiratorial comments against vaccinations and traditional government rule.</p>.<p>According to data from social media tracker CrowdTangle, Evans' reach has increased since the pandemic began, growing by up to 15,000 users a week, rather than the net loss he often used to see.</p>.<p>"People are searching for answers," said Mathew Marques, a lecturer in Social Psychology at La Trobe University. "You've got, I guess, charlatans and snake oil salesmen offering a cure."</p>.<p>Evans denies trafficking in lies, and denounces what he calls "fear-based propaganda."</p>.<p>"The pandemic is a hoax. It is as simple as that" he told AFP, claiming that wearing masks and social distancing "are in fact damaging our immune system."</p>.<p>"The reason we have become the number one selling health and lifestyle author in this country is because what we share actually keeps people healthy."</p>.<p>Academics have labelled the mash-up of New Age thinking with conspiracy theories as "conspirituality."</p>.<p>"They all see themselves in some way as rebels, as a resistance," Professor Axel Bruns from the Digital Media Research Centre at the Queensland University of Technology told AFP.</p>.<p><strong>Read: <a href="https://www.deccanherald.com/opinion/why-conspiracy-theories-are-so-addictive-right-now-898948.html" target="_blank">Why conspiracy theories are so addictive right now</a></strong></p>.<p>Those interested in healthy lifestyles and spirituality may have been primed for Covid-19 conspiracies -- given existing distrust of western medicine and corporate interests.</p>.<p>The charismatic "laid back, stereotypical Aussie bloke" appeal of Evans helped him weave a narrative which pits him against powerful establishment interests, said Marques.</p>.<p>"These kind of big pharma conspiracy theories... these seem to be kind of interlinked with this rise of a wellness alternative."</p>.<p>The spread of his beliefs can be seen online, and on the streets of virus-hit Australia's cities.</p>.<p>"He's bringing to light, to the people in Australia and the people around the world, how corrupt the governments are," said Evans fan and naturopath Sheridan Lee at a recent anti-lockdown rally in Melbourne.</p>.<p>"If it has to be a celebrity and influencer to bring this out, then so be it."</p>.<p>Fellow Melbourne protester Dellacoma Rio said he regularly listened to Evans' livestreams and agreed with his promotion of anti-vaccination views.</p>.<p>"I feel like if you follow the money you see who's getting paid to do things and where money is coming from," he said.</p>.<p>For some of Evan's critics, the question of money is pertinent.</p>.<p>He sells pricey "Thoughtful Food" products like "Dehydrated Beef Bone Broth with Wattleseed, Lemon Myrtle & Kakadu Plum" and has promoted an Aus$15,000 "light machine" -- which looks like a psychedelic countertop blender -- to help against Covid-19.</p>.<p>Evans denied pitching the "biocharger" for use against the disease, despite video evidence of him telling followers it had "recipes" for the "Wuhan coronavirus" -- a claim which resulted in a fine from Australia's Therapeutic Goods Administration.</p>.<p>"It's hard not to look past the fact that many people offering these supposed cures or alternatives seem to be profiting from them," said Marques.</p>.<p>Authorities complain that the spread of such disinformation also weakens social cohesion, which is needed to tackle the virus quickly.</p>.<p>"The tinfoil hat-wearing brigade are alive and well in our community," a frustrated Victoria Police assistant commissioner Luke Cornelius said recently.</p>.<p>"They're taking every opportunity to leverage the current situation to serve their own ridiculous notions about so-called sovereign citizens, about constitutional issues and about how 5G is going to kill your grandkids," he said, describing the claims as "batshit crazy nonsense."</p>
<p>One minute Australian "wellness" personality Pete Evans is posting a barbecued prawn recipe to 1.5 million Facebook followers, the next he's claiming the coronavirus pandemic is an elaborate global hoax.</p>.<p>During this year of crisis, the ever-smiling, one-time television chef known as "Paleo Pete" has become a leading purveyor of conspiracy and pseudoscience Down Under.</p>.<p>The pandemic has seen a worldwide explosion of misinformation with anti-vaccination groups, the far right, libertarians, state-backed trolls and anarchists forging a loose coalition of the disgruntled.</p>.<p>An unlikely mix of celebrities, wellness experts and social media influencers like Evans have become a powerful vector in that "infodemic".</p>.<p>While government scientists give earnest daily briefings, Evans turns to social media to question lockdowns and rubbish the use of facemasks.</p>.<p>The content is often up-beat -- appearing in a wetsuit with blue eyes beaming, riffing about the joys of being back surfing after injury. He signs off emails with the signature: "Cook with Love and Laughter!"</p>.<p>But his most popular content is often recycled from US conspiracy theories.</p>.<p>These posts prompt long threads that echo QAnon movement talking points, claiming a "plandemic" manufactured crisis by global elites to enforce lucrative mass vaccinations and control humanity.</p>.<p><strong><a href="https://www.deccanherald.com/national/coronavirus-news-live-updates-india-world-coronavirus-vaccine-karnataka-maharashtra-tamil-nadu-delhi-kerala-gujarat-bengal-bengaluru-mumbai-new-delhi-chennai-kolkata-cases-deaths-recoveries-AstraZeneca-Oxford-898877.html" target="_blank">For live updates on the coronavirus outbreak, click here</a></strong></p>.<p>A post of Anthony Fauci, who has led the US government's response to every epidemic since the 1980s, being questioned over a potential Covid-19 vaccine was a particular hit for Evans.</p>.<p>The post attracted over half a million views and a blizzard of conspiratorial comments against vaccinations and traditional government rule.</p>.<p>According to data from social media tracker CrowdTangle, Evans' reach has increased since the pandemic began, growing by up to 15,000 users a week, rather than the net loss he often used to see.</p>.<p>"People are searching for answers," said Mathew Marques, a lecturer in Social Psychology at La Trobe University. "You've got, I guess, charlatans and snake oil salesmen offering a cure."</p>.<p>Evans denies trafficking in lies, and denounces what he calls "fear-based propaganda."</p>.<p>"The pandemic is a hoax. It is as simple as that" he told AFP, claiming that wearing masks and social distancing "are in fact damaging our immune system."</p>.<p>"The reason we have become the number one selling health and lifestyle author in this country is because what we share actually keeps people healthy."</p>.<p>Academics have labelled the mash-up of New Age thinking with conspiracy theories as "conspirituality."</p>.<p>"They all see themselves in some way as rebels, as a resistance," Professor Axel Bruns from the Digital Media Research Centre at the Queensland University of Technology told AFP.</p>.<p><strong>Read: <a href="https://www.deccanherald.com/opinion/why-conspiracy-theories-are-so-addictive-right-now-898948.html" target="_blank">Why conspiracy theories are so addictive right now</a></strong></p>.<p>Those interested in healthy lifestyles and spirituality may have been primed for Covid-19 conspiracies -- given existing distrust of western medicine and corporate interests.</p>.<p>The charismatic "laid back, stereotypical Aussie bloke" appeal of Evans helped him weave a narrative which pits him against powerful establishment interests, said Marques.</p>.<p>"These kind of big pharma conspiracy theories... these seem to be kind of interlinked with this rise of a wellness alternative."</p>.<p>The spread of his beliefs can be seen online, and on the streets of virus-hit Australia's cities.</p>.<p>"He's bringing to light, to the people in Australia and the people around the world, how corrupt the governments are," said Evans fan and naturopath Sheridan Lee at a recent anti-lockdown rally in Melbourne.</p>.<p>"If it has to be a celebrity and influencer to bring this out, then so be it."</p>.<p>Fellow Melbourne protester Dellacoma Rio said he regularly listened to Evans' livestreams and agreed with his promotion of anti-vaccination views.</p>.<p>"I feel like if you follow the money you see who's getting paid to do things and where money is coming from," he said.</p>.<p>For some of Evan's critics, the question of money is pertinent.</p>.<p>He sells pricey "Thoughtful Food" products like "Dehydrated Beef Bone Broth with Wattleseed, Lemon Myrtle & Kakadu Plum" and has promoted an Aus$15,000 "light machine" -- which looks like a psychedelic countertop blender -- to help against Covid-19.</p>.<p>Evans denied pitching the "biocharger" for use against the disease, despite video evidence of him telling followers it had "recipes" for the "Wuhan coronavirus" -- a claim which resulted in a fine from Australia's Therapeutic Goods Administration.</p>.<p>"It's hard not to look past the fact that many people offering these supposed cures or alternatives seem to be profiting from them," said Marques.</p>.<p>Authorities complain that the spread of such disinformation also weakens social cohesion, which is needed to tackle the virus quickly.</p>.<p>"The tinfoil hat-wearing brigade are alive and well in our community," a frustrated Victoria Police assistant commissioner Luke Cornelius said recently.</p>.<p>"They're taking every opportunity to leverage the current situation to serve their own ridiculous notions about so-called sovereign citizens, about constitutional issues and about how 5G is going to kill your grandkids," he said, describing the claims as "batshit crazy nonsense."</p>