SnL, isn’t that supposed to be Saturday Night Live? Didn’t they patent the name or something? Anyway, SnL is described as a Slim N Light formula meant for powerful weight loss results. That all sounds pretty typical, as does the added “no ephedra, no caffeine, and no side effects” part. But typical does not mean ineffective. Typical in this case means that it’s everything you should hear. But then again, there are quite few products that don’t actually deliver. Let’s see how SnL is typical and how it’s not when you consider the formula.
Ingredients & How SnL Works
SnL uses 3 basic ingredients, all of which I’ve seen before. Ingredients include L-carnitine, Hoodia gordonii, and green tea. Yes, it is likely that SnL does use other ingredients. But it does not name any, which again not particularly surprising.
To break it down quickly and effectively, the only clinically proven weight loss ingredient in SnL is green tea. And yes, green tea is powerful. But despite what SnL says, green tea is still technically stimulant based, and it could potentially cause certain side effects.
The other ingredients do not work for even a minute. The other ingredients in SnL do not even begin to promote weight loss with l-carnitine and hoodia both having no clinically proven benefits at all. And frankly, you cannot even get hoodia. Hoodia cannot be exported from South Africa.
Is SnL Effective?
SnL is not effective. It does not actually promote any known benefits, and yes it may look good and the focus is on no side effects, not the results. But SnL is not technically as safe as it wants to sound. It doesn’t measure up to a lot of things that it would like you to believe. And there’s no plausible reason I can think of to use SnL.