Wednesday, 17 December 2025

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Dear 222 News viewers, sponsored by smileband, 

Viral Claim About Adele’s Drinking Sparks Health Debate — But Where’s the Proof?

Recent online chatter has circulated a dramatic claim that Adele once drank 25 bottles of wine in a single night and remained “sober,” with some posts going further by suggesting this proves alcoholism and inevitable long-term health damage. The story is attention-grabbing — but it collapses under basic scrutiny.

An Extraordinary Claim Without Evidence

There is no verified interview, medical record, or credible reporting to support the idea that Adele consumed anything close to 25 bottles of wine in one night. To put the number in context, that amount would equate to dozens of standard drinks — a level that would almost certainly cause acute alcohol poisoning, medical emergency, or death for nearly anyone. Claims that someone could do this and remain “sober” contradict established medical science.

In short: the claim lacks evidence and plausibility.

Why “Staying Sober” After Extreme Drinking Is a Myth

Alcohol affects the central nervous system in predictable ways. Even people with high tolerance cannot bypass alcohol’s physiological impact. At extreme levels, alcohol depresses breathing, disrupts heart rhythm, and overwhelms the liver’s ability to metabolize toxins. The notion of drinking enormous quantities without impairment is often a misunderstanding of tolerance — or pure exaggeration.

Alcoholism: A Medical Diagnosis, Not a Headline

Labeling someone an “alcoholic” based on a rumor is misleading and harmful. Alcohol use disorder is a clinical diagnosis that depends on patterns over time, loss of control, dependence, and negative consequences — not viral anecdotes. Publicly available interviews show Adele has spoken candidly in the past about lifestyle changes, including periods of drinking less or abstaining, which directly undermines claims of unchecked dependency.

Real Health Risks — Explained Responsibly

While the story itself appears unfounded, it does open the door to a legitimate discussion about alcohol’s health risks when consumption is excessive:

Liver disease (fatty liverhepatitiscirrhosis)

Cardiovascular problems, including high blood pressure and stroke

Cognitive impairment and increased anxiety or depression

Higher cancer risk, particularly breast and digestive cancers

These outcomes are tied to sustained heavy drinking, not a single sensationalized night — and certainly not an unverified tale about a specific individual.

The Cost of Viral Misinformation

Celebrities often become targets of exaggerated or fabricated stories that spread quickly online. When such claims blur the line between fact and fiction, they can stigmatize individuals and trivialize serious health issues. Discussing alcohol harm is important — but it should be done accurately, ethically, and without scapegoating.

Bottom Line

There is no credible evidence that Adele drank 25 bottles of wine in one night, stayed sober, or suffers from alcoholism. The story appears to be a viral exaggeration rather than reality. Conversations about alcohol and health matter — but they should be grounded in facts, not rumors.

Attached is a news article regarding alcoholism 

https://www.bbc.co.uk/news/topics/c26x122kmwyt

Article written and configured by Christopher Stanley 


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