
Adam Cherrington is a convicted felon who did hard time for duct taping 6.6 pounds of nose candy to his body and trying to smuggle it into Australia.
Where’d he get his moral compass: the clearance bin at Kmart?
But hey, he’s learned his lesson.
Now he’s married, wears plaid shirts, and loves God.
So you can totally trust him when he says he makes a quarter million a month as a super affiliate.
And that he’s been raking in these numbers for 20 years.
A bit strange, considering there was a GoFundMe created on October 5, 2020, with a $10,000 goal so he and his wife could adopt another kid.
I mean, you’d think a multimillionaire could find a spare $10k lying around, wouldn’t you?
Also weird is how Adam has been dickslapping the internet with ads for years, peddling his so-called Invisible Affiliate System that supposedly earns him that $250k a month completely passively.
If I had such a system, I sure as hell wouldn’t be spending money to create more competition for myself.
Nope.
I’d be burnt lobster-pink in an infinity pool overlooking the beach, waiting on my Hypnotic Breeze while peeing with a straight face – because I, too, got a defective moral compass, though not as bad as Adam’s.
Wait, I just thought of something.
You don’t s’pose Adam really makes his fortune selling you coaching packages that cost anywhere from $40,000 to $100,000, do ya?
Nope, Mr. Incorruptible would never.
This is the type of guy who’d stop traffic for a squirrel.
Sure, maybe he wants you to fork over six figures for mentoring, plus $20k for ad spend, and 50% of the profits for the next two years – but at least you know he’ll be praying for you.
Now. Do I think Adam ever made money with affiliate marketing?
Yeah, probably some. But nowhere near the amount he claims.
Even Stevie Wonder can see through this charade.
Then again, maybe I’m just being a hater, right?
Just because I trust Adam about as much as I trust someone who communicates solely through WhatsApp doesn’t mean he can’t successfully teach you how to get your affiliate link clicked.

So, what are actual Adam’s Method members saying about their experience inside his ridiculously-priced program?
I searched Reddit for Adam Cherrington reviews, but, like Chick-fil-A on a Sunday, came up empty.
Luckily, there was this one guy on YouTube who spilled the beans.
He made the training area sound like a tornado had ripped through it, leaving a trail of chaos and confusion.
It was basically a mess of links and videos, all of which ended with you on a sales call being pitched the next five-figure upsell.
Then he dropped a bomb.
He revealed that in one of Adam’s videos, Adam admitted that while you can make some money with regular affiliate marketing, it’s a grind with lots of A/B testing and whatnot. But the real money is made by promoting Adam’s mentorship to others.
When I heard that, my heart damn near fell outta my butt.
Recruiting? Wow. I didn’t see that one coming.
I bet if you looked into Adam’s soul, you’d see nothing but darkness and Hennessy.
Another student filed a Ripoff Report stating they paid $50,000 for Adam Cherrington’s done-for-you affiliate marketing program, which promised a return within nine months.
They experienced severe delays and a lack of communication from Adam, who always clapped back with some sad excuse.
After eight months and nothing to show for it, they requested a refund, which was denied.
They also met other members who had yet to make a dime.
The student dropped the mic with a link to a bankruptcy filing by one of Adam’s earlier companies.
That got me Googling some more, where I was able to dig up at least one lawsuit against Adam.
Verdict?
I’d live in a sewer and pop out of a manhole like Donatello – just to dumpster dive for food – before I’d do business with Cherrington Media, LLC.
Q&A
Q: Does Adam have a book?
A: There’s an Adam Cherrington on Amazon with a book called Jericho, which he claims God told him to write after getting saved in his early 20s. That lines up with our Adam’s backstory, but the author photo doesn’t match. So no, just a coincidence. Though I gotta admit, Fraud, Faith, and Funnels: The Adam Cherrington Story has a nice ring to it.
Q: Adam Cherrington net worth?
A: I dunno, but if I were Adam, I’d be less focused on counting my cash and more worried that karma’s cooking up a revenge arc ready to seize every ill-gotten dollar.
Q: Workshop.AdamsMethod.com – is the training here really free?
A: If by free you mean hand over your email so Adam can spam you until you either invest tens of thousands of dollars or unsubscribe, then yep – it’s free.
Q: TheInvisibleAffiliate.com sells his entire system for only $67 now?
A: That’s what Adam wants you to think. In reality, it’s probably a handful of dusty videos and sloppy PDFs, peppered with plugs for the expensive stuff you actually need to become a super affiliate like him. The $67 price tag lets Adam recoup his ad spend – and it’s cheap enough that most people won’t bother Googling him. The guy is one greasy little weasel.
Q: Is this a pyramid scheme?
A: Not by definition. But if it looks like a duck, quacks like a duck, and demands you shill its overpriced course to make any real money… well, you do the math.
Q: What’s the word on Trustpilot about this guy?
A: There isn’t one. No listing. Not that it’d help. You know that moment when you realize your parents’ “saggy old friends” were actually just 33? Yeah, same thing when you figure out 5-star Trustpilot reviews are mostly bots, bribes, and students who haven’t done squat yet – completely drowning out the few honest 1-star reviews. I’ve seen gurus sued by the FTC for fraud who still hold a “Great” or “Excellent” rating. See: Lucas Lee-Tyson and Ozzie Blessed of Growth Cave. See: the Mikkelsen twins from Publishing.com. Trustpilot’s a joke.
Q: What about the Better Business Bureau?
A: The BBB listing for Cherrington Media, LLC oughta be roped off with yellow caution tape. Complaints are flooding in faster than Adam’s crew can hit “ignore,” shining a light on his sketchy business practices. They’re currently sitting at a D+ rating – which, to be fair, is probably the highest grade Adam’s ever gotten.
Q: Do you have a legit alternative that won’t take my wallet, my dignity, and the last shred of my credit score?
A: Yes, but. Adam sold you on a Swedish model with blonde hair, blue eyes, and knockers so big you fantasized about taking a nap on her milk shelf. Whereas, this business is more like a 55-year-old truck stop waitress with a raspy voice and type 2 diabetes. But at least it’s honest. Watch this video.