I said there is no measurable force being applied to a falling body. Einstein did call gravitation a fictitious force. He postulated that we exist in non-inertial frames of reference. If relativity were to be true, it would be a fictitious force by definition. Perhaps you should read up on fictitious forces.
As far as Newtonian Mechanics is concerned gravity is a force. Newtonian Gravity assumes inertial frames of reference.
You use the term ficticious to insinuate something that doesn't exist. The term ficticious force refers to an inertial force. It's real and it exists, but it's not a force that acts on the body, it is an apparent force that manifests when a body undergoes acceleration. Centrifugal force is also a ficticious force, are you going to say that the centrifugal affect is not real?
When you accelerate in a car, there is an apparent force pushing you back in your seat. You can't measure that either, there is nothing pushing on you at all, yet the fact remains SOMETHING is pressing you into the seat.
Gravity is real. It causes an apparent force to act on bodies within it's field.
You are arguing semantics, the bottomline is that gravity is a well measured phenomenon and even though it's not known what actually causes gravity, it's affects are well understood and offer a far better explanation than UA (the cause of which is even less understood) for the shape of the earth and for the phenomena of 'falling'.