Funny Products Archives - Page 9 of 11 - I Hate Working In Retail

By

What fast food you expect to get compared to what you actually get

So, I went to some fast food places… I won’t say “restaurants”, just “places”. After a lifetime of disappointment, bafflement, and frustration with the food, I decided it was time to do a little test, and compare the food you get with the ads. (I’m always on the hunt for little projects like this. Stoked.) I brought the food home, tossed it into my photography studio, and did ad-style shoots, with pictures of the official ads on my computer next to me, so I could match the lighting and angles.


People around the world know fast food as one of the most reliable distributors of disappointment ever produced by the business world. We know that if we ever feel the need to complain about something, we can just grab a page out of a coupon booklet, adorned in pictures of juicy burgers, then go have a party. Why, the places themselves usually plaster their walls with pictures of juicy burgers – often hanging right over your table – so that you need only open your eyes to find something to compare your food with.

Needless to say, the results of my project were unsurprising… which shouldn’t be a surprise.

 

The Rules:

1 – I only care about size. I don’t care if my lettuce isn’t arranged like the crown on Caesar’s head.
2 – I have to show the most attractive angles of the food, with lighting identical to the ads.

Note: This is an ongoing project, started late 2010. It’s free to spread around, and repost anywhere, without permission.

 

taco bell, crunchy taco, fast food, false advertising, , mcdonalds, fast food, false advertising, actual, false, comparison, ads, vs, reality

The taco on the right is my life experience with Taco Bell. (best of two tacos that I bought)

Once upon a time, occasionally dropping in to Taco Bell was something I did, and I always held this grudge: I said, “If you have a company called TACO Bell… and you have this item on your menu called “Crunchy Taco” – you know, like your flagship item – let us hope to heaven up high that it doesn’t look like THIS.” (Seriously… we’ve got 3 ingredients in here: lettuce, cheese, and meat somewhere.)

Since these tacos are pretty dry and empty, I can only tolerate them with hot sauce, which, for me, is when they become good.

 

Tacos, Jack In The Box, fast food, false advertising, actual, false, comparison, ads, vs, reality

(The tacos come in 2.)

I picked these up at a location about half an hour from Jack In The Box’s corporate headquarters. Since I’m showing the largest tacos I could get, I can’t show you how they like to seal themselves shut, like a clam, so that you can’t even see inside. The cheese acts as a perfect glue at the edges. I swear, if you had to use one as a snorkel, to save your life, you would not get air.

They taste a lot better than they look, but that’s because I don’t actually think they’re tacos; they’re just tragically mis-shaped and misrepresented nacho pockets (or something). Pitching them as tacos is a crime against humanity, because we humans have standards of what a taco should look like. And not seal itself shut like.

 

fast, food, advertising, burger king, whopper, false, tiny, comparison, ads, vs, reality

Burger King has had this a long time coming. The Whopper I got the other night was a sight to behold. On one hand, it was exactly the size I remember them being, but it might’ve been the most uninspiring Whopper I’ve ever seen in my life. I’m certain it was just a collection of all the disappointment Burger King has ever served, manifest into a curse, which was now coming back to haunt them.

 

Okay, let’s give Burger King one more chance here…

fast, food, advertising, burger king, whopper, false, tiny, comparison, ads, vs, reality

They need to fire the guy who does his yoga on top of the Whoppers.

I had a childhood of eating these, during the 99-cent Whopper sales they used to have. Mine here was $3.69. (They have the nerve to charge extra for cheese. Maybe they should consider charging extra for things when they decide to serve even half a Whopper.)

…while I was at it, I caught sight of a gargantuan Whopper Jr. photo on the menu, and couldn’t resist:

fast, food, advertising, burger king, whopper, jr, false, tiny, comparison, ads, vs, reality, studio, photography

“Get your burger’s worth,” eh, Burger King? (That was their slogan for a while.)

Before we continue, there’s something everyone should understand: burger size/presentation can certainly vary from location to location, even if we know that it usually isn’t by much. But, for example, when I was young, I once went to a Burger King right next to the beach, where I got a Whopper that was comparatively huge… and it hadtoasted buns. I never forgot that… though I later speculated it was probably because California is known for its great beach-side burger shops (REAL places), so, being next to the beach, this place had to compete.

MY nearest two locations, however, have issues. This is what I got when I asked them specifically for burgers as big as the ads:

fast, food, false advertising, burger king, whopper, big, tiny, comparison, ads, vs, reality, burger, studio, test

(The one in the middle has cheese. I forgot cheese on the other one.)

A fast food place can’t flatly turn down a request for a burger as big as the ads. They can’t say, “I’m sorry, we aren’t able to make burgers that big.”… so, I wanted to see if my two nearest locations would even try. For both orders, I (very politely) asked if my Whopper could be made exactly as big as the ones right behind the cashier, on the menu. Both times, the cashiers turned and took strangely long, careful looks, as if nobody had ever requested that before. They said sure.

Well… I like the pile of onions I got with the second one.

(Note: I’m sure you can find some location where they’ll at least TRY. Surely, it’s just a matter of getting the right people… but, considering that my first two tries were misfires, I wonder exactly what the ratio is between employees who will try, and ones who won’t. Employee training seems to teach absolutely no concept of preparing inviting food.)

Back to price… things always get worse at McDonald$:

 

big mac, mcdonalds, fast food, false advertising, comparison, ads, vs, reality, burger, hamburger

$4 now will get you one of these. ($3.99, to be exact, but that 99 is psychology that I think should be illegal.)

The size was pretty close to the ad… though I’m still trying to determine the planetary origins of this lettuce:

fast, food, advertising, mcdonalds, big mac, actual, false, tiny, comparison, ads, vs, reality, studio, photography

(That’s actually a pickle in the upper right.)

For those who don’t know, Big Macs come in a little box. Looking down in the box, and lifting the top bun, you ask yourself, “What is this empty, dry thing?” Apple fans know of Apple’s famous “unboxing experience” – when you open the gloriously friendly, won’t-destroy-your-hands packaging of an iPhone/iPad/etc – but, well, Big Macs are still working on theirs. They should come with little pink, polka-dotted bow-ties, or little top-hats… and, given the price, they should be made out of real fur.

Big Macs taste really good, though, at least to me… even coming out of the fridge, the next day. In comparison, a leftover Whopper, coming out of the fridge like a mushy old sock from a trash bin, is a different story.

After a little thinking, I realized something. I thought, “You know, these Big Macs I got seem to fit in the boxes pretty snugly… as if the boxes were designed ONLY to house the actual, served Big Macs. I wonder if the advertised ones would even fit.” So, I did a test:

big mac, fast food, mcdonalds, false advertising, box, test, actual, comparison, ads, vs, reality, burger

Oops.

My measurements are unscientific, but extremely carefully done, so I certainly hold my candle to them.

 

big n tasty, mcdonalds, fast food, false advertising, actual, false, comparison, ads, vs, reality, burger

 


burnt paper

One of the burgers performed! The burger I got looks even more serious than the ad.
I got mine with cheese. It cost $4, or $3.79 without cheese.

Looking at the burger I got gives me this weird feeling, though, like the ad should have looked like this:

fast, food, advertising, mcdonalds, big n tasty, actual, false, tiny, comparison, ads, vs, reality, studio, photography

 

angus deluxe, third pounder, mcdonalds, fast food, false advertising, actual, false, comparison, ads, vs, reality, burger

Another $4 burger (mine was $4.29, plus tax)…

Well, I really liked the lettuce I got with this one. You’ll certainly never see a Whopper or Big Mac with that kind of lettuce. But WHAT HAPPENED TO THE MEAT?! It seems to be on a diet, whereas the ad’s meat was only missing a cowbell…

Flavor-wise, for me, it’s a terribly boring burger. There are many $1 burgers that I prefer over this. When trying to figure out what keeps these on the menu, at least for this price, I think either some people out there really like them, or they sell as one-time-buys, intended for people who drop in late one night, and are deceived by the juicy picture… (and have a LOT of money).

This one also comes in a box (a wider, bigger box than the Big Mac), so, I had to test again:

angus deluxe, third pounder, mcdonalds, fast food, false advertising, actual, false, comparison, ads, vs, reality, burger

I hope McDonald’s does something about this. What I think we learn here is that some of their burgers not only don’t look like the ads, but physically CAN’T.

I’m wondering if the other Third Pounder burgers don’t fit in the boxes, and, for that matter, if there are other ways to show similar flaws. Examples I have in mind:

  1. Are some wrappers too small to fit ad-sized burgers? Could they simply not be closed?
  2. I’m fairly certain that many ad shots have all of the ingredients crammed up in the front. Should it be legal to do this, if the human mind perceives that the thickness seen in front must be wrapping around the entire burger, equally?
  3. Should you be able to call the “Third Pounders” that name if it’s only a third pound of meat while frozen, not when it’s served to you? When buying meat, it makes sense to see the pre-cooked weight, because you mentally classify that differently… but, when you’re being served something off a menu, if they say you’re getting a “third pound” of meat, who actually knows that they’re talking about the meat before it was cooked? Realize that shopping at any store that isn’t a restaurant ALWAYS has this “rule”: the weight tells you what you’re GETTING… not what it used to be. For instance, when you’re at a grocery store, all vegetables, fruit, MEAT, cereal, pasta, and everything else is labeled with the weight you’re GETTING. Restaurants are the ONLY places that reverse this rule, and it’s only done for meat. Ever notice that? Restaurant menus often have pictures of their items, with taglines like, “A half pound salad,” or, “Served with a quarter pound of ice cream,”… because that’s what you’re getting. When you’re about to buy a pound of fresh cheese, they don’t mention the cheese’s weight in milk. Even things that change while cooking, like bread, aren’t listed by their weight in dough. 2 points: 1) Cooked meat is the only thing that does this. 2) Never in my life did I buy a burger with a quarter-pound of meat thinking I would end up with half of that

 

 

Sourced from http://www.alphaila.com/articles/failure/fast-food-false-advertising-vs-reality/

Share the joy
  •  
  •  
  •  
  •  
  •  
  •  
  •  
  •  
  •  
  •  
  •  
  •  
  •  
  •  
  •  

By

German shop accidentally sells mugs decorated with picture of HITLER

Furniture store in Bielefeld, Germany sold the Hitler mugs in error

They feature an image of the Nazi leader alongside flowers and poetry

5,000 mugs were made in Chinese factory, which has since apologised 

German shop staff didn’t notice the design until selling 175 of them

They are now offering a £15 coupon to anyone who returns the mugs

Selling items featuring an image of Hitler is banned in modern Germany

 

A German furniture store is offering £15 gift vouchers to customers who return mugs that the company sold decorated with roses and poems – next to the photograph of Nazi leader Adolf Hitler.

The sale of anything featuring the former Fuehrer is strictly forbidden in modern-day Germany and can be punishable with severe fines.

But the Hitler-decorated mugs somehow crept into the stock of the Zurbrueggen home improvement store in the city of Bielefeld – which remains a base for the British army in Germany to this day.

 

Coffee cups with a small Hitler portrait are pictured in Bielefeld

Coffee cups with a small Hitler portrait are pictured in Bielefeld

Error: The Third Reich-era Hitler stamp is printed between petals and poetry on the mug’s decoration, and is not immediately obvious. The store is now offering a gift voucher to any customer who returns one of the mug

The Hitler decoration on the mugs – which were made in China – came in the form of an old 30 pfennig stamp with a swastika postmark over it.

It is not immediately obvious what is depicted on the stamp, although Hitler is unmistakable under closer scrutiny.

I thought I wasn’t seeing too well when I saw I had Hitler sitting down to breakfast with me,’ said Agner Teewald, who bought one of the mugs for her morning coffee at her home in nearby Herford.

Banned: The sale of anything featuring Hitler is strictly forbidden in modern Germany

Banned: The sale of anything featuring Hitler is strictly forbidden in modern Germany

The company spoke of a ‘pretty stupid amalgam of unfortunate circumstances’ which led to the Nazi mugs going on sale.

Christian Zurbrueggen, the owner and managing director of the store, says an investigation is underway to discover how the face of Hitler made its way on to the ceramics.

The stamp is printed between petals and poetry and is not detectable with a cursory glance.

Now the store is offering a gift voucher to any customer who returns one of the mugs.

The Chinese factory that made them produced 5,000 total, although only 175 actually sold – all for less than £3 each.

The remaining 4825 cups have already been destroyed.

Now the store is offering the voucher in a bid to get back the 175 out of a batch of 5000 made in China mugs that were actually sold. They were sold for less than three pounds each.

Mr Zurbrueggen also apologised profusely and called the incident ‘truly terrible.’

He said the mugs were loaded so quickly on to company shelves that no store workers noticed the ‘embarrassing error.’

The Chinese factory responsible has also apologised and promised a full investigation
Sourced from the dailymail.com

Share the joy
  •  
  •  
  •  
  •  
  •  
  •  
  •  
  •  
  •  
  •  
  •  
  •  
  •  
  •  
  •  

By

24 Experiences You Only Have At Asian Supermarkets

Only in an Asian supermarket

1. When you walk into one, you are met with a dangerously pungent mystery smell.

When you walk into one, you are met with a dangerously pungent mystery smell.

2. (That you can only blame on the unfortunate mixture of dried fish and durian fruit.)

(That you can only blame on the unfortunate mixture of dried fish and durian fruit.)

3. You’ve plucked “fresh” produce from cardboard boxes.

Or, if they’re slightly a more upscale establishment, plastic containers.

4. And it doesn’t even matter if they’re fresh. They’re ridiculously cheap.

And it doesn't even matter if they're fresh. They're ridiculously cheap.

5. You’ve had to stand idly by with the shopping cart as your mother expertly selects one bundle of bok choy over another.

You've had to stand idly by with the shopping cart as your mother expertly selects one bundle of bok choy over another.

6. You’ve seen it all and nothing fazes you.

7. Well…not always.

Well...not always.

8. You can purchase fine pottery in the same vicinity as live octopus and fermented duck eggs.

You can purchase fine pottery in the same vicinity as live octopus and fermented duck eggs.

9. But you have to maneuver those aisles carefully ‘cause you know the consequences.

But you have to maneuver those aisles carefully 'cause you know the consequences.

And they’re not playing.

10. You’ve witnessed a butcher dismember and package an entire duck in literally under 10 seconds.

11. You’ve watched your mother lift and sling a 70-pound bag of rice like a fucking champ.

You've watched your mother lift and sling a 70-pound bag of rice like a fucking champ.

(You’ve tried and struggled.)

12. You and your family have been buying the same groceries your entire life, and you still don’t quite know what they are.

You and your family have been buying the same groceries your entire life, and you still don't quite know what they are.

I don’t know what you call these, but when you sautée them, it’s fucking delicious.

13. You’re extremely grateful of establishments that have a slightly higher standard of order and cleanliness.

14. Because when it’s Saturday afternoon and all the families are out, it is every-man-for-himself anarchy.

Because when it's Saturday afternoon and all the families are out, it is every-man-for-himself anarchy.

As a kid, you were always assigned to watch the cart at HQ while your parents ran back and forth.

15. You used to watch the live crabs crawl all over each other and wonder how they haven’t figured out how to escape.

You used to watch the live crabs crawl all over each other and wonder how they haven't figured out how to escape.

16. You’ve accepted that presentation means nothing.

You've accepted that presentation means nothing.

17. Except those moments when they mean everything (and no one else around you quite notices or cares).

Except those moments when they mean everything (and no one else around you quite notices or cares).

18. You rarely need to exchange a single word with the cashier.

You rarely need to exchange a single word with the cashier.

No small talk here: strictly business.

19. And there is usually no scanner because they somehow know the prices of EVERYTHING OFF TOP.

24 Experiences You Only Have At Asian Supermarkets

AND THEY’RE JUST MANUALLY TYPING IT IN WITHOUT EVEN LOOKING AT THE PRICE STICKER. HOWWWWWWWWW.

20. But that’s OK: Your total will always be under $100, and you have a trunkload of food.

But that's OK: Your total will always be under $100, and you have a trunkload of food.

21. Somehow, to this day, most Asian supermarkets are still cash only.

Somehow, to this day, most Asian supermarkets are still cash only.

(But let’s be real: No matter how big, most stores still don’t want to pay that credit card processing fee.)

22. You and your family have been going to the same local grocer for years now, and you’ve accepted its quirks.

You and your family have been going to the same local grocer for years now, and you've accepted its quirks.

23. Because it has what you really want.

Because it has what you really want.

JUNK FOOD AISLE = CRACK.

24. And so much more.

And so much more.

Share the joy
  •  
  •  
  •  
  •  
  •  
  •  
  •  
  •  
  •  
  •  
  •  
  •  
  •  
  •  
  •