Video Archives - Page 15 of 22 - I Hate Working In Retail

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This Is What Happens When A Really Tall Guy Goes Grocery Shopping Dressed As An Orc

 

Which way to the meat counter? It's on the menu tonight.

One does not simply walk into the supermarket. Wait, actually… yeah. That’s how it works.

You show me someone who’s not afraid of orcs as imagined by J.R.R. Tolkien, those slavering, soulless hordes drooling for manflesh, and I will show you a liar. So it’s not surprising that the appearance of a seven-foot tall man dressed like those fiercest of orc warriors, the mean ol’ Uruk-hai, would draw some interesting reactions when he headed out to go grocery shopping.

Mr. Uruk-hai heads off to the supermarket to pick up whatever it is orcs need — extra toilet paper for those long hauls across the Plateau of Gorgoroth and maybe some chips and salsa for nights spent in the Mountains of Shadow — and of course, startled titters and general fun ensues.

While he definitely needs some more gnarly action going on in the dental region, and maybe a bit of slime and general orc muck slathered all over that imposing frame, I can tell you without a doubt that my insides would still want to be on the outside if I ran into that guy.

(h/T to HappyPlace.com)

Sourced  consumerist.com

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Domino’s Disgusting Video Gets Workers Fired

 Scroll down for Video….. Its a fairly old article from 2009 but Totally Gross.

Photographs from the Conover, N.C., Police Department

Online comments helped the police identify Kristy Hammonds and Michael Setzer as the makers of a troubling kitchen video.

 

When two Domino’s Pizza employees filmed a prank in the restaurant’s kitchen, they decided to post it online. In a few days, thanks to the power of social media, they ended up with felony charges, more than a million disgusted viewers, and a major company facing a public relations crisis.

In videos posted on YouTube and elsewhere this week, a Domino’s employee in Conover, N.C., prepared sandwiches for delivery while putting cheese up his nose, nasal mucus on the sandwiches, and violating other health-code standards while a fellow employee provided narration.

The two were charged with delivering prohibited foods.

By Wednesday afternoon, the video had been viewed more than a million times on YouTube. References to it were in five of the 12 results on the first page of Google search  for “Dominos,” and discussions about Domino’s had spread throughout Twitter.

As Domino’s is realizing, social media has the reach and speed to turn tiny incidents into marketing crises. In November, Motrin posted an ad suggesting that carrying babies in slings was  a painful  new fad. Unhappy mothers posted Twitter complaints about it, and bloggers followed; within days, Motrin had removed the ad and apologized.

On Monday, Amazon.com apologized for a “ham-fisted” error after Twitter members complained that the sales rankings for gay and lesbian books seemed to have disappeared — and, since Amazon took more than a day to respond, the social-media world criticized it for being uncommunicative.

According to Domino’s, the employees told executives that they had never actually delivered the tainted food. Still, Domino’s fired the two employees on Tuesday, and they were in the custody of the Conover police department on Wednesday evening, facing felony charges.

But the crisis was not over for Domino’s.

“We got blindsided by two idiots with a video camera and an awful idea,” said a Domino’s spokesman, Tim McIntyre, who added that the company was preparing a civil lawsuit. “Even people who’ve been with us as loyal customers for 10, 15, 20 years, people are second-guessing their relationship with Domino’s, and that’s not fair.”

In just a few days, Domino’s reputation was damaged. The perception of its quality among consumers went from positive to negative since Monday, according to the research firm YouGov, which holds online surveys of about 1,000 consumers every day regarding hundreds of brands.

“It’s graphic enough in the video, and it’s created enough of a stir, that it gives people a little bit of pause,” said Ted Marzilli, global managing director for YouGov’s BrandIndex.

The Domino’s experience “is a nightmare,” said Paul Gallagher, managing director and a head of the United States crisis practice at the public relations firm Burson-Marsteller. “It’s the toughest situation for a company to face in terms of a digital crisis.”

Mr. McIntyre was alerted to the videos on Monday evening by a blogger who had seen them. In the most popular video, a woman who identifies herself as Kristy films a co-worker, Michael, preparing the unsanitary sandwiches.

“In about five minutes it’ll be sent out on delivery where somebody will be eating these, yes, eating them, and little did they know that cheese was in his nose and that there was some lethal gas that ended up on their salami,” Kristy said. “Now that’s how we roll at Domino’s.”

On Monday, commenters at the site Consumerist.com used clues in the video to find the franchise location in Conover, and told Mr. McIntyre about the videos. On Tuesday, the Domino’s franchise owner fired the employees, identified by Domino’s as Kristy Hammonds, 31 and Michael Setzer, 32. The franchisee brought in the local health department, which advised him to discard all open containers of food, which cost hundreds of dollars, Mr. McIntyre said.

Ms. Hammonds apologized to the company in an e-mail message  Tuesday morning. “It was fake and I wish that everyone knew that!!!!” she wrote. “I AM SOO SORRY!”

By Wednesday evening, the video had been removed from YouTube because of a copyright claim from Ms. Hammonds. Neither Ms. Hammonds  nor Mr. Setzer were  available for comment on Wednesday evening, said Conover’s chief of police, Gary W. Lafone.

As the company learned about the video on Tuesday, Mr. McIntyre said, executives decided not to respond aggressively, hoping the controversy would quiet down. “What we missed was the perpetual mushroom effect of viral sensations,” he said.

In social media, “if you think it’s not going to spread, that’s when it gets bigger,” said Scott Hoffman, the chief marketing officer of the social-media marketing firm Lotame.  “We realized that when many of the comments and questions in Twitter were, ‘What is Domino’s doing about it’ ” Mr. McIntyre said. “Well, we were doing and saying things, but they weren’t being covered in Twitter.”

By Wednesday afternoon, Domino’s had created a Twitter account, @dpzinfo, to address the comments, and it had presented its chief executive in a video on YouTube by evening.

“It elevated to a point where just responding isn’t good enough,” Mr. McIntyre said.

 

Sourced from thenytimes.com

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Video. Pranksters put giant toad in a KFC burger box and return it to the fast food counter

A group of pranksters put a giant toad in a KFC burger box and returned it to a fast food counter to shock and horror of staff.

Prank group Monkey Kingz set up the stunt and filmed the reactions from workers in takeaways and shops across Shanghai, China.

They then posted their amusing reactions on YouTube.

Scroll down for video

A group of pranksters put a giant toad in a KFC burger box and returned it to a fast food counter to shock and horror of staff

 

A group of pranksters put a giant toad in a KFC burger box and returned it to a fast food counter to shock and horror of staff
Prank group Monkey Kingz set up the stunt and filmed the reactions from workers in takeaways and shops across Shanghai, China

 

Prank group Monkey Kingz set up the stunt and filmed the reactions from workers in takeaways and shops across Shanghai, China
They then posted their amusing reactions on YouTube

 

They then posted their amusing reactions on YouTube

The clip shows a man buying the toad from a supermarket and then putting it in a KFC box.

When he takes the box back up to the fast food counter to complain, the worker opens it and jumps back in horror as she grabs a co-worker.

The woman asks ‘What is this?’  and then ‘What is this doing there?’ as the man answers, ‘I don’t want to eat it.’

The clip shows a man buying the toad from a supermarket and then putting it in a KFC box

The clip shows a man buying the toad from a supermarket and then putting it in a KFC box

 

When he takes the box back up to the fastfood counter to complain the worker opens it and jumps back in horror as she grabs a co-worker

 

When he takes the box back up to the fastfood counter to complain the worker opens it and jumps back in horror as she grabs a co-worker

He also tries the prank in McDonald’s and the staff jump back and look at the toad in a concerned manner.

The prankster slips the toad into a noddle box in a shop and when the assistant opens it he exclaims ‘You scared me!’

The man carries out the prank in a variety of other places – and all the reactions prove to be amusing.

Monkey Kingz is made up of a group of two Americans, two Chinese and two Scottish people.

He slips the toad into a noddle box in a shop and when the assistant opens it he exclaims 'You scared me!'

He slips the toad into a noddle box in a shop and when the assistant opens it he exclaims ‘You scared me!’

The man carries out the prank in a variety of other places - and all the reactions prove to be amusing

The man carries out the prank in a variety of other places - and all the reactions prove to be amusing

 

The man carries out the prank in a variety of other places – and all the reactions prove to be amusing

 

The toad in a box waiting to scare some shop workers in the prank which was posted on the internet

 The toad in a box waiting to scare some shop workers in the prank which was posted on the internet

Read more: http://www.dailymail.co.uk/news/article-2649568/Pranksters-giant-toad-KFC-burger-box.