We’re sorry to be the ones that burst your bubble when it comes to Pizza Hut, but someone has to do it. Some judge their pizzas based on their crust, while others judge based on their cheesy goodness. But in order to judge the quality of the cheese, you’ve got to be sure you’re eating a real cheese pizza.
A couple of years back, health inspectors from the UK standards department tested fast-food pizzas for authenticity and discovered that nearly all of the pizzas (including Pizza Hut) were made with imitation cheese. We don’t want to know what exactly fake cheese entails, but we’re hoping Pizza Hut learned its lesson!
Panera Bread
Believe it or not, Panera Bread has been caught red-handed manipulating customers. Yes, the Panera crew does bake their bread on the spot, but that doesn't mean the dough is made from scratch at that same location. Prepared dough arrives every day and may or may not be frozen. So, you may be eating fresh bread, just not completely fresh.
Now, when you think of it, it is exactly like the frozen stuff you buy at the local store and bake at home. There is no difference at all, except for the final price you are charged when buying at Panera Bread. Scam or not, it is up to you to decide.
Aberdeen Square
Well, isn't this ad a roller coaster of emotions? At first, you're upset because you think you just received a parking ticket, then you're relieved it isn't a parking ticket, but then you're upset again because someone tricked you into thinking you just got a parking ticket. Honestly, how is this marketing technique even legal?
In our opinion, it isn't even funny; if anything, it's the perfect way to make prospective customers take their business elsewhere! this is a perfect example, of bad marketing, bad advertising, bad copywriting, and we suppose a bad brand too.
Peppermint Cream
Many things differentiate the European Union and the United States; it turns out, the packaging is one of them! Organic farming, production, and labeling have been regulated in the European Union since 1991. Meaning, this kind of packaging would be banned in the European Union.
In the United States, on the other hand, the organic food industry seems to be making more and more money every year. That's probably why regular companies decide to label their foods organic and gluten-free even when they're not! Horrific and dangerous, to say the least!
Subway
A classic scam; the footlong sub was never really a footlong. When it was measured, the sandwich came to be only 11 inches. When trying to defend their decision, Subway said that their "Footlong Sub" is just a trademark as a descriptive name for the sub and was not intended to measure length.
The cost of the famous sandwich jumped significantly escalated in the past few years, so we're hoping they changed its length to the advertised size, or else, in the future the measuring tape will become a necessity whenever going out for a sub.