Yes, it is time to tackle the food industry over some of their most
egregious claims. Nutella is pretty excessive though. You presume
naturally that sugar and the grease of choice would be minimized.
Yet this is merely a sweeter replacement for pork fat on toast. It
is certainly not hazelnut butter which is what it attempting to
imitate. It is a sordid faux food created back when everything went.
What we have is an excellent advertisement for the proposition coming
out of Ontario that proposes to make manufacturers put nasty health
warnings on their labels. This product would be dead on arrival.
It is a concoction of palm oil, powdered skim milk and lots of sugar.
Hazelnuts are mentioned but the scant fiber suggests that is quite
low although the claim is fifty nuts per thirteen ounce jar. Such
numbers would reduce to around 2 to 4 ounces of actual paste. So at
best we have twenty percent hazelnut paste or butter, ten percent in
milk solids and the balance in margarine. Who exactly would buy well
flavored margarine?
Hopefully the food industry gets the point and gets out there and
begins the hard task of reformulating product.
SAN DIEGO MOM WINS
$3MILLION CLASS-ACTION LAWSUIT AGAINST NUTELLA
A California court has
ruled that Ferrero U.S.A. Inc., an affiliate of Nutella’s
Italian-based parent company should pay $4 to every person who
purchased a jar of their chocolate spread between January 1, 2008 and
February 3, 2012 in the United States.
The ruling came after
a mother initiated a class-action to make the company pay for
advertising their product as a “nutritious” product ” and part
of a “healthy breakfast.”
Athena Hohenberg, a
San Diego mother, said she was shocked to learn that contrary to the
impression given by the company’s advertisement, the product was
not nutritious, but contained dangerous levels of saturated fat.
According to CBS News, Hohenberg said she discovered it
contained 21 grams of sugar, 200 calories, and 11 grams of fat (3.5
of which are saturated) per serving.According to Hohenberg and her
lawyers, Nutella has been falsely presenting their product as making
a “balanced breakfast,” while showing healthy looking families
eating it with healthy foods such as fruits and whole wheat bread.
Daily Mail reports
Hohenberg’s lawyers said Nutella contains dangerous levels of
saturated fat and sugar that have been contributing significantly to
“America’s alarming increase in childhood obesity.” The product
can cause type-2 diabetes, heart disease and other “serious health
problems.”
Hohenberg
demanded that the company should stop advertising Nutella as a
healthy and nutritious food and refund all the money they earned from
their “fraudulent advertisement campaign.”
According to Daily
Mail, a Nutella TV commercial shows a blonde mother worrying
about the challenges of preparing breakfast for her family. Then she
recommends Nutella as a “delicious hazelnut spread perfect on
multi-grain toast and even whole wheat waffles.” The mother says:
“It’s a quick and easy way to give my family a breakfast they’ll
want to eat. And Nutella is made with simple, quality ingredients
like hazelnuts, skim milk, and a hint of cocoa. They love the taste,
and I feel good that they’re ready to tackle the day.
CBS News reports
the settlement allows all persons in the United States who purchased
Nutella between January 1, 2008 and February 3, 2010 (August 1, 2009
and January 23, 2012 for California residents) to file a claim and
join the class action and claim their rewards until July 25, 2012.
Those who join the class action will receive $4 for a single purchase
and a maximum award of $20. Anyone who wants to join the class action
can fill out their claim here. According to Yahoo! News ”It
seems that you don’t even have to have a receipt.”
CBS reports that
the judge’s decision has been widely criticized and the
class-action ridiculed. Many are surprised that any mother would
think that a chocolate-based spread is healthy and nutritious. LA
Weekly says: “Here’s a suggestion for the thousands of other
litigious California mothers: Try a little responsible parenting. Try
reading the labels and understanding what they mean.” A
disapproving reader comments on LA Weekly: “Her kids should
sue her for being so… stupid. Lawsuits like this should be a crime.
If you’re too stupid to read a label, then you’re also too stupid
to make other adult decisions, by that alone, she should be deemed an
unfit parent.”
Another reader
commented: “…also got the impression that drinking Bud Light
makes hot chicks attracted to me, and that I can afford a Lexus. But
it doesn’t and I can’t. Should I sue?”
Ferrero Inc. has
agreed to modify the product’s label and change its marketing
statements about Nutella, create new ads and modify its website
message.
A SMALL PRICE TO PAY for false advertizing that made millions. Legal fees likely cost a lot more than the settlement.
ReplyDelete