So E bought this box of Coles Frooty Rings a week or so ago. Think no-name Fruit Loops. Not something we'd usually buy (honest), but as an activity for Little e's party last week, the idea was to thread them on some string or something and make necklaces.
Now thankfully we ran out of time to run that activity, because E was contacted yesterday about a recall of Frooty Rings, due to 'traces of wire' in the product. Wire?! Come now, Coles, the kiddies need iron in their diet and all, but steady on.
Just a quick aside here- what sort of crazy Orwellian society are we living in where your Frooty Rings purchase can even be traced? Chilling.
Anyways, post-party but pre-recall, I saw the box of Frooty Rings sitting on the bench, just pretty much going to waste. How often does a grown up get to satisfy his cravings for Fruit Loops, be it cheap no-name version or not. Rarely. One must take these opportunities when they arise, obviously.
So I had a big bowl of them the other day. They were good. So sugary that my eyeballs were tingling and I started trembling a little. In a good way of course.
But now I'm worried. Have I ingested Traces of Wire? What is to become of me once said traces make their way into my bloodstream? What sort of lonely cyborg existence am I in for? Tell me that, Coles. Tell me that!
8 comments:
The tracing of shoppers more scary than Traces of Wire. Hey, can you become Wolverine?
Relax. You have just ingested an inordinate amount of empty calories that's all..
Jess- totally.
Ped-Diddy- ..and three minutes of pleasure. Not to be underestimated.
I have to assume that E bought the groceries using a credit / debit card; that way they could at least contact the banks for contact details of customers who were known to have bought the product.
Makes me think of the book/television show "Wire in the Blood"
We were apparantly traced thru Fly Buys
FlyBuys as a community service, eh?
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