However I did find a good blog post on another site that I had to pass on.
From Coyote blog:
A portion of my novel BMOC was satire of oddball lawsuits. In that book, for example, I had a woman suing Disney because she found that the characters at Disney World were people in costumes rather than the actual animated characters she had expected. I thought that was enough beyond reason and reality to constitute satire, but I guess I was wrong:
On May 21, a judge of the U.S. District Court for the Eastern District of
California dismissed a complaint filed by a woman who said she had purchased
“Cap’n Crunch with Crunchberries” because she believed “crunchberries” were real
fruit. The plaintiff, Janine Sugawara, alleged that she had only recently
learned to her dismay that said “berries” were in fact simply brightly-colored
cereal balls, and that although the product did contain some strawberry fruit
concentrate, it was not otherwise redeemed by fruit. She sued, on behalf of
herself and all similarly situated consumers who also apparently believed that
there are fields somewhere in our land thronged by crunchberry bushes.
Doesn't XANGO contain a certain amount of cruchberries? I mean it can't be pure mangostean can it?
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