Holy s*it is this bad.
Meet Jennifer Dopazo, whose Twitter bio says she used to work at the New York Times. Dopazo went full “Karen” in a now-deleted series of tweets and accused a local butcher of selling a product with a “fake weight” because she doesn’t understand that 1.63 lbs (on the label) is the same as 1lb 10oz (on the scale):
https://twitter.com/jenniferdopazo/status/1241493238361489411
We did get a screenshot before she deleted it:
The local butcher, Dickson’s Farmstand, helped her out with a math lesson and a handy conversion via Google:
Please Learn how to read your scale please before calling cbs. Your error is shown in your own photo. Our scales print lbs as a decimal. Your scale reads as lbs and ounces.
— Dickson's Farmstand (@EatMeaty) March 22, 2020
Multiply the decimal portion of the weight by 16 to convert it to OZ
— Dickson's Farmstand (@EatMeaty) March 22, 2020
— Dickson's Farmstand (@EatMeaty) March 22, 2020
Even worse, she sent her husband in to talk to the manager:
“Jacob went back to figure out if it was a mistake and found a hostile team of people that denied it. Finally brought a smaller scale and the truth in front of their eyes. The weight in the label is wrong. Frustrated he came back home pretty sad, used to be his favorite butcher”
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https://twitter.com/jenniferdopazo/status/1241493241700245506
And when that failed, she tagged the New York Attorney General and said she filed a complaint:
“I hope they don’t do this to more people as we all stay home and try to find ways to support our local businesses. I’ve submitted a complaint to @nyc311 and @NewYorkStateAG”
https://twitter.com/jenniferdopazo/status/1241493243017203714
What an awful thing to do:
When you attack a small business because you can’t do basic math https://t.co/tjKFRl1wd0
— Kassy Dillon (@KassyDillon) March 22, 2020
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