View Full Version : Would you eat...
doom1701
03-02-2009, 10:30 AM
An unbranded candy bar that arrived in a unexpected box in the mail, supposedly from a technology research firm?
I just got a box from Lawson Research offering me a $25 gift card if I give away my contact info...I mean "fill out a survey". Included in the box is what appears to be a candy bar wrapped in their logo instead of a brand name. Lunch or trash?
TheIndependent
03-02-2009, 10:34 AM
Trash/pocket the $25 after filling out the contact card and writing "yummy" on the response field.
pdhenry
03-02-2009, 10:34 AM
The Lawson Health Research Institute (http://www.lhrionhealth.ca/)?
Does the survey deal with your opinion of the candy bar?
pseudonym
03-02-2009, 10:36 AM
Probably. There's no one who wants to poison me badly enough to go such elaborate lengths.
doom1701
03-02-2009, 10:36 AM
www.lawson.com (http://www.lawson.com) is their website.
keirgrey
03-02-2009, 10:55 AM
Looks like an ERP vendor. I wouldn't worry so much about the sender of the candy bar. I wouldn't eat it, either.
doom1701
03-02-2009, 10:57 AM
I decided to open the bar to see what kind it was; turns out it's a factory sealed Hershey bar that they then "over-wrapped" with their own branded wrapper. I may eat it after all. Still not sure about the gas card; I get enough cold calls from vendors as it is.
Edit: Suddenly got hungry and had a hankering for Chocolate. It's gone now. So everyone knows my answer to the question.
d-dub
03-02-2009, 11:05 AM
I decided to open the bar to see what kind it was; turns out it's a factory sealed Hershey bar that they then "over-wrapped" with their own branded wrapper. I may eat it after all. Still not sure about the gas card; I get enough cold calls from vendors as it is.
Edit: Suddenly got hungry and had a hankering for Chocolate. It's gone now. So everyone knows my answer to the question.
Ugh.... don't eat that crap!
JYoung
03-02-2009, 12:25 PM
(hopes Doom is not now lying under his desk, clutching his stomach in pain)
mbklein
03-02-2009, 12:34 PM
At least it wasn't a Baby Ruth bar you found floating in a pool.
procrastinator
03-02-2009, 01:46 PM
At least it wasn't a Baby Ruth bar you found floating in a pool.
You're showing your age... :2funny:
scottjf8
03-02-2009, 02:35 PM
Trash/pocket the $25 after filling out the contact card and writing "yummy" on the response field.
This.
Or put "it gave me the shits"
TheIndependent
03-02-2009, 04:05 PM
Trash/pocket the $25 after filling out the contact card and writing "yummy" on the response field.
This.
Or put "it gave me the shits"
AND put, not Or :)
doom1701
03-02-2009, 04:16 PM
I took the survey; they didn't ask about the candy bar or even have a "general comments" section.
We'll have to see if the gas card gets nabbed by accounting before making it to my desk.
evizzle
03-03-2009, 03:34 AM
At least it wasn't a Baby Ruth bar you found floating in a pool.
You're showing your age... :2funny:
I own that movie on HD DVD!:D
busyba
03-03-2009, 01:07 PM
I decided to open the bar to see what kind it was; turns out it's a factory sealed Hershey bar that they then "over-wrapped" with their own branded wrapper. I may eat it after all.
Hershey? Ugh. I'd have been more likely to eat it when it was "unbranded".
edit: when you use the exact same interjection, that's an impressive smeek. :)
Cletus
03-04-2009, 09:00 AM
I decided to open the bar to see what kind it was; turns out it's a factory sealed Hershey bar that they then "over-wrapped" with their own branded wrapper. I may eat it after all. Still not sure about the gas card; I get enough cold calls from vendors as it is.
Edit: Suddenly got hungry and had a hankering for Chocolate. It's gone now. So everyone knows my answer to the question.
Well don't leave us hanging. What happened next?
busyba
03-04-2009, 02:57 PM
Someone needs to recycle this thread title for a thread about food dares, btw. :)
dcheesi
03-07-2009, 10:22 AM
Someone needs to recycle this thread title for a thread about food dares, btw. :)I remember seeing some reality show where they did a food-dare challenge. Except it was clearly amateur hour; instead of the live bugs and animal-testes we've all come to expect, it was all common or traditional prepared dishes from various cultures. Haggis, poi, etc. And the contestants were still freaked out?!? :huh: Granted, they refused to tell them what was in some of the dishes, but I'd heard of most of them and anyway they're all food that lots of people eat...
d-dub
03-07-2009, 10:26 AM
Live bugs and animal testes *are* actual food products from various cultures ;)
As far as I know, *verything* that contestants had to eat on Fear Factor were considered delicacies in some culture. Whether or not people view them as freaky depends on where they were raised.
dcheesi
03-07-2009, 07:30 PM
Live bugs and animal testes *are* actual food products from various cultures ;)
As far as I know, *verything* that contestants had to eat on Fear Factor were considered delicacies in some culture. Whether or not people view them as freaky depends on where they were raised.I knew someone would nail for that :p I should have more clearly differentiated mainstream dishes. But then, it could be argued that once-common signature dishes like haggis and poi are just relics of the past in their homelands, kept alive mostly by tourists...
*shrug* I guess it depends on what you define as "normal", vs. "what the really extreme/desperate back-woods folk eat", etc.
mbklein
03-07-2009, 08:18 PM
Animal testes haggis?
d-dub
03-07-2009, 08:23 PM
Live bugs and animal testes *are* actual food products from various cultures ;)
As far as I know, *verything* that contestants had to eat on Fear Factor were considered delicacies in some culture. Whether or not people view them as freaky depends on where they were raised.I knew someone would nail for that :p I should have more clearly differentiated mainstream dishes. But then, it could be argued that once-common signature dishes like haggis and poi are just relics of the past in their homelands, kept alive mostly by tourists...
*shrug* I guess it depends on what you define as "normal", vs. "what the really extreme/desperate back-woods folk eat", etc.
The thing is, if you grew up in Scotland, haggis wouldn't be at all unusual. If you grew up in Hawaii, you might look forward to eating poi. The only reason they seem unappetizing is that they're strange to you. The same is true for testicles and Madagascar hissing roaches. It's all a matter of the nature of your own bubble of "normal."
dcheesi
03-08-2009, 10:13 AM
Live bugs and animal testes *are* actual food products from various cultures ;)
As far as I know, *verything* that contestants had to eat on Fear Factor were considered delicacies in some culture. Whether or not people view them as freaky depends on where they were raised.I knew someone would nail for that :p I should have more clearly differentiated mainstream dishes. But then, it could be argued that once-common signature dishes like haggis and poi are just relics of the past in their homelands, kept alive mostly by tourists...
*shrug* I guess it depends on what you define as "normal", vs. "what the really extreme/desperate back-woods folk eat", etc.
The thing is, if you grew up in Scotland, haggis wouldn't be at all unusual. If you grew up in Hawaii, you might look forward to eating poi. The only reason they seem unappetizing is that they're strange to you. The same is true for testicles and Madagascar hissing roaches. It's all a matter of the nature of your own bubble of "normal."Oh I gotcha there. I guess I'm thinking more about what's likely to taste good, as opposed to "delicacies" that were acquired only through extreme necessity --eg. fried spiders in Cambodia, supposedly a habit picked up in the Khmer Rouge famine days. But then I guess you could argue that the Scots wouldn't have been off perfecting Haggis if they'd had plenty of filet mignon to go around :)
d-dub
03-08-2009, 12:00 PM
Oh I gotcha there. I guess I'm thinking more about what's likely to taste good, as opposed to "delicacies" that were acquired only through extreme necessity --eg. fried spiders in Cambodia, supposedly a habit picked up in the Khmer Rouge famine days. But then I guess you could argue that the Scots wouldn't have been off perfecting Haggis if they'd had plenty of filet mignon to go around :)
You may have a point about having an unlimited supply of filet mignon :)
Many "quisines" evolved out of the survival-based need to not waste anything that was edible. Haggis is a dish that was created to use sheep organs that were otherwise wasted in a way that was palatable.
As for the "taste good" part... again, that's going to be determined by what you're familiar with. If you grew up eating haggis and fried spiders as a normal part of your diet, it's likely that you're going to think they taste good... their flavors would be as normal to you as a hamburger is to Americans.
Makita
03-08-2009, 12:12 PM
I wonder...
What would Chicken taste like If I grew up eating Haggis and Fried Spiders.
This kind of reminds me of Thing 2 not liking spicy foods. If I tell her something is Spicy w/ Flavor, but not heat, she'll try it (Carefully) and often enjoy it. If I have her try the 'other' one and tall her it is spicy w/ Heat <same thing IRL> it'll burn her mouth, give her a tummy ache and she'll want to barf (sometimes before she even tries it).
mbklein
03-08-2009, 12:12 PM
I'll wager that nobody would have bothered cracking open that first lobster if they'd had access to unlimited filet mignon, either.
dcheesi
03-08-2009, 04:29 PM
I wonder...
What would Chicken taste like If I grew up eating Haggis and Fried Spiders.
Chicken tastes like everything ;)
I'll wager that nobody would have bothered cracking open that first lobster if they'd had access to unlimited filet mignon, either.Actually lobster was considered a low-status food for a long time; there were actually protests about prisoners being forced to eat lobster instead of "real" food :)
mbklein
03-08-2009, 07:38 PM
Yeah, I've heard a lot of those stories, and in the interest of full disclosure (and at the risk of being a spoilsport), I'll point out that they've been debunked by a few food historians.
But the point stands. Look at a lobster as if you had no idea what it was and tell me if you find it remotely appetizing. :D
Makita
03-08-2009, 08:41 PM
Yeah, I've heard a lot of those stories, and in the interest of full disclosure (and at the risk of being a spoilsport), I'll point out that they've been debunked by a few food historians.
But the point stands. Look at a lobster as if you had no idea what it was and tell me if you find it remotely appetizing. :D
I, personally, detest all seafood (Fish, Mussels, Shell-Fish - if it lives where my poo goes, I aint gonna eat it).
However, if I were starving on a deserted island and this was my only food source (and I could cook it), I am sure it'd look pretty appetizing and I'd tuck in.
Unregistered
03-09-2009, 02:43 PM
if it lives where my poo goes, I aint gonna eat it
If bears were more like you, there'd be less bears.
See also: Shitting in woods, bear.
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