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Outrage in Japan as Domino’s Pizza Employee Caught Putting Boogers in Pizza Dough

A Japanese Domino’s Pizza employee puts boogers in pizza dough. /X

A video of a Domino’s Pizza employee in Japan showing boogers on pizza dough has gone viral, sparking yet another hygiene debate. As the controversy grew, Domino’s Pizza Japan immediately issued a statement and announced that it would consider legal action against its employees. This incident had more impact as it happened shortly after Japanese restaurant workers and part-timers were caught behaving inappropriately, such as spitting on food ingredients.

The video in question spread via X (formerly Twitter) on the 12th. In this case, an employee wearing a Domino’s Pizza uniform picks the nose with a hand wearing a sanitary glove and then spreads it into the dough. The person who filmed this scene seemed shocked, but it didn’t stop the worker. Again, we laugh and laugh at each other.

This video, posted on X’s account, became a hot potato online, reaching over 13 million views in just one day. Netizens responded in unison with comments such as “Terrorism in part-time jobs never ends,” “I don’t understand the act of digging your own grave just to get ‘likes'” and “If the franchise as good as this, I don’t know what to trust and buy food from outside.” It seemed.

/X

According to Domino’s Japan Pizza, the video was filmed in Amagasaki, Hyogo Prefecture, Japan around 2 am on this day. Domino’s Pizza explains that because the footage was filmed in the process of making dough to be used the next day after business closed, the dough in question was not provided to customers. Domino’s Pizza said, “We have confirmed that the dough used in the video was not used as it was made before fermentation was complete,” and that it “has now been discarded.”

Domino’s Pizza posted an apology on its official “We are also considering legal action,” it said. He added, “We deeply apologize for causing our customers discomfort. “We will do our best to prevent this from happening again and restore trust in the future.”

In fact, a notice posted in front of the current Domino’s Pizza Amagasaki branch states, “Due to various circumstances, we have closed for the time being,” and “The reopening date has not yet been determined.”

A cease-and-desist notice posted in front of the affected Japanese branch of Domino’s Pizza. /X A spate of inappropriate acts by part-time workers at famous shabu-shabu chains and grilled fish restaurants in Japan, or ‘part-time terrorism’, is spreading through social media and causing debate /Social media

The fact that Domino’s Pizza issued a statement less than a day after the video went viral seems to be aware of the ‘Alba Terror’ (Japanese name for Byte Terror) which was recently reported one after the another in Japanese restaurant chains. Part-time terrorism refers to the unsanitary handling of food ingredients provided to customers by part-time restaurant workers.

On the 2nd, a video of part-timers cramming whole whipped cream into their mouths at the famous shabu-shabu chain ‘Shabuyo’ went viral, and last month, at the grilled fish chain, ‘Shinpachi Restaurant’, they were seen pouring liquid. from a soup container to their mouths An argument arose.

#Knead #dough #fingers #Japan #shocked #Snot #Pizza

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