Mr. Good Bar - Too many bad bites.
I just heard a story on the news where a family bought a few Mr. Good Bars, shared them for Valentines day, and discovered living insects within them.
Employees at the store they bought them from checked their remaining stock, and discovered not a small amount of similarly insect-filled candy bars.
I went downstairs and relegated the story to my father, who replied with "This is interesting... I remember buying a Mr. Good Bar once, and it also had worms in it."
It was then that I remembered opening one up in late Elementary School and finding wriggling things in it. :shakeno:
What the hell, man... I sure as hell aren't buying these, much less even looking at them.
Re: Mr. Good Bar - Too many bad bites.
Re: Mr. Good Bar - Too many bad bites.
I was trying to remember what a Mr. Goodbar was, so I did an internet search. Turns out it's just a Hershey bar with peanuts in it.
Then again, you probably already knew that.
At least that's not as bad as a Chunky, which is a Mr. Goodbar plus raisins. No thank you.
Re: Mr. Good Bar - Too many bad bites.
In line with this thread:
"There aren't any raisins in a Mr. Chunky bar. o.o "
Re: Mr. Good Bar - Too many bad bites.
Re: Mr. Good Bar - Too many bad bites.
Love Mr. Goodbars...never had any worms in mine...
Haven't eaten one in about 10 years though. :(
Re: Mr. Good Bar - Too many bad bites.
I've eaten alot of Mr Good Bars, none of them had any insects in them. Maybe it has something to do with where you live and thus where the bars were made. Food safety sure is a hot issue these days.
Re: Mr. Good Bar - Too many bad bites.
Shit. That's in Oklahoma.
Wtf.
Who buys Mr. Goodbar for V-Day? that's classy...
Re: Mr. Good Bar - Too many bad bites.
i still would have eaten it. worms are good for you.
Re: Mr. Good Bar - Too many bad bites.
I can't help but agree with your statement, (Or at least think somewhere deep in my mind that I .. should?) but I am also obviously highly repulsed by the merest notion of doing such an act, and my mind races to equate it with eating, say, compost? Mulch? Most of the contents of a post-season's ending potted plant?