New Zealand woman Wendy McMahon reckons she will never look at canned pears the same way. The latest can she opened contained a demonic face carved into one of its contents. However, Mrs McMahon of Southland said the shock of the find is nothing compared with the trial she has had trying to get answers out of the pears' supplier. She bought the Budget brand can of pears from Invercargill Pak'N Save a fortnight ago and feeling "a bit peckish", she opened it, late on May 1.
She said it was when she returned to the can for a second helping that she scooped the freakish piece of fruit out. "I thought `oh my God, is that a face'... it really kind of shocked me." Inspecting the can, she found an 0800 number and called it. That call went through to voicemail and, despite feeling "embarrassed", she left a message, Mrs McMahon said.
She took photos of the pear before going to bed. Last Monday, her call was returned by a woman from Safeway Traders Ltd in Auckland. Mrs McMahon said the woman was reluctant to accept the find was genuine, became angry she had "gone public" online with the find, assured her the manufacturing process was automated and there was no way this could have happened. Forwarding the photos to the woman made her change her tune. On Thursday she received a letter and a $15 voucher.
The woman then phoned, demanding the pear and its can be sent to Auckland so its manufacturer Heinz-Wattie's could investigate, Mrs McMahon said. She sent the pear, along with the voucher, by courier the same day. On Friday, the woman phoned again, read her a letter that conceded that during production the pear halves were checked by people at the Chinese plant as a quality control measure and offered her a $30 voucher, Mrs McMahon said. "I said that wasn't good enough, then she turned on me and got nasty again – she said `you're just after money aren't you?' – I asked her to send the pear back."
7 comments:
She was so shocked that 30 dollars wasn't good enough? Obviously she was after money. And that is not a demonic face, it's a jolly face with huge teeth.
It's a pear.
IT'S A PEAR!
Well at least it is a different take on the endless finds of Jesus and and the Virgin Mary in all kinds of products and places...
Someone in the manufacturing plant had a sense of humour and a little time, so made a funny carving... this woman should have considered herself lucky to have found it in her can. It's kind of a neat connection between anonymous producer and anonymous consumer.
How does she know it's not Jesus?
And don't they grow pears in New Zealand? Why do they have to come from China?
Same reason why "Authentic" Delft-Blue souvenirs from Holland nowadays have this print underneath that says "Made in Taiwan" and why "Hollandse Nieuwe" (translated -"New Dutch") Herring is not caught in Dutch coastal waters by the Dutch fishermen but by Scandinavian trawlers way up north... - <span>Cheap</span>.
BTW, the phenomenon of finding faces in things is called pareidolia. (Random images or sounds perceived as significant.)
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