
General Mills asked Jensen to give the cereal to the police Jensen later revealed a Carcinologist (crustacean researcher) who works at the Natural History Museum of Los Angeles to identify the shrimp using microscopy. It’s a deadly allergy to many (and non-Kosher) and that didn’t seem to matter beyond offering me a new box.” Not to investigate the issue or look into it. He wrote: “My point is – their initial reaction to shellfish being in the bag was to tell me it was sugar. In a string of tweets Jensen said his main motivation in sharing the original tweet was many people are allergic to shellfish and General Mills did not address that, but just offered him a new box. Also, a research company will be paying to DNA test the shrimp tail! (2021, y’all) Some updates: I am now in touch with a testing lab re: the “black things,” which I will not yet be calling by any other name for my own sanity.

Later that day Cinnamon Toast Crunch tweeted to say they had looked at the image further and they believe it to be an accumulation of cinnamon sugar. Can you please send us a DM to collect more details? Thanks!” The cereal company said they weren’t shrimp tails but actually sugar They wrote: “We’re sorry to see what you found! We would like to report this to our quality team and replace the box. The social media team for the cereal quickly replied saying they were sorry for what Jensen found and wanted to send him a replacement box. Cinnamon Toast Crunch responded to the claims The tweet quickly received over 100k likes. He tweeted a photo of the cereal and said: “ Ummmm – why are there shrimp tails in my cereal? (This is not a bit)” On Monday 22nd March the writer Jensen Karp tweeted Cinnamon Toast Crunch claiming there were shrimp tails in his cereal. This the much needed timeline to understand the Cinnamon Toast Crunch shrimp saga: Jensen Karp discovers what he believes to be shrimp tails in his cereal

Ummmm – why are there shrimp tails in my cereal? (This is not a bit) /tTjiAdrnVp
