![]() ![]() ![]() The term was born as a meme in 2017 and describes people who gain viral popularity on social media for some seemingly positive or cute trait - but are then revealed to have problematic backstories. In fact, it has happened so frequently, there’s a term for it – to be “milkshake duck’ed”. Karp is not the first person to achieve sudden internet fame for a relatively banal tweet, only to have the tides suddenly turn on him. ![]() “Anyway he’s done way worse and way larger-scale things to people and so this small part of it genuinely doesn’t matter all that much but hey, at least we’ll have all the memories.” “Next thing you know shrimp man will claim that he found the podcast idea and name he stole from us in a bag of Cheerios,” Cullen wrote. On Monday (March 22nd), he took to Twitter after finding what he claimed was dry shrimp tails mixed in with his Cinnamon Toast Crunch, and decided to tweet them directly to try and get some answers. The little crustaceans that aren’t found as any boxed-cereal ingredient that we are aware of. The CEO of General Mills is clapping back at claims of crustacean caudae caught up in the process of packaging its popular cereal Cinnamon Toast Crunch. Podcaster and comedian John Cullen, meanwhile, claims that Karp has stolen intellectual property. When Mike Shinoda, the lead vocalist for the band Linkin Park, tweeted praise for Karp, calling him “a razor sharp comic mind, an accomplished gallery owner and curator, spectacular radio and podcast personality, and all-around good dude”, Bird shot back, “He’s nice to you because you’re famous.” “Just fyi, the shrimp tails guy is both a marketing professional and someone who’s lied to my face without flinching,” tweeted painter Brandon Bird. Writer/Producer Jensen Karp documented what he claims was a gross morning breakfast session Monday, posting pics of various artifacts he says he found inside his new box of Cinnamon Toast Crunch. It seemed the Cinnamon Toast Crunch employees used the same exact tone and response to someone finding shrimp. Jensen Karp details the story of his viral Cinnamon Toast Crunch shrimp tweet. And the tone of all the replies to Karp was just not right for the situation. ABC7s Marc Cota-Robles spoke with Jensen Karp about the incident: 'If someone had a shellfish allergy, they would have died.' Watch the full interview below:. At least we have this fun little club!”įormer co-workers are also speaking out against Karp. This is true across the board in life but especially on social media. “Getting lots of texts from girls still in therapy over his terror. ![]()
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