• Scrubbles
    link
    fedilink
    English
    517
    edit-2
    3 months ago

    Always remember what really happened with the McDonald’s lady who sued because her “coffee was too hot”.

    McDonald’s themselves started the campaign that the issue was laughable, and seeded the notion that it’s ridiculous, how could she not know coffee hot?

    What really happened was that the coffee was:

    • Served well above safe ranges to maximize profits, so the coffee could be served longer
    • Was served near boiling temperature
    • Was so hot that it FUSED HER LABIA requiring extensive surgery to repair.

    She sued only for her hospital bills.

    They started a smear campaign against her to convince the public that she was a moron and she just wanted a payday.

    Don’t trust corporations. Ever.

    • @[email protected]
      link
      fedilink
      2303 months ago

      Not to mention they were warned many times before about serving coffee that’s too hot. The woman got such a huge settlement because the judge was tired of McDonald’s crap

      • @butwhyishischinabook
        link
        1073 months ago

        Also they calculated the cost of lawsuits like that and decided they would make more money selling it that hot than they would lose in lawsuits over how hot the coffee was.

    • The Picard ManeuverOPM
      link
      118
      edit-2
      3 months ago

      What’s that old quote? “A lie can make it around the world while the truth is still putting on its shoes”, or something like that? I believe that was pre-internet too.

      It also happens with politics. I constantly see provocative headlines get lots of attention in one circle, and then the later corrections only get passed around in the opposite circle, if at all.

      • Scrubbles
        link
        fedilink
        English
        213 months ago

        Look at just yesterday. One clickbait site said Beyonce was going to perform at the dnc, and by the time the truth and correction made it around it was already past time

        • The Picard ManeuverOPM
          link
          313 months ago

          We desperately need a return of journalistic ethics and bland, just-the-facts news.

              • @UmeU
                link
                43 months ago

                What’s more reliable than NPR?

                • Possibly linux
                  link
                  fedilink
                  English
                  6
                  edit-2
                  3 months ago

                  Nothing is reliable that’s the problem. NPR is a propaganda machine. There are worse ones to be far

                • @TokenBoomer
                  link
                  23 months ago

                  Critical thinking and media literacy. Just 2 days ago I heard NPR try to gaslight me that Gaza wasn’t a genocide.

      • @[email protected]
        link
        fedilink
        143 months ago

        Plus those corrections only show up as a footnote on articles without it being altered or removed. Its laughable.

        • @[email protected]
          link
          fedilink
          English
          13 months ago

          That’s weird. Ideally you should put it right next to the title, that there has been an addendum and the following might be incorrect/outdated.

          • lad
            link
            fedilink
            English
            63 months ago

            That depends on what your goal is, I think

            • @[email protected]
              link
              fedilink
              English
              23 months ago

              I’d consider the goal be to:

              1. Keep the original article for historical and reference purposes
              2. Make sure that anyone who only cared to read the first sentence, didn’t leave with confident misinformation.
              • lad
                link
                fedilink
                English
                33 months ago

                Your goals are too honest for mass media 😅

      • Possibly linux
        link
        fedilink
        English
        133 months ago

        Its even worse in science. Lots of crazy headlines that are later debunked quietly

        • @shneancy
          link
          103 months ago

          those headlines can also be debunked loudly and yet, anti-vaxxers still exist, somehow

          • Possibly linux
            link
            fedilink
            English
            23 months ago

            I wasn’t talking about vaccinations. I was talking about fusion and other buzzy topics.

          • Possibly linux
            link
            fedilink
            English
            53 months ago

            Which directly impacts funding

            That’s the big issue. If a project doesn’t have big headlines frequently it is killed.

            • @[email protected]
              link
              fedilink
              13 months ago

              I think more likely is that the news outlets need the revenue from clicks, and are willing to trade their reputation to get them. Accurate science journalism doesn’t pay, capitalism is a race to the bottom.

    • @Contramuffin
      link
      643 months ago

      Also, she got second degree burns, and she was not the first person to be injured by the coffee, and McDonald’s was told multiple times that they served their coffee too hot.

      During the trial, McDonald’s showed zero care for the the people they injured, to the point that most of the fine that McDonald’s ended up paying was punitive damages

      • @JordanZ
        link
        523 months ago

        deleted by creator

        • shrugs
          link
          13 months ago

          Tbh, I don’t get it. How can a coffee, that can be max 100°C cause such burns? I would have never believed hot/boiling water is that dangerous, without that story.

          • @[email protected]
            link
            fedilink
            English
            403 months ago

            That’s literally a temperature you would cook meat with

            What do you think people are made of?

            • @[email protected]
              link
              fedilink
              English
              13 months ago

              TIL, videos saying “cook meat at 180°” actually meant 180°F and not 180°C.

              Now I have to check what my induction stove means when it reads 180 in deep frying mode.

              • lad
                link
                fedilink
                English
                63 months ago

                Afaik it means °C usually, but when boiling meat it will be cooked at 100°C give or take.

                But since well done steak is supposed to be 71°C, everything hotter than that would sooner or later cook the meat.

                • @[email protected]
                  link
                  fedilink
                  English
                  03 months ago

                  Considering that Google says 350°F - 375°F for deep frying and that I am in a °C country, I would lean more this way.

                  Of course, I have never cooked meat and have no idea what deep frying meat at 180°C would do.

              • @[email protected]
                link
                fedilink
                23 months ago

                Hot air/gas, hot water/liquid, and a hot solid behaved very differently. The numbers depend a lot on what’s being measured. There’s also a big variable of time.

                • @[email protected]
                  link
                  fedilink
                  English
                  -23 months ago

                  The cheap induction stove is not really measuring anything.

                  Its PWM has been tuned to get to the temperature the user selects, under whatever testing conditions they had while R&D. The displayed temperature is just the user selected temperature.

                  But setting it to 120(whatever unit) manages to make good enough french fries, so that’s fine by me.

          • @bran_buckler
            link
            323 months ago

            Boiling water is extremely dangerous! Water at 140°F (60°C) will cause a serious burn in 3 seconds. Even water at 120°F (49°C) will cause a serious burn within 10 minutes. Source

          • Scrubbles
            link
            fedilink
            English
            173 months ago

            Well, scalding hot water, some of the hottest you are legally allowed to have set out of a water heater, is about 130 degrees F, or 54 degrees C. That will scald you in a few seconds.

            Her coffee was near double that. So, ice at 0, can burn you at 54, and then around 100 degrees… Yeah.

          • @dessimbelackis
            link
            153 months ago

            Are you American? 100 degrees celsius is 212 degrees Fahrenheit

          • @[email protected]
            link
            fedilink
            53 months ago

            I mean, it’s easy to believe when you consider what might happen if you put your hand into a boiling pot of pasta, for example.

    • @[email protected]
      link
      fedilink
      -12
      edit-2
      3 months ago

      I dont understand this, coffee is generally made with near boiling hot water. Many coffee machines make the coffee in front of your eyes. Of course its served boiling hot, no?

      I mean her accident is extremely unfortunate, but her needing money for medical bills is a problem with society, not mcdonalds.

      • Scrubbles
        link
        fedilink
        English
        20
        edit-2
        3 months ago

        Coffee is brewed near boiling, but the hottest it should be served is 60 degrees C, or around 140 degrees F. Basically her temperature was the same as it was literally coming out of the machine, no one takes a big gulp of coffee the second it comes out of the machine.

        McDonalds kept their coffee as hot as possible to give the illusion it was fresher than it was. By keeping the coffee at 190-200F then they believed that customers would feel that the coffee was fresher, even though they knew it was unsafe to serve coffee that hot.

        Larger places follow the same rules here, while coffee is brewed extremely hot it usually rests for a bit before serving unless a customer explicitly asks for it. In restaurants it’s served for you. Even Starbucks most of their drinks are milk based which cools the coffee, except for Americanos which are just espresso and hot water, and you’ll usually see those with an insulator cup to highlight that

        Found this, which explains serving coffee better than I can. https://mtpak.coffee/2022/08/takeaway-cups-coffee-temperature-ideal-serving/

        https://www.caoc.org/?pg=facts

        McDonald’s admitted it had known about the risk of serious burns from its scalding hot coffee for more than 10 years. The risk had repeatedly been brought to its attention through numerous other claims and suits.

        • @[email protected]
          link
          fedilink
          13 months ago

          Many places here you get your coffee straight from the machine that brews it (as in you press the button yourself), far too hot to drink immediately.

  • Hugucinogens
    link
    fedilink
    210
    edit-2
    3 months ago

    You can legally kill anyone related to someone who has had Disney+.

    Iirc, the wife died, the husband sued, and they tried to say the husband can’t sue because HE had had the subscription a long time ago.

    Each subscriber loses the right to sue for any of their loved ones.

    After all, if they’re dead, they can’t sue you anyway

    • @BadlyTimedLuck
      link
      44
      edit-2
      3 months ago

      If it really boils down to this, how can one fight back? I don’t wanna sit here and see these sad articles blow by, what can I do to tell Disney to fuck off. I did not sign up for this, I wanted to watch funny cartoons and superheroes like a normal person, and this is my reward? If suing them is futile, is storming their office and yelling at their corporate head about this any better? I’m pissed, and I can’t sit here and wait for other legal heads to shut this stupid clause down.

      • @PM_Your_Nudes_Please
        link
        60
        edit-2
        3 months ago

        If it really boils down to this, how can one fight back?

        Historically? Guillotines in the village square, and/or Molotovs through the front windows of the overlords’ house. The rich learned a long time ago that when no other recourse is left, people will eventually turn to violence. And they learned that keeping the poors placated is a matter of life or death. Because money and fame won’t stop an angry mob, and even trained soldiers will get overwhelmed by sheer crowd size.

        I believe Sun Tsu wrote something applicable in The Art of War, along the lines of “Always leave a surrounded army a way out. Show them a way to life so they will not be compelled to fight to the death. Because even an exhausted army will fight to the death if they have no other option.” So the rich and powerful set up systems that are heavily skewed in the rich’s favor, but at least attempt to appear fair on the surface. They set up a visible “way to life” so that people could at least feel like they had a viable way of fighting back without resorting to violence.

        But recently, the rich and powerful seem to have forgotten that, and have dropped all pretext of fairness. Now it’s just blatant “you’re going to be killed and there’s nothing you can do about it.” Which means that the people are eventually going to be forced to fight to the death, because they’re cornered and see no other option. And I genuinely believe that if things carry on this same trajectory that people will turn to violence as a means of recourse, because it’s quickly becoming the only effective recourse that is within reach.

        • @[email protected]
          link
          fedilink
          123 months ago

          I think media piracy is not only acceptable, but something that should be actively promoted by everyone. Piracy is the only way to preserve media for future generations.

      • @[email protected]
        link
        fedilink
        123 months ago

        It’s a small thing, but for me it’s refusing to support them as much as I can. I don’t use Disney+ and try not to buy merchandise from their IPs. Admittedly this is both difficult since they own so. many. things. while also being a drop in the bucket for such a large company, but if enough folks feel the same, it can move the needle a small amount.

        I also shared this message out on all my platforms (that of their shady practices) which influenced at least a few people to say they were distancing themselves from the mouse.

        Ultimately though, corporations will always do what is best for their shareholders, and in this case, that means doing anything possible not to pay out, PR nightmare be damned. Meaningful legislation is really the only thing that puts guard rails on this behaviour, so my last recommendation really comes down to being vocal with your representatives that these things matter and voting accordingly. I recognize again this is a small thing but on-mass action like this is how change happens.

        My two cents at least.

      • @CarbonatedPastaSauce
        link
        English
        103 months ago

        Stop giving them money is about the only thing the average person can do.

    • @ngwoo
      link
      English
      223 months ago

      It is a moral imperative for anyone who considers themselves to be a protector of their family to just pirate Disney shit instead

    • @Snowclone
      link
      213 months ago

      He only had a free trial which makes it even crazier. Also I don’t know who thought an arbitration demand would apply to food vs a streaming service, but as insane as our court system is with judges siding with money I can’t see a judge feeling a TOS could be THAT fluid is like Nike refusing to return a pair of sneakers because you’re cousin owned a copy of NBA JAM in the 90’s, although you never played it.

    • blargerer
      link
      fedilink
      -603 months ago

      This case has awful optics but it isn’t as insane as it is presented here. First, it’s just resolving things by arbitration not dismissing the suit completely. Second, Disney didn’t own the restaurant in question, it was on their property, and they promoted it on their website. Its reasonable that an arbitration agreement for something like disney+ could be extended to the use of their website.

      • Semi-Hemi-Lemmygod
        link
        English
        753 months ago

        Binding arbitration is terrible for consumers:

        “This is not like having judges, who get paid the same no matter what happens,” says Stanford Graduate School of Business finance professor Amit Seru, who collaborated on the study with Mark Egan at Harvard Business School and Gregor Matvos at the University of Texas at Austin. “Here, you only get paid if you’re selected as an arbitrator. They have incentives to slant toward the business side, because they know that those who don’t do so won’t get picked. Everyone knows what’s happening.”

      • @[email protected]
        link
        fedilink
        583 months ago

        No, it is insane. I don’t know of other countries that allow a corporation to just not allow you to sue them and force you into arbitration.

      • @tlou3please
        link
        423 months ago

        It is as insane as it sounds. Yes, alternative dispute resolution is perfectly commonplace and indeed in many countries - such as mine - there is an expectation that you attempt ADR before bringing a matter to court, unless there is some reason why you couldn’t.

        That’s fine. That’s not an issue.

        Disney claimed that due to the terms and conditions of the Disney+ video streaming service, anyone who has or had a subscription agrees to resolve any and all disputes with Disney through mediation and they therefore waive any recourse through the courts. For absolutely any form of dispute, even a wrongful death.

        That is absolutely insane and evil to even attempt and there is no justifying it.

      • @RedditWanderer
        link
        353 months ago

        it isn’t as insane as it is presented here

        Arbitration aside, I think you’re forgetting these are terms from the streaming service.

        If tomorrow I attack you, break your spine and you lose mobility for life, then I come back saying in 2011 you purchased an indie game I made and waived your right to sue me in the terms of service, that wouldn’t be insane? Suuure.

      • @[email protected]
        link
        fedilink
        20
        edit-2
        3 months ago

        They also agreed to a similar arbitration clause again when purchasing the park tickets. It is insane that the disney lawyers even mentioned disney+. They had a more recent and relevant agreement right there.

        Either way, I hope they lose. Fuck disney and forced arbitration.

        • @samus12345
          link
          English
          9
          edit-2
          3 months ago

          The restaurant in question wasn’t located in the park, so that clause was just as irrelevant.

          • @[email protected]
            link
            fedilink
            43 months ago

            Agreed but it isn’t as much a stretch as the disney+ agreement and serves the same purpose for their argument. The restaurant is on disney owned property right next to the park.

  • Scott
    link
    fedilink
    English
    1303 months ago

    Always remember it’s morally ethical to yar har Disney content

    • @[email protected]
      link
      fedilink
      English
      273 months ago

      It is by far the best reason they could give anyone for being pro piracy. Forget the morality of it anymore, when the alternative is signing your life away it would be stupid to pay for it.

      • @shneancy
        link
        53 months ago

        we have killed satire and threw a dance party on its corps. How is this whole situation not just a funny article by the Onion

      • @[email protected]
        link
        fedilink
        English
        23 months ago

        Oh no, you’re not signing your life away. You’d be dead

        You’re signing away the right to get any justice for those you care about

        • @[email protected]
          link
          fedilink
          English
          13 months ago

          I would say its both. You can’t have someone sue for you when you die, but even if you were severely harmed and lived, it implies you can’t sue then either. So I would say we are both correct.

  • FenrirIII
    link
    803 months ago

    The restaurant was directly responsible for the woman’s death. The husband went after Disney because it was in Disney Springs and the website said the restaurant worked with allergies. It’s more the ghoulish lawyers

    • @Avatar_of_Self
      link
      English
      393 months ago

      It doesn’t change what Disney tried to do to get out of it.

    • @[email protected]
      link
      fedilink
      53 months ago

      If I recall, Disney Springs is outside of the parks, basically an outside mall-type area with a bunch of third-party shops and restaurants. Disney is plenty evil, but they’re just the landlord in this situation.

      • @bitwaba
        link
        163 months ago

        A landlord that owns a streaming service who tries to argue that usage of that streaming service allows them to not be sued by fucking up your food order.

        • @[email protected]
          link
          fedilink
          -13 months ago

          Their other legal argument made more sense… They have nothing to do with food preparation done by one of the tenants.

      • @TheEhHole
        link
        113 months ago

        And I can’t think of many things more evil than a landlord

        • @[email protected]
          link
          fedilink
          23 months ago

          I have less issues with landlords with commercial tenants… A lot of retailers do not want to own real estate or maintain properties. Residential landlords, on the other hand…

      • @piecat
        link
        8
        edit-2
        3 months ago

        I don’t know any other landlords that advertise and vouch their clients on their website.

        I bet cafeterias or food courts have gotten sued for the same thing.

        • @[email protected]
          link
          fedilink
          03 months ago

          You don’t? The malls, outlets, and high-end shopping centers around here certainly maintain a website as well as signage for their tenants.

          If someone stopped at a Rest Stop and Baskin Robins errantly put tree nuts in their dish, I don’t of any legal precident making the Rest Stop owner liable.

          • @piecat
            link
            33 months ago

            It’s the fact they vouched for the resturaunt.

            I don’t mean having a sign or directory. I mean saying specifically “the BR at our rest stop is allergy friendly” vs “our rest stop has a basken robbins, check their page for details”

  • @[email protected]
    link
    fedilink
    743 months ago

    You are more physically, financially, mentally, and psychologically safe by pirating Disney content than legally renting it.

  • @linearchaos
    link
    English
    583 months ago

    I can’t comprehend how they give so few f’s about their image as to even contemplate that in public.

    I hate to be a back in my day kinda person, but there was a time at which large family-friendly companies were concerned enough with their image not to pull that shit, at least out loud.

    • @ceenote
      link
      323 months ago

      Perks of being a monopoly. Every time someone gets upset with them, their response is just dripping with a “you’ll be back” mentality. Same as u/spez during the reddit third party app stuff.

    • @shalafi
      link
      English
      173 months ago

      I am going to be the “back in the day” guy. Huge corporations have never been paragons of virtue, but at least they used to be smart enough to protect their image.

      “Back in the day”, I could see Disney firing the lawyer who was dumb enough to suggest such a strategy.

  • JaggedRobotPubes
    link
    English
    433 months ago

    I love my wife too much not to pirate Snow White.

    • @ours
      link
      English
      -13 months ago

      deleted by creator

  • Queen HawlSera
    link
    fedilink
    English
    363 months ago

    I don’t know which of these two situations happened

    1. Someone incredibly and insanely out of touch was watching The Boys and thought Vought was a guideline for how a good business operates

    2. Someone on a power trip wanted to try to legalize murder for his brand

    I’m not sure which scenario scares me more, the incompetence or the evil.

    • @pjwestin
      link
      353 months ago

      I’m guessing the legal department had been looking for a test case to see how far they could take the forced arbitration clause in the Disney+ ToS, but they didn’t consult the PR department as to whether this would be a good idea.

      • Queen HawlSera
        link
        fedilink
        English
        73 months ago

        I’m kind of horrified that someone not only didn’t run that idea by PR, but couldn’t piece together using their own common sense that loudly declaring “Our company is allowed to straight up murder you because Mickey Mouse is bigger than God, and we’re not even kidding!” was not exactly going to fly with…

        Anyone at all really

    • @Jiggle_Physics
      link
      11
      edit-2
      3 months ago
      1. Realize they bear a large liability for this, and hope to weasel their way out of it.
      • @mynameisigglepiggle
        link
        11
        edit-2
        3 months ago

        Some junior unpaid intern was tasked with reading all their agreements to see if there was anything they could use. They pitched this and the rest was history

        • @ZMonster
          link
          13 months ago

          😊 Well, you might think so, but if that were true then their legal team would have to be unimaginably inept. Even small companies rely on arbitration clauses. A company the size of Disney probably has boilerplate arbitration clauses prolifically spread throughout any agreement they make. I don’t imagine there’s anything their legal team says more often when they are named in a suit than, “can we arbitrate?”

          So, yes they were relying on a remote technicality to get out of the suit, but that’s also the only reason they were named in the suit. I don’t blame them. And they know they wouldn’t be found liable. But they also know that people only remember “the mcdonalds hot coffee lawsuit” being about some unintelligent gold digging woman (which BTW is a travesty). So the settlement that they will likely offer is going to be worth far less than the damage from the bad rep of a trial like this.

      • @ZMonster
        link
        13 months ago

        I honestly don’t think they hear ANY liability at all. This would be like saying your friend’s landlord is at fault for your friend feeding you allergens because the landlord introduced you to each other. Like, sure, they’re related, but by no stretch of the meaning of “obviously at fault”. That’s just ridiculous.

        • @Jiggle_Physics
          link
          23 months ago

          If they didn’t, they would have made a motion to dismiss because they bear no liability. They have an army of top tier lawyers, if they decided arguing something other than not having liability, that tells me they do, or, at very least, it would be hard to convince a court they don’t.

          • @ZMonster
            link
            13 months ago

            Not everything is all or nothing. It’s not that you either are completely liable or not liable at all. That’s not how this works. If you are not liable at all, you should move to dismiss. The way this case was designed, based on the allegations, Disney does bear responsibility. But the allegations only include Disney in the most tenuous of ways. So a motion to dismiss would NOT have worked. But IMO, they are not liable at all. This was a restaurant that leased Disney land that screwed up. I can’t see how Disney had anything to do with this at all.

            • @Jiggle_Physics
              link
              1
              edit-2
              3 months ago

              If they only bore a small liability, they would have just had their legal team reseach what the person suing would most likely get, then provide that information, and an offer based on that information, before doing anything else. You know, like what normally happens when a company gets sued. The fact that they went straight to some hail mary strategy tells me they believe they are on the hook for big money, or will have a hard time proving they aren’t.

    • @AEsheron
      link
      7
      edit-2
      3 months ago

      Neither happened. The restaurant isn’t owned by Disney, it is just listed on their website as a recommended place for allergy free dining, and they while own the property, it isn’t a part of the actual park, springs, etc. The family signed up for D+, and therefore “read” the terms, including the arbitration, and then used their D+ account to sign up for the trip, and had to “read” the terms again. The whole D+ argument wasn’t that they had to go to arbitration because they used the streaming, it was to show they had to go through the same terms multiple times and should be familiar with them. And basically, this is an issue with the labeling on the website, so would be covered by those rules. Who they really should be going after is the restaurant, if they made the same allergy free claims there. Agreements requiring arbitration are indeed bullshit and should be more limited, but this is proper enforcement of a shitty system, not the batshit insane enforcement it has been memed into.

      • @ZMonster
        link
        11
        edit-2
        3 months ago

        They are going after the restaurant. The restaurant is whom they are suing. But they know they won’t get much from an allergy lawsuit settlement with an Irish Pub themed restaurant, so they included the deeper-pocket Disney in the suit (which IMO is a less than honorable act, but in a capitalist society I’m always going to give the benefit of the doubt to the person, also you never know if the legal system is going to choose you to fuck with so I dually recognize the spaghetti-at-the-wall approach to damage remuneration).

        Even with that said though, since the guy who decided to risk a life-threatening condition on whether a likely not much more than minimum wage employee could or would know if a thing was allergen free decided to rely on a technicality of civil litigation to get more money, then I can’t fault Disney for using a technicality to try to get out of it.

        Fuck Disney in general, but kudos to Disney for taking this on the chin just to not make someone even a perceived victim of their greed. I think it’s honestly respectable. They’re still probably not going to be at fault were it to go to trial, but they’re going to settle and give this guy the obvious payday he wanted.

        Good breakdown by LE

        • @AEsheron
          link
          53 months ago

          Yeah, my understanding is that SOP is to sue everyone even remotely, possibly, responsible, and the courts will work out who is and isn’t likely enough to have to actually defend themselves. This is just a part of the dance.

          • @ZMonster
            link
            13 months ago

            You’re probably right. That’s definitely how things are done in building and commercial industries that I know of so it’s probably a standard practice system wide. Sure.

    • @[email protected]
      link
      fedilink
      33 months ago

      I’m guessing that the legal team didn’t have a case, but corporate told them to fight it anyways, so some legal intern just threw some wild shit at the wall and the more senior layers were like “well, we got nothing else. If corporate wants us to fight it, this is all we got”

  • @HKPiax
    link
    363 months ago

    Why the fuck is it allowed to force arbitration when someone dies? It’s insanity

  • @RedditWanderer
    link
    323 months ago

    I can’t believe they were only seeking 50,000$ too.

    • The Picard ManeuverOPM
      link
      113 months ago

      Really? Weren’t they a doctor too? 50k seems like it would be next to nothing for what happened.

    • @[email protected]
      link
      fedilink
      7
      edit-2
      3 months ago

      They aren’t. It’s stated “in access of”. They’re going after more.

      Also, the restaurant isn’t owned or operated by Disney. The husband’s lawyers attached Disney to it because of the super deep Disney pockets. But the husband is suing both the restaurant and Disney.

      LegalEagle has done a video on the whole thing, here’s a proper explanation of the ordeal.

      https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=hiDr6-Z72XU

  • @demizerone
    link
    English
    323 months ago

    M’fers had a meeting and a lawyer brought up the Disney+ TOS and they all agreed that was a great idea. Corporate nods all around. Idiots.

    • @TwanHE
      link
      173 months ago

      Just couldn’t stop salivating over the legal precedent they could set

    • @ummthatguy
      link
      English
      18
      edit-2
      3 months ago

      We may be trending away from the Bell Riots to Starfleet timeline and more into the Corporate Wars to Rollerball (1975) timeline. May want to brush up on your skating ability.