“Oreo??” doughnut from Tesco Tags:ireland 10 comments Old photo from last year that got a chuckle out of me 😁 It’s not a trademark violation if you’re just *asking* if the doughnut contains the brand name product! (Seriously, Tesco’s label printing system likely doesn’t handle Unicode properly and choked on a ™ or ® symbol someone entered in the name elsewhere…) Most likely a superscript^tm that was messed up in printing I’m Ron Burgendy? They weren’t sure if it was Oreo enough 😉 Mystery doughnut! Who knows what’s inside? Is it an Oreo? Only the bravest shoppers will dare to uncover the truth. Surprise Oreo cream. They do them in Lidl also , Lidl’s ones are less rotten Guess they learned from their burgers not to call things what people assume they are. Not Oreo again. Please stop trying to make us like Oreos. Leave a ReplyYou must be logged in to post a comment.
It’s not a trademark violation if you’re just *asking* if the doughnut contains the brand name product! (Seriously, Tesco’s label printing system likely doesn’t handle Unicode properly and choked on a ™ or ® symbol someone entered in the name elsewhere…)
Mystery doughnut! Who knows what’s inside? Is it an Oreo? Only the bravest shoppers will dare to uncover the truth.
10 comments
Old photo from last year that got a chuckle out of me 😁
It’s not a trademark violation if you’re just *asking* if the doughnut contains the brand name product!
(Seriously, Tesco’s label printing system likely doesn’t handle Unicode properly and choked on a ™ or ® symbol someone entered in the name elsewhere…)
Most likely a superscript^tm that was messed up in printing
I’m Ron Burgendy?
They weren’t sure if it was Oreo enough 😉
Mystery doughnut! Who knows what’s inside? Is it an Oreo? Only the bravest shoppers will dare to uncover the truth.
Surprise Oreo cream.
They do them in Lidl also , Lidl’s ones are less rotten
Guess they learned from their burgers not to call things what people assume they are.
Not Oreo again. Please stop trying to make us like Oreos.