Depends on the business and the claims. In this story, I don't see where KK actually listed or pitched real blueberries at all. We live in a fine print society. Seems they are listing out the ingredients right there for anyone who doesn't just listen to the pitches designed to draw you in. Further: So he assumed that since there is real fruit in some of their offerings, this was to be expected for all? Even when the ingredients for their Blueberry bits are clearly listed on their website? Sorry, his fault for being gullible and buying sales pitches without researching them IMO. Toss this case out, and make him pay for everyones time, and "damages".
Still do not see rewarding any one person or any group $5M for eating a fake blueberry unless it dissolved their intestines.
Before clicking the link I knew... I knew California was involved. The State that will convene an international war crimes tribunal if your bottled water doesn't have the label "warning: product contains water".
Sounds like a number Carla would have come up with. Lord knows she's had her problems with KK before. [video=youtube;uyg9hB1Mjpo]https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=uyg9hB1Mjpo[/video]