Supermarket chain slammed for ‘unacceptable’ Juneteenth cakes that angered shoppers: ‘This is a mockery’

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Kroger is being called out by shoppers for its “disrespectful” Juneteenth cake designs.

A Kroger location in Atlanta, Georgia, is going viral after a video posted to TikTok showed the cakes that “lack creativity” for the holiday in the bakery section of the supermarket.

“This is some bulls—,” TikTok user @blaq.monalisa said in the video, which has garnered 10.3 million views and 1.2 million likes as of Friday morning. “Who the hell made this ugly-ass s—?”

“This is unacceptable,” she goes on to say.

The video shows beautifully decorated birthday cakes and treats before panning back to the table with Juneteenth-themed cookie cakes that are haphazardly decorated.

A few cakes are shown, one with a printed design and others with phrases sloppily put onto the cakes such as “FREE,” “June 19 Free,” “Congratulations” and “Free @ Last.”

“Y’all decorate everything else around here cute, everything else around here cute,” the TikToker said. “But for Juneteenth, you wanna just throw something on a freaking cookie cake and expect someone to buy it.”

Juneteenth is a federal holiday celebrated annually on June 19 to commemorate the end of slavery in the United States.

“Kroger, count your days,” they added in the caption. “Why even bother if you’re going to lack creativity … This is a mockery!”

WARNING: VIDEO INCLUDES GRAPHIC LANGUAGE


@blaq.monalisa
Kroger count your days. Why even bother if you’re going to lack creativity. This is Kroger on Howell mill rd, Atlanta Ga. This is a mockery! Am I tripping, someone let me know!

♬ original sound – blaq monalisa

People in the comments agreed, shocked by the cake offerings.

“‘Free @ last’ is diabolical,” one said.

“Gurl! Not the last one saying Congratulations. Like, ‘Congratulations, you’re free!’,” a user commented with the face-palm emoji.

“Take the ‘free’ cookie home. Walk out with it. It says free,” someone jokingly suggested.

“This is funny but NOT funny,” one said. “I’m highly disappointed in Kroger.”

“You should’ve just flipped the table over,” another added.

“I thought this was a joke until you showed the store,” someone else said.

Kroger told Newsweek in a statement that “the cakes and cookies that were featured in the video were inconsistent with our provided guidance and not of the quality we would expect to see from our stores.”

“The products have been removed, and we’ve addressed this directly with the store teams and the customer who took the initial video,” the spokesperson continued.

Meanwhile, TikTok user @blaq.monalisa went back to the Kroger store in a follow-up video and confirmed the removal of the cakes.

“I still feel some type of way that they didn’t replace them with better Juneteenth cakes,” she shared.
 
I thought the argument was "Underpaid and overworked employees cannot be held to high standards", but now suddenly we expect them to create lavish cakes for niche federal holidays that they don't even get off work?
I'd honestly forgotten Juneteenth was even a thing until it was brought up we would not be working the coming Thursday.
 
This holiday is still rather new. Don't believe all bakeries really know how to decorate a cake for this holiday. I certainly wouldn't. Give the store some credit for at least trying to provide cakes for the occasion.

Some people will complain about anything.
 
This holiday is still rather new. Don't believe all bakeries really know how to decorate a cake for this holiday. I certainly wouldn't.
It’s a head scratcher isn’t it? How do you express this in fondant?
If anyone wants to laugh at cake, may I humbly suggest https://www.cakewrecks.com/
 
Cookie cakes suck and no one ever buys that shit anyway, but corporate types fucking love them. This is almost certainly the department trying to rid themselves of shit product, and trying to find a way to make it "festive" or whatever to fill a hole on their general purpose seasonal display.
Wake me up when the people who had to work on that fake holiday get time and a half.
Chances are these people aren't even getting that for working Thanksgiving.
 
It’s a head scratcher isn’t it? How do you express this in fondant?
If anyone wants to laugh at cake, may I humbly suggest https://www.cakewrecks.com/
Here are some acceptable examples according to the internet
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IMG_3591.webpIMG_3590.webpIMG_3589.webp
 
Shame George Floyd(ﷺ) never got see Juneteenth recognised but even He would be appalled at how commercialised and tacky it became.
 
Shame George Floyd(ﷺ) never got see Juneteenth recognised but even He would be appalled at how commercialised and tacky it became.
I wouldn't be surprised if the people who celebrated it in Texas before it became mainstream are appalled by this.
 
  • Agree
Reactions: SIMIΔN
I am still confused about witch actual date "juneteenth" is. The tenth of June? That was 10 days ago, why are you talking about it around the twentieth?
They all look like some sort of autism awareness cakes, except the ones to the right, they look a little bit too Italian.

Anyway I will just eat some chocolate, say Saint Floyd six times while dabbing and declare this astrotufred holiday to be over.
 
From the Wikipedia:

Quote: The holiday's name, first used in the 1890s, is a combination of the words June and nineteenth, referring to June 19, 1865, the day when Major General Gordon Granger ordered the final enforcement of the Emancipation Proclamation in Texas at the end of the American Civil War. In the Civil War period, slavery came to an end in various areas of the United States at different times.


As a Texan, I feels stupid that my folks are responsible for this stupid "holiday". If I had a time-maschine, I would travel back to our country's beginning and fucking make everyone understand why they should not import one single African (and yes, what happened back then was a horrific crime against humanity)



Quote: Early Juneteenth celebrations date back to 1866, at first involving church-centered community gatherings in Texas. They spread across the South among newly freed African-Americans and their descendants and became more commercialized in the 1920s and 1930s, often centering on a food festival.

Of course it was commercialized. Everything get's commercialized in the end.
 
“This is some bullshit,” TikTok user @blaq.monalisa(lmao) said in the video, which has garnered 10.3 million views and 1.2 million likes as of Friday morning. “Who the hell made this ugly-ass shit?”
DEI hired bakers probably made that "ugly-ass shit". Hopefully indians.
“Y’all decorate everything else around here cute, everything else around here cute,”
Get the hint.
 
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