Science Krispy Kreme will give you a free doughnut every day this year — if you've been vaccinated


In case you needed another reason to get your COVID-19 vaccination, Krispy Kreme is sweetening the deal — it's giving free doughnuts to anyone with proof of vaccination, all year long.

Starting Monday, any customer with a valid COVID-19 vaccination card will receive a free Original Glazed doughnut at participating locations nationwide. The iconic doughnut shop specifies that any guests who have received at least one of the two shots of the Moderna or Pfizer vaccine, or one shot of the Johnson & Johnson vaccine qualify for the promotion.

All you need to show is your vaccination card to redeem your doughnut — a vaccine sticker is not valid.

And it's not just a one-time offer. Vaccinated individuals can go back every single day and continue getting free doughnuts through all of 2021.

In a press release, Krispy Kreme also said it plans to support health care workers and volunteers who are administering vaccines by delivering free doughnuts to vaccination centers across the country in the coming weeks. To continue encouraging company safety, it is also giving employees up to four hours of paid time off to get the vaccine.

"We all want to get COVID-19 behind us as fast as possible and we want to support everyone doing their part to make the country safe by getting vaccinated as soon as the vaccine is available to them," Chief Marketing Officer Dave Skena said in a statement.

The U.S. has now administered over 100 million doses of the COVID-19 vaccine. That equates to more than 35 million Americans fully vaccinated — 10.5% of the total U.S. population.

The Biden administration now estimates it will have enough doses available for every adult by May. Experts hope that clinical trials in teens and children could make some shots available for adolescents by the fall and younger children in early 2022
 

Attachments

  • mmm-donuts.jpg
    mmm-donuts.jpg
    109 KB · Views: 18
The year is about 1/4 gone, so there's 270ish days left. One vaccination costs about $15, according to that story about the Indian doctor. That means it costs about 6 cents a day for the free food, assuming you're diligent and collect it every day. Effort and quality of food aside, good deal.

Let's get a bunch of other shops in the region to offer similar promotions - so you can last a whole day just eating free food - then vaccinate all the poors. Starting with that race-baiting Somalian Chipotle dine and dasher.

This would be a cheaper system than SNAP or WICS, and has the bonus factor of "the people funding the system deliberately opted in to it". Somehow shuffling all the poors to Foodville USA might take some logistical effort however...
 
Last edited:
The year is about 1/4 gone, so there's 270ish days left. One vaccination costs about $15, according to that story about the Indian doctor. That means it costs about 6 cents a day for the free food, assuming you're diligent and collect it every day. Effort and quality of food aside, good deal.

Let's get a bunch of other shops in the region to offer similar promotions - so you can last a whole day just eating free food - then vaccinate all the poors. Starting with that race-baiting Somalian Chipotle dine and dasher.

This would be a cheaper system than SNAP or WICS, and has the bonus factor of "the people funding the system deliberately opted in to it". Somehow shuffling all the poors to Foodville USA might take some logistical effort however...
Most places in the US will give you a vaccine for free IIRC.
 
  • Informative
Reactions: Fomo Hoire
Can I lie about and still get free donuts?
Technically yes, because its illegal to try to force someone to provide any kind of medical proof of anything in this context. This can get them in trouble if they are not very careful about it

I get what the intent here is but they really should have passed this through corporate legal, who would have told them its a bad idea. It would only take one asshole to deliberately fuck with them and hit them with a lawsuit for being denied a donut after refusing to divulge confidential medical information
 
Back