Culture Why Whoopi Goldberg Is Feuding With a Staten Island Bakery - The left-leaning host of “The View” said the business in a Republican stronghold declined to take an order under her name. The bakery said politics had nothing to do with it.

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A small sponge cake topped with whipped cream and a maraschino cherry is the crux of a political skirmish between Whoopi Goldberg and a 146-year-old Staten Island bakery.

Ms. Goldberg said Holtermann’s Bakery, in the heart of New York City’s reddest borough, refused to fill an order placed under her name, perhaps because of her liberal politics.

The bakery’s owner said it wasn’t personal and that politics had nothing to do with it.

Now, the bakery’s phone is ringing off the hook, and customers are lining up to show their support for a Staten Island institution — and their opposition to Ms. Goldberg.

In the final minutes of Wednesday’s episode of“The View,” Ms. Goldberg said she was celebrating her birthday with an old-fashioned pastry, charlotte russe, that had been a favorite of her mother’s.

“I should tell you, charlotte russe has no political leanings,” she said. “And the place that made these refused to make them for me.”

The live audience gasped. Ms. Goldberg’s co-hosts Sunny Hostin and Alyssa Farah Griffin paused, stricken, forks frozen halfway to their mouths. Another co-host, Sara Haines, spit a forkful of the dessert back onto her plate.

Ms. Goldberg, a native New Yorker, explained that the bakery had turned away her order, citing an equipment problem. But the bakery accepted the same order, this time placed with no mention of her name, a few days later, according to a person familiar with both pastry orders.

“Perhaps they did not like my politics,” said Ms. Goldberg, a Democratic stalwart who, along with the five other hosts of “The View,” backed Kamala Harris.

Ms. Goldberg did not name the bakery on air. But viewers recognized the packaging — a red polka-dot cardboard cup — as the work of Holtermann’s, which is operated out of a weathered storefront in the Great Kills neighborhood by the great-grandchildren of Claus Holtermann, who founded the bakery in 1878. Many locals have been patrons for decades.

The Holtermanns dispute Ms. Goldberg’s insinuation. The bakery’s boiler was broken when the call came in, said Bill Holtermann, a co-owner.

“It was a misunderstanding,” Mr. Holtermann said. “I don’t even have a cellphone. I’m just trying to bake.”

While Mr. Holtermann said that the bakery’s refusal was not politically motivated, on Staten Island, where Donald J. Trump trounced Ms. Harris by more than 30 percentage points, Ms. Goldberg’s umbrage has been a windfall for the bakery.

On Friday, the island’s Republican borough president, Vito Fossella, held a news conference outside the store to “stand up for one of the best families and businesses not just Staten Island but this country would appreciate.”

He called on Ms. Goldberg to apologize: “Just say you’re sorry so we can put this behind us and look forward to a great Thanksgiving and keeping this country great again.”

On Saturday afternoon, the line snaked out the door. People had come from as far away as Philadelphia. Coffee danish rings, cupcakes and coconut custard pies in old-school blue-and-white boxes flew off the shelves. Each fresh batch of charlotte russes sold out in minutes.

“We want to get ‘The View’ canceled,” said Barbara Volpe, 73. “All they care about on that show is politics. They’re always degrading Trump, and we love him here.”

Anthony Saltarelli said he did not buy Ms. Goldberg’s account.

“What she’s insinuating wasn’t true, and I think it backfired,” said Mr. Saltarelli, 58, who lives miles away on the island’s North Shore. “I never come to this part of Staten Island, but today I did.”

In an Instagram post on Friday, Ms. Goldberg apparently remained unswayed by the Holtermanns’ explanation.

“It does seem a little odd,” she said. But she didn’t let the contretemps ruin her special day — or her charlotte russes.

“I enjoyed my delicious dessert and I had a happy, sweet birthday,” she said. “Nothing better than that.”

https://www.nytimes.com/2024/11/16/nyregion/whoopi-goldberg-staten-island-bakery.html (Archive)

 
Hell, I've worked facilities maintenance for a couple bar&grills when I was younger. They were owned by a family friend, small local businesses with old equipment. HVAC, Plumbing, kitchen equipment, electrical, and all kinds of random shit that a business needs fixed, installed, whatever. I went on to do the same work for a franchisee around the state I'm in. I have no idea how a bakery in Staten Island is equipped or run (owner said building is 1930s, I would NOT want to do work there), and I haven't done that kind of work in almost a decade. But I can tell you, most things that break in a bar and restaurant can be quickly repaired or replaced, either same or next day, but there are some things that are cast iron bitches to fix and replace. Specialty and legacy(old) equipment can take a while, for parts or for replacement, or for the company service guy. Sometimes this means a menu will be adjusted for a couple days. I didn't do work in any McDonalds, but like I said, the McFlurry problem is a well publicized example of this.
I'm assuming that the boiler is about as old as the building itself since they're big, heavy, and far easier to fix than replace, so it probably takes a call to a specialist.
 
Maybe if it was the same day I'd have some leeway, but I would expect that if a piece of equipment essential to my business broke, I would be moving heaven and earth to get it fixed ASAP, quicker than "a few days"
We've no real idea how essential it is to their business, or even if it was their only one. FWIW, a Charlotte Russe is a "no-bake" cake. It's syrup soaked sponge fingers with custard and whipped cream in it. No disrespect to the skills of any chef but the concept itself is pretty disgusting as cakes go. I guess they probably make the sponge fingers themselves? But the boiler is used to make the syrup soaking?

Anyway, point I'm making is that there's a whole load of stuff they can probably do without the boiler if they're just focused on keeping stock on the shelves and turning down the odd custom order. So even accepting another order 20 minutes later wouldn't necessarily be proof. Hell, they might be boiling water in a kettle and simply limiting how much of a certain order they might make. As you say, the fact that it's days later weakens Whoopi's case even further than it is.
 
I hope they sue. All they need to win is the receipt for the repairs to the boiler.
I'd rather see a big government inquest, a modern day Church Committee that ends up with Whoopi and the rest of the subhumans on the View being legally classified as laboratory primates. I'm disappointed it's shaping up to be another Dem/Repub slapfight instead of everyone getting together to rip on a handful of women so stupid they'd lose a checkers game to a houseplant.
But the boiler is used to make the syrup soaking?
It's probably a heating boiler since the building is so old, and the proprietor wasn't sure she would be able to conduct business with a crew of dirty repair guys doing major repairs, walking in and out all the time, possibly having to shut off the gas or electrical main, maybe even cut holes in walls or floors...
 
I hope they sue. All they need to win is the receipt for the repairs to the boiler.
They'd have to show damages and from the sounds of it, they're inundated with business from people who can't stand Whoopi Goldberg.

Still, they could do so just to force her to make an on-air retraction and apology. That'd be worth more than money and it would cost Ms. Goldberg more than money (of which she has lots) as well.
 
Keep in mind that Whoopi is LITERALLY a Karen. Her real name is Caryn Elaine Johnson and her stage name is Whoopi Goldberg because she farts a lot and thinks that she’s Jewish (not even exaggerating, just read her Wikipedia page).

And she’s still coasting on that Sister Act fame somehow, but TV, at least from the 90s, seems to be self-reinforcing. She kept her name out there with stuff like Hollywood Squares, and then just went to The View and stayed there forever.
 
black judge who destroyed the dry cleaner owned by that asian
Roy L. Pearson, of the Pearson V Chung lawsuit. He wanted 54 million dollars for lost pants. He lost his judge job and got his bar license suspended for a while.
She tired to insinuate it's because she's a woman. Ironic, given the current owner is also a woman.
Also because most bakery orders will be placed by women. Guess who orders the food for all those baby showers and board meetings?
I suspect she picked a bad fight on this one.
I suspect The View will use this to quietly push her to "retire". They want fresh blood and a 70 yr old ooking nigger bitch isn't it.
 
Ms. Goldberg, a native New Yorker, explained that the bakery had turned away her order, citing an equipment problem. But the bakery accepted the same order, this time placed with no mention of her name, a few days later, according to a person familiar with both pastry orders
So a repairman fixed the machine that was malfunctioning?
 
It's probably a heating boiler since the building is so old, and the proprietor wasn't sure she would be able to conduct business with a crew of dirty repair guys doing major repairs, walking in and out all the time, possibly having to shut off the gas or electrical main, maybe even cut holes in walls or floors...
It also can be a health code issue, depending on how strict the local laws are.

In some places? If you are serving prepared food? Or a restaurant that does it's own dishes? And you lose the ability to boil water? You have to shut down everything, end of story, until you have it back as they don't want you taking any risk since no boiled water = no guaranteed sterilization of bacteria.

It's crazy how they never seem to get that attacking people just trying to live their life will make them look retarded
Libs haven't cared about the working man since the 80's, why would they start now?
 
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