Latest news with #BryanArnett

Miami Herald
9 hours ago
- Entertainment
- Miami Herald
In-N-Out sues YouTuber over fake employee prank video
In-N-Out Burger has filed a lawsuit against a YouTube personality for allegedly impersonating a company employee, filming customers without their consent and posting videos sharing false and misleading information about the popular California burger chain. The federal lawsuit, filed in Santa Ana on June 20, stems from a video Bryan Arnett posted to his YouTube channel on April 25. In the now-private video, Arnett posed as an In-N-Out employee at multiple Southern California locations while the chain's restaurants were closed for Easter Sunday. Wearing the restaurant's signature uniform - a white T-shirt, red apron and paper hat - Arnett pretended to take drive-thru orders from unsuspecting customers. The video showed him offering fake menus, making inappropriate comments and asking uncomfortable personal questions. In one clip of the video posted to TikTok, Arnett and an accomplice staged a scene where they pretended that a cockroach was found in a meal, with Arnett claiming the location was experiencing "a pretty bad cockroach problem" that week. Another clip captured him asking a customer if they would be interested in sleeping with his wife while he watched. According to the lawsuit, Arnett also made false statements suggesting the chain served food "doggy style" and that a "manager" had put his "feet in the lettuce" served to customers. This isn't Arnett's first run-in with In-N-Out management. He was previously removed from locations for trying to pay for strangers' orders with pennies and for posting fake "employee of the month" plaques featuring his own photo in dining areas. The content creator, who has built a following on YouTube and Instagram through videos of himself breaking social norms, recently posted a vlog showing him living inside a Planet Fitness gym to see how long he could stay before being ejected. In-N-Out, which operates 421 locations across the United States - 283 of them in California - has consistently defended its family-oriented brand reputation. The Irvine-based (as of now) company pursued legal action against another YouTuber for similar pranks in 2018. The chain is also known for hosting international pop-ups as a strategy to maintain its global trademarks and protect its brand identity worldwide. It has previously sued copycat restaurants in Utah, Mexico and Australia for trademark infringement. "In-N-Out cares deeply about its customers, the goodwill those customers have for its brand, and the Associates who work tirelessly to uphold that brand by their commitment to ensuring every customer has a positive experience," the lawsuit states. In a YouTube video posted Monday, Arnett responded to the legal action with apparent indifference. "It'll probably be annoying or whatever, but whatever's gonna happen is gonna happen," he said. The video has since been made private. Arnett did not immediately respond to requests for comment about the lawsuit. Copyright (C) 2025, Tribune Content Agency, LLC. Portions copyrighted by the respective providers.
Yahoo
11 hours ago
- Entertainment
- Yahoo
In-N-Out sues YouTuber over fake employee prank video
In-N-Out Burger has filed a lawsuit against a YouTube personality for allegedly impersonating a company employee, filming customers without their consent and posting videos sharing false and misleading information about the popular California burger chain. The federal lawsuit, filed in Santa Ana on June 20, stems from a video Bryan Arnett posted to his YouTube channel on April 25. In the now-private video, Arnett posed as an In-N-Out employee at multiple Southern California locations while the chain's restaurants were closed for Easter Sunday. Wearing the restaurant's signature uniform — a white T-shirt, red apron and paper hat — Arnett pretended to take drive-thru orders from unsuspecting customers. The video showed him offering fake menus, making inappropriate comments and asking uncomfortable personal questions. In one clip of the video posted to TikTok, Arnett and an accomplice staged a scene where they pretended that a cockroach was found in a meal, with Arnett claiming the location was experiencing 'a pretty bad cockroach problem' that week. Another clip captured him asking a customer if they would be interested in sleeping with his wife while he watched. According to the lawsuit, Arnett also made false statements suggesting the chain served food 'doggy style' and that a 'manager' had put his 'feet in the lettuce' served to customers. This isn't Arnett's first run-in with In-N-Out management. He was previously removed from locations for trying to pay for strangers' orders with pennies and for posting fake 'employee of the month' plaques featuring his own photo in dining areas. The content creator, who has built a following on YouTube and Instagram through videos of himself breaking social norms, recently posted a vlog showing him living inside a Planet Fitness gym to see how long he could stay before being ejected. In-N-Out, which operates 421 locations across the United States — 283 of them in California — has consistently defended its family-oriented brand reputation. The Irvine-based (as of now) company pursued legal action against another YouTuber for similar pranks in 2018. Read more: After 30 years, In-N-Out leaves corporate office in Orange County The chain is also known for hosting international pop-ups as a strategy to maintain its global trademarks and protect its brand identity worldwide. It has previously sued copycat restaurants in Utah, Mexico and Australia for trademark infringement. 'In-N-Out cares deeply about its customers, the goodwill those customers have for its brand, and the Associates who work tirelessly to uphold that brand by their commitment to ensuring every customer has a positive experience,' the lawsuit states. In a YouTube video posted Monday, Arnett responded to the legal action with apparent indifference. 'It'll probably be annoying or whatever, but whatever's gonna happen is gonna happen,' he said. The video has since been made private. Arnett did not immediately respond to requests for comment about the lawsuit. Sign up for our Wide Shot newsletter to get the latest entertainment business news, analysis and insights. This story originally appeared in Los Angeles Times.
_fitted.png&w=3840&q=100)

Miami Herald
11 hours ago
- Entertainment
- Miami Herald
Influencer made lewd videos while pretending to be In-N-Out worker, CA lawsuit says
A social media influencer is being sued after he was accused of posting lewd and derogatory videos dressed as an employee of a popular restaurant chain. The federal lawsuit was filed by In-N-Out Burgers on June 20 in the Central District of California against Bryan Arnett. McClatchy News reached out to Arnett for comment June 24 but did not immediately hear back. Arnett is accused of impersonating an In-N-Out employee and posting videos to his social media accounts. In April, Arnett went to multiple In-N-Out locations in California, dressed as a worker with a fake uniform and recorded himself interacting with customers, according to a civil complaint. 'He made lewd, derogatory, and profane remarks, such as stating that In-N-Out had cockroaches and condoms in its food, and that In-N-Out associates put their feet in lettuce served to customers; offering food products 'doggy style'; and asking a potential customer whether the customer would sleep with his wife and allow Arnett to watch,' the lawsuit said. The lawsuit said Arnett went to the locations on Easter Sunday while the restaurants were closed, pretended to be a drive-thru associate and took customers' orders as a prank, filming them without their consent. He then posted the videos to his social media accounts and told viewers the restaurants were unsanitary and the business was 'not a welcoming or family-friendly establishment,' according to the complaint. 'In doing so, (Arnett) ensured that his remarks—from the purely defamatory to the lewd, unsettling and bizarre—did not come across as mere jokes by some unaffiliated prankster but instead reflected directly and negatively on In-N-Out,' the complaint said. In one video, Arnett told a customer, 'I like watching my wife sleep with other men. Is that something you would be interested in?' the lawsuit said. He told another customer the restaurant was 'only serving gay people' that day, according to the complaint. Arnett has 334,000 subscribers on YouTube, 276,000 followers on Instagram and 170,000 followers on Tik Tok with nearly 10 million likes. The lawsuit said Arnett 'benefits from posting videos on social media.' According to TikTok's Creator Rewards Program, eligible content creators are able to make money from posting videos. The restaurant is suing for federal trademark infringement, false designation of origin and disparagement, common law trademark infringement and unfair competition, business defamation and common law trespass. Several of the counts stem from Arnett wearing a fake In-N-Out uniform with the restaurant's logos and colors, the lawsuit said. The lawsuit is seeking an undetermined amount in damages.


Los Angeles Times
11 hours ago
- Entertainment
- Los Angeles Times
In-N-Out sues YouTuber over fake employee prank video
In-N-Out Burger has filed a lawsuit against a YouTube personality for allegedly impersonating a company employee, filming customers without their consent and posting videos sharing false and misleading information about the popular California burger chain. The federal lawsuit, filed in Santa Ana on June 20, stems from a video Bryan Arnett posted to his YouTube channel on April 25. In the now-private video, Arnett posed as an In-N-Out employee at multiple Southern California locations while the chain's restaurants were closed for Easter Sunday. Wearing the restaurant's signature uniform — a white T-shirt, red apron and paper hat — Arnett pretended to take drive-thru orders from unsuspecting customers. The video showed him offering fake menus, making inappropriate comments and asking uncomfortable personal questions. In one clip of the video posted to TikTok, Arnett and an accomplice staged a scene where they pretended that a cockroach was found in a meal, with Arnett claiming the location was experiencing 'a pretty bad cockroach problem' that week. Another clip captured him asking a customer if they would be interested in sleeping with his wife while he watched. According to the lawsuit, Arnett also made false statements suggesting the chain served food 'doggy style' and that a 'manager' had put his 'feet in the lettuce' served to customers. This isn't Arnett's first run-in with In-N-Out management. He was previously removed from locations for trying to pay for strangers' orders with pennies and for posting fake 'employee of the month' plaques featuring his own photo in dining areas. The content creator, who has built a following on YouTube and Instagram through videos of himself breaking social norms, recently posted a vlog showing him living inside a Planet Fitness gym to see how long he could stay before being ejected. In-N-Out, which operates 421 locations across the United States — 283 of them in California — has consistently defended its family-oriented brand reputation. The Irvine-based (as of now) company pursued legal action against another YouTuber for similar pranks in 2018. The chain is also known for hosting international pop-ups as a strategy to maintain its global trademarks and protect its brand identity worldwide. It has previously sued copycat restaurants in Utah, Mexico and Australia for trademark infringement. 'In-N-Out cares deeply about its customers, the goodwill those customers have for its brand, and the Associates who work tirelessly to uphold that brand by their commitment to ensuring every customer has a positive experience,' the lawsuit states. In a YouTube video posted Monday, Arnett responded to the legal action with apparent indifference. 'It'll probably be annoying or whatever, but whatever's gonna happen is gonna happen,' he said. The video has since been made private. Arnett did not immediately respond to requests for comment about the lawsuit.
-copy.jpeg%3Ftrim%3D0%2C0%2C0%2C0%26width%3D1200%26height%3D800%26crop%3D1200%3A800&w=3840&q=100)

The Independent
17 hours ago
- Entertainment
- The Independent
In-N-Out sues YouTuber who pretended to be employee and made lewd comments to customers in prank video
In-N-Out Burger has filed a federal lawsuit against YouTuber Bryan Arnett after he allegedly impersonated an employee and made lewd remarks to customers in a prank video. Arnett, who has over 600,000 followers across YouTube and Instagram, posted the video on April 25. Dressed in a red apron, white shirt, and paper In-N-Out hat, he posed as a drive-thru worker at a closed location, reportedly in Glendale, on Easter Sunday, when all the burger joints were closed for the holiday. In the video, which is now unsearchable and appears to have been taken down, Arnett takes fake orders, offers imaginary menu items, and makes vulgar comments. At one point, he asks a customer, 'I like watching my wife sleeping with other men. Is that something you'd be interested in?' In another part of the video, he and an accomplice joke about cockroaches and condoms in customer meals. Arnett has previously posted videos pranking the chain, including paying in pennies and hanging a fake employee-of-the-month plaque. This time, In-N-Out is taking legal action. The lawsuit, filed on June 20, accuses Arnett of falsely representing the company and defaming its brand with 'lewd, unsettling and bizarre' behavior. The company sent a cease-and-desist letter in early May. The suit seeks to ban Arnett from all In-N-Out locations, recoup any earnings from the video, and pursue damages. The Independent has reached out to In-N-Out for comment. Known for fiercely guarding its family-friendly image, the Southern California-based chain previously sued another YouTuber in 2018 over similar antics. In a new video, Arnett has responded to the lawsuit while eating In-N-Out in his car, SFGate reported. 'When I went out and filmed the video, I kinda knew what kind of waters I was stepping into,' he said. 'I knew I was kinda teetering the line a little bit, pushing my luck.' 'I wouldn't say I'm worried about the lawsuit,' he added. 'Like yeah, sure, it'll probably be annoying or whatever, but whatever's gonna happen is gonna happen.'