Latest news with #Ziplocs


New York Post
a day ago
- Entertainment
- New York Post
Passenger slammed over ‘stinky' in-flight dinner prep: ‘Straight to jail'
They didn't think it was so egg-cellent. A female influencer is being ripped online after prepping a meal on a plane — which reportedly included a helping of 'smelly' boiled eggs. An Instagram video of her demo amassed over 1.3 million comments and oodles of angry comments before getting taken down, Jam Press reported. 4 Marra enjoys her homemade meal. Jam Press/@kitschenista 'What started as a fun travel moment turned into the international egg scandal of the year,' Jess Marra, 33, told the outlet while recalling her cooking demo at 30,000 feet. The Los Angeles-based influencer — who goes by @kitschenista on social media — had reportedly been flying from Los Angeles, US to Paris, France, and wanted to bring something along to tide her over during the 10-hour trip. As she was averse to airplane food, however, she decided to bring several containers filled with various ingredients so she could enjoy a healthful meal in-flight — like a sky-high Sweetgreen. 'When the flight attendant came around for meal service, I politely declined and once everyone around me was settled eating, I got to work,' she told Jam Press. In a video reposted to TikTok, Marra is seen whipping out a bag of arugula, Ziplocs with an avocado and salad dressing, which she tossed at her seat. 4 'People were yelling at me for being selfish, inconsiderate, endangering the lives of passengers, and just generally being the worst human ever,' said Marra. Jam Press/@kitschenista 4 Marra puts dressing on her salad. Jam Press/@kitschenista She also opened a container of boiled eggs and celery and took a bite. The Californian's mid-flight meal prep did not go over-easy with the viewers. 'Ya eggs/ fish in a small space like that makes you hella disrespectful,' said one critic. 'If you wanna bring dinner heck ya but like cmon girl.' 'THE EGGGGGGGGG straight to jail,' said another while one wrote, 'hard-boiled eggs smell on a long haul plane.' 'New fear unlocked: I get on a plane and the person next to me starts making an egg salad,' said another under the Instagram post. 'Between the egg, the elbow jabbing into your neighbor, the salad shaking and the 'influencing' I am 100% annoyed and I'm not on the plane,' critiqued one detractor. 'Just be a normal person and stop trying to gain attention.' 4 Marra insisted that the eggs were soft-boiled and therefore not odiferous. Jam Press/@kitschenista One viewer wrote, 'No one likes you on this flight….. no one.' However, Marra insisted in the comments that the eggs didn't smell as they were 'soft-boiled.' She said that she was 'shocked' over the 'brutal' comments. 'People were yelling at me for being selfish, inconsiderate, endangering the lives of passengers, and just generally being the worst human ever,' said the content creator. Marra found the reaction overzealous considering that was 'discreet' with her DIY dinner service, adding that 'no one on the flight seemed to notice or care.' She argued that the criticism was unfounded given that boiled eggs are sold at every airport convenience store, Starbucks and even on the airplane, whose meal options she felt naturally had a 'strong odor' even if they didn't feature eggs. 'Was it a little weird I assembled a salad at my seat? Sure,' Marra declared. 'Is it the end of the world that I ate an egg on a plane? Certainly not!' In a similar incident in October, flight attendants allegedly raised a stink after a fitness influencer and Playboy cover model brought a smelly egg-rich lunch into an airplane's first-class cabin because she was on a strict diet.


Buzz Feed
13-02-2025
- General
- Buzz Feed
People Are Sharing The "Unserious" Generational Curses They're Breaking In Adulthood, And It's Hilarious And Heartwarming
It doesn't really matter what kind of childhood you had — I'd put money on the fact that there's at least one thing you'd change about your life and habits in your adulthood. A "generational curse" — or a negative pattern or behavior that gets passed down from parent to child — might be a bit strong to describe some of the things you'd prefer to leave in the past, but there's also plenty of truth to it. After all, many habits are forged in poverty and other circumstances that can transcend generations. And old habits, as they say, die hard. In one of the most beautifully unhinged places on the internet, the meme page @patiasfantasyworld on Instagram, people chimed in on the prompt: "What 'unserious' generational curse are y'all breaking?" They started the conversation: "I throw away stained Tupperware and we open more than one cereal box at a time." Many responses centered around not having to reuse disposable items around the house, presumably because folks have the money not to anymore: "Not washing and drying the shitty little Ziplocs." "I throw away the chicken grease after one use." "Saving every receipt EVER. Turning on the real heat instead of just the oven lol. Simply throwing away loved/worn clothes when they finally get mega holes instead of trying to find another use for them like using them as a cleaning rag or saving them for a piece of a quilt. Saving the tiny condiment packages like ketchup in case you might need them someday when you're out but this hack is still worth it tbh." "No, children, you DO NOT have to eat all your food before getting up from the table." Still others referenced the more innocuous (or, yes, "unserious") habits they're choosing to leave behind. "I put ketchup and BBQ sauce in the fridge where it belongs..." Some were about being newly able to enjoy the finer things: "1) Order a fun drink that isn't water when I go out. 2) Order appetizers and/or dessert." "Go to therapy lol."