Cereal is a staple of the American breakfast table, consumed by millions of people every day and tied, for many, with memories of childhood. So when a story began circulating this week about a disturbing discovery in a box of Cinnamon Toast Crunch, consumers were horrified.
None more so than Jensen Karp.
On Monday morning, he ate a bowl of his favorite cinnamon sugar-striped cereal. As he began filling a second bowl, "something plopped out of the box," he said in an interview. "I picked it up, and I was like, 'This is clearly a shrimp tail.'"
He looked in the bag and saw what appeared to be another tail. Both were encrusted with sugar. "I get really grossed out, and I'm medicated for OCD, so this is a total nightmare for me," he said.
Karp, a 41-year-old comedian and writer in Los Angeles, took a picture of the contents and sent it to his wife, Danielle Fishel Karp, who played Topanga Lawrence-Matthews on "Boy Meets World."
Then he sent a form submission email to General Mills, which began selling Cinnamon Toast Crunch in 1984, documenting what he'd found. Soon after, he posted a picture of the items on Twitter. Eventually, Cinnamon Toast Crunch reached out to Karp through its brand Twitter account.
"Privately, they were still being very nice," he said, offering to send a replacement box, which he politely declined. Then the brand issued a public statement on Twitter.
"After further investigation with our team that closely examined the image, it appears to be an accumulation of the cinnamon sugar that sometimes can occur when ingredients aren't thoroughly blended," the statement from Cinnamon Toast Crunch read. "We assure you that there's no possibility of cross contamination with shrimp."