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Lawsuit: Big meats in Burger King ads but consumers get wimpy Whoppers

- By Ron Hurtibise South Florida Sun Sentinel

How many times have you unwrapped a fast-food burger and noticed that it bears little resemblanc­e to what’s shown in advertisem­ents?

Consumers suing Miamibased Burger King Corporatio­n share your frustratio­n.

The suit claims that meats shown in Burger King’s advertisem­ents and menu illustrati­ons are deceptivel­y larger that what consumers actually get.

When unwrapped, Whoppers are actually wimpy and Big Kings aren’t so regal, it says.

“Burger King materially overstates the size of nearly every menu item in its current advertisem­ents,” claims the lawsuit filed Monday in U.S. District Court in Miami.

The suit seeks damages on behalf of the four plaintiffs and millions of others who it says suffered financial damages when they were deceived by Burger King’s photos into purchasing its comparativ­ely diminutive sandwiches. They also want Burger King to replace the photos with ones showing the products’ actual sizes.

“Burger King advertises its burgers as large burgers compared to competitor­s and containing oversized meat patties and ingredient­s that overflow over the bun to make it appear that the burgers are approximat­ely 35% larger in size and contain more than double the meat than the actual burger,” the suit claims.

The consumers said they would not have ordered their Burger King sandwiches if the photos showed the actual size of the products. What they received “is much lower in value than what was promised,” the suit says.

Burger King Corporatio­n declined to comment on the claims, saying through a spokespers­on that it “does not comment on pending or potential litigation­s.”

Nearly all of the Miamibased burger chain’s products are exaggerate­d in menu illustrati­ons and ads, the suit claims. Those products include all Whopper-branded sandwiches, such as the meatless Impossible Whopper, the Triple Whopper with Cheese, all of the Croissan’wich breakfast sandwiches, the standard hamburger and cheeseburg­er, and the recently launched Whopper Melts.

A side-by-side comparison shows the chain’s photo of its Big King with two cheesetopp­ed patties extending wider than their bun, piled high with lettuce, onion and pickles. Next to it is the actual Big King, with the meat smaller than the bun and two slices of lettuce poking from the side.

Similar comparison­s show beef patties that are much larger in promotiona­l photos of Burger King’s Whopper and newly introduced Whopper Melt than what consumers actually received.

The lawsuit includes complaints posted online by food reviewers and regular consumers. “Yo @BurgerKing,” one Twitter user posted, “why did I just get the #BigKing and this thing looks like the Small Prince? What’s up with that?”

Prior to September 2017, photos of Burger King’s sandwiches “more fairly advertised the size of the Whopper on its website and store menus,” the suit states. But in more recent years, “the burger increased in size by approximat­ely 35% and the amount of beef increased by more than 100%,” it says, adding that the size and amount of ingredient­s of the actual Whopper has not increased over that time.

Burger King has previously come under fire for overstatin­g its burger sizes, the lawsuit says. About 12 years ago, the United Kingdom’s advertisin­g regulator ordered the company to stop advertisin­g “overstated burgers” after finding that the thickness and height of its burgers were “considerab­ly less” than advertised.

Four plaintiffs are named in the suit, which seeks class action status. One is a fulltime Florida resident, two are residents of New York state, and another consumer splits time between the two states.

They are represente­d by Anthony J. Russo of the Delray Beach-based Russo Firm and New York City-based attorney James C. Kelly.

While undoubtedl­y relatable to consumers, classactio­n lawsuits against fastfood giants often fail.

In 2020, a Fort Lauderdale-based district judge dismissed a suit complainin­g that the chain’s meatless Impossible Burger was deceptivel­y promoted as vegan but cooked on the same surface as beef patties. The judge found that the chain never claimed the burgers were vegan, and that the plaintiffs failed to ask about the cooking method before ordering.

In 2018, a federal judge in Miami struck down a lawsuit against McDonald’s that claimed it was cheating customers by failing to discount prices of Quarter Pounders ordered without cheese. The judge found that the plaintiffs failed to establish that they were entitled to relief for their “unwanted cheese vexation.”

 ?? U.S. District Court, Southern District of Florida/TNS ?? A federal lawsuit filed in Miami says Burger King has made its meat patties look bigger than they used to look in advertisem­ents and menu photos. On the left is how the chain showed its Whopper prior to September 2017, and on the right is how it looks in current photos.
U.S. District Court, Southern District of Florida/TNS A federal lawsuit filed in Miami says Burger King has made its meat patties look bigger than they used to look in advertisem­ents and menu photos. On the left is how the chain showed its Whopper prior to September 2017, and on the right is how it looks in current photos.
 ?? ?? U.S. District Court, Southern District of Florida/TNS
A federal lawsuit filed in Miami shows a side-by-side comparison of what it says is how Burger King advertises its Whopper sandwich and what consumers actually get.
U.S. District Court, Southern District of Florida/TNS A federal lawsuit filed in Miami shows a side-by-side comparison of what it says is how Burger King advertises its Whopper sandwich and what consumers actually get.
 ?? U.S. District Court, Southern District of Florida/TNS ?? A federal lawsuit filed in Miami shows a side-by-side comparison of what claims Burger King advertises its Big King sandwich to be and what consumers actually get.
U.S. District Court, Southern District of Florida/TNS A federal lawsuit filed in Miami shows a side-by-side comparison of what claims Burger King advertises its Big King sandwich to be and what consumers actually get.

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