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Dominos Pranksters Done In By Crowdsourcing

imageTeens have long used YouTube to post videos of themselves doing gags, but in the case of some Dominos employees from North Carolina, uploading clips cost them their jobs in less than a day thanks to the viral power of social media.

Consumer watchdog blog The Consumerist wrote about the clips yesterday, which showed the employees doing gross things to food while on the job; repulsed viewers worked to narrow down the store location, alerted the manager and got in touch with Dominos’ corporate office. The two teens took the videos down, but the damage had already been done: this morning, Dominos’ VP of communications Tim McIntyre told Consumerist readers via email that the franchise owner would be “terminating their employment today.”

It’s a testament to how social media can force major corporations to act much faster than they might otherwise in an effort to do damage control. From the “AmazonFail” mess the book retailer is trying to clean up now, to the Twitter firestorm that erupted last November around Motrin’s baby-carrier ads (via the NYT), consumers are turning to resources like Twitter, YouTube and blogs to hold companies accountable for their ad campaigns, unruly employees and other actions—and in record time.

One of the gross-out clips is embedded after the jump.


Video Credit: feeish
Photo Credit: bettybl

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Apr 14, 2009 1:21 PM ET
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Posted In: Advertising, Technologies / Formats, Broadband, Companies, Amazon.com, dominos

  • A

    You've got the wrong Kristy Hammond, Celebminute. It's pretty obvious to anyone who spends more than a few seconds looking at that facebook profile that the one you've found is Australian, and most probably very unimpressed you've slandered her.

  • Teens were slandered unfairly here—the fools who did this are indeed "adults" in the legal sense of the word, but not from the maturity standpoint we usually mean when talking about "adult behavior."

  • Cambel

    something even more pathetic.  They aren't teens.  They are both in their 30's!!!

  • Oh man, what were they thinking? I guess they're now going to Pizza Hut?!

  • she's also apparently the boyfriend of dirty dude Mike in the vid? is this lookin' like her FB page folks??

    http://www.facebook.com/people/Kristy-Hammond/697950763

    And also in case you note to see again or just once—it's the lost " poopy-pans " sponge video times…lol wtf?? Jail these sadistic beings!

    http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=58wiPckwMnw

  • infoman

    Here's the girl in the video, a reg sex offender:
    http://www.ncfindoffender.com/details.aspx?SRN=016454S11

  • Let's hope the teens learnt something from the episode - not that they would stop posting videos of themselves doing such gags, but that they would stop doing such gags altogether.
    "It’s a testament to how social media can force major corporations to act much faster than they might otherwise in an effort to do damage control." Let's not stop at just damage control. Hopefully social media will also drive corporations to run their businesses with integrity and honesty.

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