Grocery Shrink Ray Hits Arizona Ice Tea?
It looks like the fell Grocery Shrink Ray may have hit cans of Arizona Ice Tea, reducing the size of their 12 oz cans to 11.5 oz cans. We couldn't find any definite pictures of 12oz Arizona Ice Tea cans, but we did find them being sold on this website in 12 oz cans. What happens to a product when the shrink ray hits it? I imagine it goes eek! eek! eek! and the last eek is an octave higher than the first.
(Thanks to Cynicor!)
This is a test contextual ad for the SHOPPING category. It should appear on all SHOPPING entries, unless the subcategory has its own ad.
Post a comment
Comments:
Anyone who drinks tea deserves whatever comes their way. I only drink free-range water dispensed out of my faucet made with recycled materials.
Kidding aside, this reminds me of the whole "Arizona Southern Sweet Tea has racist packaging!" brouhaha that Snopes covered. I still see those racist packages in grocery stores.
Watch for the food companies to continue training us to buy products based on shape and vague size estimates instead of weight/volume. The recent article about beer glass sizes comes to mind. Vernacular has a way of protecting us from the shrink ray, so these companies would like to change it:
There are times when we buy things based on a named weight or volume, such as "a gallon of milk" or "a pound of potatoes". These items are generally resistant to the grocery shrink ray because you can't buy a "gallon of milk" that consists of only 120 fl oz (1 gal = 128 fl oz). However, many of our food choices involve only the packaging: "a can of Coke" or "bag of chips". Once "a gallon of milk" becomes "a jug of milk", we'll start to see 120 fl oz milk, then 100 fl oz, etc. When this happens, nothing will stand in the way of the grocery shrink ray.
That's it...I'm writing my congressman about this. I hate how companies are doing this.
Yes, I would get outraged if they increased prices, but "innocently" reducing how much product I get is the same. The products should be clearly marked that they've lowered the amount of product they include.
Anyone else want to join me in a letter writing campaign?
@linus: I would. Unfortunately the pack of stationary I usually get had too few sheets so I'm out of paper.
Ok seriously, have you forgotten what the "shrink ray" even means? It means same price for a smaller product. The last 5 or so stories you've posted about the "shrink ray" haven't mentioned price. (and one story was either confusion by the poster or outright deception, since the product didn't match the shelf sticker)
All you've been doing lately is prove that product comes in different sizes.
@Bladefist: You're so right...*sigh*
By the by, I was reading the Declaration of Independance the other day (you know, for funsies) and what's interesting is this little gem:
That whenever any Form of Government becomes destructive of these Ends, it is in the Right of the People to alter or abolish it, and to institute a new Government, laying its Foundation on such Principles, and organizing its Powers in such Form, as to them shall seem most likely to effect their Safety and Happiness.
Not saying that we should overthrow the government...just saying that there is precident for it.
@linus: And "The Violent Radicalization and Homegrown Terrorism Prevention Act" established into law that that is illegal. Contradictions in the law much?
Price per weight,yeap:especially in the supermarket.But most won't remember or notice that as well.If they would just come out and say a new size.Sooner or later most will notice but then they'll be on to the next shrink.
I also noticed Skippy Peanut Butter is down to 16.3 oz compared to 18 0z in the past.And a local dollar store is now carrying a 12 oz size instead of 18oz.
FYI- to anyone who is looking for a healthy alternative to soft drinks, DO NOT DRINK ARIZONA TEA! I used to drink them all the time because they claim on the front to be sweetened with Sue Bee honey. One day I decided to read the ingredients list and lo and behold one of the first ingredients after water was HFCS. The big can has 54 carbs and 210 calories.
Yo, it is called inflation. Shrink the sizes or increase the prices. This whole package shrinking is not an issue until standardized sizes, such as 1 gallon or 10 lbs are no longer meeting their standards.
BTW, I suspect we will see a lot of 9.5lb bags of food being passed off as 10 lb bags. The State weight and measure boys really need to watch for weight fraud until gas prices settle out.
@czarandy: Unit pricing could be helpful, but it usually isn't. Because stores mix up their units of measurement. My grocery has the following types of unit pricing for toilet tissue:
--per roll;
--per ft2.
Other product unit prices show similar confusion. Bottled water:
--per oz;
--per liter;
--per bottle.
All this is complicated by the fact that mfgrs are shrinking products to odd sizes (like the 16.3 oz peanut butter referenced above, which I recently saw), and the recent invention of the 20-pack (instead of 24) of bottled water. Such silliness means you have to choose the proper unit and do the word problems yourself. Don't forget to bring a pen, paper and a calculator to the store.
I don't know about non-alcoholic beverages, but I worked in beer about 10 years ago and state to state laws and regulations made it such that we could sell 12 oz beers in one state, but had to have a 11.5 oz package in another because you couldn't sell it in 12 oz increments (40's sold well there). Of course that might be a more heavily regulated industry than most.
@sean77: Consumerist came up with the term and (much like other organizations often do) can change the definition to mean whatever they need it to in order to make the story work.
P.S. Apparently the standard volume for a can of soda/drink in Europe is 330-340ml














I call bullshit. I drink Arizona Ice tea all the time, and have not seen it shrink. I chuck the 12oz website to a lasy programmer... Or editor.