Are NYC fruit carts unsanitary? Scared city | Lifestyle News

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Are NYC fruit carts unsanitary? Scared city…


A New York transplant has sparked a juicy controversy.

On March 31, TikTook consumer @wine_by_marielle — who has since deleted her account — took to the video platform to ask whether or not “New York City people” really buy the fruit from “those stands on the side of the road.”

“I have a fruit stand guy on my corner, and we always say hi to each other when I walk past, but I’ve never actually bought anything there from the year that I’ve been in this neighborhood,” she stated within the now-gone video, sharing that she lives on the Upper East Side.

TikTook consumer @wine_by_marielle — who has since deleted her account — requested if “New York City people” really buy the fruit from “those stands on the side of the road.” TikTook/wine_by_marielle

“I’m just, like, scared of getting sick or something. It doesn’t seem very sanitary, but I see a lot of people going there, so it must be decent. I don’t know — please advise.”

The video shortly went viral, with many stitching the video to call her out and making parody videos to mock the debacle.

“If you guys ever wanted to know what a microaggression looks like, it is exactly this video,” TikToker @economyvodka stated in a stitched response.

“There’s a lot going on when someone implies that a fruit stand is not sanitary because it’s on the side of the road,” she stated. “Because all those expensive restaurants on the Upper East Side that allow you to sit outdoors for your dinner and your lunch on the side of the road, I’m sure she wouldn’t ask if it’s sanitary with the hordes of cars and vehicles going by on the street.”


Faruk Ahammad, 42, operates a fruit stand on the corner of 72nd and 3rd avenue and has actually gained customers during the outbreak of Coronavirus (COVID-19).
Many identified that there’s no distinction between a fruit stand on the facet of the street and a fruit stand at a farmer’s market, that are usually set up on the facet of the street. Stephen Yang

The content material creator went on to say: “This is why people don’t like transplants.”

“This is the exact problem with these people who are moving into New York City,” she continued. “It’s almost like they do not see people here as people, because for me, if I’m seeing this guy on the side of the road who’s really friendly to me and he’s selling fruit, I would support his business.”

She stated that transplants view New York as a “doll house” the place they “get to play dress up and not live in the real world.”

Many additionally identified that there’s no distinction between a fruit stand on the facet of the street and a fruit stand at a farmer’s market, that are usually set up on the facet of the street.

“But call it a farmers market and she’d gleefully pay 3x the price and talk about how ‘quaint’ this is,” somebody commented.

“She wouldn’t question the sanitation if it was Italy or Paris,” one other famous.

“Y’all are so out of touch with New York City and the culture that you would say something so asinine,” one stated.

New Yorkers additionally identified that road distributors and carts are what introduced in so many cultures to the city.

ItalianIrish and Jewish immigrants all bought items and merchandise on the streets within the early twentieth century — and a few even later grew to become well-known institutions, comparable to the long-lasting Russ and Daughters, which began when Joel Russ bought “schmaltz herring out of a barrel” on the Lower East Side.

Baffled viewers additionally identified that fruit and greens ought to be washed anyway — and people argued that fruit stands are higher than grocery shops like Trader Joe’s or Whole Foods.

“Wait til she finds out that fruit is grown in dirt,” one quipped.

“‘It doesn’t seem sanitary, do people not wash their fruits/veg??” somebody questioned.

“Does she really not know how to spot rotten fruit? To clean fruit? It should be extremely obvious that, of course, fruit stands are safe. Like let’s use our eyes and nose, girly!” one other added.

“Girl what?!? Meanwhile, trader joes fruit and vegetables go bad if you look at them wrong but the local guys stay delicious,” a baffled consumer wrote.

“Mind you, the fruits and vegetables go thru a JOURNEY (dirt; trucks; warehouses; etc) just to get to the display stand at Whole Foods,” one commented.



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