Business – Page 46 – Michmutters
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Woman finds flowers in her McDonald’s Chicken McSandwich

There’s nothing quite like the disappointment of opening a food order and discovering what’s inside isn’t exactly what you ordered.

So spare a thought for this Macca’s customer who claims she found an unexpected item in her McChicken Sandwich.

The Irish woman was recorded by her boyfriend expressing her shock after she took a bite of her burger and pulled out what appears to resemble a dandelion.

“There’s a flower in my McChicken Sandwich,” she states, holding the mayo-covered piece of greenery.

“Is this actually for real?”

She then places the mysterious green item into the top of the burger box, showing it was an entire stem complete with yellowing buds.

The video of the unimpressed woman – captioned, “Flowers in chicken legend meal looks lovely so it does” – has clocked up over two million views since it was shared on TikTok on Sunday.

But while many people sympathized with the woman’s plight – others were suspicious.

“I work at McDonald’s. No you didn’t,” one bloke wrote.

“Yeah nah Maccies worker here, that’s not possible,” another agreed.

While another said: “I work in McDonald’s and I can assure you that everything is checked, so I feel like this has been planted in.”

Others tagged McDonald’s UK in the video, stating: “You owe her free food for life.”

“That’s true, I find these all the time in the bags of lettuce when at work,” one user said.

“Would have been in the lettuce mix. Staff wouldn’t have known it’s contaminated,” another argued.

Despite not being able to tell if the video was authentic, many saw the funny side, remarking it made the fast-food item “healthier”.

“That’s a weed, they must have run out of lettuce,” one teased.

“Still better than a bug or plastic. It is organic girl!” another laughed.

“Cost of living is so bad now, they’re just tricking us with dandelions instead of lettuce,” someone else joked.

It’s not the first time a hungry diner has found something unexpected in their Macca’s order – with a Sydney woman recently claiming there was a cockroach crawling in her fries.

The woman posted photos of the shock found on social media in April with the caption: “Straya – where you get a free live toy with every Happy Meal.”

As a result, McDonald’s launched an investigation into the gross discovery, which was found in an order delivered via UberEats.

It’s still unclear how the roach got into the food but Reddit users posted several theories.

“My guess is he crawled in while our food was sitting on the front porch of the wrong address for half an hour,” the woman said.

“I’m Australian and should be used to them I guess, but give me snakes, spiders and rats over cockroaches any day. Those things are unspeakably revolting.”

Other users agreed with the theory the cockroach got in the bag while it was being delivered.

“Christ, driver’s car must have been a dumpster fire, I reckon that’s the only way it got in there,” a user commented.

“I’ve not seen inside an Uber/Menulog etc bag but I reckon they’d be rank,” a second said.

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An uncomfortable reality is finally dawning on Australia’s tech sector

Cliff Obrecht, the co-founder of Australia’s most valuable and celebrated start-up, used an interview with this masthead last week to reassure staff about the future and financial position of his company after investors slashed their holdings in Canva for more than $20 billion. Journalists obsessed with his firm’s plunging valuation “need some more interesting things to write about”, he said.

To enter Blackbird's website, users zoom in through the eye of this bird and pass a wave of psychedelic shapes.

To enter Blackbird’s website, users zoom in through the eye of this bird and pass a wave of psychedelic shapes.Credit:Blackbird Ventures

Obrecht is not the only member of the tech sector to be feeling this way, as punishing market conditions hit home, bringing a decade-long boom in start-ups to an abrupt end. “In 2021 the media stories for start-ups were gushing and in 2022 it’s doom and gloom,” Paul Bassat, one of the country’s largest start-up investors, recently said on Twitter. “It wasn’t that good last year and it’s definitely not that bad this year.”

Endless glowing magazine covers, laudatory pieces about minor capital raisings and photoshoots of two founders standing against an exposed brick wall attest to the former complaint from Bassat. But while some privately grumbled about that, many in the start-up scene grew accustomed to uncritical coverage in the media as a normal standard. Now though, the market has turned sour, and the tech industry is having trouble adjusting.

Some compelling investor letters aside, venture capital firms have every incentive to act like the downturn is a problem for other people. Until recently, capital was a commodity. To persuade start-ups to take their cash, investors had to show that they weren’t just money bags, they were true believers. Consider perhaps Australia’s most prominent venture firm, Blackbird Ventures, for example. Instead of a typical website, a visitor to its online property must “enter the world of Blackbird” by zooming in through the eye of a flame colored bird and flying past a series of kaleidoscopic shapes to learn that the fund backs ambition so great it is. “generationally”.

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In America, this kind of self-mythologizing has spawned a legion of critical pundits. For almost every entrepreneur hawking indecipherable self-help proverbs on Twitter, there is a skeptic. Most famously, New York University Professor Scott Galloway gained prominence after lambasting the coworking firm WeWork’s claim it would “elevate the world’s consciousness”.

In some cases, the technology-media relationship in the United States has grown intensely bitter. After a series of stories on allegations of harassment, corporate mismanagement and his sex life, the billionaire Elon Musk tweeted that “The media is a click-seeking machine dressed up as a truth-seeking machine.” Another start-up founder, Ryan Breslow, issued a series of tweets obliquely implying some form of collusion between the New York Times and a venture capital firm when his company was the subject of a critical story. Big name venture capitalists routinely attack the media. Of course, there is a history of corporate tension between the media and the technology industry: sites like Facebook, Google and eBay took billions that once went to print advertising. But the American experience points to a deeper belief present: that technology and start-ups are fundamentally good, so any reporting on unfavorable truths is therefore fundamentally bad.

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That worldview is still rare in Australia, where laudatory stories about tiny start-ups raising cash ⁠— or even hoping to ⁠— still predominate. The exhortation from Bassat and Obrecht is instead to “ignore the noise” of the broader economy, which is in one sense, good advice. Start-ups aren’t day traders, trying to buy low and sell high. If a company has the potential to upend an enormous industry and generate billions in revenue over the long term, it shouldn’t really matter if it has to endure a downswing on the way. In other words, Obrecht can’t do anything to change inflation or interest rates, so on Bassat’s logic, Canva should not focus on them. But that is not the point: how companies respond to a new situation is what counts. Does marketing expenditure go up or down? Do they have too many staff? And while Canva, a profitable company with $1 billion in the bank and 70 per cent annual revenue growth, can afford to regard a recent multibillion-dollar hit to its valuation as “noise”, it is the exception that proves the rule.

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Elon Musk scalls Instagram a ‘thirst trap,’ confesses to ‘selfie’ problem

Elon Musk has called Instagram a “next-level thirst trap” full of attractive women, and admitted that he stopped using the photo-sharing app after he found himself taking too many selfies.

“I was on Instagram for a while but I mean, so the problem is Instagram, man, it’s just a thirst trap, you know?” Musk said on an episode of the full send podcast last week, the new york post reports.

“Instagram is a next-level thirst trap.”

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A co-host then asked Musk to clarify, “On the women side, right?”

“Yeah, yeah, totally,” replied Musk, who has fathered 10 children with three different women.

“But the thing is I found myself taking like a lot of selfies and sh*t and I’m like, what the f**k man. Why am I doing this?

Musk then said that he realized that he was wasting his time with the app and decided to delete his account.

“I’m like, oh I’m trying to get more likes and do selfies, I’m not gonna – I gotta stop,” he said.

Musk said that he now maintains a “secret Instagram account” that he uses to look at posts.

He said he prefers using Twitter to communicate with the public.

“Whatever message I’m trying to get across I can just post on Twitter,” Musk said.

This article originally appeared in the New York Post and was reproduced with permission

Read related topics:Elon Musk

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Brisbane Airport is looking to fill 2000 positions – these are the jobs up for grabs

As we’ve seen in recent months, the process of catching a flight has become increasingly chaotic.

Delays, cancellations, lost baggage and lengthy queues have plagued the travel sector this year, largely due to a severe shortage of labour, exacerbated by thousands of workers being made redundant during the pandemic.

Watch: The jobs on offer at Brisbane Airport in the video above

Watch Sunrise on Channel 7 and stream it for free on 7plus >>

Airports are now in overdrive to scale up and find staff with plenty of jobs waiting to be filled.

Brisbane Airport is recruiting as many as 2000 people for a variety of positions ranging from engineers to gardeners.

“We’re looking for virtually every job you find at an airport,” Brisbane Airport CEO Gert-Jan de Graaff told Sunrise.

“From airline crew to baggage handlers, from people working in our retail stores to engineers and accountants.

“Across the board we’re looking for people because of the recovery of our industry, but also the future growth we’re expecting in the aviation industry.”

It’s also anticipated that as passenger traffic grows, another 10,000 people will be needed over the next decade.

Brisbane Airport from above Credit: BNE Airport

“Aviation gets in your blood,” de Graaff said.

“It’s an exciting world… it’s so cool.”

The Brisbane Airport Careers Expo will be held on Saturday September 10, 2022. More info can be found here.

Sam Mac attends prenatal zoom.

Sam Mac attends prenatal zoom.

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Hackers target social media accounts of small businesses

Screenshot of the message hackers sent to Spark after her account was hacked.

Screenshot of the message hackers sent to Spark after her account was hacked.

“If you look at the platforms they don’t put anywhere near enough effort into supporting their users because it’s just a cost to them and they like making profits,” he said. “We’re failing at every level when it comes to micro and small businesses, who rely on these channels.”

Phair said it was relatively easy for platforms to reclaim hacked accounts, but they were unwilling to resource the teams required to do it.

The phishing emails are often sent during the early evening and on weekends when the recipients are likely to be less vigilant.

For Michelle and Craig Tindale, the operators of True North Candle Collective, based in Noosa on Queensland’s Sunshine Coast, the message came as they were preparing to go out for dinner.

Like Spark, Tindale had clicked on a link in an email claiming to be from Instagram that claimed her business page had violated copyright laws.

The alleged scammers insisting on getting a response from Spark following their initial message.

The alleged scammers insisting on getting a response from Spark following their initial message.

After weeks of unsuccessfully attempting to reclaim the account, the couple gave up and opened a new profile.

“I’ve always said if my name was Kim Kardashian or Chris Hemsworth, I guarantee this would have been dealt with much quicker,” Tindale said.

A spokeswoman for Meta said users could verify emails by accessing a support inbox, which contained all of Meta’s official correspondence about their account.

“Online phishing techniques are not unique to Meta, and we will never request your password via email or direct messages,” she said.

Cybersecurity expert Guy Yunghanns said users failing to secure their online accounts were collectively “fueling this global criminal industry”.

Australians lost almost $300 million in scams since the beginning of the year, with phishing through messages and phone calls being the most widely reported scam nationwide, according to data from the Australian Competition and Consumer Commission.

In a bid to address rising rates of online crime, AFP last year established Cyber ​​Command, a specialized unit that investigates matters such as compromised business emails and ransomware attacks.

AFP Assistant Commissioner Justine Gough said the unit had prevented millions of dollars from falling into the hands of criminal syndicates but added that ransomware attacks were probably underreported.

Gough said that in the same way that people needed to lock their doors and windows, they also needed to take steps to protect information online.

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“The reason phishing scams are so prolific is that that’s a way to open a door to obtain personal banking details and steal money,” she said. “We really do need to ensure that we’ve got the hygiene or the discipline in the use of our devices and technology.”

This includes backing up files, using sophisticated passwords, and enabling multifactor authentication – an electronic verification method that needs two or more pieces of evidence of users’ ties to the account – on devices.

Other ways to avoid becoming the victim of a phishing scam include logging onto social media platforms using the app or typing the URL into a browser.

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Mazda MX-30 Electric prices slashed, sold as demonstrators as buyers shun new model

Most electric cars have waiting lists of between six months and two years in Australia. But a new Mazda with limited driving range has triggered heavy discounting.


Massive discounts of up to $15,000 – about 20 per cent off recommended retail – have begun appearing on the Mazda MX-30 Electric as buyers appear to be slow to embrace the model with limited driving range and a high price.

The Mazda MX-30 went on sale last year priced between $69,400 and $74,000 drive-away (costs vary from state-to-state based on different stamp duties and registration fees).

Mazda claims the MX-30 has a maximum driving range of between 200km and 224km.



However, real-world testing by Drive has found the battery can run flat after covering less than these distances, giving it about half the range of other electric cars in the same price range.

Mazda Australia only imported 100 examples of the electric-only version of the MX-30 – in 2021 – to sell alongside the petrol-electric hybrid, but they appear to be hard to sell.

Today, about two-dozen examples are on classifieds website Carsales advertised as “demonstrator” models, most with between 200 and 2000km on the odometer.



The cheapest Mazda MX-30 Electric was advertised at $55,990 drive-away – with 900km on the odometer – which is about $15,000 less than the new price.

A number of other examples of “demonstrator” Mazda MX-30 electric models were listed between $59,990 and $62,888 drive-away, a discount of about $10,000 in round numbers.

Mazda’s struggle to sell electric cars as brands such as Tesla and Kia have long waiting times is being seen as an indication that Australian electric-car buyers are baulking high prices for vehicles with modest driving range.



A statement from Mazda Australia said: “(Electric vehicles) remain a very small sales percentage of the overall new car market.

“Representing a key technological milestone, Mazda MX-30 was the first-ever fully electric vehicle produced by Mazda, and the first step in a long-term electrification plan that will be bolstered by the introduction of the all-new Mazda CX-60 plug-in hybrid.

“Sales for the full-electric Mazda MX-30 are in line with Mazda Australia’s projections. A portion of the initial allocation of Mazda MX-30 Electric models remain available, along with some ex-demonstrator models.”



Joshua Dowling has been a motoring journalist for more than 20 years, spending most of that time working for The Sydney Morning Herald (as motoring editor and one of the early members of the Drive team) and News Corp Australia. I have joined CarAdvice / Drive in 2018, and have been a World Car of the Year judge for more than 10 years.

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Tesla setting up to overtake Toyota as the world’s largest carmaker

Elon Musk says Tesla is working towards a production of 20 million new cars annually – which, if all sold, would be twice the sales figures of the world’s number one carmaker, Toyota.


Tesla is preparing to boost production, with CEO Elon Musk telling shareholders the electric vehicle company is aiming for 20 million new cars annually.

The Tesla boss said the ‘run rate’ – the average production number from each factory – is set to increase to two million cars each year, up from one to 1.5 million currently, according to Automotive News Europe.

The new target means at least ten of the company’s ‘Gigafactories’ will need to be operated, which when boosted to an average of two million electric vehicles, would equate to a total annual production of 20 million new cars.



The world’s biggest car company, Toyota, sold about 10.5 million new cars in 2021, with Volkswagen Group coming in a second with 9.3 million reported sales.

Tesla reported a total of 936,000 vehicles produced in 2021.

Musk said the company’s two newest plants, located in Germany and Texas, were working through solving “10,000” small problems, despite both enjoying a run rate of 1.5 million cars.



“If all goes as planned, we will be exiting 2022 at a two million annual run rate.”

The key to Tesla’s long-term profitability is in its manufacturing, Musk told shareholders, with the carmaker revolutionizing production processes with its ‘Giga Press’, which replaces hundreds of welded steel parts by creating one large aluminum piece.

Ben Zachariah

Ben Zachariah is an experienced writer and motoring journalist from Melbourne, having worked in the automotive industry for more than 15 years. Ben was previously an interstate truck driver and completed his MBA in Finance in early 2021. He is considered an expert in the area of ​​classic car investment.

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Australian farmers issue an urgent warning to Coles and Woolworths shoppers: ‘They’re RUTHLESS’

Australian farmers have reacted furiously to suggestions major supermarkets are set to post super profits because they have the power to pass on soaring costs to consumers as experts reveal evidence of price gouging on essentials.

Major retailers, including supermarket giants Coles and Woolworths, are preparing to announce their profits for the 2021-22 financial year and market analysts expect them to post billion-dollar gains even as the skyrocketing cost of living bites consumers.

Stock market analyst Johannes Faul told the AFR that supermarkets’ ability to raise prices as needed meant profits would at least remain ‘steady’.

New analysis has predicted consumers will give up on luxuries and focus on essentials as the cost of living crisis bites, accepting high supermarket prices and allowing the big retailers to maintain profits (pictured are stallholders from Paddy's Market, which often have lower prices than supermarkets)

New analysis has predicted consumers will give up on luxuries and focus on essentials as the cost of living crisis bites, accepting high supermarket prices and allowing the big retailers to maintain profits (pictured are stallholders from Paddy’s Market, which often have lower prices than supermarkets)

Australian farmers have reacted furiously to suggestions that rising inflation could boost supermarket profits because they can pass rising costs onto shoppers (pictured is NSW farmer Chris Stillard and his son)

Australian farmers have reacted furiously to suggestions that rising inflation could boost supermarket profits because they can pass rising costs onto shoppers (pictured is NSW farmer Chris Stillard and his son)

Another analyst, Craig Stafford, said supermarkets were ‘in good shape’ as inflation feeds into higher prices for consumers.

The profit predictions come as an independent finance sector analyst told Daily Mail Australia there ‘appears to be evidence of price gouging’ in supermarkets and called on the ACCC to investigate.

Guy Gaeta, a cherry farmer from Orange, told Daily Mail Australia the idea that supermarkets could get richer amid high inflation while families and battlers are forced to cut back ‘really pisses me off’.

‘You can’t use inflation as a reason to make money, it’s shocking. They’re ruthless,’ he said.

Mr Stillard claimed inflation is the perfect excuse to get supermarkets 'off the hook'

Mr Stillard claimed inflation is the perfect excuse to get supermarkets ‘off the hook’

Guy Gaeta, a cherry farmer from Orange, told Daily Mail Australia the idea that supermarkets could 'get richer' because of high inflation while families and battlers are forced to cut back 'really pisses me off'

Guy Gaeta, a cherry farmer from Orange, told Daily Mail Australia the idea that supermarkets could ‘get richer’ because of high inflation while families and battlers are forced to cut back ‘really pisses me off’

‘Sure, everyone is paying more for extra costs, like with fuel. But when you say “well, we’ve got seven per cent inflation, so we’ll just bump up prices 10 per cent”, that’s just price gouging isn’t it?

‘It’s easy money for them, they must want to buy more Ferraris – it’s just a rip off.

‘I don’t think it’s a fair business you’re profiteering from people because of inflation. I thought no-one makes money out of inflation?’

Martin North, a finance sector analyst with Digital Finance Analytics, said his company’s consumer surveys show supermarket prices have jumped ’20 per cent or more, way above CPI’ in some cases.

Farmer Chris Stillard lamented that there is no mechanism in Australia to prosecute price gouging (Pictured Mr Stillard with his family)

Farmer Chris Stillard lamented that there is no mechanism in Australia to prosecute price gouging (Pictured Mr Stillard with his family)

Supermarkets price rises are too high and do not match the extra input costs they pay because of inflation, critics say

Supermarkets price rises are too high and do not match the extra input costs they pay because of inflation, critics say

He claimed the increase in prices paid at the checkout was larger than the increases in ‘input costs’ paid by supermarkets.

‘If you look carefully, its clear to me that these companies are taking the opportunity to bulk up and safeguard their profits to shareholders by adding more than the (rise in) input costs to their prices. In other words, firms can lift prices to protect margins, at the expense of consumers.’

Mr North claimed price-gouging was happening in ‘the supermarket sector, oil industry and gas industry’.

‘There appears to be evidence of price gouging, at a time when consumers cannot afford to pay more than they should,’ he said.

A confronting graph has illustrated the alarming rise in the cost of basic groceries, with vegetables, cereal and other household staples at the top of the list of steep price rises

A confronting graph has illustrated the alarming rise in the cost of basic groceries, with vegetables, cereal and other household staples at the top of the list of steep price rises

Martin North of Digital Finance Analytics claimed predictions of buoyant supermarket profits pointed to a wider problem with 'corporate ethics'

Martin North of Digital Finance Analytics claimed predictions of buoyant supermarket profits pointed to a wider problem with ‘corporate ethics’

Another New South Wales farmer, Chris Stillard, who grows persimmons near the Victorian border, said the supermarkets’ confidence in future profits did not surprise him.

‘I’m not an economist, I’m a farmer, but maybe that’s what you get when you have two supermarkets controlling 70 per cent of the market,’ he said.

‘When there’s a perfect excuse like inflation, it gets supermarkets off the hook.’

Mr Stillard claimed consistent price rises on all lines of produce should never happen. He said whenever lines of produce are in oversupply – such as apples, because China stopped importing them – prices should fall to reflect that.

‘Australia doesn’t have any laws to pursue price gouging. It’s blue murder,’ he said.

He said consumers should not ‘just cop’ high prices: ‘Go and shop around.’

Last month, Daily Mail Australia proved that, on at least one day, the cost of shopping at a supermarket giant was dramatically more expensive than a fruit and veg market.

Farmer Guy Gaeta has suggested a boycott of major supermarkets because he says they rip off consumers and farmers (Pictured, from left, Guy Gaeta with wife Simonetta and son Michael)

Farmer Guy Gaeta has suggested a boycott of major supermarkets because he says they rip off consumers and farmers (Pictured, from left, Guy Gaeta with wife Simonetta and son Michael)

Australia-wide the cost of meat and seafood was up 6.3 per cent in the last year

Australia-wide the cost of meat and seafood was up 6.3 per cent in the last year

Daily Mail bought a week’s worth of fruit, vegetables and eggs from Woolworths and from Paddy’s Market in western Sydney – using an identical shopping list and buying the same weights – and the supermarket giant was nearly twice as expensive.

Coles told Daily Mail Australia: ‘At Coles, our key focus is on keeping the cost of the family shop down and delivering great value to our customers. Since January, we have reduced prices on over 1,000 items across our range of more than 20,000 products.’

Fruit and veg plus eggs from bustling Paddy's was far cheaper than Woolworths

Fresh fruit and vegetables from Woolworths are more convenient to buy but on the day we went, far more expensive

The price difference of $49.75 represented a saving of 45 per cent on the Woolworths haul, with the grower’s market cheaper on all but one of the 19 lines purchased.

Woolworths said: ‘Managing industry-wide inflationary pressures will continue to be the focus for us as we work hard to provide customers with great value in partnership with our suppliers through programs like Prices Dropped for Winter and Price Freeze, as well as the thousands of weekly specials.’

The price of vegetables, fruit, breakfast cereals, meat, bread, eggs, oils, butter and margarines all jumped sharply in price in the last year according to the Australian Bureau of Statistics (ABS).

The ABS released its quarterly Consumer Price Index (CPI) figures – the key measure of inflation – last week, showing a 6.1 per cent jump over the last year.

The biggest jump in an everyday grocery items was the cost of vegetables, up 7.3 per cent in the last year, mostly attributed to the continued flooding in southeast Queensland and New South Wales.

Coles told Daily Mail Australia its prices are determined by 'supply and demand' and that 'our team is working hard to get prices down'

Coles told Daily Mail Australia its prices are determined by ‘supply and demand’ and that ‘our team is working hard to get prices down’

Woolworths said it is 'always working to strike the right balance so suppliers receive a fair market price and our customers'

Woolworths said it is ‘always working to strike the right balance so suppliers receive a fair market price and our customers’

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Are utes or SUVs more dangerous than cars?

A new crash test has highlighted the dangers posed by utes and SUVs to sedans and hatchbacks.

America’s Insurance Institute for Highway Safety has developed a new side-impact test with a heavier and faster impact to better reflect real-world hazards.

The IIHS, which says motorists face a “much greater risk of head injury from impacts with taller vehicles”, has introduced a tougher side-impact test that should result in safer cars in the future.

IIHS president David Harkey said vehicles that sat lower to the ground took side impacts higher on the door panel in the revised T-bone test.

“That potentially puts sedans and wagons at a disadvantage in this evaluation but reflects what happens in a real-world crash when these vehicles are struck by a higher-riding pick-up or SUV,” he said.

Crash experts increased the weight of their side impact barrier from 3300 to 4200 pounds (1497 to 1905kg) and ramped up speeds from 31 to 37 miles per hour (50 to 60km/h).

The resulting test has 82 per cent more energy than before.

Cars tested in the new program receive one of four scores – good, acceptable, marginal or poor.

Re-testing of cars that received full marks in the old test format returned alarming results.

The Toyota Camry received a “poor” rating, joining mid-sized sedans from Nissan and Chevrolet on the bottom tier for side-impact safety.

Toyota’s sedan was the only vehicle in the test that recorded a “poor” safety outcome for rear passenger injuries, though it did a better job protecting drivers than the Chevy Malibu and Nissan Altima.

Side airbags in the Camry, Malibu and Altima failed to stop the heads of crash test dummies from colliding with the cars’ window sills.

Honda’s Accord received a “marginal” overall score, falling behind “acceptable” results for the Hyundai Sonata and Volkswagen Jetta.

The only car worthy of a “good” score in the latest batch of testing was Subaru’s Outback, a car that benefits – in this test – from additional ground clearance more akin to an SUV than a conventional sedan.

But 10 out of 18 family SUVs earned good ratings, with larger and higher-riding cars such as the Mazda CX-9, Nissan Pathfinder and Toyota Kluger performing much better than conventional sedans.

No family SUV received a poor rating, though smaller SUVs were hit harder by the test.

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Only one – Mazda’s CX-5 – received a “good” rating, while popular models such as the Subaru Forester, Toyota RAV4, Honda CR-V and Nissan X-Trail were deemed “acceptable”.

The Hyundai Tucson, Ford Escape, Kia Sportage and others received “marginal” ratings, while the Honda HR-V and Mitsubishi Eclipse Cross were deemed “poor”.

Honda’s HR-V – a model that has since been updated – came under fire for a pillar between the driver and passenger doors that “began to tear away from the frame, allowing the side of the vehicle to crush inward almost to the center of the drivers seat”.

IIHS research shows side-impact crashes account for 23 per cent of fatal smashes in the US.

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Woman finds flowers in her McDonald’s Chicken McSandwich

There’s nothing quite like the disappointment of opening a food order and discovering what’s inside isn’t exactly what you ordered.

So spare a thought for this Macca’s customer who claims she found an unexpected item in her McChicken Sandwich.

The Irish woman was recorded by her boyfriend expressing her shock after she took a bite of her burger and pulled out what appears to resemble a dandelion.

“There’s a flower in my McChicken Sandwich,” she states, holding the mayo-covered piece of greenery.

“Is this actually for real?”

She then places the mysterious green item into the top of the burger box, showing it was an entire stem complete with yellowing buds.

The video of the unimpressed woman – captioned, “Flowers in chicken legend meal looks lovely so it does” – has clocked up over two million views since it was shared on TikTok on Sunday.

But while many people sympathized with the woman’s plight – others were suspicious.

“I work at McDonald’s. No you didn’t,” one bloke wrote.

“Yeah nah Maccies worker here, that’s not possible,” another agreed.

While another said: “I work in McDonald’s and I can assure you that everything is checked, so I feel like this has been planted in.”

Others tagged McDonald’s UK in the video, stating: “You owe her free food for life.”

“That’s true, I find these all the time in the bags of lettuce when at work,” one user said.

“Would have been in the lettuce mix. Staff wouldn’t have known it’s contaminated,” another argued.

Despite not being able to tell if the video was authentic, many saw the funny side, remarking it made the fast-food item “healthier”.

“That’s a weed, they must have run out of lettuce,” one teased.

“Still better than a bug or plastic. It is organic girl!” another laughed.

“Cost of living is so bad now, they’re just tricking us with dandelions instead of lettuce,” someone else joked.

It’s not the first time a hungry diner has found something unexpected in their Macca’s order – with a Sydney woman recently claiming there was a cockroach crawling in her fries.

The woman posted photos of the shock found on social media in April with the caption: “Straya – where you get a free live toy with every Happy Meal.”

As a result, McDonald’s launched an investigation into the gross discovery, which was found in an order delivered via UberEats.

It’s still unclear how the roach got into the food but Reddit users posted several theories.

“My guess is he crawled in while our food was sitting on the front porch of the wrong address for half an hour,” the woman said.

“I’m Australian and should be used to them I guess, but give me snakes, spiders and rats over cockroaches any day. Those things are unspeakably revolting.”

Other users agreed with the theory the cockroach got in the bag while it was being delivered.

“Christ, driver’s car must have been a dumpster fire, I reckon that’s the only way it got in there,” a user commented.

“I’ve not seen inside an Uber/Menulog etc bag but I reckon they’d be rank,” a second said.

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