Stories reported on
Consumerist have been featured in national media such as
CNN and
The New York Times.
Consumerist often posts phone numbers and contact information for
CEOs and upper level corporate
customer support, and provides information on how to execute an "Executive Email Carpet Bomb".
Vincent Ferrari and AOL On June 13, 2006,
Vincent Ferrari posted an audio file of himself speaking with an
AOL representative, allegedly named John, as Ferrari tried to cancel his AOL account. The AOL representative initially resisted Ferrari's request by attempting to keep the discussion focused on Ferrari's reasons for wanting to cancel. Vincent asked the customer representative several times to close the account until the conversation became confrontational, at which point Ferrari adamantly stated, "Cancel the account!", repeatedly until John complied with his request. After recording this call, Ferrari both posted it to his blog and submitted it to
Consumerist tip line. The AOL representative whom Vincent spoke to was fired from his job.
Consumerist called the story "[t]he best story we ever posted."
"The Grocery Shrink Ray" The "grocery shrink ray" is a term Meghann Marco coined to describe the trend for groceries to be
reduced in size while being sold at the same price point. Manufacturers perform these reductions to reduce their own costs but do not pass any savings on to the customer. Installments of these articles usually included user submitted photographs of the product in question on the shelf, being sold along with a newer and slightly smaller version of the same product. Local and national media outlets such as
WTVT-TV FOX 13 in Florida, and
National Public Radio has interviewed Popken regarding the trend and his attempts to inform the public at large. The issue is now commonly known as
shrinkflation.
Facebook terms of service On February 15, 2009,
Consumerist broke the news of a
terms of service clause that gave
Facebook the right to "Do anything they want with your content. Forever."
Mark Zuckerberg, CEO of Facebook, Inc., later claimed that a paragraph was accidentally left out saying that the license to your content was exclusive to one's privacy settings and that the license expired when an account was closed. This event instigated much media coverage over the controversy of the terms of service. == Closure ==