On Friday the woman who narrated the Domino's booger video that made national headlines plead guilty and received sentencing.
The video shot in April 2009 showed her and a fellow male worker doing disgusting things to the food in the kitchen. The guy stuffed cheese up his nose before he put it on a sandwich, farting on a piece of salami, and sneezing on cheese sticks, and then disguising the boogers underneath the cheese and boxing it up.
The two workers testified that no customers ever actually ate the food.
The woman plead guilty to "Distribution of certain food at Halloween and all other times prohibited," a lesser charge than the felony food adulteration charge she was first hit with. The statute makes it unlawful to "...cause to be placed in a position of human accessibility, any food or eatable substance which that person knows to contain: (1) Any noxious or deleterious substance, material or article which might be injurious to a person's health or might cause a person any physical discomfort..."
The charge carries a max 120-day suspended sentence, but the judge gave her 45 days and 18 months probation. While on probation she can't work in any kind of restaurant or food or drink serving establishment. She also has to do 200 hours of community service.
She was also told not to talk about the incident to anyone else and is forbidden from making any money off any interviews having to do with it.
Before sentencing her, the judge told the woman, "The scary thing is this goes on in other places that you don't know about, and it makes you wonder what you're getting."
Woman pleads guilty in Domino's gross-out case [Hickory Daily Record]
PREVIOUSLY
Domino's Gross-Out Video Star Gets 24 Months Probation
Infamous Domino's Where Gross-Out Video Was Recorded Closes Doors
Former Domino's YouTube Gross Out Girl Can't Get A Job Now
Catch Ben & Meghann On Nightline Tonight Re: Domino's Videos
Arrest Warrants Issued For Domino's Outlaws Kristy And Michael, While Domino's Prez Apologizes Online
Consumerist Sleuths Track Down Offending Domino's Store
Domino's Rogue Employees Do Disgusting Things To The Food, Put It On YouTube
As part of the ongoing Mashable Awards, we’re taking a closer look at each of the nomination categories. This is “Most Influential Social Good Champion” supported by Yahoo!. Be sure to nominate your favorites and join us for the Gala in Las Vegas!
Social Good is a brand new form of online giving that draws both from small non-profits and large brand cause-marketing campaigns. But like any burgeoning movement, social good requires champions to bring it to the public and promote its growth.
While “social good” and “influence” may not have absolutely concrete definitions (is influence based on Twitter followers? Raising the most money?), it is easy to see when an individual has taken on the cause of social good to create some real change.
Even though the exact parameters are a subjective call, we scoured the web for three social good activists who are using their skills to create change. We’ve highlighted three individuals who are utilizing social media and online campaigns to shape the way that we think about activism.
1. The Free Agent
Beth Kanter and Allison Fine defined the concept of the “free agent” this year in their book, The Networked Nonprofit. A “free agent,” as they defined it, is a “person who is passionate about a social cause, but is working outside of a nonprofit organization to organize, mobilize, raise money, and engage with others.” Using social media tools, free agents are able to make an impact that was once only capable within the infrastructure of an organization.
We’ve covered a number of free agents who had influence this year. Individuals like Shawn Ahmed, who posts YouTubeclass="blippr-nobr">YouTube videos about poverty in Bangladesh; Mark Horvath, who gives homelessness a voice through his We Are Visible and Invisible People projects; and even Dan Savage, who launched the It Gets Better Project in September to support gay teens who face adversity.
Kanter, a free agent herself, has played an influential role in helping non-profit organizations accept and cooperate with these social media-powered activists. Among her efforts, she facilitated a conversation at the State Department’s Tech@State Civil Society 2.0 event about how non-profits and free agents can work together.
2. Ben Rattray, Founder and CEO of Change.org
There are two hurdles that almost every cause campaign struggles with. The first is making the complexities and realities of its cause understood. The second is mobilizing people effectively. Change.org, which was founded by Ben Rattray in 2006, helps solve both.
The site has more than 100 writers who contribute in-depth reporting on 15 different causes. When people come to the site to read about a cause they’re passionate about, they also have the opportunity to take action toward that cause by signing petitions. While these cumulative actions lack the drama of a protest, mobilizing a large network toward one specific action has proved a lot more effective than a hodgepodge of independent actions.
Change.org has partnered with thousands of non-profits, and together the community has accomplished more than 100 “victories,” in which they’ve changed an unjust practice, law or policy. The organization connects activists with similar passions, and by doing so it gives them power as a cohort that they would never have as individuals.
3. Scott Harrison, Founder of Charity: Water
Charity: water uses 100% of public donations to fund water projects and is transparent about how donations are used. Both of these qualities make it somewhat of an oddball in the non-profit world — which might be exactly what the non-profit world needs.
When people donate money to most organizations, they’re not sure what happens to their donation or how efficiently it was used. When they give to charity: water, they can look up a picture and GPS coordinates of the project they contributed to. Since the organization relies on private donors for the money that makes it run, there’s no doubt about whether your donation ended up paying for somebody’s flight instead of funding a water project. The organization even covers its PayPal fees on donations.
This model of transparency and accountability has created trust and helped raise more than $20 million for 3,196 projects in the past four years. We hope that its success will influence other non-profits to do the same.
What’s Your Pick?
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Who were your social good champions this year? Let us know in the comments or nominate them for a Mashable Awards. The Mashable Awards Gala at Cirque du Soleil Zumanity (Vegas)
/>
In partnership with Cirque du Soleil, The Mashable Awards Gala event will bring together the winners and nominees, the class='blippr-nobr'>Mashableclass="blippr-nobr">Mashable community, partners, media, the marketing community, consumer electronics and technology brands and attendees from the 2011 International CES Convention to Las Vegas on Thursday, January 6, 2011. Together, we will celebrate the winners and the community of the Mashable Awards at the Cirque du Soleil Zumanity stage in the beautiful New York New York Hotel. The event will include acts and performances from our partner Cirque du Soleil Zumanity. In addition, there will be special guest presenters and appearances.
Date: Thursday, January 6th, 2011 (during International CES Convention week)
/> Time: 7:00 – 10:00 p.m. PT
/> Location: Cirque du Soleil Zumanity, New York New York Hotel, Las Vegas
/> Agenda: Networking, Open Bars, Acts, Surprises and the Mashable Awards Gala presentations
/> Socialize: Facebookclass="blippr-nobr">Facebook, Foursquareclass="blippr-nobr">Foursquare, Meetup, Plancast, Twitterclass="blippr-nobr">Twitter (Hashtag: #MashableAwards)
Mashable Awards Category Sponsor:
Yahoo! is an innovative technology company that operates the largest digital media, content, and communications business in the world. Yahoo! keeps more than half a billion consumers worldwide connected to what matters to them most, and delivers powerful audience solutions to advertisers through its unique combination of Science + Art + Scale. Yahoo! is proud to sponsor this Mashable Award because Yahoo! is focused on connecting individuals to a community of millions so they can change the world together. That’s How Good Grows at Yahoo!. Yahoo! is headquartered in Sunnyvale, California. For more information, visit the company’s blog, Yodel Anecdotal.
Image courtesy of iStockphotoclass="blippr-nobr">iStockphoto, RichVintage
For more Social Good coverage:
- class="f-el">class="cov-twit">Follow Mashable Social Goodclass="s-el">class="cov-rss">Subscribe to the Social Good channelclass="f-el">class="cov-fb">Become a Fan on Facebookclass="s-el">class="cov-apple">Download our free apps for Android, iPhone and iPad
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f the cable networks insist on setting the stage for those who tell whoppers, such as the Family Research Council's Tony Perkins, the least they can do is carve out time the following evening to correct the mistruths.
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eric seiger do
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Good <b>News</b>: Chrome Now Sandboxes Flash for More Secure Browsing
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eric seiger do
Wayne Besen: The Failure of Cable <b>News</b> to Follow Up
f the cable networks insist on setting the stage for those who tell whoppers, such as the Family Research Council's Tony Perkins, the least they can do is carve out time the following evening to correct the mistruths.
Good <b>News</b>: Chrome Now Sandboxes Flash for More Secure Browsing
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Flipboard killer? Pulse <b>News</b> Reader for iPad adds Facebook <b>...</b>
The implication is that Pulse News Reader is growing beyond simply a news reader, adding social feeds and blogging capabilities to its already wonderful design. This should have everyone's darling iPad app, Flipboard, concerned that ...
eric seiger do
Wayne Besen: The Failure of Cable <b>News</b> to Follow Up
f the cable networks insist on setting the stage for those who tell whoppers, such as the Family Research Council's Tony Perkins, the least they can do is carve out time the following evening to correct the mistruths.
Good <b>News</b>: Chrome Now Sandboxes Flash for More Secure Browsing
Adobe Flash Player is now sandboxed in the latest dev channel release of Google Chrome, bringing a huge security benefit to Chrome users. Here's why:
Flipboard killer? Pulse <b>News</b> Reader for iPad adds Facebook <b>...</b>
The implication is that Pulse News Reader is growing beyond simply a news reader, adding social feeds and blogging capabilities to its already wonderful design. This should have everyone's darling iPad app, Flipboard, concerned that ...
eric seiger do
Wayne Besen: The Failure of Cable <b>News</b> to Follow Up
f the cable networks insist on setting the stage for those who tell whoppers, such as the Family Research Council's Tony Perkins, the least they can do is carve out time the following evening to correct the mistruths.
Good <b>News</b>: Chrome Now Sandboxes Flash for More Secure Browsing
Adobe Flash Player is now sandboxed in the latest dev channel release of Google Chrome, bringing a huge security benefit to Chrome users. Here's why:
Flipboard killer? Pulse <b>News</b> Reader for iPad adds Facebook <b>...</b>
The implication is that Pulse News Reader is growing beyond simply a news reader, adding social feeds and blogging capabilities to its already wonderful design. This should have everyone's darling iPad app, Flipboard, concerned that ...
eric seiger do
Wayne Besen: The Failure of Cable <b>News</b> to Follow Up
f the cable networks insist on setting the stage for those who tell whoppers, such as the Family Research Council's Tony Perkins, the least they can do is carve out time the following evening to correct the mistruths.
Good <b>News</b>: Chrome Now Sandboxes Flash for More Secure Browsing
Adobe Flash Player is now sandboxed in the latest dev channel release of Google Chrome, bringing a huge security benefit to Chrome users. Here's why:
Flipboard killer? Pulse <b>News</b> Reader for iPad adds Facebook <b>...</b>
The implication is that Pulse News Reader is growing beyond simply a news reader, adding social feeds and blogging capabilities to its already wonderful design. This should have everyone's darling iPad app, Flipboard, concerned that ...
eric seiger do
Wayne Besen: The Failure of Cable <b>News</b> to Follow Up
f the cable networks insist on setting the stage for those who tell whoppers, such as the Family Research Council's Tony Perkins, the least they can do is carve out time the following evening to correct the mistruths.
Good <b>News</b>: Chrome Now Sandboxes Flash for More Secure Browsing
Adobe Flash Player is now sandboxed in the latest dev channel release of Google Chrome, bringing a huge security benefit to Chrome users. Here's why:
Flipboard killer? Pulse <b>News</b> Reader for iPad adds Facebook <b>...</b>
The implication is that Pulse News Reader is growing beyond simply a news reader, adding social feeds and blogging capabilities to its already wonderful design. This should have everyone's darling iPad app, Flipboard, concerned that ...
eric seiger do
Wayne Besen: The Failure of Cable <b>News</b> to Follow Up
f the cable networks insist on setting the stage for those who tell whoppers, such as the Family Research Council's Tony Perkins, the least they can do is carve out time the following evening to correct the mistruths.
Good <b>News</b>: Chrome Now Sandboxes Flash for More Secure Browsing
Adobe Flash Player is now sandboxed in the latest dev channel release of Google Chrome, bringing a huge security benefit to Chrome users. Here's why:
Flipboard killer? Pulse <b>News</b> Reader for iPad adds Facebook <b>...</b>
The implication is that Pulse News Reader is growing beyond simply a news reader, adding social feeds and blogging capabilities to its already wonderful design. This should have everyone's darling iPad app, Flipboard, concerned that ...
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