Sushi terrorism” pranks, which involve customers licking communal soy sauce bottles and tampering with dishes, have forced ...
The threat of “sushi terrorism” — carried out by pranksters who spit on other diners’ food or otherwise tamper with food and dishes — is prompting big changes in Japan’s popular ...
Grim acts of 'sushi terrorism' has forced four of Japan's 'big five' sushi restaurants to scrap self-service after footage showed customers rubbing their saliva on the dishes. Conveyor belt-served ...
For many people, it is the essential Japanese cuisine — sushi on small plates, plucked by the customer from a slowly moving ...
Two men were arrested in Japan, after they posted a video to social media showing them eating directly from a communal serving bowl with chopsticks, in another example of the "sushi terrorism" trend.
Japan's celebrated culinary world is known for its exacting standards of etiquette, so when a series of "sushi terrorism" videos came to light in recent weeks, the response was predictably heated.
W hen small plates of raw fish first started moving around British restaurants on conveyor belts, the response was mainly one ...
More Japanese companies are investing in insurance to cover legal fees and public relations campaigns to repair brand damage caused by unpleasant antics of customers and staff that have gone viral ...
“Sushi terrorism” pranks, which involve customers licking communal soy sauce bottles and tampering with dishes, have forced nearly all major restaurant chains in Japan's iconic conveyor-belt ...