Jennifer Tolkachev

Jennifer Tolkachev is the Co-founder and CEO of Food Allergy Grades. The organization aims to connect the food allergy community with corporate America in a positive way that reduces hostilities and seeks solutions that protect both allergic consumers and business interests.

57%

The Daily's Verdict

This author has a mixed reputation for journalistic standards. It is advisable to fact-check, scrutinize for bias, and check for conflicts of interest before relying on the author's reporting.

Bias

85%

Examples:

  • Food Allergy Grades is working to change this toxic cycle.
  • The unfortunate timing of this commercial also comes on the heels of the tragic death of a young NYC dancer, Orla Baxendale, who had a peanut allergy and died after eating cookies that were not labeled properly.

Conflicts of Interest

0%

Examples:

No current examples available.

Contradictions

100%

Examples:

  • The article implies that Patrick Mahomes' son had a severe allergic reaction due to peanut allergy when he did not have one.
  • The author uses selective reporting by stating that Orla Baxendale died after eating cookies without proper labeling but does not mention anything about her death being caused by anaphylaxis which is true.

Deceptions

80%

Examples:

  • The author uses sensationalism by stating that many people with food allergies are impressionable children which is not true as they can understand and make their own decisions.
  • The title of the article implies that Jennifer Tolkachev gave a statement on UberEats Super Bowl commercial when she did not give any specific statement about it.

Recent Articles

Uber Eats Super Bowl Ad Sparks Controversy Among Food Allergy Advocates

Uber Eats Super Bowl Ad Sparks Controversy Among Food Allergy Advocates

Broke On: Friday, 09 February 2024 Uber Eats' Super Bowl ad featuring a man having an allergic reaction to peanut butter has sparked controversy among food allergy advocates. The commercial is seen as insensitive and offensive by many people with food allergies, leading some organizations to call on Uber Eats to edit or remove the ad altogether.