Consumer Talk: Teabags and fake local websites

Lunch with Pippa Hudson · 3 June 2026 · 37m

Speaker 1: Consumer Talk with Wendy Nola. Speaker 2: You can join the conversation. Welcome to Consumer Talk and delighted to have consumer journalist Speaker 2: Wendy Nola back with us in studio. We've got a mixed bag of issues, from Speaker 2: a listener who had a great experience with the city of Cape Town to a Speaker 2: warning again about websites claiming to be Cape Town based but actually from China. You Speaker 2: can raise a question or make a comment, of course, on the number. Oh seven Speaker 2: two five six seven one five six seven. Speaker 3: Wendy Nola, welcome. Speaker 1: Back, Hello, Jacob. Is quite unique for me to sit in opposite Ye, we're not Speaker 1: even talking cars. Speaker 3: Yeah, we've changed things up. We're talking a lot of other things. Speaker 2: And I want to start by talking about this Greek yogurt conversation that I've been Speaker 2: having. Okay, is it normal for a consumer or somebody to sell Greek yogurt as Speaker 2: Greek style? Is that they are fine? Speaker 1: They have to that would the labeling regulations require them to do to say it's Speaker 1: style rather because the Greek yogurt has very specific requirements in terms of what and Speaker 1: et cetera in order to be called Greek. So I'm ninety nine percent sure that's Speaker 1: case. I haven't enough time to research it, but that I remember there was a Speaker 1: change in the in the regulations that's that required the word style to be added Speaker 1: if it didn't fully meet the criteria of a of a pucker Greek yogurt.

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