Wednesday, October 17, 2012

Flamin' hot cheetos banned

  • Flamin' Hot Cheetos Banned From Schools In California, New Mexico And ...

    Flamin' Hot Cheetos are a wildly popular snack that literally leaves its indulgers red-handed. And now several schools in California, New Mexico and Illinois have banned the high-fat, high-salt and possibly addictive treat. Some schools in Pasadena, Calif.

    www.huffingtonpost.com

  • Schools Take Aim at Popular Flamin' Hot Cheetos

    School districts in California and New Mexico are trying to ban the popular snack food Flamin' Hot Cheetos because they say it is a health hazard to students. School officials say the concern is their nutritional value, or lack thereof. Each bag of ...

    abcnews.go.com

  • Flamin Hot Cheetos Ban in Schools Due to Lack of Nutrition

    Flamin Hot Cheetos Ban. Flamin' Hot Cheetos may be banned in schools in California and New Mexico after school officials stated they are a 'health hazard' to the students who eat them.

    z6mag.com

  • Flamin' Hot Cheetos Face Ban In New Mexico School For Health Hazard ...

    A health teacher at Lyndon B. Johnson Middle School in New Mexico is moving to ban Flamin' Hot Cheetos, claiming the trendy snack food represents a health hazard and is just too messy, WTVR reports.

    www.huffingtonpost.com

  • Flamin' Hot Cheetos ban? School districts want to get rid of the snack ...

    The popularity and "lack of nutritional value" behind Flamin' Hot Cheetos reportedly has school districts in New Mexico and California wanting to ban the snack. CNN reported that a teacher at Lyndon B. Johnson Middle School in New Mexico said the snack ...

    www.abc15.com

  • Flamin' Hot Cheetos so 'addictive' among children that schools are banning ...

    Flamin' Hot Cheetos, a spicy, salty snack, have become so popular with children that schools have begun banning them and scientists are speculating whether they're chemically addictive. Cheetos, along with a Mexican chili-lime corn chip snack called ...

    www.dailymail.co.uk

  • Flamin' Hot Cheetos ban: Lyndon B Johnson Middle School New Mexico teacher ...

    The popularity of Flamin' Hot Cheetos has fired up a health teacher at Lyndon B Johnson Middle School in New Mexico.

    www.wptv.com

  • SCHOOLS: Some campuses banning Flamin' Hot Cheetos

    Schools across the country are banning or considering bans on Flamin' Hot Cheetos, which some researchers say can produce an endorphin-fueled high and other researchers say are highly addictive and offer little nutritional value.

    blog.pe.com

  • Proposed Cheetos ban has snackers flaming hot

    School districts in California and New Mexico are waging war against junk food, and one fiery, fried Frito Lay product is directly in their crosshairs.

    www.news10.net

  • Flamin' Hot Cheetos under fire for nutritional value

    (KABC) -- Some Pasadena schools are among several from across the nation that have banned Flamin' Hot Cheetos from campuses.

    abclocal.go.com

  • School Considers Ban On Flamin' Hot Cheetos (Video)

    That's exactly the reason, according to the Huffington Post, that a middle school health teacher in New Mexico wants to ban Flamin' Hot Cheetos. She says that not only is the snack a health hazard, but it's just too messy. Apparently school janitors ...

    blogs.babble.com

  • Flamin' Hot Cheetos Come Under Fire

    Now to the uproar over the popular snack food, Flamin' Hot Cheetos. The product is now banned in many schools around the country, despite its popularity among kids.

    www2.wjbf.com

  • Schools Consider Banning Flamin' Hot Cheetos Because They Are Unbelievably ...

    It's not often that a snack food so takes hold of the junior high crowd's collective conscious like Flamin' Hot Cheetos have. Not only are the radioactively-colored, preservative-and-salt-filled curls are a staple on my bus route and in school yards ...

    blisstree.com

  • Some schools want to ban Flamin' Hot Cheetos

    (WXYZ) - Some schools are banning Flamin' Hot Cheetos because of nutrition concerns. Teachers say kids are becoming addicted to the brand and substituting one bag for an entire lunch.

    www.wxyz.com

  • New Mexico teacher wants to ban Flaming Hot Cheetos

    NEW MEXICO - The popularity of Flamin' Hot Cheetos has fired up a health teacher at Lyndon B Johnson Middle School in New Mexico.

    www.abcactionnews.com

  • Flamin' Hot Cheetos under fire from nutrition advocates

    Some schools and districts, including Illinois' Noble Street Charter School Network and the entire Rockford school district, have banned Flamin' Hots by name, citing nutritional concerns. "We don't allow candy, and we don't allow Hot Cheetos," said ...

    www.courier-journal.com

  • 'Flamin' Hot Cheetos' come under fire as health concerns arise

    "Flamin' Hot Cheetos," the spicy, orange-hued delectable made famous by Frito Lay is coming under scrutiny at one New Mexico Middle School and teachers and parents are suggesting it be banned, according to a Huffington Post article . A health teacher ...

    www.kypost.com

  • Health Controversy: These Chips Are Being Called Nutrionally Evil and Banned ...

    So, school officials in districts in California, Illinois and New Mexico have decided to take aim at Flamin Hot Cheetos, and they're now being banned in certain schools. The problem, the administrators say, is that kids can't stop eating them ...

    www.glamour.com

  • School Health Officials Warn Flamin' Hot Cheetos Are Addictive and Contains ...

    Thus far, Nobel Street Charter School Network and Rockford Public Schools have banned the Flamin' Hot Cheetos due to the lack of nutritional value. "If children were to bring in snacks that are high in fat, high in calories, that's their choice ...

    www.medicaldaily.com

  • School districts in California, New Mexico trying to ban Cheetos; say they are ...

    School districts in at least two states are trying to ban the sale of Flamin' Hot Cheetos from machines at school because they say the snack food is little more than a bag filled with fat and salt, according to a story on ABC News.

    blog.al.com

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