Today, boba shops are ubiquitous. Big conglomerates like Starbucks and Jamba Juice have experimented with boba for limited ...
A bubble tea brand has apologized after a fiery conversation with Simu Liu on Dragons’ Den. Bobba's members Sébastien Fiset and Jessica Frenette asked the “dragons” (the show's panel of ...
Canadian actor Simu Liu has hinted at possibly investing in a US boba business after a Canadian company received backlash for alleged cultural appropriation. In a recent episode of Dragon's Den ...
Bobba has released a statement apologizing "for the harm we have caused by our words and actions" used on the episode of 'Dragons' Den' Trae Patton/Getty Simu Liu; Bobba A bubble tea brand has ...
Bobba has released a statement apologizing "for the harm we have caused by our words and actions" used on the episode of 'Dragons' Den' Trae Patton/Getty Simu Liu; Bobba A bubble tea brand has ...
It’s not Canadian bubble tea company Bobba that should be apologizing for the nonsensical allegation of cultural appropriation. Who should be apologizing is hypocrite Canadian actor Simu Liu ...
And the Bobba brand owners were this close to getting it. But after actor and potential investor Simu Liu politely raised a few relevant red flags, their bubble finally popped. The den's dragons ...
Dragons like Simu Liu and a backpedaling Manjit Minhas (who withdrew her investment offer due to vehement condemnation) have chimed in to say that this level of animosity is out of line.
The guest investor for Bobba's episode, Hollywood superstar Simu Liu, who took issue with the company and the way it's non-Asian founders presented a product that was created in Taiwan in the 1980s.
In the episode, Liu-the visiting Dragon-commented that he was not comfortable with their plan. He was worried about "disturbing" the bubble tea because this beverage is firmly based in Asian culture.